A month in Italy - even though it only took a week on Gallifrey thanks
to TARDIS travel - did Marion a lot of good. All the oxygen machines around
the house could be dispensed with now, though she still carried a small,
pocket sized inhaler that she could use wherever and whenever it was needed.
Increasingly it wasn't and most days, now, she almost forgot it was among
her possessions in her handbag.
She was managing a few quiet afternoons away from home. Lily's house was
a pleasant retreat. So was the Dower House. She regularly visited the
little house where Rodan kept a comfortable parlour and tea was always
made.
But the real test was going to be Calliope’s birthday ball. On the
day itself, Marion took breakfast in bed and spent the morning reading
then a long afternoon sleep. These were Kristoph's terms for allowing
her to attend the kind of huge function organised by Lord Patriclian.
Thoroughly rested, she bathed and dressed in the evening with special
care. Her gown was red velvet with silver lace trimmings and her hair
was fixed with a fascinator of matching colours. Her cosmetics were a
particular concern this evening. She didn't want anyone to say she looked
pale so the colours of her foundation emphasised a healthy glow.
"It is winter, still," Kristoph pointed out. "All of the
ladies of the southern plain look pale after three months indoors. You
already outshine them with the benefit of your sojourn on the Amalfi Coast
and the flattering attentions of so many men of literature."
"Most of the men of literature preferred the company of other men,"
Marion answered. "I don't think I was attractive to them in that
way."
"None of them were blind," Kristoph answered. "They know
a woman of natural beauty and charm when they meet her. They saw in you
just what I saw on Leeds railway station even though it was hidden then
beneath shyness and uncertainty."
He kissed her on the cheek so as not to interfere with the application
of lip colour to match the vibrant red of the gown.
When that was done he fastened around her neck a necklace of silver and
diamonds that had been newly made for her. The pendant was a large and
rare red diamond that thoroughly complimented the gown.
"You don't think I look like one of Count Dracula's women?"
she asked, viewing the total effect in a full length mirror.
"Certainly not," Kristoph answered. "Do you think I resemble
the Count?"
His formal robe was black and silver with a cloak lined in red silk that
denoted his membership of the Prydonian Chapter. He looked dashing and
just a little bit Carpathian!
“You'll do fine," Marion told him. "Just don't leave my
side. I need you this evening more than ever. I feel like this is my first
ball!"
She made sure that the oxygen inhaler was in the clutch bag that went
with her outfit and Kristoph put a warm cashmere shawl around her shoulders
before they went downstairs. Caolin bowed graciously to them and opened
the front door.
“I don’t know how late this ball may go on for,” Kristoph
said to the butler. “But I don’t think we will need anything
more than a warm drink when we return. The kitchen staff may retire when
they are ready.”
“Indeed, sir,” the good man responded. Then they made their
way down steps carefully cleared of ice and snow and straight into the
waiting car. The usual escort was in front and behind as they set off
to the Patriclian estate where Calliope’s father had arranged the
birthday ball.
Lord Patriclian was one of the richest landowners on the southern plain
and one of the most generous with his wealth. He was also noted for holding
the most spectacular and ostentatious parties.
The cars bringing the cream of Gallifreyan society stopped by an arch
of ice carved flowers and ribbons. A plush red carpet passed beneath it
and along a causeway across at least twenty metres of frozen lake until
the partygoers boarded something like a cross between an extremely wide
boat and a marquee.
"This is not on the ice itself," Kristoph noted as he held Marion's
arm tightly and they climbed the red carpeted steps into the fantastic
venue for Calliope's birthday party.
"I know," Marion answered him. "I can feel the vibrations.
It’s a sort of huge hovercraft. Lord Patriclian loves to spend his
money."
The walls and ceiling of the party room were glass, or at least a transparent
substance. The clear night sky full of stars and Pazithi Gallifreya in
her silver aspect provided magnificent backdrop for the party. The view
of the lake and the Patriclian mansion was enhanced by gravity globes
that spilled diffused light around the darkness.
The dance floor was perfectly smooth and polished. Around the sides tables
with silvery white linen were provided for eating and drinking and sitting
out some of the dance sets. A buffet took up one end of the room and the
orchestra the other.
Of course, when Kristoph arrived the crowds stood solemnly and the anthem
was played. Then the Lord High President and first lady were formally
greeted by Lord and Lady Patriclian and their daughter and son in law,
Lord and Lady Hadandrox. But formal greetings quickly gave way to hugs
and kisses among the women and the relaxed air of a party resumed.
"Look at the cake," Calliope said to Marion who had, until then,
taken the six foot high confection to be some kind of decorative sculpture.
"Daddy won’t hear of anything less than the biggest and best.”
“There is a school of thought that biggest isn’t always best,”
Marion replied. “But it IS a remarkable cake.”
Calliope laughed. Marion had a way of putting things into perspective
that endeared her to her Gallifreyan friends. Then Lord Hadandrox swept
his wife onto the dance floor and Kristoph took Marion to do the same.
It was the Galloso, a very old formal dance of the southern plain. Marion
always thought it looked a lot like the sort of dancing seen in dramas
set in Tudor times. She also thought it fitted with the more traditional
robes worn by both men and women of Gallifrey with their almost Elizabethan
collars and headdresses. Her own influence on the women in her peer group
had reduced the formality of dresses, lightening the fabrics and lowering
necklines, but the men still looked as if they might fit in the Court
of Henry VIII and the Galloso with its careful movement of the feet belonged
there, too.
After that was something closer to a waltz where husbands and wives or
those due to become husbands and wives might dance close against each
other. Marion enjoyed being close to Kristoph, feeling his two hearts
beating beneath his Prince of Darkness robes. Calliope was still very
much in love with her Lord, too, and they danced in their own pool of
silvery light as if they weren’t among a hundred or so guests.
