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Authors: Karen Engelmann

The Stockholm Octavo (19 page)

BOOK: The Stockholm Octavo
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Anna Maria joined The Uzanne, curtsied, and waited, anticipation causing her to rock up and down on her toes until she caught the disapproving glance from The Uzanne. She became still as a frozen lake—still but for her fingers, eagerly squeezing the smooth guards of her fan.

“Miss Plomgren, I would like to see you open your fan, and then indicate to me that you are ready to receive my message,” The Uzanne instructed. It was the simplest of requests, a basic maneuver that would tell her everything. Anna Maria flicked open her fan with an expert snap, then shifted it into her left hand, holding it open and still exactly over her heart. Every gentleman in the room had suddenly become as rapt with the lesson as the girls, but there was no need for an interpreter. Anna Maria was her own language. I pushed forward, scraping the floor with the chair in the hope that she would look my way, but Anna Maria was intent upon the face of The Uzanne.

“At what time do you anticipate that refreshments will be served?” Anna Maria closed the fan until only three sticks were showing. She did not once glance down at her fan, but looked directly into the eyes of The Uzanne, a faint smile hovering on her lips.

“And how might you indicate that you would like to be seated next to me?” The Uzanne asked.

Anna Maria raised the partially open fan, still held in her left hand, to cover the lower half of her face, her smile still visible in her eyes.

“Now I should like you to say good-bye,” The Uzanne said. Anna Maria slowly closed the fan, held it by the blade end, and touched the rivet to her lips. It was not a gesture The Uzanne expected, nor was it one she had ever received from a woman:
kiss me
. The Uzanne's eyes widened ever so slightly, and a faint pink bloomed beneath the powder on her cheeks. She seemed frozen to the floor. The salon burst into appreciative applause, not the least of which was Lars calling
brava
. The Uzanne returned to her senses. “Young ladies, note the rewards of diligent practice and the effect of a disarming blow. Miss Plomgren, please demonstrate further while I observe,” The Uzanne said.

The girls shifted their chairs and craned their necks to better follow Anna Maria's every move. She walked serenely among them, answering queries with a hint of disdain, adjusting fingers with just a hint of force. Lars trailed her like a footman, ready to serve. Soon the students were on their feet, practicing, chattering, aiming their messages at various men. Johanna appeared in this mix, a wary look on her face and fan clutched like a cudgel; she knew a rival when she saw one, even if said rival came from common stock. The Uzanne watched Anna Maria closely. “Miss Plomgren, you belong at Gullenborg. I would like to engage your services as my assistant for the weekly practice sessions that will be held between our formal lectures,” The Uzanne said, extending her hand. Anna Maria dropped into a stage curtsy worthy of an encore. I could hear Mother Plomgren, from her perch on the bench, cooing at this unexpected advance of her daughter, an advancement she herself would ride. “Carry on,” The Uzanne said, and the statement was followed by a whoosh of fans and excited chatter.

I turned my attentions to Christian; I had a favor to ask in light of my emerging eight. With the lecture concluded, Christian assumed that he was dismissed and was gathering his extravagant letters of introduction. The Uzanne approached him, took a page, and read it. He waited stiffly for her response.

“I am pleased that you honored King Gustav's mother, the late Queen Louisa. There was a regent who learned her role properly in the end: beacon of culture, servant of the nobility, symbolic ruler. Her time was called the Era of Freedom, Mr. Nordén. The Era of Freedom. She despised her son Gustav,” she said.

Margot had warned Christian to leave politics aside. He nodded politely. “I am afraid I do not know, Madame. I have been so many years in France.”

The Uzanne obliged this dodge and took his arm. “I am intrigued with your theories, Mr. Nordén. Both alchemists and philosophers have called geometry the juncture of art and science, and that is the fan in a word, is it not?” Christian agreed enthusiastically. “Tell me, do you think that the power of the fan lies in the instrument or the hand that wields her?”

“A woman with your skills and the perfect fan would be the combined ideal.”

