The Summer Ball was happening, after all. For a long time it looked as
if it wouldn’t be. Not only could the ladies not get their gowns
made while the seamstresses were striking, but it very much looked as
if there would be no caterers prepared to make the food for the buffet,
no orchestra to play the music, nobody to erect the marquee and lay out
the dance floor upon which the aristocracy of Gallifrey would dance.
“They see it in no deeper terms than that, though,” Kristoph
observed as he sat back in the limousine travelling across the southern
plain in the slanted sunlight of the glorious mid-summer evening. “They
don’t realise that the carpenters who smoothed down the boards for
them to dance upon might just have easily been building gallows to hang
the lot of us from if a popular uprising had gained ground.”
“Kristoph, please,” Marion told him. “Put such ideas
out of your mind. It didn’t happen – mostly thanks to you.
It was your determination not to let the guards fire upon the people,
and to negotiate with the leaders of the disaffected groups that prevented
it going that far. With you as president, Gallifrey is always going to
be safe. I wish you, of all people, would believe that.”
“I do believe it, my dear. But I feel as if I am surrounded by complacent
fools who don’t realise how fortunate they are.”
“I’ve often thought that,” Marion replied. “But
many of them are our friends, and this is a special night. Let’s
go and enjoy it and set politics aside for a while. No more talk of popular
revolt, and absolutely NO discussion of Athenican autonomy or the price
of real estate in Arcadia”
“I promise, my dear,” Kristoph assured her. “Though
I fear I may be kept silent all evening trying to keep that promise. Those
last two topics are all anyone ever wants me to talk about lately.”
“Introduce the emissary from Elbrach Prime to everyone and steer
the conversation towards exports of industrial diamonds. That’s
a subject that should interest most of the Oldblood men. After all, there
are few of them who aren’t going to profit from the trade agreement.”
“That’s a very diplomatic suggestion,” Kristoph told
his wife. “I ought to send you to the next intergalactic trade conference.”
Marion laughed. She took an interest in her husband’s work, but
no more than that. She much preferred to support him as a hostess greeting
his distinguished visitors and as his companion when he visited them.
Her political ambitions lay no further than that.
“You look beautiful, my dear,” Kristoph said, changing the
subject skilfully. “The Elbrachtian waistline is very becoming.”
“I hope I don’t look too out of place. The Empire dress is
very much in vogue.”
“It will be until you arrive, then they will all be pressing their
dressmakers to make them gowns like yours. Though I fear some of the high-born
ladies of Gallifrey will have to invest in some VERY efficient corsetry
in order to achieve a waistline.”
“That is NOT at all diplomatic,” Marion pointed out. “Though
it is certainly true. I think that is WHY the Empire gown has been fashionable
for so long – to hide the fact that too many waistlines are not
what they ought to be. But I shall refrain from giving diet and exercise
advice to them.”
She reached out and held Kristoph’s hand. He looked very handsome
tonight, though for the men of Gallifrey fashion invariably gave way to
convention. He was in a red satin gown with gold trim and a high collar
of silk - lighter fabrics than the formal gowns of office with their heavily
embroidered linen and collars made of actual precious metals that needed
broad shoulders and straight backs to support.
The sun was dropping ever lower over the yellow-green southern grasslands
of the southern plain as they came in sight of where the Summer Ball was
taking place this year. It was at the easternmost edge of the D’Alba
estate, where the River Argien, a tributary of the Bærrow, was spanned
by an elegant white stone bridge. Beyond the bridge a huge white marquee
had been erected, but that was not the whole of the effort. The road from
the bridge to the marquee was laid with sparkling white quartz and on
either side were pilasters topped by overflowing vases of white flowers
interspersed with carved marble swans and tall columns topped by diffused
globes of light. Every dozen yards there was an archway with white roses
trained over it and the entrance to the marquee itself was another grand
archway.
“Lily has stamped her own mark on this year’s ball,”
Kristoph remarked as they walked across the bride, listening to the sound
of the river flowing beneath and the music spilling from the marquee ahead.
“White is the new gold and crimson.”
Marion laughed as she remembered the bold colours that distinguished the
ball last summer at the home of Lord Gyes, a traditional man of the Prydon
Chapter.
“It looks lovely,” she said. “Lily has done very well
– or her party organiser has, anyway. Even she would not have arranged
all of these planters personally.”
Marion would have preferred to go into the marquee quietly and find Lily
among her usual clique of friends, but that would never happen. As the
Lord High President and First Lady entered, there was a fanfare. Everybody
ceased their chatter and turned, bowing obsequiously.
Fortunately, Kristoph did not allow such formality to last for long. He
waved to the orchestra to continue playing and drew Marion onto the dance
floor. Slowly everybody around them relaxed and danced and chatted, helped
themselves to food, or sat in small gossiping groups at the white linen
covered tables with delicate floral arrangements, set around the edge
of the floor.
After two sets of dancing Marion went to find her friends while Kristoph
talked with the Premier Cardinal and the High Chancellor. Lily was sitting
with the Ladies Reidluum and Lady Dúccesci. She took a glass of
champagne from a passing waiter and sat with them.
