The Magician's Wife

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Emmeline is the young, lovely wife of Henri Lambert, a world-famous magician. But her secluded, bourgeois existence vanishes forever when she and her husband are summoned to the country estate of Napoleon III. Lambert's mission for the Emperor is crucial to his country's empire-building future. He and Emmeline are to travel to North Africa where, through his flawless illusionist's art, Lambert is expected to perform a near-miracle: to show the primitive Bedouins that France's power is absolute. But the Arab ...
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Overview

Emmeline is the young, lovely wife of Henri Lambert, a world-famous magician. But her secluded, bourgeois existence vanishes forever when she and her husband are summoned to the country estate of Napoleon III. Lambert's mission for the Emperor is crucial to his country's empire-building future. He and Emmeline are to travel to North Africa where, through his flawless illusionist's art, Lambert is expected to perform a near-miracle: to show the primitive Bedouins that France's power is absolute. But the Arab tribesmen are in thrall to another "Holy God," an aging marabout they look upon as a living saint - and their savior. It is up to Lambert, with the help of Emmeline, to be hailed as the greater magician. Only by demonstrating irrefutable proof of his magic can Lambert help the French imperialists quash imminent rebellion and complete their conquest of Algeria. The customs and ways of the Moorish people are strange to Emmeline - and strangely liberating. Beneath the mesmerizing glare of the North African sun, she finds herself succumbing to the attentions of Colonel Deniau, the charismatic chief of the Bureau Arabe. Gradually, she begins to shed her inhibitions, along with her provincial ideas of patriotism and propriety. It is Emmeline who threatens the outcome of the French mission and risks her own life in an act of courage and betrayal that will have unforeseen and dangerous consequences, and leave her profoundly changed. Inspired by a true story, set against the breathtaking landscape of our not-too-distant past, The Magician's Wife sweeps from the splendor and pageantry of the French court to the majesty and mystery of the Sahara.
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Editorial Reviews

Stephanie Zacharek
Brian Moore sure has a gift for packing maximum depth into a very trim number of pages. In The Magician's Wife, Moore (whose books include The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne and the historical novel Black Robe) paints a political backdrop in watercolor and then sets to work enriching it with detail, using it as a context for exploring and breaking down larger themes. Moore thinks like a historian, but he's able to feel like a novelist, and that's what makes his work so engaging. The Magician's Wife is set in mid-19th century France, just as Napoleon III was hoping to sink his claws into North Africa, and although one of Moore's aims is to underscore the treachery of imperialism, he's even more interested in the effects the larger political arena has on his characters: He digs right into their motives, their crises of conscience, their tussles with their own fears and desires.

Sometimes The Magician's Wife even reads like a somewhat level-headed historical romance, a sure sign that as much as Moore wants to make us think, he also wants to give us some visceral, sensory pleasures. Perceptive, straightforward (and beautiful) Emmeline is the wife of the distracted, self-absorbed Henri, a magician who craves the attention and respect of nobility and royalty. He's delighted when he and Emmeline are invited to the court of Napoleon III for a week in the country to rub shoulders with the rich and famous. Emmeline, nervous about fitting in with high society, begs Henri to refuse the invitation, but he insists. It turns out that Henri and Emmeline fit very specifically into a plan hatched by the dashing (but calculating) Colonel Deniau that will strengthen France's foothold in Algeria, a country the emperor seeks to dominate.

