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"This we fix. I give you lessons. In short time you will ride like the wind."

"You are terribly kind," I said.

Vanya scowled. "Do not say this to any of my comrades.

They will tease me. I will have to bloody their noses. It grows tiresome."

I smiled and told him it would be our secret. Vanya brandished his long knife.

"You stay," he suggested. "I show you how I skin this wolf."

"I'd rather not. I fear I'm a bit squeamish."

"The blood bothers you?"

"It bothers me a great deal," I confessed.

"Is naturaL You are the delicate female. English, too. I skin the wolf and cure the hide and give it to you as a present."

He grinned. It was a delightful grin, broad and boyish.

For some reason, I had obviously made a conquest. I felt a rush of gratitude for his friendship and longed to give him a hug. I didn't, of course. I merely smiled again and told him good-bye.

"I get this mare from Leo tonight. Tomorrow we will begin teaching you to ride."

"I shall look foward to it."

"In the meantime, you are not to worry about these foolish peasants. Vanya will protect you."

He took hold of the wolfs tail, lifted the body up and

. grinned even broader when he saw the expression on my face. I could hear him chuckling as I scurried away, putting his boots to good use. Lucie had been watching us. She was amused by my hasty withdrawal. I made a face at her from the distance and began to stroll past the troikas, feeling a pleasant exhilaration after my encounter with the savage-looking, engaging cossack who was the only member of Orlov's party who had shown me the least friendliness.

Few would use the word
adorable
to describe him, but it was the one I felt most suitable.

Two huge stoves had been hauled from the troikas, set up on the side of the road and filled with kindling. The chef shouted shrill orders to his underlings and complained vociferously

about using up his precious supplies to feed

"twenty more yowling heathens" who were totally incapable of appreciating his culinary skills. It was a sad day indeed when he left the..kitchens of the Empress to join this crazy menage.

Pots and pans rattled, meat and vegetables were cut up, spices added into simmering broth. The underlings could prepare the stew-"Use more water! Go easy on the meat!" -and he would cook for those who could appreciate him. I smiled at the confusion, smelling the marvelous aroma of baking bread as I passed. Tall trees grew on either side of the road, trunks half-buried in snow, branches encrusted with ice that glittered brightly in the sunlight. It was good to walk, to use my legs, to breathe the crisp, invigorating air after being cooped up in the troika for so long. Would we ever get to St. Petersburg?

Servants hastened about on various assignments. Stout canvas bags were hung over the heads of horses so that they might munch the oats inside. Troika drivers were stamping their feet and drinking hot coffee and gossiping with each other. A crowd had gathered to watch Vanya skin the wolf. I saw Orlov in the distance, immersed in conversation with one of the cossacks. He seemed to be questioning

the man, and his broad, handsome face was serious as he listened to the man's replies. His legs were planted wide apart. The gray fur coat was open in front, and he stood with fists on his thighs, the coat bunched back.

He was a majestic figure standing there in the snow, taller than the tallest cossack, his body superbly hewn, radiating power and authority, seeming to draw the sunlight to him. I paused beside one of the supply troikas, looking at him, thinking about last night, wondering how much he remembered. Very little, I hoped. I was prepared to forget the things he had said, the words that had come unbidden to his lips in the haze of alcohol, prepared to forget the sensations that stole through my body as his hands squeezed and caressed and massaged my foot, but there would be a certain strain between us if Count Orlov had a clear memory.

I was attracted to him, strongly attracted. I couldn't deny that. Any woman would be. I was drawn by his warmth, his courtesy and consideration, his jovial good humor and boyish high spirits, and I was drawn by his incredible male beauty and vibrant sexuality. I knew, though, that anything other than friendship between us would be most ill-advised, and after Jeremy I was not prepared to become involved. Orlov was attracted to me, too, strongly attracted. That had been clear from the first night we had dined together in that cozy room with its gleam of yellow satin and glitter of gold, but he knew full well I would not be receptive to any advances and had settled for friendship.

Until last night.