“Your dress is beautiful, my dear,” Lily told her. “What
was the inspiration for such a unique design?”
Marion explained about Elbrach Prime and the ballgowns worn even by the
Duchess and the ladies of the Ducal Court that were based on the traditional
peasant style of tight waists and loose bodices with wide, flowing skirts
for dancing.
Both Lily and Talitha Dúccesci were wearing dresses in the suchan
style. Mia Reidluum was wearing an outfit of the Salwar Kameez style –
a long silk satin shirt with loose silk trousers of a contrasting colour.
The style was comfortable for her and covered her legs when Jarod carried
her from the car to the seat where she was compelled to spend the evening
due to her disability.
Both of those styles were introduced into Gallifreyan high society by
Marion over the seasons she had ordered gowns made to her own chosen pattern.
They contrasted starkly with the almost uniform style worn by other ladies.
Those with slender figures looked dazzling in an array of satins and silks
that swished as they danced. A few ladies were pregnant in this summer
season and the ‘Empire waist’ suited them well enough.
It suited the matrons, too, with the less flattering figure, but it was
clear that a lack of adventure prevailed this Season. Few ladies had dared
to break the mould.
“They’re afraid of being thought unGallifreyan,” Talitha
remarked.
“Un what?” Marion replied, startled.
“Un-Gallifreyan,” Lily echoed. “With or without a hyphen
it is the ‘buzzword’ about the salons just now. There is a
movement among the fashionistas to avoid any style, any mannerism, that
has not been a part of Gallifreyan culture for at least three millennia.”
“Anthis Cerulean tried to say that spoons were unGallifreyan last
week,” Mia said with a laugh. “She said that they were imported
from the Venturan empire. I asked her how babies were fed before the importation
of spoons and she described something that sounded like a blunt knife
with a sort of indentation on the end. She called it a ‘pollinger’.”
“It sounds like a prototype spoon to me,” Marion pointed out.
“It just needed to evolve a bit more.”
“Just what I said,” Mia answered. “Un-Gallifreyan or
not, I intend to carry on feeding my little girl with that lovely plastic
spoon set you brought from Earth for me, and I shall dress her any day
I please in the dresses that came from the same source. They are beautiful
dresses, far nicer than the cotton smocks that ‘tradition’
dictates.”
“The whole thing sounds quite silly,” Marion remarked. “Where
did it start? I must have missed it all while I was away in Liverpool.”
“Lord Ravenswode started it,” Lily explained. “I think
he is still a little burnt by his ‘foreign’ wife and the amount
of money she siphoned from his galactic bank accounts before he could
freeze them. He’s going to try introducing a ban on offworld marriage
next week in the Panopticon.”
“Oh dear,” Marion said with a worried frown. “I suppose
that means MY marriage.”
“He won’t get away with banning marriages within the bounds
of Gallifreyan law and tradition,” Talitha confirmed. “But
he wants any wedding that takes place under any other custom between a
citizen of Gallifrey and an offworlder to be ruled void.”
“I always thought it WAS,” Marion acknowledged. “That’s
one of the reasons why Kristoph and I had a ceremony on Earth as well
as a Gallifreyan wedding nearly a year later.
“By custom, it is,” Mia pointed out. But it is not an actual
law. That’s where Lord Ravenswode went wrong, of course. He should
have done the same as you and Kristoph, binding his wife to him by Gallifreyan
law as soon as he got her here. That way she couldn’t have taken
all his money and then divorced him once she was far enough away.”
“She could still have taken his money,” Talitha added with
a laugh. “But she couldn’t have divorced him and she’d
have been stuck with him as much as he was with her – and serve
them both right.”
“He should have been more careful in the first place,” Marion
concluded. “Marry in haste, repent at leisure, as they say on my
world. But we are getting away from the original topic – this unGallifreyan
movement.”
“I wouldn’t call it that,” Lily told her. “A movement.
That gives too much credence to a bit of nonsense among the purist snobs.
It will blow over in a week or so.”
“Of course, it will,” Mia and Talitha added. “Anything
Lord Ravenswode thinks of blows over eventually. He’s nothing but
bluster.”
That was generally true, Marion conceded, recalling the many times Lord
Ravenswode had failed to get some piece of absurdly self-serving legislation
passed by the High Council.
But this was the Summer Ball, and Kristoph had promised no politics. Marion
smiled warmly as Jarod Reidluum came to sit with his wife while Lord Gyes
asked Lily to dance with him, and Malika Dúccesci and Kristoph
both came to take their wives back into the throng of dancers. Marion
forgot all about the idea of ‘un-Gallifreyan behaviour’ as
she danced in the arms of her husband.
She was reminded of it only once more as they swirled around the floor.
Marion was certain she heard somebody whisper ‘unGallifreyan’
close by her ear. She turned to look but the only thing she could see
was Lady Charr’s wide back swathed in yellow lace and the chubby
hand of her dance partner holding her shoulder.
“Is anything wrong, my dear?” Kristoph asked her.
“No… at least, I don’t think so,” she answered.
She turned back to face him and he pressed her close for a slow, romantic
dance. She let herself forget everything else except the joy of being
in the arms of the man for whose love she had crossed a galaxy and called
a new planet home.
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