She gave an artful sigh, and released his arm. “My perfect fan was lost.” She watched his face for the slightest twitch of the mouth, the minute furrow of the brow. Master Fredrik's inquiries in the fan shops had come up blank, but she might press a place where he could not. “On her face was a sunset scene of a black coach, so enticing it moved a king from his own queen's bed. I would give anything to have her back.”

“I quite understand your passion, Madame,” Christian said with the utmost sincerity. “Every fan that leaves the shop is like a death to me. It is a terrible philosophy for business, I am afraid.” Christian gazed up at the ceiling thinking, and bumped into a table. “What was it about your fan that causes you such longing?”

“You speak of my fan in the past tense, but she is merely missing, and I will find her. Her name is Cassiopeia and once belonged to a woman of great influence, a woman whose path I plan to emulate.” Christian gave her a quizzical look. “Madame de Montespan, First Mistress to the Sun King. She gave him several children, if I remember, but some say Montespan's real powers were of a darker nature.”

“Darkness could never be an aspect of your nature, Madame.”

“Sometimes we are forced to darkness, Mr. Nordén.” The Uzanne stopped and held out her hand, this time allowing Nordén's lips to linger on her skin. “It is crucial that my fan maker have a perfect understanding of my desires. I look forward to a long and meaningful association.” The Uzanne turned and walked toward the Russian ambassador, deep in conversation with General Pechlin.

Christian sat upon one of the unoccupied chairs and closed his eyes for a moment to keep joyous tears from spilling out. I approached him, but he was quite distracted, looking about the room. “May I be of some assistance?” I asked. “We have not met, but I am a customer of your shop and met Mrs. Nordén there. I am
Sekretaire
Larsson.”

“Thank you,
Sekretaire
, for your custom and your concern. I am pleased to meet you,” he said, taking my hand in a warm grasp, “and excuse my behavior. I am eager to share some good news with Mrs. Nordén.”

“We have several things in common, sir. We are in the same lodge, and I am acquainted with Master Fredrik as well. I also know a certain Mrs. S.” His face became wary; I knew his strict rule of confidentiality. “I was wondering if you might give me the gift of an introduction. To another client of yours. Miss Plomgren.” Before he could reply, The Uzanne gave the signal for attention, her form dark against the brilliance of the snow beyond the glass of the French doors. The room quieted, guests crept back to their seats. “I will speak to you when the class is done,” I whispered.

“We appreciate Miss Plomgren's demonstration of the language of the fan,” The Uzanne said. There was scattered applause. “She will be sharing her skill and knowledge with you all in the coming months. When your time at Gullenborg is complete, you will have mastered the language completely. But this is a child's simple speech compared to what follows. You are here to learn so much more.” She leaned forward on these words, as if sharing a secret. “I am speaking of Engagement.” The young ladies nodded, as if they knew already. The men could only hold their breath and stare.

The Uzanne stood still, fan fluttering at the level of her rib cage. “Engagement is the first phase of battle, and in your hands, young ladies, lies one of the most useful weapons at your disposal. And one of the few.” She walked toward a gentlemen's table on my right. Pechlin and three other men leaned in toward each other, voices hushed and insistent, deep in a passionate argument that they could not release. “Engagement is a skill that transcends any language, harnessing the power of attraction. True mastery of engagement may seem inconsequential, but if you wish to triumph, you must command attention from those you wish to conquer.”

Now Pechlin's table came under her spell, except for a striking young man in a black and white waistcoat who continued to talk. Master Fredrik leaned in, ever the source of learning. “That is Adolph Ribbing, a hotheaded enemy of the king who is courted by Pechlin. Ribbing shot Gustav's equerry in a duel over a woman, and Madame wants him in her camp.”

The Uzanne closed her fan and placed it against Ribbing's cheek, gently turning his head toward her. He fell silent. “Attention cannot be forced, but it can be encouraged.” His face was level with the low curve of her belly, and he raised his eyes to hers. “Captivation is the first step in communication.” She did not blink and drew her fan down the side of his neck, then leaned over him, breasts pushing up against lace. “Offer something of interest, and you will get something in return.” She pulled the fan away and began a rhythmic, vertical stroke, fanning his face. Her cheeks and lips grew flushed. A curl of hair came loose and fell tumbling against the perfect skin of her neck.