As a prose stylist, Moore stacks his details beautifully. He takes his time setting up simple scenes, as when Emmeline, having traveled to Algeria with Henri, goes out riding: "The road ahead was empty, but minutes later she heard behind her the clanking of bells and, turning, saw three Tuareg riders, their faces half-masked in the fashion of their tribe, advancing on her, whipping their giant racing camels as they came up on her and passed her, the iron harness bells worn by the great beasts clanking at every step, their riders high on Tuareg saddles adorned with woolen tassels, the long camel necks swaying as, with undulating strides, they vanished in a cloud of dust." It's imagery like that that makes Moore's book seem expansive, even though its epic themes are rendered as slender and as elegant as a lady's compact. -- Salon

Thomas Flanagan
Accomplished and adroit. —The Los Angeles Times
San Francisco Chronicle
Enthralling and provocative.
Library Journal
A literary novel filled with suspense? A novel of intrigue for serious readers? Either way, this book sounds fascinating and distinctly different: as the French begin colonizing North Africa, one woman finds herself provoked to a spiritual crisis.
Library Journal
A literary novel filled with suspense? A novel of intrigue for serious readers? Either way, this book sounds fascinating and distinctly different: as the French begin colonizing North Africa, one woman finds herself provoked to a spiritual crisis.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780786213887
  • Publisher: Macmillan Library Reference
  • Publication date: 4/1/1998
  • Series: Basic Ser.
  • Pages: 359
  • Product dimensions: 5.74 (w) x 8.77 (h) x 1.23 (d)

Meet the Author

Brian Moore was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in 1921. He served with the Ministry of War in North Africa, Italy, and France during the Second World War. He emigrated to Canada in 1948 and worked as a newspaper reporter for the Montreal Gazette from 1948 until 1952.

While living in Canada, Moore wrote his first three novels, The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, The Feast of Lupercal, and The Luck of Ginger Coffey, the first two set in Belfast, the third in Montreal. In 1959 he moved to the United States, but Canada continued to play a role in his later novels, including I Am Mary Dunne, The Great Victorian Collection, and Black Robe. His many honours included two Governor General’s Awards for Fiction.

Brian Moore died in Malibu, California, in 1999.

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Read an Excerpt

The Colonel left the house at five o'clock. AS his carriage drove out towards the main gates Emmeline put down her petitpoint and went to look through the window of her sitting room. She wondered about this visitor. He must be important. For the last two weeks her husband had refused to see anyone, remaining locked up in his workroom with orders that he not be disturbed. As the Colonel's carriage reached the gate, a painted mechanical gatekeeper wheeled jerkily out of its lodge, legs moving on an electric track as it approached and touched the lock of the gate. The gate swung open, the automaton stiffly raising its right arm in salute. When the carriage had crossed the hidden trip wire which lay at the entrance the gate began to close. As the carriage moved off in a wall of dust down the rutted road which led to Tours, the automaton trundled back into its lodge and an electric bell sounded within the house, signalling that the visitor had departed. A moment later she heard a second bell. She looked up at the bell panel installed in her sitting room. That would be for Jules. Soon Jules would come upstairs to tell her that the Master could not leave his work to join her for supper.

Two weeks ago a new mechanical figurine had arrived on schedule from the workshop, where her husband's artisans had constructed it exactly to his specifications. But something was wrong with the mechanism. The automaton's hand, which was supposed to draw silhouettes in ink on a sheet of paper, behaved erratically, producing a series of scribbles. He had at once begun to take it apart painstakingly, obsessively, as always when a marionette developed some flaw. There was no reasoning with him, not that she had tried. He no longer thought of himself as a magician. Now he was an inventor, a scientist. But would a real scientist spend his days making mechanical marionettes?

A bell jangled on the panel above her head. That would be Jules. She went to her escritoire and pressed a button. The door opened electrically.

"I beg pardon, madame. Monsieur sends his compliments and asks that you meet with him in the green salon in ten minutes' time, if that is convenient?"

"Tell him yes."

As Jules withdrew, the electric beam automatically closed the door behind him. She went to her dressing table and sat in front of the triptych mirror, beginning to brush her hair. She set great store by this brushing and did it three times daily, tugging at the long thick mane of her hair, counting the strokes. She was not brushing it for him. These days she sometimes wondered if he noticed that she no longer used mascara or rouged her cheeks except on the rare occasions when they went out to dine. And even then, what was the point of dressing up and trying to look pretty? It was always the same: when they entered a room people looked at him, not at her, he, the famous Henri Lambert--and she? May I ask you, Madame Lambert, what it is like to be married to a great magician? It must be exciting to be the wife of a person like that?

