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"Well, Mr. Fruitricks... it would seem, and I offer this out of pure scientific deductive reasoning, that you are in-as it is said amongst your people-a spot."
"I'm sure I am in no such thing."
"As you insist. And yet, even the crates we are sitting on-"
"Crates are common on a barge."
"Come, sir. I am also a soldier, though I should hardly need to be to recognize so famous a seal as the one upon your seat."
The man looked awkwardly between his legs. The crate was stamped with a simple coat of arms in black-three running hounds, with crossed cannon barrels below.
"Are you insolent?" the man bleated.
"The only question that matters," continued Svenson mildly, "is which member of the Xonck family you serve."
"YOU DID not say what happened to your head," said Mr. Fruitricks sullenly.
"I am sure I mentioned luggage."
"You wander in a forest without any possessions? Without hat or coat-"
"Again, sir, all of this was left on the train."
"I do not believe you!"
"What else would I be doing here?"
Svenson gestured at the trees with exasperation. The ca.n.a.l had curved more deeply into the park, and when Svenson looked through a small break in the trees, there was no longer any sign of the track bed. The pain in his arm was pulsing again, the disturbing overlay of images seeping up through his thoughts like bubbles of corruption in swamp water-the cenotaph, the fossil, Eloise... Svenson felt dizzy. He nodded to the stove.
"Would there be any more tea?"
"There would not," replied Mr. Fruitricks, whose mood had soured even more. He sniffed at Svenson like a thin, suspicious dog. "You seem unwell."
"The... ah..." The Doctor motioned vaguely toward the back of his head. "Blow... bag... hitting me-"
"You will not vomit on my barge. It has new bra.s.s fittings."
"Wouldn't dream of it," rasped Svenson, his throat tightening. He stood. The barge-master, who had approached without any warning at all, caught his shoulder and steadied him from pitching over the side. Svenson looked down at Fruitricks' crate.
"That has been opened," he said.
"The Prince would not travel without you," snarled Fruitricks, petulantly throwing his cigar into the water. "You know where he is, where they all are, what has happened! Who has attacked them? Why have I heard nothing? Why have they said nothing to the Palace?"
The questions flew at Svenson with such speed and invective that each one caused him to blink. His tongue was thick, but he knew that the situation ought not to be beyond him. Fruitricks was exactly the sort of desperate man-officious courtiers, ambitious minions-he had spent years doggedly manipulating in the service of the Macklenburg court.
The sky spun, as if a very large bird had silently swept past. Doctor Svenson lay on his back. He squeezed his eyes tightly, embracing the dark.
SVENSON WOKE slowly, his entire body stiff and chilled, and attempted to lift his arm. He could not. He craned his aching head-which felt the size of a moderate sweet melon-and saw the arm had been bound to a bolt on the deck with hemp rope. His other arm was tied as well, and both legs lashed together at the ankle and the knee: he lay cruciform between two of the canvas-wrapped objects. The sky was empty and white. He closed his eyes again and did his best to concentrate. The barge was no longer moving. He heard no footstep, call, or conversation. He opened his eyes and turned to the nearest piece of cargo. From within the canvas Svenson smelled indigo clay.
The hammer was gone from his belt. He brought his legs up and bent forward. The knot binding his knees came well within the reach of his teeth. The Doctor's naval service did not call for any particular knowledge of sailing, yet he had often found his interest piqued by older members of the crews he tended, and the earlier, vanished world those men had known. His awkward but honest attempts at friends.h.i.+p were often met with some practical demonstration-easier than conversation for all concerned-and in more than one instance this had involved knots and ropework. With some satisfaction, biting at the fraying hemp like a crow at a sinewy carca.s.s, Svenson realized he knew both the knot in question-what Seaman Unger called a "Norwegian horse"-and the simplest way to pluck it apart.
With his knees free and his legs beneath him, he could bend to reach his right hand. The knot was the same-he had no high opinion of his captors' creativity-and, a few moments aside for spitting out hemp fiber, his hand was quickly free, then the second hand, and at last his ankles. Doctor Svenson crouched at a gap between the swathed pieces of cargo, working the stiffness from his wrists.