Last night he had been tipsy. Last night he had lost control, and all those submerged emotions had come bubbling to the surface. Sober, if he remembered, he would be horrified at what he had said, what he had done, and I prayed he wouldn't remember. Let it continue as it has been. Let us be comfortable with each other, polite and friendly. I sighed and moved to join Lucie, who was standing beside our troika, swathed in rich golden brown sable.

"Enjoy your walk?" she inquired.

"Very much. I feel better, not so stiff."

"Did you see any wolves?" she teased.

"Just one, and damn you for doing that to me."

"It was quite dead, Marietta."

"It was quite horrible just the same."

Lucie smiled, her eyes full of girlish delight. "You made a very big success with Vanya. He told me he is going to give you the skin after he has cured it. That is quite a great honor."

"I'm overwhelmed," I told her. "I'm also starving."

Both of us looked to where the cossacks were lining up to receive their bowls of stew and hunks of black bread. The chef was still shrieking, refusing to relinquish any of his precious rounds of cheese. The cossacks grumbled and made mock-threatening noises, teasing him unmercifully, but he adamantly refused to give up a single round. Orlov finally intervened and said of course his cossacks could have cheese, could have any of our supplies they wanted, we would all share together, and the chef waved his arms in the air in total exasperation. Someone gave him a bottle of vodka. He took a huge swig and then stalked off to shriek at his underlings.

"Poor chef," Lucie said. "More stomachs to fill really does present a problem. It could be serious if we're unable to replenish our supplies at the next village."

"Will that be a problem?" I asked.

"It shouldn't be," she said casually, "but the next village of any size is two weeks from here, under the best traveling conditions. We could easily run quite low on provisions."

"Cheer me up some more," I said. "Tell me about the blizzards and avalanches."

"We don't have avalanches," she informed me, "but occasionally the roads are blocked by treacherous snow

drifts. Travelers have been stranded for days, but we have plenty of men to dig a way through."

"That's comforting."

"You sound discouraged," she teased.

"I've had better days."

Lucie laughed, and, rememberirig the tormented child, I was glad to see her in so mischievous a mood. We climbed into the troika where a table had been set, linen cloth gleaming, silverware sparkling, silver-rimmed pink Sevres beautifully arranged. Here, in the middle of a desolate road, surrounded by snow and ice, we were served a marvelous meal-spicy beet soup, potato pancakes with sour cream and caviar, flaky apple tarts sprinkled with brown sugar, strong hot tea. Lucie found nothing at all unusual about any of this, but I was still dumbfounded by the incongruity of it. I had to keep reminding myselfthat I was traveling with one of the richest men in the world, and only staggering wealth made such things possible.

I took another short stroll while the lunch things were cleared away and the troikas repacked. Eight husky servants lifted the great porcelain stoves back into their vehicle.

Dishes were washed, dried, carefully packed away. A servant collected the empty oat bags from around the horses' necks. Drivers oiled harnesses, checked rigging.

The bustling activity was wonderfully organized, each man knowing his job, doing it efficiently. Only the cossacks were idle, apparently too important for menial tasks. I strolled past the line, ermine hood over my head, my hands in the muff. Soft, tiny snowflakes began to drift down from the sky, floating lightly like puffs of white crystal.

"I see you are wearing the boots," Count Orlov said.

I turned. He stepped up beside me, shortening his stride to match mine as we continued to walk.

"They're a perfect fit," I told him. "I met Vanya earlier and thanked him for them. I want to thank you again."

"Was nothing," he said amiably. "I-uh-I wasn't sure if I
did
give them to you. I remember getting them from Vanya, and I
think
I remember starting up to your room, but everything else is hazy. I made it up the stairs?"

"You made it," I said.

"I came to your room?"

"And brought the boots."

Orlov gave me a sheepish grin. "I am so pleased to see my cossacks again I drink much too much vodka. I am feeling happy and aglow as I start up the stairs to your room. I hope I am polite and do not make the fool of myself."

"You were extremely polite," I replied. "You gave me the boots and promptly passed out. I had Vladimir take you to your room."

"This I am ashamed of. You must think me a great booby."

I smiled, vastly relieved. The snowflakes were falling faster now, swirling in the air, pelting our faces like moist, gentle kisses. Our boots crunched on the ice as we passed the supply troika filled with great metal containers full of various meats packed in ice, with bags of apples, grain, flour. Swathed in black furs, the chefstood beside the vehicle with a testy expression, as though he expected someone to steal his valuable provisions. Orlov took my arm as we started back toward the troika I shared with Lucie.

