Nervously, Sarah fluttered about the drawing-room, as if Herriard House’s small
army of servants had not already engineered all domestic matters to perfection, and
as if Cook did not have an array of tasty dainties prepared in the kitchen, awaiting
Sarah’s call. She paused to peer out the window, inspecting the carriages that
passed on the street below. A glance at the clock upon the mantlepiece told her that
she could not expect Miss Bulleyn for a quarter of an hour yet, so there was no use
looking out for her carriage.
It occurred to Sarah that she was not even sure where Miss Bulleyn lived. They
had always met in secluded public places, by arrangement, each new meeting fixed at
the close of the previous. But that near-clandestine arrangement would cease as of
today, Sarah vowed. If Meriel’s uncle could afford to set at naught the wishes of a
mere Marchioness, he would find the desires of the Duchess of Wessex a different
matter entirely.
The sight of a familiar figure in the street caused Sarah ‘ to emit a highly
unduchesslike squeak. It was all she could do to compose herself in a slightly more
ladylike fashion until Buckland came to announce her young visitor.
Miss Bulleyn was a figure of flowerlike perfection in white muslin and a
deep-poke bonnet. The ribbons that trimmed bonnet and dress alike matched the
deep green velvet spencer that she wore, and tiny emerald drops glittered in her ears.
She had the same Otherworldly beauty as –
But as soon as the thought formed it vanished, leaving Sarah momentarily
confused. She shook off her confusion to hug Meriel in greeting, a salutation that
was warmly returned.
„How well you look!“ Meriel said. „Marriage agrees with you.“
„The absence of my husband agrees with me,“ Sarah responded with tart
honesty, and Meriel’s green eyes danced with answering amusement.
„Then I will be glad for you that he is gone – but he is twice a fool to leave you
so hard upon the heels of your wedding.“ Meriel untied the ribbons of her bonnet
and set it aside, and then began calmly removing her crocheted cotton gloves.
„It was not of his own choice.“ Perversely, Sarah felt the need to defend her new
husband. „It was by the King’s order. Something to do with the Army,“ she finished
vaguely, suddenly realizing that though she had thought Wessex’s explanation
pedantic and boring in its length, he had actually told her nothing at all.
„And when the King disposes, what can his loyal subjects do save obey?“ Meriel
said.
It was undoubtedly not Meriel’s intent to make the simple statement sound so
scornful; Sarah decided that her nerves were playing her false after so many
sleepless nights. While she had no idea what Meriel’s politics might be, certainly
there was no malice in her friend. Sarah smiled to herself, shaking her head. Meriel’s
caustic words were no more than the truth, anyway, what could any of them do in
the face of King Henry’s commands? She had married Wessex because of them,
after all.
„But I hope he does not make you too unhappy,“ Meriel went on.
„The King?“ Sarah said blankly, and Meriel laughed, a silvery peal of affectionate
mirth.
„Your husband, lobby! Although, if you are thinking of the King when you ought
to be thinking of him…“
„Indeed,“ said Sarah with exaggerated piety, „I should be very wrong not to think
of the King on every possible occasion.“
As she had hoped, Meriel laughed.
At first the visit passed smoothly, with the two women chatting of their common
experiences: books, shopping, plays they had attended. They did not have many
acquaintance in common – for though Sarah was not much fond of Society, she was
a figure in it, while so far as she could tell, Meriel did not go out at all. Sarah tried to
extract from her friend the promise that she would visit again, but Meriel’s response
was odd; not precisely evasion, but almost one of guilt. At last she said:
„I see I may not put it off any longer, but I pray you, Sarah, that for the friendship
we have shared, you will not hate me for what I am about to do.“ From a pocket in
her dress, Meriel withdrew a small velum envelope folded over a square of stiff
pasteboard.
Highly puzzled, Sarah took the mysterious billet. Opening it, she pulled out the
little square of pasteboard and read almost with incomprehension the invitation
written upon its smooth white surface.
„The Earl of Ripon requests the Favor of the Duchess of Wessex’s Attendance
at a Ball to be held upon the Occasion of the Presentation to Society of his Niece,
Lady Meriel Jehanne Bulleyn Highclere….“
„Your wicked Uncle Richard is the Earl of Ripon?“ Sarah said in astonishment.
Which meant, her mind informed her with pedantic thoroughness, that Meriel was
Ripon’s niece and, further, that her dear friend Meriel was the woman Wessex had
said was intended to entrap the Prince of Wales into marriage at the bidding of some
looming Catholic conspiracy.
„Yes,“ Meriel said in a low voice. „When I knew who you were’, I did not want
you to know, for your husband and my uncle are political enemies, but Uncle
Richard insisted…“ Her voice trailed off.
Sarah looked sideways at Meriel. It was hard to imagine anything more ridiculous
than that Meriel should be entangled in such a dark plot – but Wessex had said it
was true, and whatever Sarah might think of the man, he was not given to flights of
gothic imagination. If Meriel were indeed tangled in such a coil, surely she would
need a friend to help her find her way free.
„Oh, Meriel, pray do not look so Friday-faced! I do not care two pins for any
quarrel that Wessex and Ripon may hold,“ Sarah said, with more heat than
accuracy. „We two are friends, are we not? And I hope we shall remain so.“
„Then… you do not mind?“ Meriel asked in a low voice.
Sarah’ hesitated, choosing her words with care, for to tell Meriel she did not
„mind“ was to extend a carte blanche over Ripon’s contemplated treasons, and that
she could not do. Disgusted with her husband Sarah might be, but she was loyal to
the King, and it had not even occurred to her to doubt the wisdom of the Danish
treaty and the wedding that was its price. Sarah decided her first action must be. to
extract a promise from Meriel not to be a party to any plan to entrap the Prince of
Wales.