At first it had been exciting. She was happy to escape Rouen for the pleasures of Paris. They lived in a furnished apartment in the seventh arrondissement which he told her was a gift to him from one of his admirers. He also owned an atelier in Neuilly, where he employed three artisans in the manufacture and painting of automata and electric devices, and a small theatre near the Palais Royal, where each season he performed his celebrated "Magical Evenings." In the first two years of their marriage he took her with him on two foreign tours, once to Berlin and once to Madrid. She had enjoyed seeing these cities and had hoped to see others. But after her first miscarriage Lambert decided that he no longer wished or needed to keep his Paris theatre or go on foreign tours. "I've long ago made my name as a performer," he told her. "Now is the time for me to devote more time to my inventions. And so, my darling, I've decided that we shall live in the country with servants and comforts in a home where we can bring up our children and I can work undisturbed."

At once, in his usual secretive way, he bought and furnished this manor outside Tours without even showing her the premises. And so, when she first entered the Manoir des Chenes, knowing it would be her home, she was pleased, disquieted, and disappointed. Pleased because the rooms were larger and more grand than those in her parents' home, disquieted by the strange displays, disappointed because the manor was down a rural road that led to Tours, a dull town far from Paris. It was, she felt, less a country house than a theatrical museum. There were magic boxes in almost every room, a large puppet theatre in the front hall, its stage electrically lit, and on the walls portraits of magicians from a bygone age and Large framed posters of Lambert's command performances before the Queen of England, the Empress of Russia, King Louis Philippe, and Emperor Napoleon III. In addition to the chimes and tickings of forty-two clocks, an electric carillon sounded constantly in different tones, each tone telling the master of the house that a visitor had arrived or departed, that a servant was preparing a certain meal, that the gardeners were working in a specific area of the grounds, that the morning mail had arrived or been sent out, that the electric grottoes and displays had been activated by someone's entering them. In his workroom in the dungeonlike basement, Lambert controlled and watched over each of these activities.

And now, minutes after Jules's visit, clocks throughout the house began to chime the quarter-hour. She hurried out of her sitting room, down the main staircase and into the ground-floor reception room. As she entered she looked at once to the clock over the chimney piece, strategically placed to astonish all who had not seen it. Five feet in height, made of transparent glass, it kept perfect time. He kept perfect time. She knew that in less than one minute he would appear in the doorway.

"Emmeline!"

As always, coming into a room he made an entrance, now opening his arms as if to embrace her, palms up to show that he had nothing to hide. Normally, while working at home he wore an old velvet coat, an open shirt, and checkered trousers which he bought in a store which provided uniforms for chefs and kitchen staff. But today he was dressed as for a performance, in a dark frock coat, a white linen waistcoat, a formal shirt with red silk cravat and narrow trousers of dark grey wool. This was the attire that had made him famous as the first magician to appear, not in ornate oriental robes or other extravagant stage costumes, but dressed soberly, a person no different from his audience and therefore ever more mysterious, ever more the sorcerer. Now, in a conjuring gesture he slid his slender white hand into an inside pocket of his frock coat and produced a gold-lettered invitation card which he held in front of her.

"We are going to Compiegne, my dear."

"Compiegne?"

"Yes. We have been invited to a serie for the last week of November."

A serie? The Emperor inviting his guests to a week of hunting, shooting and parties--everyone had heard of those grand affairs, everyone in Paris talked about them. Was Henri to perform?--that must be it. But why me?

"Henri, if you're going to perform there, why would I be invited? Aristocrats, grand people ... They don't want me."

He handed her the gilded card. "Read it." She stared at the ornate lettering:

"It's an invitation for both of us. And I am not being asked to 'perform.' I'm told the Emperor wishes to see me on a matter of national importance."

