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that I could not possibly keep it. I had given the box of chocolates to one of the maids, asking her to share it with the rest of the staff, and the lovely fan was packed away with my other belongings. I would keep it as a memento of an evening that now seemed dreamlike and unreal, a blur of flickering golden light made even vaguer by the alcohol I had unwisely consumed.

This morning, cool, clear-headed, I could view my attraction to Orlov with objectivity. I had felt a certain stirring, yes, but it had been purely physical and in no way a betrayal of my love for Jeremy. I had been in a sad, pensive mood, feeling very vulnerable, and he had been extremely amiable, extremely charming. Any woman would have responded

to that potent, persuasive, sexual allure, but there had been no seduction and, all things considered, I had conducted myself in a blameless fashion. Orlov had shown me a great deal of consideration, had not pressed, had been a gentleman, however rough at the edges. I appreciated that. Another man might have turned the evening into a very unpleasant struggle of wills.

I pulled the heavy violet silk hood over my head and arranged the folds of the cloak more closely around me.

Three more Russian guards came out of the inn, grumbling among themselves as they marched toward the

stables. All three were heavily armed, I observed. I recognized Ivan and one of the others, but Vladimir wasn't with them. He was probably standing guard outside the door of Lucie's room, I thought, shuddering as I remembered the near-murder I had witnessed. Vladimir took his post very seriously, as, indeed, did all the guards. The villagers were certainly going to be pleased to see the last ofthem. One of the maids had told me this morning that "them 'orrible .

Ruskies" had almost demolished one of the village taverns last night after they left the taproom. There had been a bloody brawl, three villagers had been seriously injured and one of the serving wenches had been "brutally ravished"

by six of the brutes, although "that Madie

,Awkins" wasn't any better than she should be and probably relished every minute of it.

Orlov had undoubtedly showered more gold coins around to pay for damages to persons and place, I reflected.

The proprietor of the tavern was probably counting his profits at this very minute, and Madie Hawkins would be richer, too, in experience if nothing else. I stepped back as the magnificent white and gold carriage pulled into the yard, the handsome grays stamping restlessly.

"It seems we are going to have this splendid vehicle all to ourselves," a voice behind me said, "at least for the first lap."

I turned. Because of the noise of the carriage I hadn't heard Sir Harry Lyman come outside. Tall, lanky, with short-clipped brick red hair and weary brown eyes, he was elegantly attired in black with a splendid waistcoat of maroon satin patterned with black silk embroidery. In his late forties, he had the worn, slightly faded look of a man whose life has been harried by details and minor crises.

The dashing clothes merely accentuated a complexion like old parchment, the fatigue in those friendly eyes.

"Sir Harry Lyman," he said, "and you must be the celebrated Miss Marietta Danver."

"Celebrated?"

"Count Orlov scarcely spoke of anything else on the ride back from London. Most aggravating," he added. "I had hoped to go over some very important papers with him."

"He told me you handled various business matters for hiim. "

"And I rue the day I agreed to do so," Sir Harry said dryly. "Orlov is an interesting chap, but he has no head for business. The exasperation I endure is equaled only by the profits I make."

"I would imagine there are quite a lot ofthe latter."

"Quite a lot," he agreed. "My nervous system may collapse, my hair may turn white, but if he continues to turn over to me such generous sums for investment, I'lfsoon be a wealthy man."

Sir Harry removed a silver watch from his pocket and glanced at it distractedly, obviously preoccupied with the thousand and one things he needed to do in the city.

"You mentioned that we would have the carriage to ouro selves," I said. "Lucie and the count won't be joining us?"

"Not this morning," he replied. "Lucie, it seems, was eager to put on the English riding habit her uncle brought her from London and decided to do the first lap on horseback-she's an excellent rider, if a trifle headstrong and reckless."

"And the count decided to join her?"

He nodded, putting away the watch he was still holding in his palm. "He much prefers horseback, hates being cooped up in a carriage. They've gone on ahead, and we'll rendezvous at noon when, it appears; we will have a picnic on the side of the road."

