Marion was entertaining Lady Lily in the White Drawing
Room when Caolin entered discreetly as ever to tell her that Lord Ravenswode
was here and wished to speak to her.
“He… demands to speak to you, madam. I can tell him you are
not receiving visitors if you wish. His mood is… impolite.”
Marion and Lily both smiled knowingly. If Caolin, a well trained butler,
described his Lordship’s mood as ‘impolite’ he probably
meant downright obnoxious.
“You’d better show him in, but stay nearby in case his impoliteness
boils over into rudeness,” Marion answered. She braced herself,
glad that Lily was present as moral support.
Lord Ravenswode stormed into the room, his mood as black as his name implied,
his face thunderously red, close to turning purple with rage.
“Where is my wife?” he demanded. “Is she here with you?”
Marion took a moment or two to answer him, simply because the question
surprised her so much.
“Why would your wife be here?” she asked.
“You are her friend,” he answered.
“Hardly. I met her once at my tea party a few weeks ago and I have
had no opportunity to meet her again, since.”
“At the least, you are a foreigner, like her. She might have come
here for ‘sanctuary’.”
“Lord Ravenswode, this house is not a sanctuary for anyone, and
I can assure you that I have not seen or heard from your wife. Do I understand
that you have… misplaced… her?”
“She has left my house,” he answered, too enraged to realise
that the conversation had been turned around and now he was the one being
questioned. “She is gone, and so are the jewels I gave her…
and those locked in the vault.”
“Really?” Lady Lily did her best not to smile as she looked
Lord Ravenswode in the eye. A theory was forming in her mind, but she
wasn’t going to be the one to mention it in front of his Lordship.
“Perhaps she has taken them to be cleaned,” Marion suggested,
carefully hiding her real thoughts behind a mental wall and making sure
to keep a straight face as she said it.
“Cleaned!” Lord Ravenswode looked at her as if she had said
something extremely rude. Of course, the lady of any Oldblood House was
not responsible for cleaning jewels. That was a silly notion to begin
with, and Marion knew it. She just couldn’t resist saying it.
“That’s the only reason I can think of for her taking them,”
Marion continued, still keeping her face impassive, but at a tremendous
expense of effort. “Why don’t you try some of the goldsmiths
in the Capitol?”
Lord Ravenswode was speechless, now. He spluttered for a few syllables
and then stormed out of the drawing room. Caolin followed and opened the
front door moments before his Lordship strode out, almost tripping on
the steps.
Marion and Lily didn’t see that bit. They were both laughing into
the silk cushions on the white sofa. Caolin returned to the Drawing room
and waited until they had composed themselves before reporting that his
Lordship – after he had regained his balance, declared that he was
going to the Citadel to report the matter to the Castellan, and if that
did not give him satisfaction he would take his complaint to the Panopticon
itself.
“He intends to complain to the High Council about his wife and his
jewels going missing?” Lily asked in astonishment. “Which
is he most concerned about?”
“I could not say, madam,” Caolin answered quite truthfully.
“Of course, even if I had any insight into that I should have to
refrain from comment.”
“My ducats, my daughter!” Marion quoted. Lady Lily burst out
laughing again. She had seen a production of The Merchant of Venice on
her last visit to Liverpool. She fully understood the reference to the
moneylender Shylock whose daughter eloped with his fortune in her bags.
“I will bring more tea,” said Caolin, who was not aware of
the works of Shakespeare at all. He bowed to Lady Lily and his own mistress
and backed out of the room. The door wasn’t quite closed when they
heard him laugh out loud in the hallway.
Lily and Marion laughed again in the privacy of the drawing room, finally
composing themselves only when Caolin returned with a tray of tea and
hand-made violet macaroons that Mistress Calitha had experimented with
making.
“Do you suppose that’s what she’s really done?”
Marion asked when they were alone again and had sampled the macaroons.
“Run away with his jewels?”
“Isn’t she some kind of aristocrat on her world?” Lily
queried. “Surely Lord Ravenswode’s personal stock of gold
and diamonds isn’t worth her effort?”
“I assumed that was why HE married her,” Marion answered.
“I certainly didn’t imagine him as the romantic sort who swept
her off her feet.”
The very impossibility of Lord Ravenswode being romantic sobered them
both up and prevented another fit of laughter as they thought about the
possible reasons for Lady Ravenswode, also known as the Duchess of New
Ashher, or to most of Marion’s social circle as ‘that strange
and unfriendly woman’ to have left her new home so abruptly.
“There isn’t any legitimate reason,” Marion concluded.
“She has left him and taken his jewels as compensation for the miserable
time she must have been having since she married him.”
“He won’t like that,” Lily predicted. “Not one
little bit.”
Lily stayed the whole day, and was there in the evening when Kristoph
came home from the Citadel and the business of the High Council and relaxed
with a single malt in the main drawing room. The ladies joined him and
related their encounter with Lord Ravenswode. He, for his part, shared
what had happened in the Citadel.
“He went to the Castellan, first. Pól told him that according
to The Married Woman’s Shared Property Act of RE178654 the jewels
were as much his wife’s as his and she could not be arrested for
stealing them. Nor could she be prevented from boarding a shuttle to Polafrey
if she chose to do so. As his wife she was a Gallifreyan citizen and permitted
to travel within the seven planets at her leisure. He couldn’t confirm
if she had done so. Or wouldn’t. Pól is not exactly a friend
of his Lordship. I can’t see him bothering too much about his complaint.”