"I am afraid I have the bad news," he said.

"Oh?"

"The next posthouse, where we were to stay tonight, has been burned to the ground. The fire is said to have started by accident, but my cossacks believe it may have been deliberately

burned."

"Who-who would want to do such a thing?"

"These peasants," he growled. "Several posthouses have been destroyed by fire lately, too many for it to be the coincidence. They are too cowardly to attack, so they do this to harass. No, no, it is nothing you must worry about," he added hastily, seeing my expression. "Is merely a handful of discontented serfs."

"What shall we do tonight?" I inquired.

"Is no problem. We have the tents, the sleeping platforms, the furs and the stoves. We even have the large tent for the horses so they will not be exposed to the elements."

"You certainly come prepared," I remarked.

"This one must do when traveling in winter. This is the reason we bring the extra troikas, to carryall these things we might need. The traveler who is not prepared can have serious trouble."

Lucie met us at the troika, her young face radiant. The cossacks had brought along several extra horses, she explained, and she had decided to ride this afternoon. Orlov nodded, pleased that she was so enthusiastic. I asked her if it wouldn't be better to wait until it stopped snowing, and Lucie made an impatient gesture, looking at me as though I were an exasperating child. Snow? What was a little snow? She loved to feel it pelting her cheeks, loved to ride through the whirling white curtains. As we stood there one of the cossacks came over leading a muscular chestnut with beautiful lines. Lucie hitched her skirts up, put her foot in the stirrup, took hold of the horn and swung herself up into the saddle in one lithe, graceful movement.

"I will see you later, Marietta," she cried.

She turned the horse around and galloped offto the head of the line, riding astride with the greatest of ease. No fancy sidesaddle for this daughter of Russia. She rode like a man and, I suspected, better than most. Orlov watched with proud eyes as she rode away, then helped me into the troika, climbing in himself to see that I was comfortably settled with lap robe in place, books and chocolates within reach. He checked the braziers to see that there was plenty of coals, and he actually tucked the lap robe around my knees. What good care he took of one, I thought. I couldn't

.help appreciating that.

"You will be all right?" he asked.

"I will be fine, Count Orlov. I'm not an invalid, you know."

"This I realize, but you are not used to these difficult conditions. I feel guilty, subjecting you to them."

"I'm much tougher than I look," I told him.

"This I do not believe."

He stood up straight, his head almost touching the ceiling, and looked down at me with fond navy blue eyes halfshrouded by heavy lids. Being the helpless female was a novelty to me, a role
I'd
often longed to play, but it really didn't suit me, I decided. Once, perhaps, I could have clung to some man, depending on his strength, but I had relied on my own for too many years now and the toughness I had referred to was an integral part of me. I was a fighter, a survivor, and though the role might have its attractions, a delicate, dependent female I could never be. Still, it was nice to be pampered.

"You are comfortable?" he asked.

"Wonderfully snug," I assured him.

"I leave you then."

The vehicle rocked slightly a few minutes later as the driver climbed onto his perch, and then there was the jingle of harness, the jangle of bells and we were on our way again, gliding smoothly along through the soft, billowing snow, moving through a frozen, crystalline world of blinding whiteness and rainbow-sheened ice, a world so strange, so alien to any I had ever known before. Snug and warm under layers offur, I rested my feet on the silver brazier with its belly full of glowing pink coals and gazed through the windows and, unbidden, the pain came.

It was always there, always, but much of the time I was able to hold it at bay. If I had not been able to ignore it, at least I had been able to deny its virulent force. Much of the time. The constant travel, the new sights and new people had helped, true, but they were merely distractions, like an apothecary's powder that, when taken, deadens the agony of a migraine yet does nothing whatsoever to heal. The pain was with me still, as strong, as agonizing as it had been when I first learned of Jeremy Bond's treachery, and when I was tired, when I was alone, when there was no powder, I was its helpless prey. If only I could
forget
him. If only I could
hate
him. If only I didn't
stillloue
him.

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