His dry, resigned tone indicated that he was less than thrilled with the idea. Although I would have enjoyed chatting with Lucie, I was relieved to have my next meeting with Orlov delayed. Why was I so apprehensive about seeing him again? What did I fear?

There was a clatter of iron on cobbles as the four guards I had seen earlier came riding into the yard, holding the splendid grays to a slow walk. I had to admit that they were an imposing sight as they took their places, two on either side of the carriage. The driver settled back on his perch, tightening his hold on the reins. A liveried groom opened the door for us, and Sir Harry gave me his hand, helping me into an interior that was all plush white velvet and gold gilt. Sides and ceiling were covered with white leather embossed with gold
fleurs-de-lis.

"Modest little rig, isn't it?" Sir Harry said, sinking back into the velvet cushions across from me.

"I've never been in a carriage so grand," I admitted.

"It's modest compared to some I've seen in St.

Petersburg," he told me. "Orlov himself used to have one that put this to shame. When he was-ah-officially attached to the court, he owned a blue and silver rig that literally stopped traffic when he took it out."

The groom closed the door and took his place
on
the standing platform on back of the carriage. The driver cracked his whip, clicked the reins smartly. The carriage began to move slowly out of the yard, the four guards keeping pace beside it. I looked through the window at the rambling old inn with its mellow rose-gray brick walls and thatched roof. The faded blue sign swung gently on its hinges. The Wayfarer was a place I would not soon forget.

Sir Harry sighed, resigned to a long, unproductive journey.

We passed through the brick portals and started down the road that led through the village. People came out to stare at the spectacle as we passed. Several of them booed, and I had the feeling that, had it not been for the guards, we would have been pelted with rocks and refuse.

"It would appear that Orlov's men have hardly endeared themselves to the local folk," Sir Harry observed.

"Hardly," I said. "Did you hear about last night?"

"In some detail. The good count severely reprimanded his men and scattered gold all over the village." He shook his head. "I'll never understand the Russian character.

The same men who raised such hell last night will sob like infants at the sound of a native song played on a balalaika, tears pouring down their cheeks."

"You spent a great deal of time in Russia, didn't you?" I asked.

"Almost twenty years. Elizabeth was ruler when I took my first post-a very minor post, I might add. I was an attache to an attache to an attache, little more than a clerk.

Poor pay, very long hours, a great deal of youthful enthusiasm."

"It must have been terribly exciting."

"Exciting indeed for a youth of twenty-six. Elizabethnow there was a figure for you, painted like a china doll, so bloated up she could hardly move without assistance, stilI-uh-lustily indulging in various pleasures. Her nephew and heir was a drooling, demented bully alternately drilling his private troops until they dropped or torturing his cocker spaniels-if he wasn't playing with toy soldiers, that is."

"And Catherine?" I asked.

Sir Harry hesitated a moment before answering, his weary brown eyes looking into the past. "A dull, colorless little nonentity back then," he said, "abused by her husband, ignored by the Empress and scorned by the rest of the court. She was marking time the whole while, ingratiating herself with the army, winning the respect of the people. Without a drop of Russian blood she became more Russian than the Russians, observing all the religious ceremonies,

clinging to the old customs, making a great show of it. An exceedingly shrewd woman, this obscure German princess brought to Russia to wed the heir. Catherine was determined to take the throne. When the time came, she was ready."

"I find it incredible that she could just-just take over the country."

"Incredible, but not really surprising under the circumstances.

Her husband was literally mad-it would have

been disastrous if Peter had been permitted to reign-and she was, after all, the mother of the heir. Europe was scandalized,

but the Russian people were happy with their new Empress."

"Is-is it true that she had Peter murdered?"

"The official word is that he died quite suddenly of colic,"

Sir Harry replied.

"I understand the Orlovs were holding him prisoner at the time."

"Peter was being--uh-cdetained, yes. For his own good, of course."

