Otto Gutesohnes was muddy to his knees and his face was ruddy from the effort of his ride, and although he was only twenty-three, his long, cold journey had left his bones aching like an old man’s; he stood on the top step at the door of Château Ragoczy clutching a dispatch-case while he waited for his knock to be answered. Around him the late-arriving spring showed boughs wreathed in the shining snow of apple-blossoms in the shattery brightness of noon, but he was too tired to pay any attention to this extravagant display.
The door was opened by Balduin, the steward, who took one look at the state of Gutesohnes’ clothing and indicated the path around to the rear of the château. He spoke in the German-tinged French of the region. “Please use the rear door, and remove your boots before you enter. While you make your way there, I’ll fetch Comte Franciscus.” He nodded toward the stable. “I trust your horse is in the grooms’ hands?”
“My mule, actually; yes. They manage the mud better than horses,” said Gutesohnes, his French heavily accented with his native German. He backed down the steps and did as the steward had bade him, calling out as he went, “Otto Gutesohnes of Waldenstadt Messenger Service, with a delivery for Comte Franciscus. I am supposed to hand him the item in person.” He cleared his throat. “You’re over a league back from the lake, and the directions I was given were very poor, or I should have arrived an hour ago.”
“No matter; you are here now.” Closing the door, Balduin went along the corridor to the study, and knocked on the door. “There is a messenger here for the Comte; an Otto Gutesohnes. He has brought something in a case for personal delivery. He didn’t say what it is.”
“Merci. The Comte is in his laboratory,” answered Rogier from within; he came to the door and opened it, addressing Balduin directly. “I will inform the Comte of this arrival at once. See the messenger is fed and given an opportunity to rest. He must have had a hard ride coming here, with the roads so wet. Tell him the Comte will join him in about twenty minutes.”
“Very good,” said Balduin, and continued on to the rear door immediately next to the pantry when he called out, “Uchtred, a messenger has arrived.”
“I heard,” said the chef, coming into the kitchen corridor. “There is a fire in the rear parlor. Let him rest there. I’ll put together a small meal for him, and give him something hot to drink. The Comte will not object.”
“I will attend to it,” said Balduin, opening the outer door and waiting for Gutesohnes to appear. He noticed the midden was already steaming, an excellent sign in this laggardly April, and May less than a week off.
Gutesohnes appeared, breathing a little hard, his dispatch-case held tightly to his chest. “If you’ll hold this for me”—he proffered the case—“I’ll take off my boots. And my coat.”
“Very good,” said Balduin automatically, accepting the dispatch-case.
“I’ve come from Zurich,” Gutesohnes said as he steadied himself against the door frame with one hand and worked his boot off his foot with the other. “Shall I leave these outside?”
“For the moment; I’ll have the under-footman clean them.” Balduin’s mouth pursed with distaste at the thought of the chore.
“Danke,” said Gutesohnes as he set down one boot and went to work on the other.
“How long ago did you leave Zurich?” Balduin asked, truly curious. “The weather has not been good.”
“I left eleven days ago; between the mud and that last snowstorm, I was fortunate it didn’t take longer to get here. This is my third stop along Lake Geneva.” He put his second boot down, peeled off his coat, and stepped into the small entry-way. “Where shall I hang this?”
Balduin indicated pegs on the wall, then swung the door closed. “The sun is warm, but the shadows are still cold.”
“That they are,” said Gutesohnes with feeling. “And this house must hold the damp.”
“So if you will follow me?” Balduin said, handing the dispatch-case back to Gutesohnes; he led the way to the rear parlor, opening the door to the cozy chamber for the messenger. “If you will sit, refreshments will be brought to you directly. Do not hesitate to ask for more if you are hungry. The Comte will join you shortly.” He was about to close the door when Gutesohnes stopped him.
“May I have a basin of warm water to wash my hands?”
“Certainly,” said Balduin, a bit nonplussed. “At once. Dietbold will bring it.”