The barge was tied at a dockside of freshly cut timber, and the road that led from the water was recently enough laid to show an even depth of gravel across its width. He saw no one on the landing. He quickly untied one of the canvas flaps, uncovering a gleaming steel foot pierced with empty bolt holes. Svenson reached into his pocket for a match, then stopped as his fingers found an empty pocket. His cigarette case, his filthy handkerchief, the matches... all missing. With a surge of rage at being plundered, the Doctor caught the canvas with both hands and pulled it away from the machinery. A bra.s.s-bound column of steel, studded like jewels in a monarch's scepter with dials and gauges, liquid-filled chambers and copper coil. Svenson attacked the tall bundle to his other side: an examination table dangling black hose, like the legs of five wasps all over-laid onto a single sickening thorax, each hose end tipped with a ring of blue gla.s.s. He recalled the strange imprints on Angelique's body. This cargo had been removed from the great cathedral chamber at Harschmort.
THE ROAD narrowed between natural hedgerows of thick underbrush, and so the Doctor nearly missed it, rising above the trees: a dark curling plume against the white sky. Only then did he notice the rough path, simply made by a large man pus.h.i.+ng his way through the foliage. He looked back toward the barge. Could it perhaps be a watch fire? But why would a watchman have set himself so far from the cargo? He took the time to dig out his monocle and screw it into place, and looked down the road.
The road curved, he realized. From the barge one could not see to its farthest end. But from the curve Svenson could see both behind to the barge and ahead to a distant white-brick building. Feeling suddenly exposed-was someone watching with a telescope?-he darted off the road. At the trees he sank to a crouch, peering through the leaves of a weeping beech at a ring of stones and a smoking knot of blackened wood. The fire had been allowed to gutter out. On a blanket next to the fire pit lay a bottle, a checked handkerchief containing what looked like bread and meat, and a flat silver square... his cigarette case.
Next to it lay the purple stone, a pencil stub, coins, his handkerchief... and something he did not recognize, reflecting light in a different way than the case. Where was the man who had taken them?
Svenson crept carefully forward, toward the fire, and s.n.a.t.c.hed up his things, hesitating at the new object, which took him utterly aback. It was a blue gla.s.s card, exactly like the one he had found in the Prince's flower vase-the first glimpse of his charge's entanglement with the Cabal. The Doctor had later found another, on the body of Arthur Trapping, but both those other cards were long lost. What was another card now doing amongst his things?
Someone had slipped a blue gla.s.s card into his pocket without his knowing-but when? And who... for who could have such a thing? The cards were created by the Comte-enticing tokens to seduce potential adherents, each inscribed with the events of a few lurid moments ... each as much a trap as a first exquisite taste of opium.
Svenson frowned. He had not had the purple stone in his pocket either. He had given it back to Eloise on the train...
He was an idiot-it was a message! She had tried to communicate with him! If only he had examined his pockets at the cottage! What if the blue card explained exactly what he ought to have done? What if the Contessa had forced Eloise- What if he had doubted her wrongly? What if it was not too late?
He grazed the cool surface of the gla.s.s with one fingertip, and at once felt an icy pressure at his mind. He licked his lips- THE DOCTOR spun at a noise on the other side of the fire. He stuffed the card into his tunic and s.n.a.t.c.hed up a piece of unburnt wood. The sound came from behind an alder tree. He advanced cautiously. A pair of legs, half-visible in the underbrush... the black-capped barge-master, the kerchief round his neck soaked with blood and already a dark locus for flies. Svenson took a clasp knife from the man's belt, snapping it open. He s.h.i.+fted the piece of wood into his other hand, feeling a little foolish, as if he were aping a true, battling man of action.
Another noise, now near the fire. While Svenson had been examining the body, the killer had quite silently circled around.
Svenson forced himself to walk-no longer caring for silence- directly toward the fire. A twig tugged insolently across his ear. Some one was there.
On the blanket, one hand picking at the food in the checkered handkerchief, the other tucked out of sight to her side, knelt the Contessa di Lacquer-Sforza. She met his arrival with a mocking smirk.
"Doctor Svenson. I confess, you are no one I expected in this particular wood-apart, one supposes, from symmetry-and yet having seen you approach so earnestly..."
Her dress was of poor-quality silk, dyed deep maroon. Her black boots were smeared with mud, and above the left one he could see her white calf. She swept her hand across the blanket, as if to welcome him, indicating the exact spot where the blue card had been set, and spoke again, careful as any cobra.
