Across the Endless River (15 page)

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Authors: Thad Carhart

Tags: #book, #Historical, #FIC014000

BOOK: Across the Endless River
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“Yes, I suppose it is”—Paul laughed—“but in this case the Great Father is the founder of our dynasty.”

“And the one on your coat?”

Paul fingered the ribbon lightly. “That one is special. It's for valor and was conferred by my uncle when I served in his guard.” He turned back to the mirror and changed the subject abruptly. “I asked Schlape to help you dress.” Paul's face spoke to him from the frame. “You'll find that it takes a bit of getting used to.”

Not long afterward, Baptiste descended the staircase looking elegant, or at least formal. Schlape had been indispensable in attaching the studs down the shirt's starched front and the links at its cuffs. There was nothing he could do about the stiff collar, however, and Baptiste strained against its chafing like a young horse fighting the bridle.

Downstairs he found a thorough transformation. The
frotteurs
had disappeared and the broad expanse of wood gleamed. The smell of wax was replaced by the perfume of flowers, which adorned every surface. The musicians were all seated, wigs on their heads and jackets in place, a double arc of premature grandfathers, it looked to Baptiste. Tables bearing food and wine lined the salons and wide hallways, and countless candles augmented the gas lamps to cast a glittering light throughout the rooms. There was an expectant hush, like a drawing in of breath before the change that was about to occur.

A liveried footman whispered in Prince Franz's ear and hurried back down the main staircase. The prince drew Paul to stand with him just inside the entrance to the main salon. Another uniformed servant stood at attention at the top of the stairs, and when the first guests arrived and gave their names, he struck the floor with a long wooden rod and shouted out to the empty rooms, “His Highness Prince Philippe de Savoie and Her Highness the Princess Elisabeth!” Baptiste stood on the broad landing, keeping well off to the side, where he could lean on the balustrade and watch the parade of arrivals. Within ten minutes the quiet atrium was awash in the din of social chatter: greetings, laughter, the tread of feet, and the constant braying of the
maître d'hôtel
as he presented the guests to Prince Franz and to Paul. The clatter of horses in the courtyard welled up from below, met by the swells of music that issued from the ballroom and gave those waiting to be announced a sense of urgent gaiety. Baptiste felt a thrill of excitement and let the sensations roll over him like a wave: whiffs of perfume, flashing jewels, uniforms covered with gold braid and medals, gowns that shimmered like liquid.

The pace of arrivals didn't slacken, and the broad staircase was crowded with those waiting to greet their host. Baptiste decided it was time to go in to the ballroom. He passed slowly through each of the salons being used, observing the groups of guests gathered together drinking, eating, and talking with determined good humor. They all seemed to know one another and greeted each other easily as they walked about.
I am clearly not one of them,
he reflected as he returned their occasional looks of curiosity with an even gaze,
and they don't
know what to make of me.

He entered the main salon and took a glass of champagne offered by a servant. Above the din he heard,
“Monsieur Jean-François Hennesy
et Mademoiselle Maura Hennesy!”
Baptiste was surprised and curious for a moment as he strained to see the receiving line, but he told himself he was mistaken. Then, through the mingling guests, he caught a glimpse of the porcelain white skin of her neck and shoulders as she curtsied to Prince Franz. Her hair was up, and a dark blue silk dress set off her light complexion dramatically. Beside her, a tall man with craggy features and gray temples greeted the prince warmly and shared a private joke that made them both laugh.

Following at a discreet distance, Baptiste watched Maura and her father make their way through the crowd and stop several times to talk with others. He maneuvered so that he could see her from the side and, convinced he was unnoticed, watched her over the shoulders of the couple who had joined her and her father. When she turned to address them, her face was even more astonishing than he remembered. Her dark hair, eyebrows, and eyelashes set off her perfect skin, which tonight was touched by a blush of pink. Her square, strong jaw was apparent in profile. She wore a necklace and earrings of clear blue stones that amplified the deep blue of her eyes, as if they, too, were jewels in the set.
How can I talk to her?
A thousand doubts raced through his mind and heightened his frustration and his desire.
Will she remember
me?
The little group broke up, and before he could withdraw, he saw her coming toward him.

“Monsieur Charbonneau, that
is
you, isn't it? I was hoping you would be here.” She greeted him in English, and the familiar cadence mixed with her lilting accent was like music. “Come meet my father, won't you?” He shook her hand and smiled awkwardly, pleased and surprised, and she led him across the room, striding ahead with a forthright step.

“Papa, I'd like you to meet Monsieur Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau, Duke Paul's friend from St. Louis in America,” she said as they reached her father.

“Delighted to meet you, Monsieur Charbonneau,” Mr. Hennesy said with a smile. His face exuded warmth and curiosity, and his grip was strong. “Maura tells me that she and my wife met you in Le Havre.”

“Yes, sir. We met in the customs shed. Our ships arrived at the same time.”

“I'll wager you are glad to have your legs on solid ground once again,” Maura's father said. “My wife was still talking about the storm at sea when she left for Bordeaux last week.” He paused. “Overland.” He gestured to Maura. “But my daughter has the sea legs of a sailor: never seasick a day in her life.”

Maura laughed and put her arm on her father's shoulder. “I got that from you, Papa. It is very useful to feel at ease in a ship.” She turned to Baptiste. “Don't you agree, Mr. Charbonneau?”

“It was my first time on the ocean,” Baptiste said. “Duke Paul and I will travel to Stuttgart by coach in a few days. I expect it will be easier to bear.”

Baptiste tried hard to focus on the pleasantries, but he was distracted by the beauty of the woman who stood before him, swathed in silk and animated with good humor. Mr. Hennesy signaled with a wave and a nod to someone across the room, then turned to Baptiste. “Sir, may I leave my daughter in your care? There are some gentlemen waiting to talk to me.”

