“NOW, AS TO THE TRANSACTION,” said the Duke, once he had got his pipe lit. The fragrance of the smoke was welcome, for the dead-animal smell Eliza had noticed out at the gazebo seemed to have followed them into the drawing-room. She was of a mind to go and throw the doors open, to admit some rose-scented air from the gardens; but that would have defeated the purpose of a private meeting in this place.
“It’s going to involve moving a lot of silver. I want you to go to Lyon and make the arrangements.”
“Will the silver actually be passing through Lyon, then, or-”
“Oh yes. You shall see it. This is not just a Depot sort of manipulation.”
“Then why Lyon? It is not the best place.”
“I know. But you see, it will come off of my jacht at Marseille. From there, Lyon is easy to reach-right up the Rhone, of course.”
“It makes sense, then. It is safer than any alternative. Tell me, is it coined?”
“No, mademoiselle.”
“Oh. I had assumed it would be pieces of eight.”
“No. It is pigs. Good metal, mind you, but not coined.”
“It makes more sense to me as we go along. You do not wish to be moving uncoined silver around, any more than you must. You want instead a Bill of Exchange, payable in Paris.”
“Yes, that is it precisely.”
“Very well. There are several houses in Lyon that can do this.”
“Indeed. And normally I would not care which one of them handled it. But in this case, I specifically want you not to use the House of Hacklheber. I have reason to believe that the old ogre, Lothar, will be most unhappy with me after the transaction goes through.” And the Duke laughed.
“I see. May I guess, from this hint, that it has something to do with piracy?”
Plainly the Duke thought this a stupid question. But he was polished, and handled it in good form. “That is the word that Lothar will attach to it, no doubt, in order to justify any…retaliations he may contemplate. But the method is normal, in a war. I am sure you will see nothing unusual in it, mademoiselle, given that you are such a friend of Jean Bart, and that along with the Marquis d’Ozoir you are a direct supporter of his exploits?” He laughed again, with gusto; and she felt his breath on her face, and with some trepidation drew it into her nostrils, and smelled death. It reminded her of something in addition to death, however.
“You look peaked, mademoiselle. Are you all right?”
“The air is stuffy.”
“We shall go outside, then! I have nothing further to say, other than that you should plan to be in Lyon no later than the end of August.”
“Shall I see you there?”
“It is not known. There is another aspect of this transaction, which has nothing to do with money, and everything to do with the honor of my family. It is a matter of personal revenge, which need not concern you. I must tend to it myself, of course-that’s the whole point! No telling where or when exactly. Nevertheless, you may count on my being back in Paris, at the Hotel Arcachon, for my birthday party on the fourteenth of October. It shall be splendid. I am already making the plans. The King will be there, mademoiselle. You and I shall see each other then and there, and if Etienne has done the honorable thing, why, then I shall expect a blessed announcement!”
He turned and offered his arm to Eliza, who took it, trying not to recoil from the smell of him. “I am certain it shall all come to pass just as you say, monsieur,” she said. “But as I go outside with you, I should like to change the subject, if I may, to horses.”
“Horses! It is a welcome change of subject! I am a great fancier of them.”
“I know, for the evidence has been all around me ever since I came here seven months ago. I noticed quite early that you have some albinos in your stable.”
“Indeed!”
“Seeing this, I phant’sied that such horses must be very popular among the Quality here, and that, in consequence, I could expect to see many more of them, in the stables of the King and of the many other nobles who live in these parts. But this has not been the case.”
“I should hope not! For the entire point of having them is that they are rare. They are distinctive. They are of Turkish stock.”
“May I ask who you bought them from? Is there some breeder hereabouts who has connections in the Levant?”
“Yes, mademoiselle,” said the Duke, “and he has the honor of being on your arm at this moment. For it is I who imported the Pasha to France some years ago, from Constantinople, via Algiers, in an unfathomably complex exchange of assets-”
“The Pasha?”
“A stud, mademoiselle, an albino stallion, the father of all the others!”
“He must have been magnificent.”
“Is magnificent, for he still lives!”
“Really?”
“He is old, and does not venture out of the stables so often, but on a warm evening such as this, you may go down to the paddock and see him stretching his stiff old legs.”
“When did you import the Pasha?”
“When? Let me see, it would have been ten years ago.”
“Are you certain?”
“No, no, what am I saying!? Time passes so quickly, I quite lose track. It would have been eleven years ago this summer.”