“What happened, then?” Lily asked, suspecting that there was
more.
“Ravenswode marched into the Panopticon in the middle of a Treasury
report and demanded a divorce.”
“He didn’t!” Lily was scandalised, and it took a lot
to scandalise a lady as experienced as she was.
“He can’t,” Marion added. “There is no such thing
as divorce in Gallifreyan law.”
“Indeed there is not. He was demanding that we change the law, right
there and then, in order for him to divorce the woman who had run off
with his property.”
“So that the Castellan could then pursue and arrest her for theft?”
“Unlikely, since we would have been bound to make a financial provision
for the lady and she could claim it was still her property. But Gallifreyan
law can’t be changed that easily. His petition was refused, of course.
He was outraged. He rounded on me and accused me of obstructing him. He
then reminded me that I, too, had a foreign wife with free access to all
my assets.”
“Yes, but I don’t have any intention of running away with
your assets,” Marion pointed out.
“I didn’t tell him that. He was reprimanded by Gold Usher
for slandering your good name, and rightly so, and warned to conduct himself
properly or face ejection from the Panopticon.”
“And did he?”
“No, he didn’t. He tried to bring a new petition, banning
foreign marriage and again accusing me of obstruction because of my personal
bias. At which point he was unanimously declared to be Out of Order and
ejected. We could still hear him shouting in the ante-chamber before the
Panopticon Guard escorted him out of the Citadel.”
Marion and Lily were laughing, now. They couldn’t help it.
“Think of poor Gold Usher, trying to uphold the dignity of the Panopticon
and you two laughing about it,” Kristoph scolded them, though he,
too, was finding it all thoroughly amusing.
“I understand he then went into every restaurant and café
in the Capitol demanding to know where his wife was. Not surprisingly
the Chancellery Guard arrested him for causing a public nuisance. They
took him back to Ravenswode Manor and put him under house arrest for two
days. He’s not happy about that, either, but one more infraction
and he’ll be in a cell instead.”
“I wonder what DID happen to his wife,” Marion said when her
laughter died.
“Oh, I know perfectly well what happened to her,” Kristoph
answered. There was a twinkle in his eye. He poured himself another drink,
agonisingly slowly before he began the second part of his tale.
“I asked the Celestial Intervention Agency to make inquiries,”
he explained. “Yes, a rather frivolous use of their special skills,
but after all, they owe me a favour or two.”
He paused again. The two women snapped.
“Kristoph de Lœngbærrow, stop pausing for dramatic effect and
get on with this before we do something unbecoming to you,” Marion
told him.
“It didn’t take long to find out what shuttles she took and
which hyperspace ship she got onto at the space port at Polafrey. It isn’t
actually illegal under Gallifreyan law to pay for passage out of our jurisdiction
with cut diamonds, and I see no reason why it ought to be. She is, by
now, in a neutral space port deciding which luxury planet with no extradition
treaties to take a long holiday upon.”
He paused only long enough to take a breath before continuing.
“There are several interesting factors,” he said. “First,
Lord Ravenswode is even poorer than he knows. The Celestial Intervention
Agency found out that all of his offworld bank accounts have been emptied
and his share portfolios liquidated. As his wife, Lady Marita could legally
do so, and she did.”
“Oh dear, poor Shylock has lost ALL of his ducats,” Marion
said. Kristoph recognised the literary reference immediately and smiled
knowingly.
“It gets worse. It turns out that, although her name IS Marita Ginella
Assher, she is NOT a Duchess of that high prefecture of Nerussia. It is
merely her surname, just like the author Jack London or the composer John
Ireland never actually owned either of those places. Marita is an actress
– a moderately successful one. She had a part in a Nerussian soap
opera for a while. - hence her attendance at social functions –
much as you get celebrities at Royal Ascot and garden parties at Buckingham
Palace.”
“So she lied to Lord Ravenswode?”
“Oh yes, indeed,” Kristoph confirmed. “Lied through
her teeth. Should there be any doubt at all, the real Duchess of Assher
is an old lady of five hundred and three who rarely attends social functions
since her last stroke.”
“Oh dear.” Marion tried to sound calm as she heard the news,
but it was too amusing. She laughed out loud. So did Lily.
“It’s his own fault,” Kristoph said. “He thought
he was marrying into old money and royal blood. He should have checked
her antecedents fully before making it official.”
“Does he know, yet?” Lily asked.
“No. Pól Braxietel asked if he might break the news to him.
I never realised just how much he dislikes Ravenswode. I told him he could
have the pleasure, though on reflection I almost wish I had kept the duty
for myself. I rather want to see his face.”
“At times like this, I think it’s a shame that Gallifrey doesn’t
have ‘reality TV’,” Marion managed to say before laughing
again. “We could ALL enjoy the moment.”
“As I told mama last week,” Kristoph said. “Schadenfreude
is quite distasteful.”
“But a lot of FUN,” Marion countered.
“Oh, lots of fun,” Kristoph admitted. “Quite the best
fun I have had in a long time.”
He was still laughing softly when Rodan arrived in the drawing room, freshly
bathed and dressed for dinner after being in riding clothes most of her
day. She asked what the joke was, but Kristoph shook his head as he reached
to lift her onto his knee.
“It’s a joke for the grown-ups, not really suitable for a
little girl,” he admitted. “And one we ought to be ashamed
of, really. Now let us change the subject. We have just enough time before
dinner to hear about your day, little one.”
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