Another Scandal in Bohemia (19 page)

Read Another Scandal in Bohemia Online

Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas

Tags: #Traditional British, #General, #Historical, #Women Sleuths, #irene adler, #Mystery & Detective, #sherlock holmes, #Fiction

BOOK: Another Scandal in Bohemia
10.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

No.

“No!” I said. "I cannot!”

I cannot sew for an Irene in miniature while sitting on the hard wooden seat last warmed by a dead girl. I cannot—

“You cannot? Or you will not? Relation or no, I cannot tolerate an arbitrary worker. Miss Uxleigh, where do you go? You cannot leave—!”

But I did leave, for good, and breathed better for it.

Irene expressed surprise to see me home at midday. Perhaps she was merely surprised to see me.

“My dear Nell! Why are you at home—? You are so pale. And perspiring. Here, sit down. Have you an ague? A fever?”

“No, not at all. I am not perspiring,” I added indignantly. “I am... dismissed. Again.” As from Whiteley’s, when Irene first found me on the streets of London years before.

“Oh. Oh! Do not fret. That spy business at Maison Worth is not worth fretting about.”

“It is not? You insisted that I must go there and learn things.”

“Yes, but that was before Godfrey’s preparations for Bohemia had matured. Now we have bigger fillets to grill. You seem most upset There is nothing to worry about, I promise you. I will even tolerate this Allegra Turnpenny who has been foisted upon me. What has happened at Worth’s to upset you? I will have words with them if they have behaved badly.”

I sat in Godfrey’s chair while she fussed over me, and must admit a moment of satisfaction. “You do not wish to endanger your standing with Monsieur Worth.”

“Defending my friend will endanger no standing I value. What has gone wrong?”

“It’s that awful Madame Gallatin who supervises the seamstresses. She allows for no invention in her workers. I merely changed the design a scintilla, not even thinking about it but I have some aesthetic sense, you know, and do fancywork of my own, and she was most overwrought by my innovation.”

“ ‘Overwrought by your innovation!’ ” Irene puffed up like an angry peacock. “What enterprise does this woman imagine she directs? A bakery? Every loaf, every slice, must be of regulation size? Are you not to embroider a more pleasing design? Am I not to sing a more inventive aria? My dear Nell, I can’t think what I was doing, sending you into that den of... conformity. Monsieur Worth will know of this.”

“No!” I caught her hand before she could rush off to write a letter, or dash into town, or seize a horsewhip like her idol Sarah Bernhardt. “I am not suited for such workrooms. And... I was distracted.”

“By what?”

My hesitation quieted her of a sudden, made her sink beside my chair, as she had at Godfrey’s the previous evening.

“I was thinking of”—my voice quavered despite myself—“dear Allegra.”

Irene nodded sagely, looking regretful. “Of dear Allegra, and of her absent uncle. And also of my headstrong trek to Bohemia, and of the King, the Queen, and Godfrey. Oh, Nell, you worry too much about us, who are not worthy of your devotion—”

“And, and... they brought me a new mannequin. Irene, it was you!”

“I?”

I nodded.

“I. Then... Monsieur Worth has decided upon me as a
mannequin de ville!
I am to set the standard. This is wonderful news!”

“No! No, it is not. I sat there, not believing my eyes. You—reduced to bisque and paint and kid leather. You a puppet of other people’s purposes. Then I thought of the Rothschilds and the Golem, a creature animated by no desire of its own, made to walk, made to sleep eternally as it suits someone else—no wonder it is restless, and mute, and angry!”

“Nell, darling Nell. That is legend. We face far more lethal dangers, in others, in ourselves. Only you know why I must return to Bohemia. Or guess it. You must not take all this so seriously.”

She shook my hand, my icy fingers clasped in her warm ones. “I know you feel the contradictions, as Godfrey cannot. Dearest Godfrey, he believes I don’t know how much this enterprise troubles him. It goes against his very core, yet he will do it, because I must, even if I will not—cannot—tell him precisely why. Forget the latest foolishness at Maison Worth. Godfrey will take fine care of you in Bohemia, and you must take care of him.”

“I? Take care of Godfrey?”

“Of course, you darling ninny!” She shook my hands. “I rely upon you. Godfrey is a babe in Toyland there, and you have seen the lie of the land at least. You must advise and protect him, as I must the inopportune Allegra. Surely you and I could handle this better ourselves. Did we not together defeat the King’s every stratagem on our last encounter in Bohemia—and beyond? Are we not up to another skirmish? I think so.”

