Marion enjoyed her morning shopping in the Capitol much
better this time. There seemed much less pressure on her, and she found
that all of the staff in each of the fashion houses she visited knew exactly
who she was and that her presence in their establishment was an honour.
They looked at fabrics and designs for a wedding gown, of course. But
this was an important decision and she did no more than take some samples
and preliminary designs away this morning. She did order a whole selection
of new clothes for every other occasion. Everything from lingerie to a
new coat – not a lapin fur one yet. The fabrics were not yet available.
But a selection of day gowns and evening gowns, tea dresses, gloves, hats,
shoes.
They lunched at the Conservatory and the waiters addressed her as Madame
de Lœngbærrow. That surprised her.
“I’m NOT…. At least not by Gallifreyan law,” she
said to her luncheon company, Lily, Thedera and Aineytta. “I mean,
Kristoph and I were married on Earth. But that isn’t recognised
at all here. And besides we didn’t… haven’t…”
She was talking to three married women. They understood that last part.
“Quite right, too,” Aineytta told her. “It will be worth
the wait. But my son has had a hand in this. He booked the table here
for luncheon. And he gave your name as Madame de Lœngbærrow. After
your Alliance anybody who calls you anything but Lady de Lœngbærrow
will be committing a terrible breach of etiquette.”
“What will they call YOU, then,” Marion asked.
“I will still be Lady de Lœngbærrow,” Aineytta explained.
“But YOU will be THE Lady.”
“Ok…” she started to say, then remembered
something. “I should stop saying that. It is terrible Earth slang.
Kristoph always corrects me. Very gently, of course. It doesn’t
feel like a rebuke. I think he just hates that expression. I suppose he’s
right. It’s a lazy kind of word.”
“You don’t have to change who you ARE just because you are
going to acquire a title,” Lily told her. “Kristoph doesn’t
want that.” Marion noted that they used the form of his name that
she was accustomed to using. Even his mother. They seemed to have adopted
that form in her presence. She HAD learnt to pronounce his name in the
proper Gallifreyan way – Chrístõ Mian – and
she was starting to learn the full version of it – Chrístõdavõreendiamòndhærtmallõupdracœfiredelunmian
de Lœngbærrow. She would need to know that for the Alliance, after
all. But when she thought of him, when she dreamt of him, he was Kristoph.
“Quite right, too,” said the voice of her betrothed and she
turned in her seat to see him standing behind her. She stood and embraced
him fondly and he kissed her gently on the lips before sitting beside
her and ordering a large black coffee from the waiter. The ladies were
all drinking latte at the end of their meal.
“Have you enjoyed your morning in the fashion houses?” he
asked Marion, and she smiled and said yes, and meant it.
“But it will be a few days before you get to see what I am having
made,” she added. “And you can’t see the most important
dress of all for another twelve weeks.”
“Indeed, not,” he replied. “But I am sure it will outshine
every Alliance gown ever made.” Then he reached into his pocket
and gave her a beautifully wrapped package. “I had this made for
you,” he said. And she slowly unwrapped the gold paper and the box
inside and gasped with surprise to see the beautiful wristwatch. The wristband
was a gold torc, an open ended bangle, flattened where the face of the
watch was inlaid. The face of the watch was ruby red and the hands were
themselves gold. The numbers on the dial were studded with tiny diamonds.
And there were thirteen of them.
“How beautiful,” she said. “My first Gallifreyan watch.”
“It’s a strange thing,” Kristoph said. “We are
the Lords of Time, and we are born with an innate sense of time. we know
instinctively how much of it is passing. And yet, we still make clocks
and watches that measure it no more accurately than our own souls do.
Anyway, it is fitting that you should have one. A little more of the gold
and diamonds of Lœngbærrow for you to own for yourself.”
“Thank you,” she said as he slipped it onto her wrist. “It
is so sweet of you to think of that.”
“You are my Lady. You must have the best.”
“I loved you when I thought you were just a literature professor,”
she told him. “Don’t ever forget that.”
“And I loved you when you were afraid to look me in the eye and
didn’t believe that you were a beautiful woman,” he answered.
“That’s why I don’t want you to have any doubts about
that ever again.”
The waiter brought his coffee and he sipped it and watched her as she
talked with Lily about some small matter. Lace patterns, he thought it
was. And then his mother asked him what he had been doing with his morning.
