“Do you wish to arrive entirely dissolved in perspiration?” reproved Marie-Claude.
“Please… I must,” said Harriet, and they shrugged and climbed into one of the carriages and left her.
Rom surveyed his guests with an experienced air and was satisfied. Simonova, reclined on a couch on the terrace, was surrounded by admirers; the dancers and musicians wandered happily between the tables, helping themselves to iced fruit juice or champagne. Standing beside the statue of Aphrodite flanking the stone steps, Marie-Claude was regaling a group of dazed gentlemen with an account of the restaurant she was proposing to start with Vincent in the foothills above Nice. That this entrancing girl was bespoke and visibly virtuous had given Rom a pang of relief, a reaction he had not sought to explain or understand, preferring simply to enjoy the sight of de Silva, Harry Parker (who ran the Sports Club) and a host of others drinking thirstily at these forbidden waters.
During this hour before sundown, the house and the terrace were one. The lilting music from the Viennese trio he had installed in the salon wafted out through the French windows, the jasmine and wisteria climbing his walls laid their heavy, scented branches almost into the rooms themselves. The moment darkness fell he would relinquish his garden to the moths and night birds, close the windows and lead his guests to a dinner as formally served and elaborate as any banquet of state. But this present time was for wandering at will, for letting Follina work its spell, and he intervened only with the lightest of hands—introducing shy Mrs. Bennett to the glamorous Maximov; removing the misanthropic conductor, Kaufmann, to the library with its collection of operatic scores.
Yet though no one could have guessed it Rom, as he wandered among his guests, was fighting down disappointment. He had been absolutely certain that he would recognize the swan who had sneezed so poignantly at the end of Act Two; it seemed to him that the serious little face with its troubled brown eyes was entirely distinctive, but he had been mistaken. A casual question to Dubrov when the girls arrived elicited the information that all members of the
“Never!” the ballerina was declaring, throwing out her long, thin hands. “Never, never, will I return to Russia! If they came to me crawling in the snow on their hands and knees all the way from Petersburg, I would not come!”
She fanned herself with the ends of her chiffon scarf, and looked at her host from under kohl-tipped lashes. What a man! If only she had not been committed to her art—and of course to Dubrov, though that was more easily arranged…
“Ah, Madame, what a loss for my country,” sighed Count Sternov.
“It is a loss,” agreed the ballerina complacently. “But it is one for which they must take the blame. And in any case soon I am going to retire.” She waited for the groans, the horrified denials… and when they came, proceeded. “Dubrov and I are going to live in the country in absolute simplicity with goats and grow vegetables. I have a great longing,” she said, spreading tapered fingers which had never touched anything rougher than Maximov’s silvered tights, “to get my hands into the earth.”
“You must allow me to show you over the kitchen gardens,” said Verney, concealing the smile that had flickered at the corners of his mouth.
“Yes. Later,” said Simonova. The plants she had seen on the way up to the house had seemed to her excessive, altogether too much
But Marie-Claude now detached herself from the besotted gentlemen surrounding her and said something to Dubrov, who turned to his host.
“Marie-Claude is a little concerned about our newest member of the