“You do?

“Certainly.” She loosed my hands to clap hers together with resolution. “Well. We must do our best, as you say.”

“If you are Monsieur Worth’s new
mannequin de ville
, as you say, will it not harm your standing to desert Paris?”

“Nonsense! Even so, I do not truly care. Besides, absence makes the heart grow fonder in other than romantic matters. But you must promise me, Nell, to keep a weather eye out in Prague, so that Godfrey does not go astray. I bank on you.”

“I will watch him as if my life depended upon it!” I swore.

“Excellent!” Irene sat back on her heels with a satisfied expression that much reminded me of Lucifer’s.

Godfrey returned from Paris that evening so altered that we both almost did not recognize him, and indeed forgot any unpleasantness at Maison Worth, be it death or dismissal.

Irene was in the music room trilling her scales at Casanova, who showed much interest and repeated the exercise in a crude falsetto that nevertheless managed to be irritatingly on key. I, naturally, am tone deaf.

I was occupied with my sewing. When a shadow crossed the threshold, I expected Godfrey, so I did not eye him with much attention. Yet even my distracted glance detected a change. I turned immediately to Irene, expecting her to act as my weather vane and point to the source of the new wind in his sails.

She, too, glanced carelessly over her shoulder, smiling and
Eeee-eeee-eeee-EEEE-eeee-eeee
-ing without interruption. Then she stopped, her mouth still impressively open and her motionless hands hovering above the chords.

Godfrey always cut a quite respectable figure in my view, but now it was as if I saw him through a freshly washed window. Everything about him was sharp, new, and shiny in some subtle way.

Irene’s hands descended into a discordant chord that made Casanova squawk in disgust.

“Godfrey! What have you done to yourself?” she demanded.

“Nothing that I am aware of, except work excessively hard these past two weeks,” he said innocently.

Irene glanced at me for rare support. “Is he not more splendid than usual, Nell?”

Before I could answer, a frightful racket exploded in the passage. Lucifer hurtled into the music room like a furry croquet ball that yowled. Something thumped the hall slate with the dead weight of a corpse. A French curse drifted into our civilized scene, to be quickly emulated by the vile parrot.

Another dreadful thump brought Irene and myself to our feet.

“Nothing to worry about.” Godfrey returned to the threshold to call out a
merci
and dismiss our man-of-all-work, André. Godfrey glanced back to us with a sunny smile. “Merely some necessities for the journey to Prague.”

“Ah.” Irene beamed as she rustled over to the doorway. “Trunks, I deduce, and a good many, from the sound. What have you brought me?”

“Nothing,” he said. “They are for me.”

“For... you?”

“I cannot go to Prague as emissary for the Rothschild banking concerns attired like a court clerk.”

“I see.” Irene looked him up and down, then caught his lapel in her fingers and gave her impeccable diagnosis. “A morning-coat of finest twilled cashmere in charcoal gray. Silk lined and—oh, my dear, stayed in the seams so the tight cut at the waist will not buckle. A satin brocade waistcoat with, think of it, Nell, mother-of-pearl buttons!” She ran her forefinger along the buttons in question as if presenting evidence before the Bench. “Black and gray fine- striped worsted trousers and pointy-toed boots. My, you are quite the dandy; one might even say, the Masher.”

“Godfrey is not a Masher!” I said hotly in his defense. These young men about town were not dandies in the Oscar Wilde manner, but known accosters of young ladies. “He looks,” I said haughtily, “like a diplomat.”

Irene was not to be gainsaid. “Like a most fashionable diplomat and more attractive than any of that calling that I have ever seen.”

Godfrey remained unruffled by her prowling around his person, examining and petting his every article of clothing.

“Really, Irene,” I added, “I cannot see much different at all in Godfrey’s clothing. I have myself noted in my diaries than men’s garments are for the most part like as peas in pods, and most undistinguished. Though, Godfrey, of course, has always appeared distinguished to me.”

“Nell,” Irene said, sighing, “you have the discrimination for fine points of men’s clothing that Messalina the mongoose has for parasols. Take my word upon it: our man Godfrey has made a most astounding change in the cut, style, and, I would say, the cost of his clothing.”

Godfrey laughed. “Cost I grant you, but it was underwritten.”

“By whom?” Irene demanded.

“By Baron de Rothschild.”

“And by whom is your splendid new clothing created? By Baron de Rothschild’s tailor?”

Godfrey shrugged, which did nothing to disarrange the fine fit of his morning-coat. “I confess it.”

