Sir John A.'s Crusade and Seward's Magnificent Folly. Richard Rohmer

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must come and have tea with us, soon,” she said, smiling warmly.

      “I’d love to, but I’m afraid …” He hesitated.

      Theodora said, “I know what it is. Your conference starts tomorrow, so tea will be out of the question. You meet through teatime, do you not?”

      “Exactly.”

      “Then why not come to dinner?”

      “Tonight?” Agnes added. “We’re just two blocks or so from here. Hewitt told us he’s meeting with you this afternoon — he can bring you afterward.”

      John A.’s ruddy face was shining with pleasure. “Wonderful, I was going to dine with some of my colleagues — Cartier and Galt. You know them. But I’d much rather be with the ladies Bernard. Much.”

      With that said, they parted and went their separate ways. As the ladies Bernard walked on arm in arm toward their Grosvenor Street flat, Theodora said, “I saw the way John A. was looking at you, my dear.”

      Agnes merely nodded.

      “And you did not give any sign of discouragement, did you?”

      Eyes down slightly and deep in thought, Agnes shook her head. “No, Mother.”

      Theodora pressed on. “You know, my dear, he’s so much older than you are — twenty-two years. And we both know how he gets … ill with too much drinking.”

      “Yes, Mother, I know all that! For heaven’s sake, we’ve only just met the poor man again and all he’s done is make some flirting eyes with me. He hasn’t asked me to go to bed with him, let alone marry him.”

      “He’ll do both, mark my words!” Theodora was certain she knew what was going on in John A.’s widower’s mind.

      “And if he did, Mother, I’m not at all sure I could cope with that illness of his.” Agnes was silent for a moment. “But he is a splendid man, is he not? The finest man in Canada — the ablest, I should say.”

      Theodora chuckled, then wrinkled her nose as the wind of a passing, prancing ebony young horse caught both of them full on. “God, what a stench! Yes, undoubtedly the finest and ablest man in Canada — except for our own dear Hewitt.”

      “Yes, Mother.”

      It was not reported in the London Times, but the mass of polar air that engulfed the British Isles on December 3, 1866, remained unmoving for six icy, clear days. Then moved slowly northeastward across the Baltic, where it sat in crystal-blue splendour over St. Petersburg and the regal Winter Palace of His Imperial Majesty Alexander the Second, the Tsar of All the Russias.

      2

      December 10, 1866

      St. Petersburg

      The even gait of the pair of sinewy young horses gave the sleigh that familiar gentle back-and-forth motion, a movement that had always comforted Edouard de Stoeckl, especially when he was in the incredibly beautiful St. Petersburg. And doubly so on this crisp, frigid morning as the Imperial sleigh carried him over a blanket of yielding fresh snow toward the massive building that housed his master, the Tsar’s powerful Foreign Minister, Prince Gorchakov.

      De Stoeckl’s ship had docked in the bustling ice-rimmed harbour at high noon the day before. Now he was on his way from his hotel, the Grand, to the Winter Palace to pay his respects and make a preliminary report to Prince Gorchakov. He expected that the Prince would provide him with an itinerary and the time of the meeting he hoped to have with the Tsar to discuss a most pressing topic.

      The Tsar’s Washington plenipotentiary sat huddled under a bulky blanket, the high collar of his ankle-length sable coat turned up to cover his neck and face, the flaps of his matching fur hat pulled down to protect his ears from the crackling cold. For the moment, de Stoeckl was thoroughly content.

      The pleasurable sights that his squinting eyes took in had driven from his fretting mind — at least for the moment — his nagging concerns about the meeting with Tsar Alexander and his pompous brother, the Grand Duke Constantine, to discuss the Empire’s most questionable possession, the remote, and because none of the dignitaries who would be at the conference with the Tsar had ever been there, the almost fictitious, lands and waters thousands of miles to the east and across the North Pacific known as Russian America.

      De Stoeckl could hear the soft, snow-muffled clopping of the horses’ hooves mixed with the tinkling of myriad bells on the polished leather harnesses strapped over purple blankets emblazoned with the Imperial double-headed eagle. Beyond the swaying, high back of the sleigh driver, he could see the massive rumps of the ebony horses, tails twitching, swaying in unison like a pair of locked pendulums. De Stoeckl could see their alert, pointed ears and the billowing white clouds of breath that came back from their snorting, puffing heads. Above was a crystal-clear blue sky unblemished by even the hint of a cloud, the horizon broken only by the towers and roofs of the massive buildings that fronted the broad approaches to the looming gates that opened into the high-walled courtyard of the Winter Palace.

      This was a sublime moment for de Stoeckl, short minutes that captured his heart’s desire, a yearning that had developed during his seemingly interminable posting in that power-mad, politically corrupt bastion of new republican democracy — Washington. Oh, to be back in St. Petersburg, or, if not that magnificent capital of the Russias, then Paris or London or some other cultured, sophisticated principal European city. Anything to get out of Washington. But de Stoeckl knew that he would never have a posting in St. Petersburg.

      He had long since decided that when he retired — perhaps in two years’ time when he was sixty — he would take his young American wife to live in Paris. She could accept the “City of Lights” but could not abide the prospect of living in a place such as St. Petersburg, which was so different from her beloved America. She had long since learned from the difficult experiences of past visits to St. Petersburg that apart and away from the glittering, sumptuous façade of the Tsar’s court and the palaces that contained it, the real Russia, the world she would have to live in if her Edouard had to return to a post or retirement in the capital, would be intolerable. She would be thrust into totally different culture and language, as would their two daughters, both in their early teens. No, his wife would have none of it. Martha de Stoeckl had firmly refused to join her husband for this visit to St. Petersburg, even though it meant that she and the girls would be separated from Edouard at Christmas. She had had enough of the days and nights of seasickness through which she suffered during the wretched Atlantic crossings. And she had had enough of the boring hours of sitting and waiting while her husband attended to the volume of business at the Foreign Ministry or at the several other ministries that did business with the government of the United States, or with firms engaged in trade with the Americans.

      Boring? Being in St. Petersburg for her was like being in prison. Even when Edouard was with her during those weeks of hotel confinement she was bored and unhappy. There was little for them to talk about except to wonder how the children were getting on back in Washington with their nanny or for de Stoeckl to go on about the various events that had happened during the day, rattling off stories about people — always men — whom she had never met. His Excellency so and so, Minister this and that, His Royal Highness The Prince of something or other.

      So gradually their time together became a time of silence. He would read and shuffle through his papers while she would attack her needlepoint. It followed, or so she thought, that with his advancing years Edouard’s interest in touching her, offering

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