"Will you not sit? Such old acquaintances like ourselves must have so very much to talk about-we should scarcely notice if it were the end of the world."
Seven. Cinders.
AS A GIRL Miss Temple had once, after insisting upon it for a steady hour, tagging along at his side as he surveyed the fields from the raised high road, been given a puff from the pipe of Mr. Groft, the overseer of her father's plantation. She had immediately become sick- realizing the puff was not likely to be repeated, the young Miss Temple had made it a mighty one-dropping to her knees as the overseer spat oaths above her, for if her father found out he would be sacked. She had stumbled back to her rooms with a splitting pain behind her eyes and a reeking taste that would not leave her mouth no matter how she scrubbed it with lemon slices. Mr. Groft indeed was sacked, but that was the following month and had involved improprieties with house girls, three of whom had been promptly sold (including a sweet fat thing, always kind but whose name Miss Temple had since forgotten), for her father's authority brooked no challenge whatsoever.
It was some years later, preparatory to her voyage to the continent, when Miss Temple, goaded by that same iron cagework of rule, found herself in her father's study. Despite her imminent departure he had ridden to the far side of the island to inspect a new planting and was not expected to return before she sailed, simplifying everything for them both. She had wandered through the house and along the paths of the garden and the open balconies, smelling the sweet, musky fields. She knew she might never return. But in the study, sitting in her father's large leather chair-the horsehair stuffing clumped and flat and kept this way precisely because her father believed a lack of ease sharpened the mind-Miss Temple was suddenly restless, and looked to the closed study door, wondering if she ought to lock it even before she formed any sense of what she was going to do.
One of her hands had idly traced a path, finger by finger, up the inside of her thigh. Despite a fullness of tension in her flesh, not yet demanding but palpable, she pulled her hand away, for she did not choose-since it seemed that she had wandered now pointedly to the heart of her father's domain-to so expend her desires. Instead, she opened the cedar box of cigars, wrinkling her nose. With a shocking and scandalous presumption she took one out and bit off the end, just as she had seen her father do on hundreds of occasions-and she knew, had she been male, this would have been a common occurrence, even such a thing as to bring two men together. She picked the bitter flakes from her mouth and wiped them onto the cracked leather of the chair, then leaned to the candle on the desk top. She puffed four times before the thing took fire, gagged, spat out the smoke, and puffed twice more, swallowing the smoke with a cough. Her eyes watered. After another puff she erupted with a hacking that would not stop. The awful taste was back in her mouth. But she continued to inhale, determined, until there was an inch of tightly coiled grey ash at the end. Miss Temple wiped her lips on her sleeve, feeling dizzy.
It was enough, her edge of restlessness blunted by disgust-with both the tobacco and her own desire. She set the smoking cigar on the metal ashtray and collected her candle, walking unsteadily from the room-uncaring whether a servant would clear it away before her father returned or if he would find the evidence of her invasion himself... a last fittingly oblique communication between them.
THE FOULNESS of these old memories was but a childish shadow to what she had so foolishly just opened herself. Miss Temple lay on her back beyond the gardens of Harschmort, panting hard, staring up without registering the slightest detail of cloud or sky, insensible to any cries that might have echoed beyond the hedgerows, to gunshots, and to time. She reached up slowly, as if the air had become gelatinous with dread, and touched her dripping mouth. Her fingers were wet with saliva and a clotted string of black bile. With a concentrated effort she turned her head and saw, gleaming where it had fallen, the blue gla.s.s book. She swallowed, her throat raw from retching, and sank back again, feeling the stalks of tall gra.s.s poking at her hair, her will sapped, with all the sickness in her mind rising again like a flooding mire.
Since looking into the gla.s.s book in the Contessa's rooms, Miss Temple had been determined that its insistent, delirious memories not overwhelm her, knowing such an initial surrender could easily stretch into a span of days. But Miss Temple's disapproval of a world so defined was primarily fearful, for such surrender frightened her very much. Miss Temple did not consider herself as priggish-she did not tremble at her own natural appet.i.tes-yet she knew some pleasures were different. When she imagined them inside her mind, she imagined her mind stained.