She stared at him. "What are you talking about?"

"I can't discuss it, not yet. It's highly confidential."

"But Henri, I can't go there. I'd be terrified."

He turned away and went to the window, which looked out on the main driveway. It was his habit when irritated to lapse into silence.

"Henri, there must be some mistake. Please?"

"There's no mistake. It's a great honor, don't you understand that? Everyone--society, aristocrats, millionaires, artists--everyone dreams of being invited to Compiegne. You who complain that life is dull here! This is the chance of a lifetime. We are to be the house guests of Napoleon III. And of the Empress! We have been invited for a whole week."

"A week? What are we going to wear? We don't belong in that world."

"Don't worry. Colonel Deniau has given me a list of the items we will need for our visit. In my case, I'll have to be fitted for court clothes. You'll have to have at least twenty dresses. The style for the ladies is that they should not be seen twice in the same costume. Emmeline, it's going to be wonderful. We'll be entertained, we will mingle with the gratin, we'll be in Their Majesties' company each night for dinner."

"But it's not--I don't want to go! Besides, it will cost a fortune! My dressmaker here wouldn't be able to make anything suitable. I'd have to go to Paris. I won't have time to do all that. And in Compiegne, what would I do all day among a lot of titled ladies who'll be looking down their noses at me? And you dressed up in court dress, dining among marquesses and counts. Henri, it's not our place. We must apologize, you must invent some excuse."

"Nonsense! And what do you mean, it's not our place? I've met royalty many times, I've been to the Tuileries, the Emperor knows me--"

"But as a performer, not a guest!"

"Emmeline, I am not being invited as a performer. I am being asked to do something for my country, something of the highest importance. That's why the Emperor wants to see me. They are trying to persuade me."

"Persuade you to do what?"

"I'll tell you later, if I decide to do it. Listen to me. When Colonel Deniau first spoke about this matter, that was two months ago. He came here specially, at the end of August, do you remember?"

"No, I don't. I never saw him, you never introduced him. And today I just saw the back of his head as he was leaving. Who is he, anyway?"

"He's the head of the Bureau Arabe--the political office of France in North Africa. At any rate, last August I refused his request. My mind was quite made up. I was too busy here. Now they have come back with this invitation. The Emperor himself wants to persuade me."

"The Emperor?"

"Yes! I am being wooed by Napoleon III. Think of it! And as far as being made to feel uncomfortable, you'll be treated as the wife of an inventor, which is just as high a calling as a sculptor or writer or any of the other intellectuals who have attended these series."

She looked at him, standing there by the window, his hand tucked into a fold of his waistcoat like Bonaparte, whom he admired, cocking his head slightly to the side as she had seen him do on stage when he listened to a question from his audience, his smile, his soft tone of voice aiming to distract her, to shift her attention away from her fears. But of course it wasn't a matter of how he would be treated; it was a matter of how she could survive a week in Compiegne, a week of blushes, feeling looked down on, not knowing what to say.

"I've read about the series at Compiegne," she said. "Everyone knows you bring your own servants. I'd have to have a lady's maid. Can you see Therese in the part? She doesn't even have a uniform. And Jules, is he to be your valet? Henri, listen to me. Say that I'm sick. Tell them you'll go alone. If they're so anxious to have you do whatever it is, then it won't matter that you haven't brought me with you. And it will be a lot cheaper. Have you any idea what all those dresses will cost if I have them made up by a Paris dressmaker?"

"Don't worry," he said. "I'll pay for it. And you can engage a lady's maid for the trip. We'll dress Jules up."

"But that's only the beginning--"

"Listen to me, Emmeline. This is what we're going to do. I'm going to send you to Paris at once. Madame Cournet will advise you. She knows about these things. I've always consulted with her when I'm giving a royal performance. She'll find a dressmaker, a maid, everything you'll need. You'll have to stay in Paris for the fittings."

