The Golden Tulip (48 page)

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Authors: Rosalind Laker

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: The Golden Tulip
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“So I should hope!”

He thought to himself it would have relieved the tedium of being confined to his bed if the young woman had not been clothed! Nevertheless, he appreciated her thoughtfulness over the soup. There had been countless gifts and notes from well-wishers, many of the senders well known to him and others from his parents’ acquaintances. The only letter that had held his pain-racked interest had been from Isabella, to whom he was betrothed. Mostly he had fallen asleep during his mother’s reading of the good wishes and it was still easier to doze than to be awake. Perhaps he was sleeping his life away as very old people did and it tempted as a soothing way out of the crippled future to which fate had condemned him.

“Here’s the broth, dearest boy. Are you sure you can manage?”

He looked into her sweet, kindly face as she fussed over spreading a napkin for him and handing him a spoon. Whether she realized it or not she was in her element at having him as helpless as a baby again, all her maternal instincts having come to the fore once more. He both loved and pitied her. All that had happened was as great a trial for her as it was for him, but he did not know how much longer he could endure the nursery atmosphere that she had induced into his bedchamber.

“I can manage well, Mother.”

It was still an effort to feed himself, there being so little strength in his arms. At first he had dropped the spoon several times and food had been spilled, increasing his sense of humiliation. Fortunately the doctor had brought in a nurse, a stolid, middle-aged woman with a rear as wide as a barge, to deal with all the private menial duties concerned with nursing. From the start she had also kept out everyone else, his mother included, during the dressing of his stumps. He would always be thankful that she gave him a wad of linen to bite on and stifle his groans, which sometimes escaped him when the dressings still stuck while being changed. He did not know what screams he must have uttered during the cauterizing after the amputation, for he had no recollection of that night.

His mother chatted while he enjoyed the broth. She did not mention what he most wanted to know and he interrupted her. “Is there no word yet of when Isabella will be coming to see me?”

“The roads are still bad for traveling. She will come as soon as it is possible. More snow fell during the night.”

He cursed the snow. As yet he had received no visitors, although local friends had called many times. They would have been too cheerful and hearty, embarrassed at not knowing quite what to say, and he could not have endured his fellow sportsmen’s poorly disguised sympathy that he, who had outrun, outraced and outskated them all, should have been reduced to such terrible straits. After Isabella had been to see him and they had talked over this new situation that had arisen, he might feel differently about receiving visitors. But for the present time he was curiously in limbo.

Chapter 15

L
UDOLF HAD RETURNED TO
A
MSTERDAM FROM
P
ARIS BY WAY OF
Antwerp. He was careful to cover his tracks these days. It was all very well for the burghers and merchants to show favor toward France, but when Louis XIV moved to annex Holland there might be a swing of feeling among them to match the hostility of the people toward the possibility of French rule. On this visit he had been received at Versailles itself, his flourishing bow to the Sun King as flamboyant as any Frenchman’s.

His first action upon reentering his home after his absence was to sort through the stack of letters awaiting him. When he found a note from Willem de Hartog he tore it open, doubtful of what he might read. To his relief it told him of Hendrick’s release. He had not received word of the artist’s arrest until he was about to leave Antwerp on his homeward journey, only to be trapped there by the Great Blizzard, which had delayed his return by another three weeks. Had Hendrick been heavily sentenced, his own hold over him would have been considerably diminished. A smile touched the corners of Ludolf’s thick lips. As it happened, everything had worked out in his favor. Now that Hendrick had had a taste of prison, he certainly would not want to set foot in one again.

There was a letter from Geetruyd, written before Christmas, and in addition to more important matters, it reported that Aletta, the sister of the young woman in her charge, had come to stay in Delft and presently had employment caring for the children of the Vermeers. He tapped a fingernail thoughtfully against the letter in his hand. Nursemaids usually had very little free time, which made it unlikely that Aletta’s presence would ease Francesca’s chaperonage in any noticeable way. When he had made that family clause in the letter which Hendrick was forced to copy, he had never supposed that either of Francesca’s sisters would ever get to Delft, except possibly on a special visit with their father.

Ludolf crossed to the window and looked out onto his white garden. It was impossible to tell whether the flagstones had been replaced during his absence before the snow came. It was months since van Doorne had declared himself dissatisfied with the quality when they had been unloaded from a wagon and had had them sent back. The base of sand and rubble had been laid, but Ludolf was impatient for the whole project to be finished.

