It was snowing hard, and had been doing so all the previous
night and all through the day. The extensive gardens of the Gallifreyan
Embassy on Ventura were a winter wonderland. The bare trees were silver-grey
against the blanket of white.
Marion and Rika looked out of the floor length window in the main drawing
room. the snow was pretty, but it was giving them a certain amount of
anxiety, too.
“We could be snowed in,” Rika noted mournfully. “We
don’t have hover cars on Ventura. And even a sleigh conversion would
have problems if it gets any deeper.”
“It won’t be a problem,” Marion pointed out. “Kristoph
can take us to the palace by TARDIS.”
“Yes, of course he can,” Rika acknowledged. “Silly me,
I still haven’t learnt to take TARDIS travel for granted. Caretakers
don’t use them, of course. They are expensive to own. And Remonte
usually prefers the diplomatic shuttle unless we need to get somewhere
quickly.”
“I take TARDIS travel far too MUCH for granted,” Marion admitted.
“I am spoiled that way. Especially just now with the Portal still
out of action. I hope we won’t need it, though. I would rather travel
the ordinary way to an event like we have tonight.”
“Remonte won’t want me to go at all if the weather worsens,”
Rika added. “He is terribly protective of me lately. He would carry
me everywhere if he could.”
“You’re having his baby,” Marion reminded her. “Of
course, his only thought is for you.” She smiled warmly at her sister
in law. She looked positively blooming in every sense of that cliché.
At twenty-five weeks she was wearing distinctly maternity style gowns.
Every time Remonte looked her way he smiled a special smile for her.
“All the same, he has to let me leave the drawing room from time
to time. I cannot spend the next eleven months as his virtual prisoner.”
She sighed softly and looked at the falling snow again. “Last winter
Remy and I built snowmen out there on the lawn. He won’t even think
of it this year.”
“But next year, you can build them for your son. And the year after
he will be able to help. Isn’t that worth waiting for?”
“Yes, it is,” Rika admitted. She put her hand on the small
bulge beneath her gown. “I can feel him kicking. It feels wonderful.”
Marion smiled gladly for her sister in law and tried not to think sadly
of when she had reached this stage in her pregnancy. She knew exactly
how Rika felt about those first kicks before her hopes had been cruelly
dashed.
But this was no time or place for regrets. She looked around as their
husbands, the esteemed ambassador and the Lord High President, came into
the drawing room. The two men had affairs of state to concern them even
on what was a national holiday on Ventura – New Year’s Day.
They were still talking about the appointment of a consul on the newly
colonised Ventura II as they sat before the huge open fire. Marion and
Rika came to sit with them and they changed the subject to the gowns their
ladies proposed to wear for the ball, later.
“As if either of you REALLY care about ballgowns,” Rika teased
her husband. “You’re just pretending to be interested.”
“I admit I have always been more interested in you taking the ballgown
off at the end of the evening,” Remonte answered with a wicked smile.
Marion and Rika both pretended to be shocked by his comment. Kristoph
said nothing, but he was laughing with his eyes.
“You will both comport yourself as gentlemen of Gallifrey outside
of this private drawing room,” Marion told them. “That is
if we are not snowed in, anyway. I do hope not. I have looked forward
to tonight’s celebrations.”
“Be assured,” Kristoph said. “I have made arrangements.
“Even the deepest snow will not prevent us from attending the New
Year gala as special guests of the Crown Prince, and we shall travel in
grand style.”
He would give no further clue to their travelling plans, and they couldn’t
prise anything more out of him before it was time to change into their
evening gowns. Since the men were keeping secrets, they kept some of their
own. When they emerged from their dressing chambers they were already
wearing full length lapin fur coats with thick hoods over their hairstyles.
They were surprised, though, when Remonte led them upstairs rather than
down to the front door. Clambering single file up the narrow steps to
a skylight onto the flat roof of the ambassador’s residence was
not something Marion and Rika expected to do in their evening dresses
and court shoes.
“I didn’t even know there WAS a way onto the roof,”
Marion said as Kristoph held her hand on the snow-covered surface. Remonte
held even more tightly to Rika as they walked towards the parapet. Then
she gasped as she saw their mode of transport for tonight, bobbing in
the night air.
“I had a word with the Ambassador from Orissa III,” Kristoph
explained. “He was happy to accompany us to the ball in the official
Orissan State Carriage.”
The Orissan State Carriage was an elegantly carved and painted gondolier,
suspended beneath a silver cigar shaped balloon. On Orissa, where the
weather was always warm, the four male Orissans who rowed it through the
air would have been shirtless. Here on Ventura they wore leather jerkins
with slits through which they could unfurl their wings. The Orissan Ambassador,
with his own wings hidden beneath his elaborate robes greeted them formally
as they stepped aboard. They settled onto comfortable, fur-lined seats
before the rowers began their work. The air was cold, but they were warmly
wrapped, and the Orissan Ambassador gave them a hot drink that had the
bite of apple brandy but not the alcoholic properties.
Flying gently above the rooftops in a balloon powered boat was a surreal
experience even for seasoned TARDIS travellers. Marion thought of the
film ‘The Snowman’ and the song that accompanied the flying
montage stayed in her head as she looked down on snow-covered roofs and
gardens, first in the affluent part of the city where the ambassadorial
residences were mansions in acres of garden, then across more ordinary
streets where houses were side by side in ribbons of rooftops interspersed
with tracts of gardens. Almost every home had a stable in the garden.