“Yes, of course, sir. It would be my pleasure,” Baptiste responded, suppressing a smile at the quick turn of events.

Hennesy turned and disappeared into the crowd.

Maura spoke first. “He'll be a while, I'm afraid, Mr. Charbonneau. It's business he's talking.”

“That is my gain. Is he a diplomat?”

She looked at him appraisingly. “Not exactly. He's a wine merchant. He supplies Prince Franz's household and many of the other embassies. But the wine business, to borrow a phrase from the nuns, covers a multitude of sins.”

Baptiste decided not to ask about the specifics. “How did you know I might be here tonight?”

“The prince is one of Papa's better clients. My father learned that the two of you were staying here. You didn't expect to see me, though, did you?” she said as if she were teasing him.

“No, I didn't. I was surprised.” He felt himself blush. “And very glad!” he added quickly.

Maura laughed happily. “Then why did you follow me about like a schoolboy and not come and say hello?” she gently chided him.

Baptiste began to stammer an explanation, but she cut him off. “You have not been to many balls. A woman is constantly aware of who is looking at her. She has to be.”

“And why is that?” Baptiste asked.

Maura paused, as if considering a riddle. “Let me put it this way: the prey is wise to observe the hunter.”

“Is this a hunt?”

“Oh, yes, certainly. Come, let's find someplace to sit and you can tell me what you think of Paris.”

Maura led him to a small room opposite the ballroom where chairs and small tables had been set in clusters along the walls. Several small groups of guests, most of them elderly, had installed themselves there to talk. She found two chairs that faced the darkened garden through a window and set her champagne flute on the adjacent table. “We'll be fine here,” she said as she sat. “No one can accuse us of running off into the night, and we won't be bothered by the dreary visiting in the main rooms.”

Baptiste was impressed by Maura's decisiveness, and glad to be in the company of someone familiar. “Do you know most of these people?” he began hesitantly.

“Let us say I have met many of them, and been to many of these affairs in their company,” Maura responded. “But that isn't the same as knowing someone. I'm sure you would agree.”

Baptiste nodded. “I've met a few of them in the last few weeks, but I don't recognize a soul tonight.”

“You recognized me!” Maura exclaimed, then added quietly, “Now we can get to know each other better, if you like.”

They talked intently for a long time. Maura told him about her family. The Hennesys had been in France for many generations but still thought of themselves as Irish. They had been expelled from Ireland by the English at the end of the seventeenth century, and had served as mercenary officers in the armies of France and Spain. Her greatgrandfather returned victorious and rich from one of the many campaigns and had established the family as wine producers in the Gironde region outside of Bordeaux. The business flourished with the extensive contacts he maintained throughout Europe. Fortunately, she told him, the age-old mistrust of France for England allowed for a special relationship with certain elements in Ireland, on the basis of religion and politics, and her family was at the center of that connection. “My father is a passionate republican for both Ireland and France,” she told him, and alluded to the delicate nature of his position under the restored Bourbons. He was convinced that France would be better off without a monarchy, and his ideas set him at odds with French rulers at a time when opposition to the regime was mounting. Baptiste knew little of the specifics of the history and politics she talked about, and he asked many questions. Her passion for justice was clear.

Baptiste watched Maura's lively eyes and the way the skin of her throat grew taut and then slackened, and he realized that he was listening to every word she had to say while at the same time being lost in her features, the sound of her voice, the imagined velvet of her skin beneath the crisp folds of silk. The awareness of the contradictory impulses that crossed his mind was both disquieting and pleasurable.

Her mother was Irish, and Maura had been born in County Cork. Her mother and she were on a trip to France when Maura was seven, and they had been barred from returning to Ireland. She had lived for much of her life in Paris.

“Why couldn't you go home?” Baptiste asked.

“It was during the Napoleonic wars,” Maura explained, “and the British blockade of France became impassable, even for my father. So my mother set up house in Paris for the duration, before moving to our vineyards in the Gironde when peace came.” Now Maura was a student, determined to study medicine, though it was unheard-of for a woman to be accepted at the medical faculty of the Sorbonne.

Her account of sudden departures, new beginnings, and endless travels comforted him and made it easier for Baptiste to talk about himself. He told her about his parents and she seemed interested as he described his youthful wanderings. He explained how he came to be in Paris with Duke Paul.

“What do you think of the French?” she asked.

He hesitated, trying to find the right words. “The French certainly value their opinions. I've met people who know about the history of America and others who know nothing of my country, people who love the king and others who hate him, people who want change and others who fear it, but I am never in doubt about what they think.”

“Yes, the French will always state their point of view forcefully. But that is not necessarily a bad thing. Don't you agree?”

She asked what he thought of the Palace of the Louvre; she wondered if he had visited any of the
quartiers populaires,
the poor sections of Paris; she wanted to know what he thought of Prince Franz's ball. None of her questions were frivolous.
Here is someone,
he thought,
who would always be worth talking to.

“Do you think you will stay in Europe for a long time?”

“Duke Paul talked about a year or two when he proposed that I come here to help with his collection,” Baptiste told her. “I'm seeing wonders every day, meeting his acquaintances, and learning about things I never imagined. Even though I expect that will change once we settle down in Württemberg, I'm in no hurry to turn around. The frontier will still be there when I go home.”

They both paused, sipping champagne and sharing glances. Then Maura continued. “Are you enjoying your travels?”

“Yes, I am,” he responded without hesitating, “but it is taking some getting used to. In America, I was the one with experience and useful contacts. While we were on the river, Duke Paul depended upon me to handle the officials, the Indians, the riverboat men and traders. That changed when we arrived in New Orleans, and here in Europe I might as well be a newborn. It's peculiar to be on the other side of the fence.”

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