Notable among those who didn’t dance were lord and Lady Oakdaene.
His Lordship had returned to Gallifrey quietly and without explaining
to anyone where he had been for so long. At least he had not explained
to anybody official. If he had told his wife, that was another matter.
Neither looked especially happy with the other. Marion wondered aloud
to Kristoph why they had even come to this party.
“To be seen and to put paid to any rumours,” he answered.
“But if they don’t look a bit happier it will only start up
new rumours of a rift in their marriage.”
“Oh dear,” Marion said. But she was too happy in her own life
to care very much for Minniette Oakdaene’s troubles.
Besides, an even juicier scandal gained new momentum in the course of
the evening.
“Who is that dancing with Lady Arrette?” asked Lady d’Arpexia
of Lily and Marion as they sat out the faster sets, the former out of
matronly dignity and the latter simply out of breath.
Lily didn’t know, and that in itself was significant. Lily knew
everyone.
“He is wearing the Arrette pin,” Marion noted. “I saw
it earlier. Could he be a cousin or something of the sort?”
“He doesn’t even look like an Arrette,” Lady D’Arpexia
answered. “They all have the hooked nose and thin face. He’s
got a face like a pudding.”
That much could not be denied. Nor could it be denied that the young courtier,
for want of a better word, dressed in velvet and silver, danced with a
vigour lacking in the elderly Lord Arrette for millennia. Even Lily, the
oldest of the group, could not remember him as a young man.
And Lady Arrette clearly enjoyed his company, especially in a dance that
resembled the Tudor Volta in that the lady was frequently lifted and turned
by her male partner. Only Calliope and Jarod were matching the mystery
man and his lady for energy.
“If they do a tango next I am going to have to look away,”
Marion noted. Fortunately such an overtly sensual dance was not known
to the chamber orchestra made up of Gallifreyan musicians. Nothing so
scandalous took place on the dance floor.
The time to cut the great cake arrived without anything worse than the
Gallifreyan Volta taking place. It wasn’t until then, when everyone
was still, that they realised the dance floor wasn’t. The hover
engines had lifted the whole portable building high into the sky. The
guests all murmured in surprise as they looked down on the snow-covered
southern plain from far above it.
Then Lord Patriclian drew their attention back to him as he made a speech
about his pride in his daughter and her accomplishments. He was not the
most sparkling dinner speaker, but he made up for lack of substance with
enthusiasm and gained the attention of his audience.
At least until somebody else stole the show. There were murmurs of consternation
as Lord Arrette, who nobody even knew was a guest at the party, strode
across the floor making dire accusations against his wife and her dance
partner.
“My Lord,” Lord Patriclian protested. “Sir, this is
not the time or the place. This is my daughter’s birthday ball.”
“Which has been turned into a bordello by my adulterous wife and
her lover,” Arrette responded. Dancing with utter abandon, flouting
their affair in front of everybody, making me into a cuckold in their
eyes.”
Kristoph left Marion’s side and stepped towards the angry Lord who
swung around intending to strike out. He remembered himself just in time
and gave the briefest of nods towards the Lord High President.
“This is not the time or the place,” Kristoph told him in
a calm voice, echoing Lord Patriclian’s words. “Calm down
and do not disturb this occasion further.”
“I will not calm down. I will not be treated as a docile fool. I
may be old, but my sword arm is strong, and I wish to call out the low
born scoundrel who has been publicly flouting himself with my wife.”
“Call out?” Kristoph responded. “Are you mad? Duelling
was outlawed in your father’s time. You cannot do any such thing.”
“I can and I will,” Lord Arrette responded, now utterly forgetting
himself. He turned his head and saw his wife and her escort trying to
make themselves inconspicuous on the other side of the huge birthday cake.
He didn’t HAVE a sword with him but he grasped the long silver cake
knife and ran at them.
Unfortunately the cake was in the way and perhaps Lord Arrette’s
eyesight or his balance weren’t perfect. He ended up in a thoroughly
undignified heap covered with debris from the second, third and fourth
tiers of the cake which had collapsed completely and topped off by the
fifth and six tiers which landed almost intact on his back. Only the wide
base layer of the cake remained on its silver platter.
Calliope was the first to laugh, followed by her mother. Some of the other
ladies tried to disguise their laughter with handkerchiefs, and most of
the men retained their composure only with effort.
Lord Arpexia and Lord Dúccesci both came forward and lifted the
top parts of the cake away before helping Arrette to his feet. Somehow
they managed to persuade him to go with them to a table with a restricted
view of the main floor. Meanwhile servants cleared up the broken pieces
of cake.
“There is still enough left in the base to cut up,” Kristoph
said to Calliope, pressing the discarded cake knife into her hand. “Happy
birthday, dear lady.”
Calliope put the knife into the cake and cut a first slice before the
caterers took over placing pieces on plates and distributing them. Lord
Patriclian gave instructions for more champagne to be opened.
Soon after the dancing began again. Marion stayed in her seat. She was
starting to get a bit tired but didn’t want to leave early.
Kristoph came to sit beside her.
“Dúccesci and Arpexia are going to make sure Arrette goes
home quietly,” he said. “I doubt this is the end of the matter,
though. Something clearly is going on with Lady Arrette and that young
man. There is trouble ahead. But never mind that. Have you had a good
night?”
“Yes, I have,” Marion answered. “And I didn’t
need the oxygen at all. I gave it to Lady Artemus. She was laughing so
hard she nearly choked.”
Kristoph laughed and kissed his wife. Lord Arrette’s crisis could
wait for another day.
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