The Diamond Slipper (9 page)

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Authors: Jane Feather

BOOK: The Diamond Slipper
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Cordelia kept her mouth shut as the cantankerous voice maundered on in his disparaging fashion. Not that she expected anything else from her uncle. His niece was a burden to him; therefore she must be to any other man.

Marie Antoinette would be married by proxy the following day in the Augustine church, which was large enough to accommodate the entire court. Cordelia’s ceremony was to take place in the small Gothic chapel beside the riding school. The guest list had been kept small, but
no concessions had been made in the formality of the ceremony.

The royal family were present, as were the senior members of the French delegation. The duke limped up the aisle, his cane thumping with every step, his niece on his arm. The bishop of St. Stephen’s stood before the altar.

Where was the viscount
? Cordelia’s eyes darted around the dim chapel. The day was overcast and there was no evening sun to light the stained-glass windows. Shouldn’t her husband, proxy or not, be waiting at the altar for her? No one seemed concerned about this, and her uncle, now mercifully silent, continued his measured progress toward the altar without faltering.

As they reached it, Viscount Kierston appeared from the shadow of a stone pillar, where he’d been standing in quiet conversation with another courtier. It was almost as if his appearance were an afterthought, it was so casual. Cordelia, mummified in her stiff wedding gown and lacquered, powdered hair, felt a surge of resentment that he should treat this … her … with such insouciance. It was a real marriage. As legally and religiously binding as any. The one that would follow in Paris would carry no extra weight or significance.

He stepped up beside her, according the duke a curt nod but ignoring Cordelia. His attitude might be careless, but his dress was as formal as hers. His midnight blue suit was richly embroidered with silver arabesques. His hair was concealed beneath a pigtail wig, the queue encased in dark blue silk and tied top and bottom with matching silk ribbons. Diamonds winked from the folds of his lace-edged cravat, sparkled on his long fingers, edged the silver buckles of his red-heeled shoes.

Cordelia decided he looked intimidating, severe in his elegance—but so very beautiful. Her earlier resentment vanished as quickly as it had arisen. She was conscious of every line of his lithe slender frame, of the sharply etched cheekbones, the sensuous mouth, the long, luxuriant black eye
lashes, so startling against the white of his wig. Her pulse raced, her palms dampened in her silk gloves.

The bishop’s voice droned on over her head, but the words meant nothing. Her uncle gave her away with a clear note of relief in his louder-than-usual voice, and she barely noticed. She heard only the moment when Leo Beaumont said firmly that he took this woman, Cordelia Brandenburg, to be his wedded wife. She closed her mind to the “in the name of Prince Michael von Sachsen,” aware only of her rising excitement, the heady swirl of anticipation. Somewhere at the back of her brain lurked the knowledge that she was being a fool, that to play with this fantasy while she stood at the altar being married to another man was a recipe for disaster, but that didn’t seem to dim the lustre of her fairy tale in the least.

What if she were really marrying Viscount Kierston? Fueled by this question, her own responses were so fervent they surprised even the bishop, who peered at her in the candlelight.

Leo’s mouth tightened as he heard Cordelia make her wedding vows. He knew what she was thinking. She had declared that she loved him, and however much he might dismiss this as a youthful fantasy, the ring of sincerity in her voice, the power of it in her eyes, couldn’t be so easily dismissed.

Any more than he could dismiss the power she held over him, against his will, against his deep-rooted convictions, against all rationality.

The bishop blessed the rings and they were returned to the little gold ring box, to be presented at the second wedding when the true bridegroom would do his part.

“Well, that went off fairly well,” Duke Franz declared when they were outside again in the gloomy, high-walled medieval courtyard outside the chapel. “And I wish you joy of your charge, my lord.” He took snuff, flourishing his handkerchief as if waving away the burdensome years of his guardianship.

Cordelia, receiving the congratulations of the empress, heard the sour comment, as did everyone else. It was so churlish it penetrated the shell she’d early constructed around herself. She turned to look at her uncle, a tear of hurt shining in her eyes.

Maria Theresa patted her shoulder, saying kindly, “You have always been very dear to us, Cordelia. I consider you as one of my own children, and I know that you and Marie Antoinette will continue to be close friends and companions.”

