When the idea of a New Years Eve party was proposed by Kristoph, Caolin
prevailed upon his employer to allow him to use the pure gold flatware
that was found among the treasures of Mount Lœng House. The butler
wanted so desperately to show off the beautiful but terribly ostentatious
settings which he and two of the footmen had polished in their own spare
time in the evenings.
Kristoph held out for a full ten minutes before giving permission for
the flatware to be used. He gave instructions, too, for the best Irish
crystal glasses to be polished and the fine Welsh linen that Marion had
bought when she first became mistress of Mount Lœng House.
“Please assemble the champagne fountain, as well,” he said.
Caolin nodded. The ‘fountain’ was a magnificent structure
built from over a hundred pieces of silver-edged glass that were usually
kept in four velvet lined boxes in the back of the walk-in glass store
off the kitchen corridor. It was rarely used because it was so much trouble
to assemble, but this was going to be a particularly lavish party and
it would be the centrepiece of the grand buffet tables.
Marion was busy for weeks before planning the menu for the grand buffet.
It was even more complicated than the Christmas dinner party. A turkey
dinner was straightforward. Deciding between a seafood cocktail, Gaspacho
or a hot soup was the most difficult decision. But choosing a dozen different
kinds of canapés and fifteen kinds of fish based dishes, all manner
of roast meats and vegetable recipes, fruit compotes and cakes was absolutely
exhausting. There were foods Marion never knew existed, called by names
she had never envisaged.
She gave up choosing eventually and just ordered every dish that the cook
and housekeeper suggested. When she told Kristoph that there were over
three hundred recipes in preparation for the party he didn’t seem
surprised.
“In my grandfather’s day we frequently had sit down dinners
that were twenty or thirty courses long,” he said. “They could
take as much as four hours to eat. Each course had an individual title
and its own cutlery, flatware and wine glass. Believe me, a buffet is
FAR simpler.”
“Then a buffet we will have,” Marion conceded. “But
even if I SEE a ‘scallop miso’ on the table I won’t
know what it is. I’ll just have to trust Mistress Calitha’s
judgement on that one.”
She felt on better ground when she went to Rosanda’s room to plan
the gown she was going to wear for the night. Many of her winter gowns
were velvet and other warm fabrics, but there would be as many as a hundred
people in the ballroom and they would be dancing for most of the night.
Her gown was deep plum damask in a Tudor style. More than three yards
of hand-made lace bought during her tour of the Dominions covered the
sculpted bodice and went into a stiff collar that Elizabeth I would have
been proud to wear.
She was making a second gown in a much smaller size for Rodan. It was
in the same fabric with a flared skirt just like a grown up lady and a
smaller collar. She would look like a miniature version of Marion in her
own gown.
“I am making cloaks from that russet cashmere you brought from Shaju-Imnai,”
Rosanda added. “You will both need them at midnight when you go
out to watch the fireworks display.”
“There is plenty of that cashmere,” Marion said. “Make
yourself a cloak, too. You and Caolin are our guests for the night, remember.”
“Yes” Rosanda answered. “I am looking forward to it.
My dear man is, too, but I shouldn’t be at all surprised if he spends
most of the evening carrying trays of drinks. He is so used to serving,
it will feel strange to him being served instead.”
“Make him dance with you all night,” Marion told her. “Then
he won’t be able to do anything else.”
She was looking forward to the big night. Before and after the Christmas
celebration she started looking towards the ball. The invitations had
gone out long ago. Very few people had any reason to decline. This was
the party, after all, where the very best people would be on New Year’s
Eve.
The gowns were ready the day before, but Marion kept them secret from
Kristoph. She told him it would be a surprise. Rosanda, having completed
her tasks, was the only member of the household who could relax now. Everyone
else was very busy making Mount Lœng House sparkle and shine like
a winter palace.
New Years Eve itself was a sparkling day. The overnight snow was followed
by a dawn frost that made the gardens glitter in the cold sunshine that
followed. Marion made sure she got a walk along the paths of the rose
garden which had been carefully cleared of ice before she was embroiled
in the last minute preparations. In the afternoon Kristoph insisted on
her having at least two hours in bed and when she woke, she had a long
bath in scented water before her own careful dressing for the evening.
Her personal maid did her hair in an elaborate fashion with lengths of
twisted gold delicately woven into it. Her make-up was completed while
she was still wearing the lace foundation garments. Then she put on the
gown Rosanda had made. That, too, was gold trimmed around the hem and
the neckline. She felt as if she was being dressed to match the gold dinner
service and the fresh greenery that adorned the walls of the ballroom.
Rodan was dressed by her own maid, and when she stood with Marion and
looked in the mirror they were a perfect match. Rodan was wearing a gold
pendant that Kristoph had left in her room. It was made from a whole ounce
of de Lœngbærrow gold with a tiny white diamond in the middle, and
was her own personal legacy of her life as the foster child of the Patriarch
of that great Oldblood House.
“I have my own gold,” she said, recalling her find in the
ruins of Ancient Olympia on one of those many excursions she had enjoyed
during the past years. “But papa had this one made for me.”
“Yes,” Marion agreed. “It is very special for that reason.”
She, herself, was wearing a necklace and earrings, and gold bracelets
that had once belonged to the wife of Kristoph’s great, great, great
grandfather, another of the treasures of the de Lœngbærrow family.
Once she would have been nervous of wearing something so old and so precious.
On any market in the cosmos and in any currency they were worth millions.
But she had got used to taking gold and diamonds for granted. Kristoph
helped by saying that she was the most precious jewel in his life and
the glittering ornaments merely served to enhance her.