“Thank you,” said Gutesohnes said as he pulled off his heavy gloves and set them on the table in front of the fireplace. “My hands feel like marble, and they smell of wet mule and old leather.”
“Dietbold will bring you the basin.” On that assurance, he withdrew from the room and sought out Dietbold, who was busy in the main dining room, applying beeswax to the table. He passed along his orders before returning to the kitchen to assist with preparing a tray for the messenger.
A few minutes later Dietbold appeared carrying a good-sized metal basin; he went to the cauldron in front of the massive castiron stove where water was kept hot, ladling out a generous amount. “Shall I take a towel from the linen chest?”
“One of the older ones,” Balduin recommended. “The man is very muddy, and there’s no reason to ruin a good towel on his account.”
“Of course,” said Dietbold, and made his way to the linen chest in the supply room between the pantry and the laundry. He selected a towel with worn spots and a few minor stains, then went to the back parlor. He knocked and entered the room, remarking as he did, “I trust you are getting warm.”
Gutesohnes half-rose. “I am. Danke.”
“I’ll take the basin and towel when you are finished with them,” said Dietbold, handing them over to Gutesohnes, who had seated himself on the broad, upholstered bench behind the low table in front of the fireplace. “Your knuckles are chapped; they must be sore.”
“They’re more stiff than sore.” Gutesohnes set the basin on the table and sank his hands in the warm water. “Much better,” he said as he rubbed them together vigorously.
“Do you require anything more?’ Dietbold asked.
“Not for the moment,” said Gutesohnes, drying his hands.
“Then I will leave you. The Comte will be down directly.” He inclined his head, picked up the basin and towel, and left the room.
Rogier encountered him in the corridor. “How is he?”
“The messenger? Well enough.” He was about to continue on when Rogier stopped him.
“What has he said?”
“About what he carries? Nothing.” Dietbold prepared to depart.
“All right,” Rogier said, moving aside. He stood still as Dietbold went to the side-door and tossed out the water in the basin, then continued on to the kitchen. When he was sure he was unobserved, he let himself into the parlor. “Good day to you.”
“Comte?” Gutesohnes stood up.
“No; his manservant. He asks you to take your ease for a little while longer.”
“Manservant.” He studied Rogier. “Treats you well, does he?”
“I have served him many years,” Rogier answered, deliberately oblique.
“Then he must be a good master, or a rich one.”
Ignoring that remark Rogier took in the man’s general appearance, and said, “Carrying messages: is it easier than driving a coach?”
Gutesohnes blinked in surprise—how had this man discerned his former occupation?—but responded readily enough: “Most of the time it is. I was worn to the bone driving coaches. But in hard weather it is more dangerous to be a messenger; you must set out long before coaches are expected to.” He saw Rogier gesture to him, and sat down again.
“Do you often come to Geneva?”
“Three times a year, on our current rounds; we serve over fifty subscribers,” said Gutesohnes. “It may be four times this year, with the demand for our service increasing.” When Rogier said nothing more, he went on. “I wanted the Italian routes—milder weather, better hostels, wonderful food, and only two circuits a year—but I was assigned to the Geneva, Bern, Basel, Zurich, Bern again.”
“Has that been so disagreeable?” Rogier asked.
“Given the weather, it hasn’t been easy, but still better than driving a coach.” He studied Rogier. “Why do you ask?”
“My master is considering employing his own courier, a private one, not a service. He has tasked me to find suitable candidates for the job.” He said it calmly enough so as not to create expectations in the young man.
“And you think he might consider employing me?” Gutesohnes brightened at the notion. “Why should he make such an offer to me? Or do you make this offer to every messenger who calls here, in the hope one will suit the requirements?”
“I think it will depend on what the Comte decides, but it is not impossible, if such a position interests you.” Rogier was calm, his polite manner unfazed by Gutesohnes’ effrontery.
