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Authors: Patricia Wynn

Tags: #Georgian Mystery

The Birth of Blue Satan

 

THE BIRTH OF BLUE SATAN

 

PATRICIA WYNN

 

 

HISTORICAL PREFACE

 

The trouble might be said to have started when James II took a second wife.

His first wife was a Protestant, who bore him two daughters, Mary and Anne. His second wife was a Catholic, and she provided him with a Catholic heir, James Francis Stuart. Unwisely in those days, the birth took place with no official witnesses, so the rumour immediately began to circulate that the boy had been born of a commoner and smuggled into the palace in a warming pan. Thereafter, a warming pan became the emblem for those who opposed the Stuart cause.

James II was an authoritarian who threatened the powers of the oligarchy. As a Roman Catholic, himself, he presented a threat to the newly restored Church of England. Religious wars had ravaged England for the better part of a century, and few wished to return to those days of strife. So, in 1688, immediately after the birth of the suspect baby, the newly created political parties, the Tories and the Whigs, united briefly to overthrow James II in what became known as the Glorious Revolution—”glorious” because it preserved the Protestant faith. James was toppled by armies led by William of Orange, his son-in-law, who became William III and reigned jointly with his wife Mary. Since they produced no heirs, Parliament passed an Act of Succession, which stipulated a new order of succession to exclude Roman Catholic heirs, namely James Francis Stuart.

From the beginning, there were those who opposed the revolution, including many priests in the Church of England. Their position was based on the principle of the divine right of kings and a recognition of the absolute authority of the Church, which had consecrated James as king. These priests refused to take the oath of loyalty to William and Mary, and so were called nonjuring priests. They refused to swear loyalty to all subsequent monarchs under the Act of Succession, and as a result, lost the right to hold positions in the state Church, schools, and universities. They found refuge under the patronage of wealthy High-Church Tories who agreed with them.

Mary’s sister Anne succeeded the joint monarchs. When Anne’s only surviving child from eighteen pregnancies died, Sophia of Hanover, a Protestant granddaughter of James I, became next in the line of succession.

In 1714, Sophia predeceased Queen Anne by two months. So, on Anne’s death, the Crown passed to Sophia’s son, George, who became George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland. The current British monarchs are descended from George.

The Hanoverian Succession, as it was called, was unpopular not only with nonjuring clerics and High-Church Tories, but also with Catholics, conservative country squires, and the Highland Scots, who regarded the Stuarts as their hereditary kings. Most of the aristocracy initially accepted George; however, before he succeeded to the throne, he was so successfully courted by the Whigs that he mistrusted all Tories, whom he suspected of being Jacobites, the term given to adherents of the deposed James II and his Catholic heirs (from
Jacobus,
the Latin for James).

Queen Anne’s last ministry had been a Tory ministry. When she died in August of 1714, the Regents appointed by George to hold the throne until he could arrive from Hanover, were nearly all Whigs. Before the parliamentary election the next Spring, George called upon his citizens to return men who would be true to the Protestant cause. He turned his back on the idea of a shared ministry, snubbed many Tories, and forbade many of them his court.

Although no attempt was made to place the Pretender on the throne immediately after the Queen’s death, George’s subsequent actions drove many Tories to the Pretender’s cause. It is during this unsettled time that this novel opens.

On a minor note: from the mid-seventeenth century until sometime early in the eighteenth, the title given to unmarried ladies or girls without a higher or honorific title was in a period of transition. In plays from the Restoration (1660) through newspapers from 1715, this is written as “Mrs.”, the same title accorded to married women. The proper pronunciation was undoubtedly still “mistress,” which had been used since medieval times, although it was on its way to becoming “missis.” The word “miss” was new and was not accepted as a polite form of address. By 1715, the year in which this novel opens, whether one was called “Mrs.” or “miss” had to do with one’s social status. The aristocracy would hold onto the use of “Mrs.” for unmarried ladies for a few years yet. Lady Cowper’s niece, who oversaw the publication of her memoirs, mentions with amusement that her aunt was of the generation that still used “Mrs.” to address unmarried ladies.

 

* * * *

 

W
hat dire offence from amorous causes springs,

What mighty contests arise from trivial things . . .

 

With beating hearts the dire event they wait,

Anxious, and trembling for the birth of Fate.

 

Say, what strange motive, Goddess! could compel

A well-bred Lord t’assault a gentle Belle?

 

And now (as oft in some distempered State)

On one nice Trick depends the general fate
.

 

 

CHAPTER 1

 

The tall, young gentleman with long, fair hair and aquiline features lounged impatiently before the looking-glass. He drummed his long, slender fingers on the dressing-table to quell his annoyance.

The longcase clock in the chamber next door had just rung eleven, yet his shoulder-length peruke was still resting in the same place it had an hour ago—on its stand instead of on his head. His valet, the little Frenchman who was busying himself in a corner, would never allow himself to be rushed.

Philippe withdrew from the Boulle armoire and returned with a familiar object draped over one arm. His eyebrows raised in a soupçon of hope, he dropped to one knee to display it.

“Would
Monseigneur
condescend to wear his new satin cloak this evening?”

Gideon gave it a look that conveyed his disgust. The offending garment, a voluminous cloak with three large shoulder capes, all in deep sapphire Duchesse, was precisely the sort of showy tog he abhorred.

“No, Philippe. I will not condescend to wear it this evening . . . nor any
other
evening, so you will please refrain from holding it out for my inspection.”

As Philippe’s face sagged, Gideon Viscount St. Mars gave an involuntary laugh. “No one but a damned popinjay would be caught out in the street in a rig like that! I cannot conceive why you persist in wasting my allowance on things I would much rather eat than wear.”