But Sarah would never know whether her common-sensical approach would have
enjoyed any particular success, for at that moment the door opened, and Wessex
strode unannounced into the parlor.
Wessex checked at the sight of Lady Meriel, but by then it was too late, for his
guest brushed past him. A heartbeat later James, Prince of Wales, came face-to-face
with Lady Meriel Highclere.
She swept him a deep curtsey, looking up from beneath her raven’s-wing lashes
into Jamie’s face.
„Duchess!“ Jamie said tardily, never taking his eyes from Meriel’s face. The
Prince hurried forward, raising Meriel up out of her curtsey. „Dash it, Wessex, you
never told me that your wife’s friends were such charmers!“
„Your Highness, may I present Lady Meriel Highclere? She is the niece of the Earl
of Ripon,“ Wessex said austerely.
Sarah stared at Wessex, surprised out of her mortification. How had he known
who Meriel was?
„Yes, that is right,“ Sarah said lamely. „She has just come to – to drink tea,“ she
finished, whisking Ripon’s invitation behind her back.
As if on cue, Buckland entered the room, carrying a heavily laden tea tray. Sarah
flicked a glance at the mantle clock. It was four o’clock, and Sarah had asked that
the tea be brought in now, but – oh! – her timing could have been better…
„Well,“ the Prince said heartily, „I must say that tea seems like a fine idea – and
with such delightful company, too. But I must take Mr. Highclere to task; Geoff
never told me he had such a handsome niece.“
„You will turn my head with your compliments, Your Highness,“ Meriel
murmured. A fetching blush rose into her ivory cheeks, and she clung to Jamie’s arm
as if unable to stand by herself. „I know that you are widely accounted a
connoisseur of many things, so that your praises must be held to be far more sapient
man those of lesser men.“
„Ah, well, a man in my position does have his opportunities,“ Jamie said, happily
swallowing this piece of outrageous flattery without a blink. „But do sit down, Lady
Meriel,“ he finished, conducting her to a chair beside the tea table and seating
himself beside her.
Filled with a looming despair, Sarah sank back down onto the sopha. She tried
not to look in Wessex’s direction – of all the times for the man to come back, why
did he have to return now, and in such company?
And what must he be thinking, to find her entertaining Ripon’s niece? It was true
Wessex had not forbidden the connection when he had told her of his suspicions
regarding Ripon’s plans, but then, he had not known of the connection – or had he?
Sarah did not choose to wonder – at least, not at this fraught moment. She
poured tea for her future sovereign, her guest, her husband, and herself.
And then realized, with Meriel and the Prince deep in the most animated of
exchanges, that Propriety demanded that she make some sort of conversation with
Wessex.
* * *
There had been a hint of Saint-Lazarre’s business, a hot enough lead that the King
had been willing, even after the furious upbraiding he had given Wessex less than a
day before, to set Wessex upon the trail; the source was one of Wessex’s own
contacts. Such promising information turned neglect of his new bride into a positive
duty. And so Wessex had saddled Hirondel and ridden for the fen country to tease
his informers out of their taciturnity. What he had learned there had been enough to
cause him to follow the trail across the Channel, to spend | three days in a French
port impersonating, a Breton fisherman on the run from the Army. He had barely
escaped impressment by a French shore party, but Wessex had no desire to spend
any time at all fighting for La Belle France in a naval capacity, either from the rigging
of a man o’war or from the decks of a prison galley, and had taken that near miss as
his signal to find his way back to England. His news was too important to risk
losing, and he was the only one who knew it.
On a bitter January day twelve years ago, the King of France had been guillotined
by a bloodthirsty Convention. Louis-Charles, the Dauphin of France, had been a
child only seven years of age.
Louis-Charles – King Louis XVII from the moment the blade fell upon his
father’s neck – spent only a few more months in the company of his mother and
elder sister, the fourteen-year-old Marie-Therese, before being taken away into „more
secure custody“ at an unknown location. By Christmas, his mother, his sister, and
his aunt were dead… but no one was sure where the young Louis-Charles was.
Wessex’s father Andrew had died trying to find out. In the wake of King Louis’s
execution, Andrew, Duke of Wessex, had gone into France at the White Tower’s
behest to try to save the rest of the French Royal family, especially the vital heir to.
the House of Bourbon. But Andrew had vanished without a trace, without any hint
of how close he was to the completion of his mission. And the whereabouts of the
young King remained a mystery that baffled all of Europe.
A band of emigres that succeeded in escaping France a few years later carried the
story that the boy had died in prison, but this tale had been seen by the Great
Powers as a fairly transparent attempt to consolidate France under Napoleon by
causing the Royalists, through Louis-Charles’s supposed death, to acknowledge the
emigre Comte de Provence as King Louis XVIII knowing that the Comte’s
unreformed Bourbonist sympathies would win French supporters not for the true
king, Louis-Charles, but for the devil they knew – Napoleon.
The Comte de Provence, however, had refused to assume the tide of King upon
the rumors of Louis-Charles’s death, instead challenging the French to produce the
body of his nephew or even a reliable witness to his death. But no one was able to
present Louis-Charles, dead or alive, and the succession was deadlocked.
So matters had stood for the next ten years. Belief grew that the young King must
be dead – for surely, if he were alive, he would have appeared, even if only to be
paraded as a suppliant puppet at Bonaparte’s Imperial court. And if he were alive,
Louis-Charles’s arrival on the political stage would galvanize the Triple Alliance to