"In Paris? That could take weeks."

"We leave for Compiegne on the twenty-second. That's four weeks from now. That will give you time. A month Paris, it will be a holiday for you. You're always saying how dull it is here."

"So I won't see you for four weeks?"

"I don't know. I may have to come to Paris for a day or two, but in the meantime I must get on with my work. Now what about you--do you think you could leave tomorrow? If so, I'll order the phaeton to be ready to take you to the station. The Paris train leaves at noon."

"But what if I say I won't go?"

"My dear, I have already accepted for both of us. Tomorrow, Colonel Deniau will convey my thanks to the First Chamberlain. Emmeline, we must do it. I can't give you a choice."

She felt tears. She heard him ring for Jules. "Perhaps you'd like me to join you for supper this evening," he said. "I'm at a delicate stage in my work, but if you're leaving tomorrow ... ?"

"No. I'll have supper in my room. If I leave tomorrow, I'll have to pack."

He came towards her. She held back her tears. She did not turn to him. He bent and kissed the nape of her neck. "You're a darling," he said. "What would I do without you?"

The Emperor. Society. The Second Empire. Everyone talked about this new Paris. The year before last, in the rue de Rivoli at eight o'clock on a September evening, Emmeline stood in a crowd of spectators, watching a file of carriages move into the courtyard of the Palais des Tuileries. From these carriages she saw, descending, gentlemen in knee breeches and silk stockings, officers in dress uniforms and decorations, ladies in billowing crinolines, their breasts almost bare, their necks and arms adorned with pearls, rubies, and diamonds. A woman beside Emmeline pointed out two famous beauties, the Duchesse de Pourtales and the Marquesa de Contadades, as the guests moved under a marquee into the entrance hall of the Pavillon de l'Horloge. Swiss guards stood to attention there, halberds to hand, plumed helmets on their heads. It was a sight Emmeline would not forget, a sight she had gazed on that night with the pleasure of watching actors in some theatrical extravaganza, a glimpse of a grand world she would never know. And now, suddenly, her husband had entered it.

"My dear child," Madame Cournet said, smiling. "If you're worried about how you will be received, remember it's all-important that your clothes be designed by Monsieur West. Compiegne is a fashion show. In a West toilette you will be recognized as someone of the first rank. He's not a dressmaker, he's an artist. He dresses the Empress herself."

"The Empress?" Emmeline said. "But then it will cost a fortune."

Madame Cournet smiled and tapped the end of her nose with the silver lorgnette which she deployed much as a school-teacher uses a pointer. "Not quite a fortune," she said. "Although an original toilette of the sort Monsieur West designs for ladies who attend the serie will cost your husband a great deal. It is de rigueur that you change three times daily. You will need eight day costumes, including a travelling suit, seven ball dresses, and five gowns for tea. But it will be worth it. You will be the height of fashion, I assure you."

"I'll have to speak to my husband," Emmeline said. A flutter of hope rose within her. Twenty dresses made by the Empress's dressmaker? Perhaps now Henri would see sense.

"There's no need," Madame Cournet said. "I've already received Monsieur Lambert's permission to make the appointment. It's arranged for Thursday at three p.m. in Monsieur West's villa at Suresnes. Believe me, it will be one of the most delightful experiences of your life. Such taste, such an artist! You'll be enchanted."

