The business of government on Gallifrey went on all year, but even so
there was a ceremony at the beginning of autumn that officially ‘opened’
a new session of constitutional business. It was one of those occasions
when all of the High Councillors wore their most fantastic costumes, the
Lord High President especially.
“This outfit is nearly fifteen hundred years old,” Kristoph
said as he smoothed down the robe of white gold spun so thin it could
be woven into fabric. His attendant brought the gown of silver and red
that went over it. That was even older – more than two thousand
years old. Both items of clothing were kept in a special cover when not
being worn that nullified time around them and prevented them from aging.
“If they could find a way to do that to the President, as well as
his robes, they would,” he added. Marion, watching it all happen
in his Presidential Chamber, laughed. Then she put on her most reverential
expression as the attendant placed the heavy collar upon his shoulders
and the diamond encrusted skull cap. When that was done the Sash of Rassilon
was placed around the shoulders already bearing a considerable weight.
Marion always thought the Sash was an ugly piece of regalia. The rectangular
pieces of gold were too clunky looking. But perhaps fashions were different
when it was made many thousands of years ago when Rassilon himself allegedly
wore it.
Perhaps Rassilon was ensuring there would never be a female president
– no woman could cope with the weight of all that on her shoulders.
“You look magnificent,” she told her husband.
“Thank you, my dear,” he replied, leaning forwards carefully
to receive her kiss. “And now Arron is ready to make me look ridiculous,
instead, this being an occasion for FULL pomp and ceremony.”
Marion giggled as the attendant stepped forward again with what looked
like a paint box. It was the formal make up worn by high ranking Time
Lords for these ceremonies. She watched as Kristoph submitted to much
heavier and far more garish eye cosmetics than she had ever worn herself.
Indeed, eye make up for women on Gallifrey was always light. It was the
men who had layers of gold-flecked green and brown sculpted around their
eyes.
And it always made Marion laugh, though only in private.
“Excellency, may I ask why her Ladyship finds the ceremonial cosmetics
amusing?” asked Arron timorously.
“In her Ladyship’s culture men don’t, usually, wear
make up at all, unless they are pop stars or something equally ostentatious.
Of course, that is only in the culture of her generation. In the past
history of her world powdered wigs and faces painted with quite unhealthy
lead-based substances were de rigueur. And in fact the ancient Egyptian
style came back into fashion for a while in the twenty-second century.”
“I understand, Excellency,” Arron said.
“I think you’re just being polite,” Kristoph answered.
“Frankly, I am not fond of the tradition. Apart from anything else,
if it is especially warm in the Panopticon the foundation cream will melt
into my beard by the end of the ceremony.”
Marion laughed even more, then put on a serious face as the Chancellor
and Premier Cardinal came into the Chamber. A Panopticon Guard in his
smartest dress uniform accompanied them. He was there to escort Marion
to the public gallery. The three men, all in their regalia, had important
matters to discuss in the President’s Chamber before the ceremony
began. She didn’t know what those matters were, but she knew she
was supposed to leave the room before they began.
She didn’t mind such restrictions. Besides, the public gallery was
filled already with people she knew and there was plenty of conversation
going on. Aineytta was already in her seat beside the one reserved for
the First Lady, and Thedera beside her. Lady D’Arpexia was at her
other side. She was there to witness the part her own daughter, as one
of the Inquisitors, played in the ceremony, as well as supporting her
husband who was a High Councillor – though a low-ranked one if that
was not a contradiction in terms.
“I do like the Opening ceremony,” Thedera said. “It’s
so colourful and exciting. And there is always the possibility of something
scandalous happening.”
“Not any year that I’ve been attending,” Marion answered.
“What has happened in the past?”
“The year Moony first attended as a High Councillor, there was a
protest by a group of radical women who wanted the right to be elected
to the Council,” Thedera replied. “They were dreadfully noisy
and quite unladylike. As much as I wanted to see women in the executive,
their methods were quite unsuitable.”