The irony in his voice was light, so subtle as to be almost indetectable, but I caught it nevertheless. As the carriage moved smoothly past open fields with the guards galloping protectively on either side, I saw that Sir Harry was still very much the diplomat. Although we were speaking of events that had taken place some fifteen years ago, he was not willing to divulge privileged information. I felt certain he knew the truth about Peter Ill's mysterious death, but he wasn't going to reveal any secrets that might tarnish the image of the man whose business he was handling.

"Count Orlov told me that you got along very well with Catherine," I remarked.

"I did indeed," he replied. "I was considerably younger in those days and-uh-considerably more attractive to the ladies. The Empress didn't get along well with the British ambassador, a fusty type, and she preferred working with-uh-healthy young men, if possible. Our relationship was strictly a working one, but a certain amount of flattery and mild flirtation made it much easier to deal with her. Catherine was-is-a strong, shrewd, formidably intelligent ruler, but she is first and foremost a woman.

Those clever enough to realize it have a distinct edge."

"You-you seem to admire her a great deal."

"Indeed I do. Catherine is the best thing that could possibly have happened to Russia at this particular time.

Peter the Great brought the country out of the Dark Ages, and Catherine is striving to bring the Age of Enlightenment to a country still weighed down with medieval customs and superstitions. She has thrown open the windows, thrown open the doors, made Russia a part of the rest of the world."

Sir Harry paused as the carriage passed over a particularly bad rut. In the luxurious, velvet-cushioned interior, we barely felt the bump. He adjusted his neck cloth, his brown eyes thoughtful as he continued.

"When I knew Catherine, she got up at six o'clock in the morning, rubbed her face with ice and, after several cups of black coffee, set to work. She often worked ten hours without pause, surrounded by ministers who couldn't begin to keep up with her. I've never known a person with such discipline, such drive."

"Yet her private life is the scandal of Europe," I said.

Sir Harry allowed himself a thin smile. "It is traditional for kings to have their favorites-Charles II had Nell Gwynn, Barbara Castlemaine and a score of others, Louis XIV had Louise de la Valliere, Montespan, the straightlaced Madame de Maintenon-and they are admired for

their virility. Is it so shocking, I wonder, for an Empress equally as powerful to have her male favorites?"

"I –I hadn't thought of it that way."

"Alas," he said, "the ladies I mentioned had far too much power, far too great an influence over the sovereigns whose beds they warmed, and the same is true of the men who keep Catherine amused. Her-uh-extremely strong sexual proclivities render her quite vulnerable and are the one dent in an otherwise invincible suit of armor."

"Apparently Count Orlov kept her amused for quite some time."

"She loved him wildly, blindly, inordinately. His word was her command. She was, I fear, an abject slave to her passion for him. She heaped him with honors, lavished him with riches, built a marble palace for him and gave him more and more power."

"Yet she sent him away."

"Even the strongest passions begin to pale in time, and the good count was not always wise, not always discreet. A woman can tolerate just so many infidelities. She showered him with even more lavish gifts-another estate, six thousand serfs, an increased annual salary-and sent him packing. Orlov was desolate. All the wealth in the worldand he has a fair share of it-can't compensate for what he lost."

"Power, you mean?"

"Power," he said. "Orlov did his best to get her back. He gave her a solitaire diamond as large as a door knob, said to be the largest in the world. It is known as the Orlov Diamond, and it is indeed a wondrous thing, but it failed to bring her back. She accepted it graciously, had it set in the Russian Imperial Scepter under a jeweled eagle but sent him packing just the same."

"It must have been a terrible blow," I said.

"It was indeed. During the intervening years Count Orlov Q.as spent most of his time traveling rather disconsolately from country to country, trying to forget. He loved her in his way, you see, although his way was a bit too casual for a woman as jealous and possessive as Catherine."

"He-he hasn't found another woman to replace her?"

"It would be a rare woman indeed who could replace Catherine of Russia," Sir Harry said.

I thought about all he had told me as we continued our journey in the luxurious coach that smelled of crushed velvet and teak. All I had learned about him only imbued Count Orlov with more fascination, of course, vesting him with an even stronger aura of glamour. The man who had captivated Catherine of Russia, whom she had loved

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