But the second book changed all of this. It had colored Miss Temple's thoughts to the same extreme degree as the first-or recolored them, overlaying every vivid impulse ash grey. The Contessa's book had been compiled from countless lives, while the book on the gra.s.s contained the memories of a single man-but his memories had been harvested at the very moment of death, infecting each instant of his captured experience with a toxic, corrupting, nauseating dread. It was not unlike the pageants one saw carved on medieval churches- lines of people, from princesses to peasants to popes, trailing hand in hand after Death, the trappings of their lives exposed as vanity. Scenes of l.u.s.t-and what scenes they were!-became disgusting charades of rotting meat, sumptuous banquets became fas.h.i.+oned whole from human filth, every strain of sweet, sweet music became re-strung to the coa.r.s.e calling of blood-fed crows. Miss Temple had never imagined such despair, such utter hopelessness, such bottomless bankruptcy. The first book's bright empire of sensation, its unstable riot beneath her skin, had been mirrored by bitter futility, with the acrid dust that was every person's inheritance.
But Miss Temple understood why Francis Xonck had chosen this book to keep. How quick his thoughts must have flown just to see the possibility, to seize an empty gla.s.s book. He had preserved in its unfeeling depths-the freezing gla.s.s no doubt pressed to the dying man's face-all the alchemical knowledge of the Comte d'Orkancz.
She shoved her body onto one elbow, pursing her lips with a twinge of irritation that hinted at recovery, and looked over her shoulder at the book, whose surface had taken on a satisfied glow. Miss Temple doubted there was any person-even Xonck, even Chang-strong enough to actually immerse themselves in its contents without being utterly overwhelmed. Mrs. Marchmoor's hand had pa.s.sed into it without harm... but what did that mean? The gla.s.s woman may have learned the book contained the Comte-why else would she have gone to Harschmort?-but if she had been able to absorb the actual contents of the Comte's mind, then she would have had no need for Miss Temple and no reason to seek the Comte's tools and machines. Miss Temple recalled the three gla.s.s women ransacking the minds of everyone in the Harschmort ballroom-invisibly pa.s.sing everything they saw to the Comte... it only made sense that he had forbidden them to enter his own mind. Could that taboo extend to his mind when encased in the book? Mrs. Marchmoor had come to Harschmort to insert the book into another body-one the gla.s.s woman believed she could control. But that must mean she had no idea of the taint, the corruption coloring all of its contents.
And what of Francis Xonck? He had rescued the book from the sinking airs.h.i.+p, his own body a sickening ruin, in hopes to reverse his condition. Had he looked into it? Miss Temple did not think so. Had not Xonck come to Harschmort-just like Mrs. Marchmoor-to find the necessary machines to open the book and thus save his life?
Again Miss Temple wondered who had set the fires, foiling them both.
SHE CURLED her legs beneath her and peeked over the wall. The actual clearing where Xonck and Mrs. Marchmoor had struggled was far beyond view, but there were no signs of anyone searching in the garden. With a fretful grimace-as if she were managing an especially wicked-looking cane spider-Miss Temple carefully scooped the gla.s.s book back into the canvas sack. Harschmort was surrounded by miles of fen country. She was alone, hungry, and her appearance would have dismayed a fishwife. Miss Temple wound the top of the sack around her palm and pushed her way through the high gra.s.s. She had no idea of cross-country escapes and pursuing soldiers, but what she knew quite well were large houses run by servants, riddled with ways to pa.s.s unseen.
Near the stone wall's end lay a collection of low sheds. She saw no one, and this was strange, for even with the family not present, routine upkeep of Harschmort's house and grounds ought to necessitate all manner of effort, and Miss Temple was confident-unless she had discovered an epidemic of s.h.i.+rking-that these sheds were a hive of everyday activity. Yet now they seemed to be abandoned.
She scampered quickly between the sheds to the nearest gla.s.s double doors of the house. The lock had been broken. This must be where Francis Xonck had forced his way in. Miss Temple slipped into the ballroom. She had last seen it full of the Cabal's minions, dressed in finery and wearing masks, cheering their masters off to Macklenburg. Now the great wooden floor and the line of bright windows were coated with dust from the fire. She crossed quickly and found herself in the very same ante-room where the Contessa had licked the port stains from her eyes. Miss Temple s.h.i.+vered, stopping where she was. The memory of the Contessa's tongue led directly to the freight car, the woman's lips on her own... and to Miss Temple's spiraling shame, she could not stop her mind from plowing on. At once those kisses bloomed like a gus.h.i.+ng artery into a hundred more, kisses of all kinds between too many different people to separate, erupting from the Contessa's book. Miss Temple stuffed one hand in her mouth, the tips of her body ablaze, aghast at how quickly she had been so overwhelmed. On desperate impulse, she opened her reeling senses to the second book, to the bilious tang of the Comte's despair. As it collided with her pleasure, Miss Temple lurched into the cover of a decorative philodendron, where she crouched and rocked helplessly, hugging her knees.