He said things like that all the time, though sometimes when she looked
in a mirror and realised she was going to be thirty next year she wondered
if he was just flattering her.
Not tonight, though. Tonight she felt beautiful and sparkling just like
everything around her. She was ready to receive every one of their guests,
Oldblood and Newblood, visiting Ambassadors from friendly worlds and all.
Among those visitors was the President of Haollstrom and her bonded partner
- Claudia Jean and Hillary. Marion greeted them both with hugs and unashamed
kisses.
“You look beautiful, my dear,” Hillary told her. “Absolutely
stunning.”
“It’s easy with several ounces of gold and several yards of
expensive fabric. The first time I met you, I was not quite so sumptuously
dressed and I felt quite inferior.”
“Never, my dear. And besides, we are absolute equals, now –
the consorts of the Presidents of our worlds.”
That was certainly the case. When they stood together to meet the other
guests, Marion felt every inch the President’s wife, an exemplary
hostess, and more than anything, she was enjoying herself.
She found out in the course of the evening that a ‘Scallop Miso’
was a shellfish cooked in a glaze that was both sweet and delightfully
savoury at the same time. It was served with a sauce of the same flavour
and was quite delicious. She avoided too much of the sauce, though, in
case it dripped on her beautiful gown, something she had never got over
worrying about in all her years at Kristoph’s side at these kind
of functions.
She discovered that the Premier Cardinal could dance a tango. He did so
with both Hillary and Claudia-Jean in turn. Perhaps it was their Haolstromnian
pheromones breaking down his inhibitions or he had allowed himself to
be mellowed by the fine wines, but he seemed to enjoy himself and didn’t
worry at all about the dignity of his office.
Everyone discovered what the huge champagne fountain was for. Kristoph
stood on the shoulders of Caolin and Sheogham who steadied him manfully
as he poured two jeroboams of the very best champagne into the top part
of the crystal structure. Even before he was finished it had tipped part
of its load into the next tier of containers which, in turn poured down
onto the next. When he descended to the ground champagne was still pouring
down in sparkling streams to land in the hundreds of glasses carefully
arranged around the very bottom. Kristoph gave the first glass to Marion
and took one for himself to toast the old year before the waiters put
the rest on silver trays and distributed them amongst the guests.
The champagne fountain was set in motion with only fifteen minutes to
midnight. They were on their second glass when the great clock in the
hall chimed thirteen and they raised their flutes to each other to wish
a happy new year. When it had been drunk, in the first minutes of that
nascent year, the huge French doors along one side of the ballroom were
thrown open. Everyone trooped outside. There was a clear but moonless
night with stars bright in the burnt-brown sky. To the north there was
a peculiar rumble. It was celebratory cannon fire from the usually quiet
and peaceful Athenica. To the south and the far north laser light danced
across the horizons. They came from the poles and yet they were still
visible here just a few hundred miles south of the equator. Such was the
power of Time Lord laser technology, even if it was just for the purpose
of a celebration.
On the long meadow there was a celebratory light show set up that would
rival the polar lasers, at least for those who gathered to witness it.
Marion and Rodan and Rosanda, all wore cloaks of russet cashmere. Other
ladies were cloaked, too. The men were hardier in their dinner suits.
These were Chinese fireworks. The Time Lords were noted for their lugubriousness
and stoicism, but not for their fireworks. Kristoph had obtained them
with a little help from Li and his contacts in the Chinese wholesale export
trade. They were like nothing anyone had seen on this planet, full of
colour and magnificent shapes accompanied by noise that shattered the
peace of the night even more completely than the cannon fire. It was a
magnificent display thoroughly enjoyed by the guests of the Lord High
President.
After the fireworks were over there was more champagne and more dancing
inside, but several couples took advantage of a chance to walk quietly
in the gardens. Hillary and Claudia-Jean sought a quiet spot. Young Ginnel
Dúccesci, home from his desert academy for the winter holiday was
walking with the daughter of a Newblood family.
Marion and Kristoph walked in their own rose garden for a while. Marion
was quiet, deep in thought about the year to come. There was excitement
to come, of course, as well as duties to fulfil, but there was one event
that was already causing her to worry.
“Rodan’s grandfather will be home in the summer,” she
said. “We will be losing her again.”
“We will never lose her,” Kristoph answered. “She belongs
to us as much as to him. She will be here for riding lessons three mornings
a week and academic tutorials in the afternoon. You will see her often.
She is not going to become an ordinary Caretaker child. We have seen to
that, good and proper!”
“Even so…” Marion sighed. “No, you are right.
We know that is best for her. But I will miss having her here as our own
child.”
“I think she won’t be anyone’s child for much longer,”
Kristoph admitted. “She is growing up fast.”
In proof of that, he stopped Marion on the path they were walking and
brought her into the shadows. A very young couple passed by. It was Rodan
with Breissal Arcalian, the boy she had met at the Untempered Schism in
the summer.
They were holding hands as they walked.
“They’re too young for THAT!” Marion protested.
“That is why they are just holding hands. They both faced the Schism
six months ago. The wonders of Creation were revealed to them. Some of
those wonders include relationships between the male and female of our
kind of species. Of course they will want to practice courtship in their
own way.”
“Do you suppose….” Marion suggested.
“I don’t know. I kissed quite a few women before I found the
one I wanted to marry. Perhaps Breissal Arcalian will, too. As for Rodan,
we have given her the freedom to choose her own destiny. Who knows what
that will be, and who she will share it with. The choice is hers.”
“Yes,” Marion admitted. “Yes, it is.”
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