“Really, Irene,” I added, “if you will bask in the good favor of the Worths and Tiffanys of the world, I see no reason why Godfrey should not have the use of a Baron’s tailor.”

“Exactly, Nell!” he said, vanishing into the hall and leaving a fascinating sentence behind him. “I have also brought a token for you.”

“For Nell?” Irene asked the empty threshold.

Godfrey filled it again, handsomely, brandishing a middling box wrapped in shiny paper.

“For Nell,” he said firmly, moving to present it to me.

I retreated to my chair, where my sewing scissors abided, to open it. Godfrey came to stand before me, anxious as St. Nick on Christmas Eve.

“Truly, I require no presents,” I muttered, cutting the lovely gilt ribbons and savaging the pretty crimson paper.

“Nonsense,” said Irene. “You do not get them often enough.”

I opened the box and unfolded the interior tissue. Sterling silver winked at me, as solid and shiny as only the real thing is.

“A... ring of keys,” I began, reminded of our find in Godfrey’s father’s chest several months before.

“No!” Irene crowded near to see. “A... chatelaine.”

“A chatelaine? It must have cost half of Hyde Park,” I said in dismay.

Godfrey had gone down on one pin-striped gray knee to better point out the article’s advantages.

“A very unique chatelaine, Nell. Every item is designed for your especial use. See, here is a tiny scissors, so you may always cut knots, be they of crochet string or puzzling conundrums we encounter in our adventures. This is a tiny automatic pencil. The lead descends with a twist of the wrist. And here is a true key—to Irene’s traveling vanity chest and the Tiffany corsage. I deemed it wise to have a second key and you are the best keeper of that.”

“And this—?”

“A magnifying glass, for unraveling threads or ciphers.”

“And this is... a thimble case! Oh, it is too clever for words. And a needle case. Smelling salts. A tiny perfume flask. Oh, most handy for surviving ill-scented foreign climes, Godfrey, foreign climes always have the oddest smells! And this... little knife? Surely this tiny thing is not meant to serve a role similar to Irene’s pistol?”

“It’s a penknife, Nell, for sharpening your pencils so you can take accurate notes, a great quantity of them that will require much pencil-sharpening.”

“Oh, it is lovely. Thank you, Godfrey. But what is this fine silver chain?”

“So,” Irene explained, “you may wear it around your waist or your neck if you do not happen to be wearing a convenient belt. It is a clever conglomeration,” she added a bit wistfully.

Irene never saw anything rare and beautiful but she yearned for it, as a child does for a bright bauble, with an innocent greed that makes a virtue out of vice.

Godfrey smiled at her. “If you are good in Bohemia, I shall find you a chatelaine of your own on our return.”

“I am always ‘good,’” she said indignantly, “and do not require bribes.”

“But you’ve been known to accept them,” he pointed out, lifting the key to her vanity case from my chatelaine.

“Only from strangers,” she murmured.

He laughed and rose, assisting Irene to her feet, so they stood at last entangled, almost embracing.

She spoke in the same, soft teasing voice she had used earlier. “I will have to investigate the rest of your booty, to ensure that you have not smuggled any other exotic articles into our simple home.”

“Investigate what you will. You will only find that clothes do not make the man,” he promised.

“Ah, but sometimes they make the man too interesting for his own good.”

I found the issue of Godfrey’s new clothing rather tiresomely trivial. No one worried how my wardrobe should impress the Bohemian court or the connivers we were en route to Bohemia to confound.

There are certain advantages to being sane and sensible, I concluded, as I listened to Irene and Godfrey wend their slow, murmuring way upstairs arm in arm. I doubted that they’d be down for dinner for some time, but then Sophie was most slack about putting out her aunt’s contortions with the menu, and besides, the French can actually eat an unbelievable number of foods stark, raving cold.

I sighed and sacrificed the notion of a decent dinner for yet another night. Yet before I took up my crochet hook and string, I fastened the gleaming silver chain around my waist, with its jingling accouterments of cryptic silver objects. I tested the tiny silver folding knife. Quite satisfactorily sharp.

 

Chapter Thirteen

Other books

Romeow and Juliet by Kathi Daley
Under the Mercy Trees by Heather Newton
Nowhere to Hide by Thompson, Carlene
Love Under Two Gunslingers by Cara Covington
Whatever It Takes by C.M. Steele
The Last Lady from Hell by Richard G Morley
Worlds Apart by Marlene Dotterer
A Dark Dividing by Rayne, Sarah
Club Vampire by Jordyn Tracey