Venturans had motorised transport when it was needed – for emergency
vehicles and long distance travel, but for every day travel they would
hitch up a horse to a carriage or cart - or in this weather, a sled or
sleigh of some description. She could see many such vehicles on the snow-covered
roads below, all heading towards the same destination.
There were two parties going on at the Venturan Royal Palace. The esteemed
representatives of Gallifrey were invited to the Crown Prince’s
own grand ball, of course, as were the ambassadors from all the worlds
that gregarious and friendly Ventura had diplomatic ties with. But there
was also a huge marquee in the grounds where the ordinary people of the
Capital were invited to feast and dance. Great pits full of burning coals
were dug, despite the snow, and whole ox were roasted for the feasting.
Their brightness, and the glow from torches lit around the field, were
a guiding beacon as the balloon gondola dropped lower and came to a halt
by the grand balcony at the front of the royal palace. Below, elaborate
sleighs with teams of glossy horses and strings of jingling bells were
arriving with the other honoured guests who looked up in surprise at the
unusual arrival of the Orissan and Gallifreyan guests. Men in the livery
of the Venturan royal household hurried to help them out of the boat and
onto the balcony, and from there into the great ballroom. Their entrance
was from the gallery rather than the grand door, but they were announced
formally by the heralds and presented to the Crown Prince and Princess
in due course.
That was something that used to terrify both Marion and Rika, neither
having been born to such a life. But Rika was a firm friend of the Crown
Princess, by now. She, too, was with child, and they had plenty to talk
about. Marion found her own friend, Lady Margery Stevenson, the wife of
the Earth Ambassador. They always had plenty to catch up on when they
met.
Of course, there was dancing. The Crown Princess and Rika sat out all
but the first set, so Crown Prince Rubein danced with all of the ladies
as well as the hermaphrodite Alpha Centaurans and the gendermorph Haolstromnian
Ambassador and her spouse. Remonte did his share of mingling, too, and
was the toast of the whole ballroom when he performed a magnificent tango
with the Ambassador from Mizzone, a planet where there was only one gender
– male. His spouse, a handsome young man, was also sitting out most
of the dancing with Rika and Princess Ria, for the very same reason.
“It’s a wondrous universe,” Lady Margery commented about
that to Marion.
“My brother-in-law dances the tango very well,” Marion remarked.
“You know, the tango was originally performed by male couples,”
Lord Stevenson said. “In the high class brothels of Argentina, men
waiting to see the most coveted ladies would dance with each other to
impress them, like peacocks putting on a fine show for the peahen.”
“His lordship knows these things because he is a history scholar,”
Lady Margery said with a soft laugh. “Not because he has any special
personal experience of Argentinean brothels.”
“Naturally,” Marion replied.
A little before midnight – fourteen o’clock in local time
– the Crown Prince led his guests out of the warm ballroom. They
donned their winter coats again and the ladies swapped court shoes for
fur lined boots. Then they went to join the ordinary people outside. That
is to say that the ordinary people stood around a roped off area while
the Prince’s guests sat in a special grandstand. They were all in
place when the great bells of the Venturan Cathedral sounded the hour
and as it did, fireworks coloured the sky with false but brilliant stars
while a huge bonfire shaped like a pagoda was lit. The people, led by
the Crown Prince and Princess and all of their court, made a gesture towards
the bonfire as if they were throwing something onto it. The ambassadors
from other worlds and other cultures did the same.
“The bonfire is to say farewell to the remnants of the past year,”
Lady Margery explained. “We are symbolically throwing onto it all
regrets and mistakes made in that time so that we might begin again with
our best intentions when the first day of the New Year dawns in a few
hours’ time.”
“I think I like that idea,” Marion said. There were more good
things than bad in her memories of the past year. But there were disappointments
enough that she was glad to throw onto the bonfire and be glad of a chance
to begin again when the sun came up on a new day.
It was tradition to wait for that to happen. The ordinary people danced
away the night in the marquee once the fire and the fireworks were over.
The guests did so in the grand ballroom. A quiet sideroom with silk covered
couches was provided for those with reasons not to be awake all night,
Rika, the Princess and the Mizzonian Ambassador’s spouse took advantage
of it. So did the visiting Queen of Ryemym Ceti, since she was only eleven
years old and the wife of the Gondian Ambassador who was one hundred and
five. Everyone else danced a little more slowly, with waltzes taking place
of tangos and foxtrots as the hours lengthened. Remonte partnered the
Mizzonian ambassador more than once, before the gentleman was called away
urgently. Remonte took Marion onto the floor for a dance and told her
that the Mizzonian spouse had gone into labour and the child would likely
be born by sunrise. The news went around the guests quickly and the Venturans
proclaimed it a good omen. A child born with the dawn of the New Year
was a bonus for them all.
And so it was. When the Crown Prince and Princess stepped out onto the
balcony in the first cold light of morning he brought with him the most
exalted of his guests – the Lord High President and First Lady of
Gallifrey, the young King and Queen of Ryemym Ceti and the Sultan of Hruni.
The Mizzonian Ambassador with his tired but jubilant spouse and their
newborn son wrapped warmly in soft cloth, were given pride of place among
that company. The High Cardinal of Ventura blessed the new family and
they received the cheers of the assembled people below. It was not planned
that way, but it had proved to be a special and wonderful addition to
the celebration to greet the New Year on Ventura IV.
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