In time, both waves ebbed away. She heard shouting in another part of the house. Miss Temple staggered up. In the corridor lay the older servant, toppled by Mrs. Marchmoor, his face still dark with blood. The voices were far away and the hallways too conducive to echo for her to place them. She crept past the fallen man to what looked like a painted wall panel and found the inset hook to pull it open, revealing a narrow maid's staircase. She climbed past two landings before leaving it to enter a thickly carpeted corridor with a low ceiling, almost as if she had boarded an especially luxurious s.h.i.+p-though she knew this to be an architectural remnant of Harschmort Prison. With a spark of antic.i.p.ation Miss Temple padded toward Lydia Vandaariff's suite of rooms.
SHE Pa.s.sED quietly through the Lady of Harschmort's private parlor, attiring room, bedchamber, and finally to her astonis.h.i.+ngly s.p.a.cious closet. The walls were lined with hanging garments and tight-stuffed shelving-enough clothing for a regiment of ladies. Satisfied no one was there-she had feared a lingering maid-Miss Temple lifted the chair from the heiress' writing desk, and, recalling Chang's precautions at the Boniface, wedged it fast under the doork.n.o.b.
She returned to the closet, plucking at her dress-not intending any commentary on the late Mrs. Jorgens but more than sick of it, the smell of her own sweat having permeated the fabric. Miss Temple dislodged the final b.u.t.tons with impatience and pulled it over her head and then balled the thing up to throw across the room.
She stopped. As she wadded the fabric... on the side of the bodice, along the seam... she stepped closer to the light and removed a sc.r.a.p of parchment paper torn to a neat square and folded over. She wondered if it was from Mrs. Jorgens-a shopping list or love note- for the writing first struck her as an unschooled scrawl. But that was wrong... not so much a scrawl as its author was utterly careless of how it appeared. As she thought back to the littered ruin of the suite at the St. Royale, such an intemperate script for the Contessa di Lacquer-Sforza made perfect sense.
My Dear Celeste, Forgive my Departure. Were I to stay I must eat you to the Bones.
Islands are Precious Domains. This is my way of saying Do Not Follow. That is your Choice now, as it was mine before you. There is no Shame in Retreat.
If you Ignore good Advice, I will see you Again. Our Business is not Finished.
RLS.
Miss Temple folded the note, then unfolded it and read it again, sucking her lip at each overly dramatic capital, sensing that even in this disturbing little note (and how long had it taken the woman to find that pocket, she wondered, imagining those nimble fingers searching across her body) the Contessa's foremost goal had been to find some measure of delight. It was as if, in a mist of woodland air that anyone else would find refres.h.i.+ng, the Contessa di Lacquer-Sforza would locate some extra thread of scent (a flower or a rotting stag-or flowers growing from a stag's carca.s.s) so the tips of her black hair might twist another curl.
Miss Temple did not consider herself an object of change-she had always been the same bundle of impulses and moods, however unpredictable these might appear to others-but now she found herself surprised, in the very midst of her anger, by the sudden memory of the Contessa's gashed shoulder, and an urge to draw her own tongue along its ragged, coppery length. The problem was not the impulse itself, but the necessary connection to another person.
Miss Temple had become very accustomed to the fact that, in her life, almost no one liked her. She was served, flattered, distrusted, disapproved of, coveted, envied, despised, but she had never, with the illusory exceptions of certain servants when she was a girl, enjoyed any particular friends.h.i.+p. The closest she had come was her fiance, Roger Bas...o...b.., but that had been a mere three months sparked by physical hunger (and had turned out horribly). She thought of Chang and Svenson, even Eloise... but friends.h.i.+p was hardly the same thing as loyalty or duty. Would the two men die for her? She had no doubt. Did they like her? A nut-hard part of Miss Temple's heart would not believe it-and she could have easily convinced herself the question did not matter, save for the Contessa's disorienting attentions in the freight car, no matter how mercenary those attentions undoubtedly had been.