“Of course,” said Gutesohnes. “I do understand.”
Anything more they might have said was lost in the gentle knock on the door, and Dietbold’s return with a tray of broiled eel in herb sauce, fresh bread and butter, a selection of pickles, and a large cup filled with hot cognac with a thick float of cream. He put the tray on the table, nodded, and left.
“I’ll leave you to your repast,” said Rogier, letting himself out of the parlor; he was thinking over what Gutesohnes had said when he saw Ragoczy coming toward him. “My master.”
Ragoczy paused to adjust his black-silk waistcoat and the black super-fine claw-tail coat over it. “Have I got it right?”
“Yes,” said Rogier, adding with a suggestion of amusement, “You couldn’t have done better with a reflection to guide you.” He adjusted the silver watch-chain so that it lay more discreetly across his waistcoat, and then nodded his satisfaction. “There. That should do the trick.”
“Always the final detail,” Ragoczy approved.
“If Hero were here, she would attend to such matters,” said Rogier. “She has a better eye than mine for the current vagaries of fashion: fobs and seals and watch-chains!”
“Yes: she knows the fashion of the present day,” Ragoczy said. “Well, she should return in two weeks if the weather holds.”
“And her uncle’s widow is no worse, and the road from Vevey is open to travel; that late storm last week surely delayed her journey,” Rogier said, and tweaked the elaborate silken bow of Ragoczy’s neck-cloth. “There. What do the English call it—a rose of good taste?”
“A tulip of the ton, I believe,” said Ragoczy in that language.
“A flower, in all events,” said Rogier in French. “No one could quibble with your appearance.”
“Thank you, old friend,” said Ragoczy. “It is always important to observe the niceties.”
Rogier did not quite laugh, but his lips quirked and his faded-blue eyes shone with amusement. “As you say.”
“How much longer should I let him eat?” Ragoczy asked.
“Five more minutes; he won’t mind the interruption then.”
“What do you think of him?’ Ragoczy inquired.
“Young, strong, sensible. He likes his comforts but not to the point of laziness, or so it appears—after all, he came here as soon as the road was clear enough of snow to allow him passage. You can tell by his shoulders that his days as a coachman were demanding.” Rogier coughed once. “He will probably not want to carry messages or drive coaches for all his life, at least not as an occupation. But he does appear to be willing to do the work for now, and he would seem to have an aptitude for it.”
“A sensible position,” said Ragoczy. “If he is willing to work for five years, I will consider myself fortunate, assuming he is capable and honest. I must hire someone in the next four to five months, and if this man seems qualified …”
“You must determine that for yourself,” said Rogier. “But he is the second messenger to arrive here since winter broke, and he came farther than Conrade did. I think he is able to do the work, and he would be accepted by the household.”
“I will keep that in mind.” Ragoczy laid his small, elegant hand on the door-latch, but said to Rogier, “I suspect there is more to it, this endorsement of yours, and I am curious to know what that may be. You are usually reluctant to give such a sanction to an unknown fellow as you have for this man. Why is that? What about him is so different that you are inclined in his favor?”
Rogier took a long slow breath. “I don’t quite know. It may be that something about him reminds me of Hercule,” he admitted at last.
“Truly.” Ragoczy regarded Rogier contemplatively. “In what way?”
“It is a question of manner.” He said, choosing his words carefully. “He doesn’t look like Hercule, he isn’t injured, he is not so old nor so burly as Hercule was, but you know how Hercule was willing to drive through fire? Well, this young man has some of the same quality about him.”
“Does he. Most interesting. I will bear that in mind.” Slowly Ragoczy opened the door, saying nothing as he took stock of Otto Gutesohnes, who was cutting into the broiled eel with gusto. He stood still, a figure in dignified black but for his dove-gray silken shirt and the shine of his watch-chain; the austerity of his clothing served to display their richness. Finally he allowed the door to close behind him, its sharp click announcing his arrival to the messenger.