That Thursday, arriving with Madame Cournet at precisely three o'clock in the afternoon at a villa in the suburbs of Paris, Emmeline, wearing her very best daytime dress, coat, and hat, was shown by a servant into a reception room crowded with gilt-edged chairs, good mirrors, embroidered pillows, small tables covered with knickknacks and silver-framed photographs. She and Madame Cournet were invited to sit on a large red satin sofa. In an adjoining room a fountain of eau de cologne spurted continuously, filling the air with a sweet yet pungent odor. Monsieur West made his entrance ten minutes later, accompanied by three young male assistants. He was enormously fat and spoke French with an English accent which Emmeline found hard to understand. He wore a loose silk smock, black velvet trousers, and a huge velvet beret which fell over his right eye. He described himself as an artist, and in the next hour, having inspected Emmeline as though she were a piece of furniture, he made sketches and notations which in subsequent weeks evolved into morning costumes of gray velvet, black velvet, and dark blue poplin adorned with sable tippets. There were also sable and chinchilla hats with coats to match, five afternoon gowns, and six sumptuous evening dresses, each costume, gown, and dress made to emphasize that it was unique and indisputably the work of an artist in haute couture. Because all of the evening dresses were crinolines, Emmeline had to practice walking in them, so difficult were they to maneuver. In addition, under their wide hoops she must wear pantaloons. And as she lacked certain items of jewelry which Monsieur West considered essential, Madame Cournet took her to a discreet boutique where decorated fans, bracelets, and bandeaux were rented out to her for a period of a month against a large deposit. Finally, when the toilette was assembled, Madame Cournet engaged on a temporary basis an old woman named Francoise, who had been employed for thirty years in the household of the Count de Maine as lady's maid to the countess. This old woman, servile yet censorious, was yet another reason for Emmeline's feeling of panic when, alone in her bed in the Hotel Montrose on the night of November 21, she waited for the arrival of her husband next morning, the day the serie was about to begin.

"The servants will travel in a separate section of the train," Madame Cournet had advised. "But it will be your responsibility to see that they and your baggage are on the station platform one hour ahead of departure time."

So, on the morning of the twenty-second, Emmeline, dressed in Monsieur West's elegant travelling clothes, took the old woman to the Gare du Nord, where Jules, uncomfortable in his new uniform, stood at the station entrance guarding four trunks and the six huge wooden boxes that housed the West crinolines. When porters had been summoned, the two servants followed the baggage into the station, Emmeline remaining outside the entrance, not wanting to be the first guest to arrive. At 2:00 P.M., when at last she went in, she saw at once, on platform number 1, a smart train, its carriages adorned with the Napoleonic eagle, waiting under a sign, EXTRA ET IMPERIAL. Standing near this sign was a gentleman who, when he saw her approach, introduced himself as Vicomte Walsh, an imperial chamberlain. She was obliged to tell him that her husband had not yet arrived.

"But it is early, madame. Perhaps you would like me to show you to your seat? I will let him know where to find you."

He ushered her onto the train and installed her in a large salon carriage fitted out with comfortable armchairs and tables strewn with illustrated newspapers. She thanked him and sat uneasily alone until 2:15, when, suddenly, the seven first-class passenger coaches began to fill with gentlemen in morning clothes and ladies in travelling cloaks and hats, many of whom seemed to know each other, bowing, nodding, exchanging conversation about acquaintances, receptions, balls, and other matters of which Emmeline knew nothing. Her unease became panic. Where was Henri?

At 2:25 precisely the train engine sounded a piercing signal. At that moment, as though he had planned it, Lambert came strolling down the platform. He stopped to consult with the imperial chamberlain, and on entering her carriage, came to Emmeline, kissing her formally on both cheeks. Although he had not seen her for a month, his first words were: "Where's Jules?"

"He's here, but the servants are in another part of the train."

"Does he have my portfolio?"

"What portfolio?"

"You know the one. It looks like an artist's Portfolio, one to carry drawings in. You've seen it on stage."

"You mean the one you take things from?"

"Yes, that's it. If it was with my baggage you couldn't miss it."

"We have so much baggage, I didn't notice."

"Well, where are the baggage coaches?"

"Henri, we don't have time. The train's leaving. Look, they're closing the doors."

Reluctantly, he sat facing her after bowing to the other gentlemen and ladies in the carriage, strangers who formally and distantly bowed back. At 2:33 P.M., with a second piercing shriek and a sudden convulsive jerk, the imperial train left the station.