“Much duller things than you have been doing,” he answered.
“I was talking with Remonte and the Castellan. They have asked me
to take up the post of Southern Magister.”
Marion noticed that Lily and Thedera and his mother were all surprised
and impressed by that. Marion wondered what it meant.
“It is a judicial position,” he explained. “Like a magistrate,
except I would preside over trials ranging from minor land disputes to
major criminal cases. I would be responsible for the dispensing of justice
on the Southern Continent.”
“Oh,” Marion said. “That’s a very high position,
then.”
“Yes, it is. I told them that for the foreseeable future I would
not return to the diplomatic corps, and so they offered me that position
instead.”
“Why not the diplomatic corps?” Marion asked.
“Because you and I need stability in our lives,” he answered.
“Diplomatic posts rarely last more than a few years. That is the
nature of them. You need to learn to call Gallifrey home, to be comfortable
here. Our children need to be born on Gallifrey, in the same house I was
born in for preference.”
“I should hope so,” Aineytta said. “I am glad there
are reasons for you to stay here. You have wandered the universe too much,
my dear son. Time for you to come home and claim your heritage. Take your
Earth Child as your wife and let me be the first to bow my head to you
and call you My Lord.”
“You DO that?” Marion asked in surprise. “To your own
son?”
“When he is Lord and Patriarch of the House of Lœngbærrow,
yes, I will,” Aineytta answered. “It is how it is. And I have
looked forward to that day since he was born. My son. The seer told me
he would be a warrior and a wanderer, but then he would come home in glory
and he has done so.”
“I don’t believe what those people say at all,” Lily
said. “I think they make it up as they go along.”
“No,” Aineytta insisted. “It is true. He HAS been a
warrior and a wanderer. And now he is here, at last, with us.”
“Well,” Marion said. “I think it is good that Kristoph
will have a job to do and so will I. Just like when we were living on
Earth and he was a teacher and I was at my studies. We will neither of
us be idle.”
“Quite right,” Thedera answered her. “Kristoph will
be Magister of Southern Gallifrey and Lord and Master of the House of
Lœngbærrow and its estates. And you will be the most popular teacher
at the school.”
“Have you thought how you will GET to the school?” Kristoph
asked her. “You realise it is nearly twenty miles away from Mount
Lœng House.”
Marion looked at him and realised he was right. She had never thought
of it. Of course, the family owned several cars. She had seen them in
the garage beside the house. And they employed at least two chauffeurs.
But she couldn't go to work as a teacher in a chauffer driven car. And
Kristoph had his own duties. Besides, she had to be herself, not dependent
on him.
“I shall have to learn to drive,” she decided. “I could
learn, couldn’t I? A hover car is… well, just a car, after
all.”
“Didn’t you learn to drive on Earth?” Lily asked her.
“I thought Earth people had cars.”
“Never got around to it,” she said. “Kristoph used to
drop me at the train station and I went up to the college on my own. Mostly
in the evenings he would meet me in the car, or in the TARDIS at the weekends
when we would go away somewhere. The idea of driving myself just never
occurred to me.”
“Well, now it has,” Kristoph said. “I can teach you.”
“No,” Marion answered with a laugh. “On
Earth they say never teach a lover to drive or you fall out of love.”
“Well, then,” Thedera settled it. “I
will teach you to drive, Marion. And when you have learnt, you can take
Kristoph away for the weekend, and he will have to learn to be a passenger.”
“Well, at least let me take you to buy a car,” Kristoph said.
“That at least is something a man should do for his wife.”
“Not mine,” Thedera answered. “He doesn’t even
know how the front part of a car works, Rassilon bless him. He has never
been anywhere without being driven. He has never understood why it is
that we women like to drive ourselves.”
“Women’s equality is still not quite there on Gallfirey,”
Kristoph explained to Marion with a conspiratorial wink. “I suspect
there may be a revolution one day, when the women will storm the capitol
by car and capture all our chauffeurs and we men will be helpless.”
Marion laughed at the idea. So did everyone at the table. She didn’t
notice that people at other tables looked around wondering what the joke
was. Kristoph did. He heard them asking each other who the young woman
was at the centre of all the joyfulness and being told that she was the
wife-to-be of the Lœngbærrow heir. And he heard at least one of them
say that they must invite her to luncheon, or tea, or to the soirée
they had planned.
Yes, Kristoph thought. Just as it ought to be.
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