“It is important to the whole harmonious layout of the garden that the flagstones should be of exactly the right color, which in turn would compliment the house,” van Doorne had said, showing him a piece of stone to illustrate its faults.

Personally Ludolf had not been able to see much wrong with it, but he had learned over the years to defer to experts while retaining the information they gave, for it was one of the ways by which he had hauled himself up from his rough beginnings to the position he held today with higher things to come. Similarly his polish and fine manners had come from careful observation. He prided himself on never having lost sight of his aim to gain wealth and the authority that came with it. He had been inwardly amused when Sybylla, during the time when she had been visiting Amalia, had confided to him that she wanted a rich young husband. The hint had been there for him to arrange a few introductions, but he never did anything for anybody that was not ultimately for his own benefit, even though he had seen in her the same avid lust for wealth that had been his already when he was her age.

While he had been at Versailles recently a
comtesse,
naked and scented in her soft bed, had stroked his chest and remarked on the number of scars on his body. He had given her the reply he always made at such moments.

“Those were gained in the service of my country.”

This useful lie always melted a woman’s eyes. Geetruyd was the only one of her sex to know that his wounds had been received from the weapons of seamen fighting to prevent their richly cargoed ships and themselves from being captured. Privateers were notoriously merciless with regard to prisoners. The only ones he had ever allowed to live had been those he had been able to sell to Arab slave traders along the North African coast. In contrast to his violent means of livelihood at that time, he had invested as soon as he was able in a legitimate shipbrokering business in Antwerp and later Amsterdam, always through an agent, and each had created its own rich profits, for his prices were competitive and nobody liked a bargain better than a Dutchman. There were other projects too, in which he had invested with equal success.

It was originally for these businesses that he had adopted the well-sounding name of van Deventer. Abandoned as a baby and brought up in an orphanage, where the authorities had baptized him Ludolf, he had no knowledge of any rightful surname, and during his years at sea he had used a variety of common names, changing from one to another when circumstances made it advisable.

At forty he had retired from the sea, a rich man from several sources, whereas others of his trade had drunk, gambled and wenched their money away, but then they had been content to spend the rest of their lives at sea. For him it had only been a means to an end. What was more, he was secure in the knowledge that there were no survivors from his more brutal exploits to rise up and accuse him of his crimes, while those who had been his companions were unlikely ever to cross his path. Money was power and he had it at last, not knowing then that it was not to be enough and a new lure was to be one of political mastery.

Not long afterward he had married Amalia. He had enjoyed using her money, but he had not married her just for her wealth, or for the fact that in those days he had found her desirable. Overriding all else had been her good breeding and her lineage that had had links with the House of Orange in generations gone by. Marriage to her had elevated him to the secure status that he had needed, gaining him an entrée into the best families in Amsterdam and, on their marriage journey, in France as well. That was when the scales had fallen from his eyes and he had seen how it was possible to live in ultimate luxury. He had become obsessed by all things French, which had led eventually to his being enrolled as a spy for France. The military information he had supplied this time had been rewarded with a complimentary word from Louis himself.

Leaving the study, Ludolf went through to the banqueting room. There he shut the door behind him and went to gaze, as if he had been starved, on the likeness of Francesca. His period of mourning was well and truly over. Not the slightest suspicion had fallen on him. He was free to go in pursuit of this lovely girl as soon as matters could be arranged.

In another part of the house Neeltje was going up a back staircase with some folded linen in her arms. So Ludolf was home again! From a window she had watched him come into the house, hatred in her eyes. The murderer! Tonight she would take her secret keys and go through his mail and whatever papers he had brought home with him. She had often come across love letters from women, but her mistress had been too private and dignified a person to sue for divorce with all its attendant scandal. In any case, as Ludolf was never physically cruel to her, a few letters would not have been enough to secure her freedom. His affairs never lasted long and the only regular correspondence from a woman was from one who wrote in an entirely different tone. She was Geetruyd Wolff, who lived in Delft and wrote obliquely on what could only be business matters about ships and deliveries and people referred to by their initials. Yet Neeltje’s feminine intuition told her this woman had some feeling for Ludolf. In those letters there had been only one reference to Francesca, saying that the young woman was now in her charge and that she intended to carry out the father’s wishes most strictly. Neeltje had not passed this on to Aletta, seeing no need, and in any case she had not wanted to be asked how she had come across this information. She hoped to find something of interest when tonight she would go through the mail that Ludolf should have opened by now. She had resisted the temptation to deal with it before his return. A hot knife slipped under a wax seal was effective, but she had not dared in case by ill chance her hand should slip in her nervousness and smudge the softened wax. Ludolf had sharp eyes. It was safer and easier to read the letters after him. It gnawed at her that when she had gained precious evidence of murder against him, which would have put him to a savage execution, she had been powerless to use it.