The portfolio? She sat, twisting her gloves in frustration. He lied to me. He's going to perform. We're not invited as guests but as the magician and his wife.

She leaned forward. "What's this about your portfolio?" she whispered. "You said you hadn't been asked to do that."

He smiled and held his slender hands palms upward. "I told you the truth, darling. But Colonel Deniau thought it might be an appropriate gesture if I would, perhaps, take part in one of the evening's entertainments."

And then, as though he sensed that the other people in the carriage were listening to this conversation, he turned to them and said, "I'm sorry, we haven't met as yet. This is our first visit to Compiegne. But I've been told we guests are expected to entertain each other during the serie. Is that not so?"

One of the gentlemen, dressed in clothes of English cut, his right eye permanently drooping in a way which gave him a sinister appearance, nodded. "Yes, indeed. But I warn you, these entertainments are exceedingly dull. Yet you are Lambert, are you not? I've seen you onstage."

"Henri Lambert. And may I present my wife."

"My respects, madame. I must say, with your husband on hand I am confident we shall be splendidly entertained."

Emmeline felt her face grow hot. Just as she had feared, the others in the carriage were aristocrats whose every glance in her direction seemed to warn that despite Madame Cournet's coaching and Monsieur West's elaborate toilette she would remain for them beyond the pale, a doctor's daughter, half educated in a Rouennais convent, provincial beyond redemption, and, despite his fame and pretensions, the wife of a person who performed on stage.

Exactly one and one half hours after leaving the Gare du Nord, the imperial train arrived at Compiegne, fifty-five miles from Paris. As they came out of the station the passengers were met by a large crowd of townspeople and tourists, assembled to see the nobles, diplomats, artists, and foreign dignitaries invited by the Emperor to his latest serie. Emmeline, drawing her new travelling cloak tightly around her because of the November chill, watched as valets and maids scuffled about, supervising the loading of scores of trunks onto baggage carts. At the station entrance ten char a bancs were lined up, their painted dark green coachwork outlined in red, each drawn by four horses. Mounted on the lead horses were postillions in short red velvet jackets, wearing black velvet caps over their white wigs, their small pigtails tied with black bows which flapped up and down behind them as, blowing their horns and cracking their whips, they rumbled the char a bancs through the quiet town of Compiegne. Behind the char a bancs came the servants' coaches, and in the rear the baggage carts, on which a mass of trunks swayed to and fro as the procession left the cobbled streets of the town. Soon they were travelling along the roads and crossroads of a huge royal hunting forest, where at every turn red painted signposts pointed towards the chateau of Compiegne. And when at last the procession clattered into the main courtyard of the chateau, Emmeline stared up at huge eighteenth-century buildings, at wings and turrets and an immensity of windows.

"Beautiful, beautiful," her husband said, turning to her with a satisfied smile as the postillions reined their horses to an abrupt stop in front of the entrance arches. "What a wonderful place to spend our week!" But Emmeline looked uneasily at the great stone staircase where servants waited to help the guests alight, servants whose court uniforms and powdered wigs brought back that evening two years ago when she, anonymous in the crowd outside the Tuileries, had her first sight of this intimidating world. Now she must step down with the other guests, pretending to be like them, as they walked towards the First Chamberlain. After a formal greeting he passed them over to a head usher, who conducted them through a series of ornate ground-floor reception rooms into a long hall, where a line of valets waited to show them to their apartments. As Emmeline followed their particular valet, she saw Lambert wave to a handsome army colonel with a scarred face, military mustache, and sun-darkened skin.

"Who's that?"

"That's Colonel Deniau. I'll introduce you later."

"He's the one who arranged all this, isn't he?"

"Yes. I've told you already. He's my liaison here."