“No, that was when Mooney was elected Chancellor,” Aineytta
contradicted her. “On his first Opening, Gold Usher was missing
from the procession. We found out later that he had been arrested for
embezzlement minutes before the ceremony began.”
“Gold Usher?” Marion thought of the staid old gentleman she
had left in Kristoph’s chamber.
“Oh, that was four incumbents back,” Thedera assured her.
“That was the then Lord Charr. He was disgraced, of course, and
the Patriarchy passed over to his brother. Lord Gyes was sworn in as Gold
Usher, but not until days after the ceremony.”
“I recall many people saying they should have let him attend the
ceremony to prevent gossip and ensure that the Procession was not spoiled,”
Aineytta added. “But he had stolen a great deal of money. It was
quite serious.”
Marion stole a glance at Madam Charr, sister of the present Lord Charr,
an unmarried woman of a certain age who taught ethics at the Prydonian
Academy, a surprising post for a woman on Gallifrey. If she was thinking
about the time when a member of her family had acted scandalously she
didn’t show it. But of course, she wouldn’t. She was Gallifreyan.
Marion strongly suspected that the ‘stiff upper lip’ was evolved
by the Gallifreyan aristocracy thousands of years before the English discovered
it.
“Do you remember that other time when one of the High Councillors
fell down dead in the middle of the Procession?” Thedera recalled.
“Lord Artema. He WAS five thousand years old, but nobody had expected
him to go just like that, with everybody watching.”
“How dreadful,” Marion commented.
“Not everybody thought so,” Lady D’Arpexia pointed out.
“His wife didn’t seem distressed even though she had witnessed
it first hand, sitting here in the gallery.”
“Really?” Marion was intrigued. Two scandals involving the
wives of senior Time Lords had rocked the coffee houses and other meeting
places of society women this month, but it seemed such bad behaviour went
back far longer.
“She WAS very much younger than he was,” Thedera pointed out.
“The marriage was one of political opportunity. Her family wanted
to be connected with Lord Artema’s business interests.”
“So she didn’t love him all that much?” Marion guessed.
“I’m scarcely surprised,” Lady D’Arpexia said.
“He was a quite unpleasant man. But the rumours that went around
at the time were quite unfounded. The Surgeon examined him immediately
after his collapse and confirmed it was natural causes.”
“The fact that she married again within a year of his death fuelled
the gossip,” Thedera pointed out. Marion saw her turn slightly and
glance at the proud Oldblood Lady sitting a few rows back in the public
gallery. She was studiously avoiding looking at the group around Marion.
She always did whenever they were in the same place, be it the Conservatory
or the Opera House or the Panopticon.
“Lady Oakdaene?” Marion whispered her name in surprise.
“The very woman,” Thedera confirmed. “Lord Oakdaene
was her second husband. Before him, she was the beautiful young wife of
old Lord Artema.”
“Does that mean….” Marion very definitely didn’t
look her way. “But did she marry Lord Oakdaene out of love, then?
Not for business interests?”
“That could well be,” Aineytta commented. “Especially
as he was the third son with no expectations of inheritance at the time.”
“Yes.” Marion knew perfectly well the scandals and complications
of the House of Oakdaene that led to Minniette’s husband becoming
patriarch of that line. As ever she remembered that her dearest friend,
now known as Mai Li Tuo, was the true heir to that House who had been
declared Renegade despite being innocent of the crimes he had been condemned
for.
The idea that Lady Oakdaene had once been a young woman with hopes and
aspirations of her own, married against her will to an old man for her
father’s business advantage, but then being free to choose the man
she really did love was a surprising idea. It was possibly the kindest
idea Marion had every had about a woman who had set herself as a bitter
enemy from the moment she came to Gallifrey.
She wondered what had made her so hard and cold, then, if she had finally
got all she desired.
“That is a mystery that we shall never truly know the answer to,”
Aineytta said quietly. Marion was surprised. She knew that telepathy was
suppressed within the Panopticon so her mother-in-law could not have read
her mind. Yet she knew exactly what she had been thinking. “Though
I would guess that her husband’s blantant philandering and financial
dishonesty are a source of distress to her. And the fact that they have
been married a very long time without a child to bless their home.”