But then, for she could not help it, Miss Temple read through the note again, this time fixing on the word "choice," and the very intriguing phrase that followed it, "as it was mine before you"... she had never heard even one reference to the Contessa's life before, nor entertained the notion that there was a before for such a creature. Miss Temple's throat went dry to imagine what the Contessa could have possibly been like as a girl. And what choice could any girl have made to become that woman?
And how dare she suggest that Miss Temple herself faced anything resembling the same crossroads?
Suitably affronted to set the paper back down, Miss Temple turned her attentions elsewhere. Lydia Vandaariff's closet had a metal hip-bath and a very large Chinese jug of water. To either side of a tall mirror stood elegant tables, three-tiered like cakes and entirely cluttered with pins, ribbons, bottles, powders, paints, and perfumes. She tore off the corset and ill-fitting s.h.i.+ft she had worn since her bath in Lina's kitchen and then, quite determined to be clean once more, sat naked on the carpet to unlace her boots.
THOUGH THE water was unheated, there was still a splendid array of sponges and soaps, and Miss Temple took the opportunity to scrub the whole of her body without any impediment of time. She must leave Harschmort eventually, but did it not make sense to wait until nightfall-a decision which, once made, allowed her hours? Washed and toweled at some leisure, she entered into a scrupulous investigation of Lydia's wide array of scents. While Miss Temple could not but view so many choices as emblematic of Lydia's essential lack of character, she was nevertheless curious whether her own sensible routine might be improved. Out of deliberately minded perversity, she settled upon a concoction of frangipani flowers, the Contessa's signature scent, placing a drop behind each ear, on each wrist, and then dragging one wet fingertip from the join of her collarbones down between her b.r.e.a.s.t.s.
Though Lydia had been taller than she, Miss Temple found several dresses that fit and one in particular that would allow her to run. This was a murky shade of violet that went quite well with both her boots (she was committed to her boots) and with her hair. That the fabric was dark meant it would not so eagerly show the dirt her actions must acquire, that it was sensible wool meant she would not be cold-practical insights that pleased Miss Temple very much.
Yet before the dress came an exacting selection of undergarments, and here, more than anywhere, the late Miss Vandaariff had not skimped. The possibilities presented to Miss Temple became quite literally overwhelming, as each new garment opened lurid implications- a veritable advent calendar of wickedness-in her mind. She was forced to pause, eyes open, cheeks flushed, and thighs tight together, until the fluttering tide had pa.s.sed. With trembling fingers she selected silk replacements for her long-lost little pants and bodice, then petticoats, and a corset she put on backwards, tightened as well as she could, and then inched around until the laces were behind her. This done, Miss Temple sat at Lydia's mirror and did her steady best, availing herself freely of pins, ribbon, and a tortoisesh.e.l.l comb, to strip the knots from her hair and restore the sausage curls she a.s.sociated with her own accustomed presentation. She was not her maid Marthe- and had she been asked, she might well have admitted it-but she possessed some skill with her own hair (and since it had before been such a fright, the merest measure of success was welcome). Another half an hour slipped past before Miss Temple was at last presentable, the canvas sack exchanged for an elegant leather travel case, the gla.s.s book inside doubly wrapped within two silk pillowcases.
She knew she was dawdling, to keep away from outright danger and to indulge herself in the luxury to which she had been for far too long denied. She had even, as she washed herself and patted powder along her limbs, enjoyed the sensual tension of the Contessa's book, hovering like a cloud of golden bees just beyond reach, testing the limits of what she might allow and when she must bite the inside of her mouth to quell the sweetening tides. But then she came aware of another strain-an impatience with the petty vanity of her toilette- and she watched with fascination, both within the emotion and apart enough to see it, as the impatience grew into anger-with herself, with the luxury around her, with everything the useless life of Lydia Vandaariff had stood for. She shot home the latches on the case and picked it up. Without any thought but bitter disapproval, Miss Temple's hand lashed out at an especially over-glazed Chinese ginger jar and boxed it from its stand. The jar broke on the floor like a disconsolate egg, and she smiled. She stopped and s.n.a.t.c.hed up another just like it. With grim satisfaction Miss Temple hurled the thing all the way back into the closet's mahogany door, the completeness of its destruction the exact expression of sharp justice she had desired.
