"Not the slightest."

"Should I be jealous?"

"Of course not. If I'm not certain that even you could convince me to marry again, then this anonymous admirer, whoever he may be, has not the remotest chance."

"Oh, I'll convince you, Emily. Never doubt it. By this time next year, we'll be breakfasting together daily, and it won't be downstairs."

2

"What a bizarre incident," David Francis said after listening to my spirited account of the burglary. Cécile had met him the previous week at the studio of Michael Barber, a sculptor, and tonight we brought both gentlemen to my house in Berkeley Square following a trip to the theater to see Mr. Ibsen's controversial new play, Hedda Gabler. Like Cécile, Mr. Francis was a patron of the arts, and the pair had become fast friends the moment they began discussing their mutual admiration of French impressionism.

"Even more bizarre when you consider the fact that there have been three such thefts," I said, and told them what had occurred at the houses of Lord Grantham and Mrs. Wilmot.

"How strange to find a thief with such specific purpose," Mr. Barber said. "Why this interest in the French queen?"

"It's hard to avoid the House of Bourbon since Mr. Berry arrived in London," I said. "Society is consumed with all things French."

"C'est vrai," Cécile said. "But I will not believe for a moment that Monsieur Berry is behind the crimes. He's not clever enough by half."

"And even if he were, he drinks far too much to pull off such a scheme," Mr. Barber said.

"Do you think he truly is who he says? Surely Marie Antoinette wouldn't have produced a great-great-grandson of such dubious merit." I swirled the port in my glass as I spoke.

"Marie Antoinette is not often viewed as a sympathetic character," Mr. Francis said.



15 из 265