That was something Marion had never considered. Lady Oakdaene was one
of the few women of her age who was childless. Yes, that was a reason
for her to be unhappy.
“You are making me feel quite sorry for Minniette Oakdaene,”
she said. “I never thought that possible.”
“Then perhaps we should mention the fact that Lord Oakdaene and
Lord Ravenswode both voted against Mooney becoming a member of the High
Council,” Aineytta remarked with an uncharacteristically bitter
note in her voice. “They both absented themselves from that Opening
when Lord Charr was arrested. They kept their noise behind closed doors,
of course. They did not dare make their absurd objections openly.”
Marion was puzzled. What could those be?
“They repeated the old gossip about Aineytta bewitching Mooney into
marrying her,” Thedera explained. “And suggested that he might
not be of sound mind due to her continued use of love charms and glamours
to befuddle his head.”
“Oh, dear!” Marion would have laughed, but she knew Aineytta
found those accusations upsetting, even old ones.
That was another of those strange contradictions about Gallifrey, of course.
It was a world with fantastic technology, renowned for the wisdom of its
people. Yet those same people took the idea of ‘witchcraft’
perfectly seriously.
“They don’t,” Thedera assured Marion when she expressed
that view. “Their Lordships were told to retract their objections
lest they be charged with slander and neither have been able to say such
things in public again. Of course, Minniette makes up for it with her
acid tongue, but nobody pays her any attention when she does. Witchcraft…
everyone with the slightest sense knows that an apothecary is a master
chemist. It is science, not magic. It is only because it is a science
practiced by the Caretaker classes that it is not recognised by our highest
academies and societies.”
Thedera looked ready to stage a one woman protest about that inequality.
She always struck Marion as like one of those energetic and utterly dedicated
women who campaigned for Women’s Suffrage in Edwardian England.
Aineytta smiled knowingly. Her skills did not need to be recognised by
Academies and Societies as long as those who needed medical treatment
knew where to come when it was needed.
And that included quite a few of the High Councillors, whose wives ordered
potions some of them didn’t even know they were taking. If she wanted
to befuddle the minds of those in government it would be a very simple
scientific process.
“When are they going to start?” Lady D’Arpexia wondered
aloud as the subject of the House of Oakdaene and their scandals staled
and the conversation died. “This Opening will be remembered as the
one where nobody turned up at all if they don’t get on with it.”
“Yes,” Aineytta agreed. “They do seem quite tardy.”
“Well, Kristoph was ready when I left him,” Marion commented.
“So was the Chancellor and Gold Usher. I can’t imagine what
is keeping everyone.”
They spoke lightly about the delay, making little jokes about uneven collars
and crumpled robes and how the men of Gallifrey could take longer than
the women to get dressed. None of them suspected that it was anything
else than some trivial matter holding up the proceedings.
Then they became aware of the presence of many more Panopticon Guards
on the floor below and a disconcerted murmur among the ordinary councillors
gathered there.
That murmur spread to the public gallery as two of the Guards came down
to where Marion was sitting and asked her to come along with them quietly
and without question.
Why? What is the matter?” It was Aineytta who asked the question
instead. She rose alongside Marion and insisted on going with her. “Is
there something wrong with my son? What is happening?”
The guards did not answer the questions. They simply brought the two women
to the smallest of the committee rooms near the Panopticon. There they
were met by Lord Dúccesci, looking very grave.
“Lady Marion,” he said very formally. Usually he simply called
her by her name. “Lady Aineytta. I am sorry to be the bearer of
distressing news. I thought it best to bring you out of the public gallery
before it became common knowledge….”
“What is it?” Marion asked. “What has happened?”
“The Lord High President is missing,” Lord Dúccesci
told her. “Along with the Chancellor and the Premier Cardinal. They
have vanished from the Chamber.”
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