“But,
monsieur!
I have already explained myself with such perfection, if
monsieur
would but listen. It is precisely the shade of blue—though
monsieur
refuses to wear it—which will bring out the colour of
monsieur’s
so-beautiful blue eyes.”

“Blue eyes be damned!” Gideon muttered, feeling a rush of heat to his cheeks. He tossed a hasty glance in the mirror and was reassured by his glowering expression and the harsh contours of his face. “I have told you I will not be dressed like a
petit mâitre
at Versailles. I am an English gentleman, not a French courtesan.”

“So much is evident,
Monseigneur
.

“Well, you don’t have to agree with me in that dismal tone of voice. I am not completely loathsome, I hope?”


Mais non, non, non!
Monsieur
is blessed with a noble countenance and a pair of shoulders one can only call
magnifique
. It is
tout simplement
that
monsieur
fails to take advantage of his splendid physique.”

“I took advantage of my splendid physique when I rode
ventre à terre
to arrive in time to dress for the ball. You should be pleased with me.”


O là!
As if
monsieur
has given me half the time I require to make him
présentable!”

“If you would stop lamenting that damned blue cape, which I have instructed you to burn, I should be dressed and at Lord Eppington’s house already.”

“Very well,
Monseigneur
.

Philippe’s shoulders drooped, but Gideon noted that he folded the cloak and carefully placed it in the armoire to bring out at a later date, when he might find his master more tractable.

Gideon grinned at his impudence. The heir to an earldom must have a valet, though he would happily have managed without if Philippe did not entertain him so.

Right now, Philippe had forgotten about the cape in his absorption over Gideon’s
maquillage
. A nearly imperceptible layer of white paint, a faint colouring of rouge, and a dusting of fine powder were all the cosmetics Gideon would allow, although his resulting pallor when combined with a grey-powdered wig made a touch of red all but essential to his lips.

“And the patches,
Monseigneur?
” With a long-suffering sigh, Philippe held up his porcelain box with its assortment of shapes and sizes.

“Two,” Gideon said.

“But two!” The little valet’s resignation crumpled. “But,
monsieur!
My reputation will be ruined if you do not wear eight at the very least!”

“Two,” Gideon repeated firmly. “And none of your hearts or crosses, mind.”

Philippe drew himself up like a martyr, the box clasped like a stake to his heart. “Very well,
monsieur le vicomte
.
” He was truly offended now, as his flared nostrils revealed. “It shall be precisely as you wish, but I hope you do not live to regret the advice Philippe has given you when Mademoiselle Mayfield decides to marry the
Duc de Bournemouth
instead.”

Gideon turned in his chair so rapidly that Philippe took a hasty step backwards. “You little imp! What the devil do you know about me and Isabella Mayfield?”

“I know nothing,
monsieur
. And I fear I shall know nothing at all if
monsieur
refuses to listen to Philippe.”

Gideon fixed him with a glare fierce enough to make a stronger man quail, but Philippe knew his master too well to be afraid. In order to keep his position, however, he endeavoured to look contrite.

Reluctantly, Gideon restrained his temper. “Cut loose, you noisome piece of bait! What do you know about Isabella Mayfield and the Duke of Bournemouth? And how do you come to know it?”


Quand même
— “with an exaggerated shrug, Philippe grew very French— “one may be a mere servant,
monsieur
, and yet not be completely
hors du courant
.

“By that, I suppose you to mean you have been talking to someone else’s servant. Is that it?”

“My lips are sealed.”

Gideon would have laughed at the improbability, but he could not allow his valet, or any other servant for that matter, to gossip about the lady he intended to wed. He could do nothing to prevent rumours from spreading outside his own household, but he exercised a considerable authority over his own staff. And, in this case, he would use it.

“You had better seal those lips, or you will have to find another pair with which to eat your dinner. Do you perfectly understand me, Philippe?”


Oui, Monseigneur
.
” The Frenchman lowered his voice to a confidential whisper. “But, since we find ourselves alone, would you not wish to hear what Philippe has heard?”

Gideon’s usual dislike of gossip warred with a distressing curiosity. He could not deny that the pairing of Isabella’s name with the Duke of Bournemouth’s had caused a nasty turn in his stomach. “Very well.” He feigned an indifference he could not feel, which would not fool Philippe for a moment. “Get
on
with it, curse you, so I can get to the ball.”

Philippe took up his hare’s foot to brush a tiny speck of powder off Gideon’s cheek. The eagerness in his tone did nothing to calm his master’s anxious pulse. “
Bon!
It is said that his Grace is expected to offer for Mademoiselle Mayfield very soon, and that the lady is not at all averse.”

“Nonsense! You may tell your sources that the lady would never dream of marrying that dried-up
roué
. And, besides, that she will soon be affianced to me.”


Exactement!
That is precisely what I said,
monsieur
le vicomte
. I could not allow
Monseigneur
to be so insulted.”

Gideon gave a short laugh. “Defended me, did you? Damn, if I won’t raise your wages for that!”


Monsieur
is too kind.” With a scattering of grey powder, Philippe clasped the hare’s foot to his chest, but he did not refuse the offer.

Instead, turning deadly serious, he moved closer to bring his lips to Gideon’s ear.

With black eyes meeting blue ones in the mirror, Philippe spoke in a portentous voice. “If
monsieur
will please but consider, the
Duc de Bournemouth
is not so old that he cannot attract a younger lady with his wealth—
monsieur
must trust Philippe on this. And
monsieur le duc
is a
grand seigneur
who knows how much the elegant wig and the skillful placement of a patch can please a beautiful lady.”

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