Cordelia curtsied as low as she could in her voluminous gown without overbalancing and falling on her rear. “I am sensible of Your Majesty’s every kindness to me over the years, and I cannot express my gratitude enough.”

Maria Theresa smiled approvingly, turning to the viscount. “I trust you’ll be able to instruct Princess von Sachsen in the nuances of life at Versailles during your journey, Lord Kierston. I know they have some different customs.”

Leo bowed. “I will do my best, madame.” He supposed it was a task that fell to his hand—one of the growing list of responsibilities that accompanied taking charge of Michael’s wife. How he had ever agreed to this insane project he couldn’t imagine. But then, if he’d imagined Cordelia, he certainly wouldn’t have agreed. But how could any sane man imagine Cordelia?

How would Michael react to her? He expected some demure, totally inexperienced young girl of impeccable breeding, well versed in her role of total obedience to monarch, father, husband. And he was going to find himself wedded to Cordelia.

“Stand still, Amelia, while I tie your ribbon. You’re such a fidget.”

“Yes, madame.” Sylvie’s eyes met her twin sister’s, and they both dissolved in giggles.

“For mercy’s sake, child, what is the matter with you today?” Louise de Nevry, the children’s governess, pulled Sylvie’s hair back with an unnecessarily hard tug. She couldn’t understand what got into them on days like this. From the moment they woke, they seemed to share some secret that sent them into fits of giggles at the slightest thing anyone said to them. And all the scolding in the world did no good. She tied the lavender hair ribbon in a cramped little knot and pushed the child away.

“Now, Sylvie, come here and let me do your hair.”

“Yes, madame.” Amelia stepped obediently forward, her rosebud mouth quivering with laughter. It was one of the girls’ greatest entertainments, this switching of identity. If they awoke before Nurse came to them in the morning, they would exchange positions in the bed before she saw them, and Amelia would be Sylvie and Sylvie Amelia for the rest of the day. And no one would be any the wiser.

Madame de Nevry tied the braid with the green ribbon that identified Sylvie for her father, as the lilac identified Amelia, then she turned the child around and scrutinized her critically. “This levity is unseemly,” she scolded as the girl struggled with her laughter. “Both unseemly and foolish. What could you possibly have to laugh about?”

She glanced around the schoolroom with its dark paneled walls, bare oak floor, sparse furniture. The uncurtained windows were kept firmly shuttered so that no noise or distraction from the world outside could reach the girls at their lessons. She could see no encouragement for laughter in their surroundings; it was all exactly as it should be.

“The prince will be waiting for you. Is that ink on your hands, Sylvie?”

Amelia held out her hands. Her nails were painted with a foul-tasting yellow paste to keep her from biting them. Not that Amelia bit her nails; that was Sylvie’s habit. But Nurse hadn’t even looked when she’d ritually anointed the supposedly bitten fingers that morning.

“What will your father think!” the governess grumbled.
“Go to the nursery and wash them at once.” She looked up at the clock, worrying at her lip with her teeth; they mustn’t be late for their weekly presentation to the prince.

Louise was a thin woman, with angular features and sparse gray hair that she kept hidden beneath a large wig on which perched a dormeuse cap. An embittered spinster, a distant relation of the von Sachsens, she was dependent on the charity of the prince, for which she was expected to educate his daughters. But since she had little education herself, serious study didn’t feature too much in the schoolroom of the prince’s Parisian palace on rue du Bac. Instead the girls were expected to sit still for long periods of time, holding their heads high, their shoulders erect, the posture maintained with the aid of backboards. They were taught to curtsy and walk with the tiny, quick gliding steps de rigueur at Versailles, so that they looked like two clockwork miniatures with their panniered skirts floating over the floor, seemingly unpropelled by anything as vulgar as legs and feet. Madame, an indifferent performer on the clavichord, nevertheless strove to impart the rudiments of the instrument to her charges, neither of whom appeared to show either interest or aptitude. It didn’t occur to the governess that this lack might have something to do with her methods of teaching.

The child returned with her ink-stained fingers scrubbed red and raw by Nurse’s pumice stone. She curtsied to her governess, holding out her hands for inspection.

