disappointment, mingled with a small sigh of relief. At least I wouldnât have to worry about knocking over priceless objects every time I turned around, the way I did at Buckingham Palace. It was also rather cold in that foyer, with a draft swirling about my legs. Not too welcoming a first impression for a newly arrived princess, I thought. But perhaps they were not planning to turn on any form of heat until she arrived.
I wasnât quite sure what to do next. I wondered if the queen would have supplied servants or if Princess Marina was bringing her own and they werenât here yet. I realized that I should have asked to be taken to Major Beauchamp-Chough, not have gone straight to the apartment. Protocol probably demanded that he escort me to my quarters. But it was a long, wet walk back to the front of the building. There was an archway at the end of the entry hall leading to a passageway beyond. As I looked toward it I saw a woman walk across it. She was moving swiftly, almost gliding and making no sound.
âHello,â I called. âWait a minute, please.â
When she didnât stop I ran after her, and found myself standing in a long dark corridor that was completely empty. Where had she gone? There were no side hallways and she would not have had time to open and close a door. That was when I realized she was wearing a long white dress and her hair had been piled upon her head in little curls. I felt the hair on the back of my neck stand up. At that moment I heard the brisk tap of feet on the marble-tiled floor and a woman came across the foyer toward me. This one was all too solid. She was probably in her thirties, well fed, in a wool dress that was a little too tight for her, pale faced and with pale hair piled in an old-fashioned bun. She spotted me and bore down upon me, wagging a finger.
âAh, there you are, you naughty girl,â she said in strongly accented English. âWhere have you been? I have been waiting for you.â
âI didnât realize there was a specific time for my arrival,â I said, taking aback by her ferocious approach.
âThat is no way to address your betters,â she said, giving me a haughty stare.
âMy betters?â Indignation now overtook surprise. âIâm sorry. I donât know who you are, but I rather think we must be equals, unless you are Queen Victoria reincarnated.â
I saw uncertainty cross her face. âAre you not the girl who was sent to bring me pickled herring from Harrods?â
I tried not to grin. âI am Lady Georgiana, cousin to His Majesty,â I said. âMay one ask your name?â
âOh, thousand pardons,â the woman stammered, thoroughly flustered now. âI did not expect . . . we were not informed that His Majestyâs cousin would be visiting. And I did not expect a royal person to arrive alone in such a manner.â And she looked at my sodden mack and the puddle accumulating around my feet.
âYes, Iâm sorry. I realize I donât look very royal,â I said. âBut itâs raining cats and dogs out there and I donât have a motorcar.â
She went and peered out of the window. âI do not see any cats and dogs,â she said.
âJust an expression.â
âAh,â she said solemnly. âAn English idiom. I must learn these things. Cats and dogs.â She nodded as if her brain had processed this information, then she gave me a little bowing jerk of the head. âI am the Countess Irmtraut von Dinkelfingen-Hackensack. I am the cousin of Princess Marina. Our mothers are related. My mother was a Pushova.â
I didnât think Iâd heard correctly. âI beg your pardon?â
âA Pushova. My mother was a Pushova. The daughter of Prince Vladimir Pushov, related to the czar.â
âOh, I see.â Thank heavens I hadnât started to laugh!
âHow do you do, Countess.â I held out my hand and
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