MISS TEMPLE, now unsettled and sour, retraced her path down the corridor. If she could suppress the gla.s.s books' active interference with her thoughts, she could not expunge the fact of their encroachment-nor pretend that suppression was any lasting victory. As she walked, she sensed the prison's bones behind the paint and powder of Harschmort's splendor. Was she any different? Just as the lurid memories from the Contessa's book mocked Miss Temple's most secret desires, the Comte's book made clear its own web of grim connection-that death was shot through her past, her family, her wealth, and in her every morsel of anger or condescension or contempt.
She glanced into a mirror on the wall, its heavy gold frame carved with impossibly lush peonies, the blossoms blown open in a way that made Miss Temple uncomfortable. But what caused her to stop before the gla.s.s and rise to her toes was the pallor of her face. There had been mirrors in Lydia's chamber, and she had naturally glanced at her own body as she bathed-the shape of her legs, the appearance of her bosom, the tightly curled hair between her legs when it was wet and soaped-but this was a way of looking and not seeing. Miss Temple poked a finger into the skin below her eye and took it away-there was a brief impression of pink where the fingertip had been, but it faded at once, leaving her complexion waxy and drawn. She bared her teeth and was distressed to see the edges of her gums were red as the flesh of a fresh-cut strawberry.
MISS TEMPLE peeked over the railing of the main staircase, her newly set curls hanging over her face, and saw a pa.s.sing line of bright red uniforms far below. There had been no soldiers accompanying their coach, which meant others had arrived. Did this mean Colonel Aspiche? She could not descend to the foyer if there was anyone who might recognize her. She quickly darted down one flight, just to the next landing. She would cut along this hallway, stay out of sight, and find a servant's staircase to the ground. But when Miss Temple hurried around the first corner she nearly collided with a Captain of Dragoons.
He was fair-haired with an elegantly curled moustache and side whiskers. It was the officer she'd seen in the corridor of Staelmaere House, sick and tottering after his audience with the Duke. Behind him in a line, the oldest holding hands with the Captain, were three primly dressed children.
"Good afternoon," said Miss Temple, bobbing in a tardy sketch of a curtsey.
"Closer to evening, I think," replied the Captain. His voice was soft but sharp, like a talking fox in a tale.
"And who are all of you?" asked Miss Temple (who did not appreciate foxes), smiling past the officer at the three children. She did not especially appreciate children either, but could be kind to them when they were silent. All three watched her with wide, solemn eyes.
"I am Charles," said the middle child, a ginger-haired boy in a brushed black-velvet suit. He sniffed. "Master Charles Trapping."
"h.e.l.lo, Charles." Miss Temple loathed the boy at once.
"I am Francesca," said the oldest, a girl with hair near the color of Miss Temple's own. Her chin was small and her eyes too round, but her dress was a shade of lilac Miss Temple very much approved of. The girl's voice was low, as if she was not at all confident of her surroundings but as the oldest needed to a.s.sert precedence over her brash younger brother. Francesca turned to the third, a boy of perhaps three years, also in a velvet suit, holding in one hand the remains of a chocolate biscuit. "That is Ronald."
"h.e.l.lo, Ronald."
Ronald looked at his feet in silence.
"Who are you?" demanded Charles.
Miss Temple smiled. "I am a dear friend of Miss Lydia Vandaariff, whose house you are in. She has journeyed to Macklenburg to be married."
"Did she forget something?" Charles pointed to her case.
"She did not," replied Miss Temple. "I did."
"Don't you have servants to fetch it for you?"
Miss Temple smiled icily, wanting to strike him. "One does not simply send servants to Harschmort House. We had been celebrating Lydia's engagement-"
"My mother has a case just like that," said Francesca. "For her silver bracelets."
"Is that full of silver bracelets?" the officer asked Miss Temple. His gaze gently ranged across her body. He negligently met her eyes and smiled, but the smile seemed unconnected to his thoughts.
"What I forgot," Miss Temple replied with a winning smile, "was a set of combs and brushes. As a treat, Lydia's closest friends all prepared her for the gala evening. But now I need them back again."
"Haven't you a maid?" asked Charles.
"I have as many maids as I like," snapped Miss Temple. "But one is accustomed to a particular degree of bristle. I'm sure your sister understands." She smiled at Francesca, but the girl was rubbing her eye.