“It’s not like you to have dirty hands,” Madame said. “Your sister is usually the one who gets more ink on her than on the page.”

There was a snort of laughter from the other child. Madame stared suspiciously between her small charges. “Now stop that! I shall report this conduct to your father.”

The girls exchanged quick looks and sobered swiftly. They saw their father once a week for ten minutes, but there was no question whose authority ruled the schoolroom. They knew that Madame de Nevry’s knees knocked when
in the presence of Prince Michael. They could tell because her face became even more pinched and pale, and she fussed and scolded even more than usual before the weekly presentation.

“Come, it’s time to go down.” The governess hustled the children out of the door in front of her. The schoolroom was under the eaves at the very top of the house, and they proceeded down three flights of back stairs, with worn carpet and faded flock wallpaper. Stairs used only by the servants.

In the small foyer at the bottom of the last staircase, Louise took one last look at her charges, straightening a green ribbon here, a crooked fichu there. “Now, you speak only when spoken to and you confine yourselves simply to answering His Highness’s questions. Is that clear?”

The twins curtsied and murmured assent. They needed no reminding of the rules. Their father was a figure so distant and lofty in their lives, they couldn’t imagine opening their mouths in his presence without a direct order.

The governess smoothed down her own skirts, adjusted her cap, and sailed through the door leading to the grand hall of the mansion. Her charges followed, all levity vanished as they concentrated on taking little gliding steps while keeping their heads still, their backs rigid. They entered the main part of the house only on these weekly occasions, but they were trying so hard not to make a mistake, they never saw anything of their surroundings, retaining only a confused mélange of gilt and soft pretty colors, rich carpets or the click of marble beneath their tiny feet.

A liveried, powdered footman bowed as they passed. The children ignored him because they had been taught that servants were not to be acknowledged unless one was giving an order. Another footman flung open the painted paneled doors, announcing in ringing tones, “Mesdames Amelia and Sylvie. Madame de Nevry.”

The children entered before the governess, both keeping their eyes on the floor, aware of the great expanse of carpet stretching between them and the figure of their father at the
far end of the salon. Everything seemed huge in this room. A console table on the wall beside the door was at the level of their heads. The sofas and chairs were made for giants. They would have to climb up the slippery legs in order to sit in them. But since they were never expected to sit down, the question was academic.

Prince Michael beckoned them over. He remained leaning against the mantel, something nestled in the palm of his hand. He was dressed for court. His pale eyes were sharp beneath his elaborately curled wig as he took in his daughters’ appearance.

“Your report, madame.”

The children held their breaths. Sometimes Madame would list a catalogue of minor offenses, things they had either forgotten or had never even been pointed out to them. They never knew why she did this, except that it seemed to happen when she had been complaining to Nurse about how her troubles were on her. Other times, she would report an uneventful week and the prince would dismiss them with a satisfied nod.

Madame curtsied. “Amelia continues to have difficulty mastering cursive, sir, and Sylvie is sometimes reluctant to practice her music.”

Michael frowned. Was it Sylvie who wore the green ribbon or Amelia? He could never remember, although he’d decreed the identifiers himself. They both looked dutifully at the carpet, but he could see that they each held their dimpled hands tightly gripped in front of them. They seemed very small, and it astonished him how two separate individuals could be so utterly identical. Presumably, they had different characters—not that their individual personalities were particularly relevant to anything.

“Anything else?”

“A degree of unseemly levity, sir.”

The children remained motionless.

How could such stiff, expressionless little dolls show unseemly levity? It struck Prince Michael as extraordinary.
However, he had other things on his mind and decided these peccadilloes weren’t worth considering.

“I daresay their mother will correct these faults,” he stated.

Louise looked as if she’d been struck by a lightning bolt. “I … I beg your pardon, sir? Their … their mother?”

Amelia and Sylvie forgot their fear and looked up, showing their father two pairs of wide blue eyes, two rosebud mouths, two small noses. Elvira’s features. He could see nothing of himself in them, but their paternity didn’t interest him. Had they been boys, it would have been very different. But girls were simply currency and he would spend them wisely. They were bidding fair to be as beautiful as Elvira, and if they fulfilled that potential, he should have little difficulty making advantageous marriages for them.

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