She paused on the stairs and drew breath. It was not ascending the flight that normally caused her any discomfort, for she was a strong woman with good lungs, but there were times when she still suffered a twinge in her ribs during any exertion and then it was best to rest for a minute or two. Through a window she could see the garden. Her warning to Aletta about a possible threat to Francesca from Ludolf had been conveyed to Pieter van Doorne, with immediate results. The young man had stopped the unloading of the flagstones on some pretext, leaving the way open for him to come to the house whenever it suited him. During the laying of the base materials on the paths she had given him an opportunity to speak to her, which he had taken.

“If ever you have more information that would help me protect Francesca,” he had said, “please leave a message at my Amsterdam address.”

He had given it to her and she had tucked it away in her pocket with a nod, going back indoors again. To thwart Ludolf over the issue of the young woman he wanted would be a triumph. There were more ways than one of killing a cat.

         

G
EETRUYD WAS ON
her way home from a meeting of the orphanage board of the regentesses. She had to skirt a noisy demonstration in the square. Supporters of the Orange party, in favor of the Prince, the States party, who backed de Witt, and a third party, who shouted loudly and did not seem to know what it wanted, were coming close to a free-for-all, there being many angry faces and shaking fists.

Snow was slushy underfoot in the late February thaw, but her high-built shoes were of the best-quality leather, soft and supple while keeping her feet dry. She could have afforded her own sedan chair with bearers employed as menservants if she had not had to keep up her image as a widow in modest circumstances. She knew Ludolf well enough to know that he paid her generously only because she did not make careless blunders in her secret work on his behalf. There had been one slip when Francesca had been able to spend time talking to the agent from Utrecht long enough for her to have registered his face and voice. Not a serious matter in itself, but it had been necessary to raise the point with him in order to quell a rising interest in him toward the girl, the last thing that could be allowed to happen.

She arrived home and, after kicking the wet snow from her shoes, she entered. Weintje came to take her cloak and hand her a pair of buckled house shoes.

“You have a visitor, madam. Heer van Deventer is in the drawing room.”

Her throat seemed to close with anticipation. It was so long since she had last seen him! “I thank you, Weintje,” she managed to say. “He and I will have much to talk about. See that neither you nor Juffrouw Clara disturbs us. I suggest you both stay in the kitchen region in case I have need to ring for anything.”

“Yes,
mevrouw.

When Weintje had gone from the entrance hall, Geetruyd whipped off the staid linen cap she wore to her meetings and thrust it into a drawer. Then she smoothed her hair into place and went into the drawing room.

Some while later she smiled at Ludolf as he stirred from his doze in the bed beside her. They were in her bedchamber, where they had come soon after their first embrace of reunion.

“You were mad to come to Delft, you know,” she said. “We had agreed on almost no contact and only essential correspondence.”

He grinned lazily. “I used to visit you.”

“But that was before your involvement in French affairs.” She traced a forefinger over his shoulder. “It’s like old times again. Nothing has changed, has it?” She wanted to hear confirmation from him. Now that they had both established themselves away from all that lay in their past and with Amalia dead, the future had opened up for them again. Naturally she did not love him blindly now as she had when he had first come into her life. Certainly some of his ways, which she had once endured in a devoted and submissive haze, wanting only to please him, would be intolerable to her now. Perhaps in truth she no longer loved him at all, but he was what she had wanted then, and what she still wanted and had always been determined to have when the time was right. It was not right yet, but when France had gained control of Holland and Ludolf was raised to a high ministerial post she would do him credit as his wife. All subterfuge and dreariness would be a thing of the past. She would be able to extend her not inconsiderable intelligence and educated taste in literature by holding salons in the French style.

He was giving her waist an absentminded squeeze, his thoughts moving rapidly away from her as he considered the important matter that had brought him to Delft, her question only just lodging with him. “We’ve known each other too long now for anything to change.”

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