She studied the colonel as the valet ushered them towards a wide marble staircase which led to the upper floors of the chateau. At the foot of this staircase, a second valet handed each set of arriving guests a numbered card tied with a yellow ribbon. They then followed their particular valet up the staircase. On the first floor some of the guests, including the colonel, were led off down various corridors. This process was repeated when they reached the second floor. Emmeline noticed that the rooms to which these more privileged guests were led seemed to be suites, many of them overlooking the park. The remaining guests must climb yet another staircase to reach the upper floors of the chateau. At last, with just one other couple, Emmeline and Lambert ascended a final staircase, leading to a floor just under the roof. At this point, the lady ahead of Emmeline angrily announced to her husband, "You must complain, Theophile. This is disgraceful."

"Please, Florence, I know about these things. The allocations are made according to a plan. There's absolutely no way we can change it now."

Their valet led them to a door. On it was a white card tied with a yellow ribbon, similar to the one which had been handed to them earlier. In its elegant calligraphy, Emmeline saw a number and their names. The valet held open the door, showing them into a cold attic room with a sloping wooden ceiling and a view from its window of turrets and roofs. Adjoining this room was a small, dark bedroom.

As Emmeline went into it to remove her hat and cloak, her husband called to her from the sitting room. "I think that room's going to be a little small for both of us. I'll sleep on the couch out here." As usual, he was being discreet.

There was a knock on the door. Three soldiers of the royal guard entered, bringing in their trunks and the large crinoline boxes, which took up most of the space in the living room. Lambert went at once to his portfolio, opening it with an air of relief, then placed it against a wall.

"Your servants will be sent up at once, monsieur," the valet said. "And the First Chamberlain wishes to remind you that dinner is at seven-thirty and that the Emperor and Empress will welcome you in the Grande Salle des Fetes at seven p.m.

The door shut. She saw Henri bend down and poke the fire in the room outside.

"It's freezing cold," she said. "I think these must be servants' rooms."

He pretended not to hear. She sat down on the bed. She felt dizzy. It was nerves, she knew, but knowing it did not help. Madame Cournet had told her one must change costumes three times daily. It was now 4:30. As she must prepare for the imperial reception in the Grande Salle des Fetes, she would not have time to change into afternoon costume but must put on the evening dress of black lace over white tulle with twisted green velvet bows, a low decolletage, and crinoline. Madame Cournet had recommended it as the proper choice for a first meeting with the Emperor and the Empress.

Shortly before seven, having completed her toilette with the aid of Francoise, the old but skillful lady's maid, Emmeline went out into the sitting room. Her husband, following instructions which had been given him earlier, had dressed for this first evening in court dress of white knee breeches with white silk stockings and a dress frock coat. She saw him rub his hands together for warmth as he stared at his image in the pier glass which was placed in a corner of the sitting room. The fire had long gone out.

"Are you ready, Emmeline? We mustn't be late."

"How will we know where to go?"

"I told you," he said. "Everything is planned here. You'll see."

He was right, she supposed, for as they left their room a valet was waiting for them in the corridor. With a bow, he indicated that they follow him, then led them downstairs and through long corridors to arrive at last at the Grande Salle des Fetes. Here, footmen stood at the doors of an immense salon. Emmeline looked up at the painted frescoed ceiling, the glitter of crystal chandeliers, and then, in trepidation, at the guests now coming into the room. At precisely ten minutes past seven a footman announced the arrival of the First Chamberlain, the Vicomte de Laferriere, and the Grande Maitresse, the Duchesse de Bassano, who moved down the lines of guests, murmuring formal words of welcome. Emmeline did not know whether to curtsy or bow and so stood, bobbing her head foolishly as these grand persons passed by. Although she guessed that by now there must be almost a hundred people in this huge salon, it still seemed half deserted. A chamberlain came up to Henri. "Monsieur, the lady you will escort into dinner is Madame de Deauville. That is the lady over there, with her husband, Monsieur de Deauville."

"And who will take me in?" Emmeline whispered as the chamberlain moved on.

"I've told you, darling. Everything is arranged. You mustn't worry. The colonel says it's just like a military operation."

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