“What service may I offer, Madame?” he asked.

“One should always speak of that in private,” she said, “but for the sake of my students I will say it. Engagement.”

There were sighs from the young ladies. The young man tugged at his coat. “Marriage is serious business, Madame,” he said stiffly.

“Then we will engage in something besides matrimony,” she replied, fanning his face in languorous figure eights. She bent her lips to his ear and filled it with some private message. The room was spellbound, only the faint ticking of the mantel clock pulled us forward in time. The Uzanne turned her head and nodded to her students. The young ladies bit their lips, frustrated with their lack of knowledge and experience. They took up their fans nonetheless, casting looks and the most basic of messages at the officers and gentlemen. The mothers and chaperones added their approval, gesturing for bolder actions from their charges. The girls leaned into the challenge, turning to show their figures to advantage, allowing a bare forearm to touch their bosoms, fingers arched just so over the guards of their fans. The murmurs and whispers of messengers, recipients, and observers were underscored by throaty laughter. Fragments of bawdy songs were added, moans and sighs were heard. Fans were slapped and dropped and thrust. This increased in volume and tempo until the room was filled with a hum, a buzz, out of which no single word could be taken. There was only the sound of desire.

“Madame, what service may
I
offer?” Master Fredrik moaned softly and began to hum a bawdy song in his low baritone. Christian went in search of Margot. Lars hung on Anna Maria like a shadow, Mother Plomgren grinning madly. Johanna pressed herself against the wall, a look of near panic on her face. I was glad to be seated at a table, for my trousers were bulging and I was sweating profusely.

Louisa stood waiting by the servants' door for the word. “My guests are clearly ravenous. I think it is time for refreshments,” The Uzanne said. As the servants entered with laden silver trays, hunger overtook the crowd. They called for Champagne and crushed strawberries, ices, and whipped chocolate. Waiters rushed in to fulfill their wishes, bearing platters of moist cakes, ripe fruit, lemon tarts, and chocolate truffles. The kitchen girls snuck up from the cellar to add their heat. Even Old Cook peered through the portal to view this voracious crowd, giddy at their pleasure. The Uzanne, one hand resting lightly on Ribbing's shoulder, watched the proceedings with the gaze of a scientist and the smile of a successful courtesan.

When the crowd was fully sated, The Uzanne snapped her fan and once again the room became a pearl gray salon in the descending darkness of a winter afternoon, filled with polite and attentive guests. Only Pechlin seemed utterly unmoved, for he yawned and stood to check the clock. “Do you see how Engagement can change everything?” The Uzanne said. “You might change the course of history. Cause even the greatest of men to be . . . disarmed.” Ribbing took her hand and kissed it. She withdrew her hand slowly and returned to the front of the salon. “Engagement is like the release of your fan: it offers many pleasures, but it is just the first step,” The Uzanne said. “If you fail to master closure, all you desire can be taken from you. The aftermath can be . . . painful.” She turned her head in profile, the long neck bowed by some remembered sorrow. A low whispering enveloped the salon, glances of sympathy passed between the mothers and older gentlemen that had known her Henrik. “By March you will be ready for your debut. You will speak the language of the fan as if it were your mother tongue. You will be capable of Engagement and a victorious climax. But you must commit fully to my instructions. We will meet weekly here under less formal circumstances, without these handsome gentlemen to distract you or a lecture that . . . escapes you. In between, you must practice without pause, observe your superiors, ask for help when needed. And then practice more until your hand cannot close around the guards. You will receive a list outlining skills you are to master every week. I suggest you consider how you present yourselves as well; you are no longer girls. You are women, and you must claim your power.” An excited chatter rose from the girls, then ceased when The Uzanne continued. “I promise your debut will be unforgettable, but I must tell you now it will not be held at court. The court is an empty shell.” She paused, but there were no whispers of dismay. “Your debut will take place at the last masked ball before the Lenten season. The debut will be the threshold of a new life for us all.”

“What is she talking about? Is she looking for a new husband?” I whispered to Master Fredrik.

He shrugged and whispered back. “Does it matter?”

BOOK: The Stockholm Octavo
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