DIARY OF A PAINTED LADY
By
Maggi Andersen
Originally published as Surrender to Destiny by New Concept Publishing, June 2011
Reworked.
Copyright by Maggi Andersen, 2016
Cover Artist Melody Simmons
Published by Maggi Andersen
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Please Note
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead is coincidental and are the product of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously.
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ISBN: 978-0-646-92420-5
DIARY OF A PAINTED LADY Maggi Andersen
Dedication:
My grateful thanks to actress, Veronica Lang, for sharing her knowledge of the British film industry.
Table of Contents
Dedication:
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Epilogue
About the Author
Prologue
Paris, Present Day
The black limousine pulled away from the wrought-iron, gated entranceway of Astrid LeClair’s apartment building. It swept down the Avenue Foch, past elegant, period residences adorned with sculptures. As they passed playgrounds filled with squealing children and their vigilant nannies, Astrid recalled her heated conversation with Philippe that morning. Her stomach churned.
The chestnut trees along the avenue paraded their new spring green. In the park, Parisian women looked like spring flowers themselves in the latest fashions. Through the car’s tinted windows, Astrid was able to watch the world without the world watching her. It had become a novelty. The newspapers had called her a star on the rise, and the paparazzi caused a sensation wherever she went in Europe. Her face graced the magazine stands and details of her life featured in the tabloids. She’d been with billionaire businessman, Philippe Fabre, for five years. No scandal or gossip had touched her since, but the media still hounded her, snapping her as she shopped in the local market. It was life in a gold fish bowl.
Philippe pointed out she would be protected by his wealth if she married him and gave up her career to become a mother. This morning, he’d raised the question again. When she’d refused to be pushed, he’d exploded. At forty-seven, he was still an attractive man. Most women would think her crazy. Astrid wasn’t ready to settle down to motherhood, for she knew she would embrace it with all her heart. She couldn’t make Philippe understand that she wanted to be seen as a serious actress. When her contractual obligations with this movie were finished, she would move into her own apartment.
She had never lived alone. The thought made her shiver with excitement and uncertainty.
Two hours later, Astrid took her first class seat next to the window as her fellow passengers boarded for the short flight to London. She removed the script from her briefcase and began to go over her lines again. She was to work with the Irish actor, Dylan Shaw. Word had it he slept with many of his leading ladies, well if true, he was about to be disappointed. She would not allow an actor distract her, no matter how charming. She was keen to make her name in England. And maybe this was the movie that would achieve it. The script of Painted Lady had been adapted from a diary kept by Giovanna, the step-daughter of renowned pre-Raphaelite artist, Milo Russo, who had been mysteriously murdered at the height of his fame.
* * *
England,
At the Pinewood Film Studios in Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, Dylan Shaw entered the building that housed his suite. It was comfortable enough, comprising a small living area, bedroom, bathroom and kitchenette. He’d spend a good deal of time here during the next two months of filming. The movie had taken on even more importance for him since his agent phoned to tell Dylan he was to be considered for a high profile movie franchise, scheduled to begin the year after next. Scouts were out, and would check on his performance in this one.
It was an unseasonably hot day and the air conditioner struggled to cope. Before he went over his lines, Dylan opened his door in search of a breeze. Astrid LeClair’s name was on the door opposite. She’d always been the first choice to play Gina. He went back to check his call sheet. He’d never worked with the beautiful actress, but he’d heard she could be difficult.
He sighed, picked up the script and settled down to read. The best thing about this project was the story. It had everything.
Chapter One
London, 1890
“I say, there’s Lord Ogilvie, Earl of Douglass,” Horace Atherton said, raising his voice above the clinking of glasses and the murmur of table talk.
Blair Dunleavy searched through the pall of cigar smoke at the checker-board of black tailcoats and trousers, white waistcoats and bow ties. He located the earl, sitting among the industrialists, merchants and bankers, all here to view the risqué art.
Blair smothered a yawn. He was here under sufferance to keep Horace company. Two months spent in London was proving to be too long. He had to admit he’d stayed longer than
usual just to pique his mother. He had sent a letter off this morning to advise her of his imminent return.
Despite his annoyance at his mother’s demands, Blair was eager to return home to Ireland. The estate didn’t run itself, despite what his friends might suggest. After he had solved the problems his steward would have for him, the woods awaited, full of red deer and grouse, the river stocked with salmon and brown trout.
He turned his attention back to the room as conversation fell away. The auctioneer had taken his place at the podium.
The first painting appeared. Once placed on the stand, complete silence descended on the room bar the odd, sharp intake of breath. It was an explicit portrait of a woman’s body from the waist down, in perfect, biological detail.
“What do you think of that, eh?” Horace whispered. “Rather well done, what? Like to buy it?”
“I prefer the real thing in my bed,” Blair answered dryly.
The auction took off with an offer of fifty pounds from Charles Ogilvie, Earl of Douglass, a ginger-haired, hollow-cheeked Scot, known for his questionable tastes. Blair found the man as cold as the climate of northern Scotland where he resided in
an ancient castle. Soon others joined in, quickly raising the stakes to eighty pounds.
After the gavel came down and the painting went to Ogilvie, another, entitled Death of a Christian, by Harold Schiller appeared. In this painting, a young woman was bound to a post, the bonds seeming to cut into the soft flesh of her arms. Blair thought it lacked beauty, but the emotive work drew a lively response, going to a fellow, Blair didn’t know, for one hundred pounds.
The next painting to emerge from behind the curtain was Aphrodite, by Milo Russo, a Pre-Raphaelite work. There was no denying its sensual beauty, but there was something more personal, a tenderness from the artist’s brush, a sort of reverence for his subject. In an Ancient Grecian setting, a young woman reclined on a couch.
Blair found himself holding his breath as if waiting for the lady to raise her hairbrush to her waist-length, golden-blonde hair. Her robe had slipped off one smooth, creamy-skinned shoulder, its folds outlining the perfect curve of waist and hip. On the table beside her sat a glowing, red apple, like the one Eve had bidden Adam eat. Did she await a lover? The languidness of her pose suggested he had just left the room.
Blair leaned forward in his chair. The painted silk gown gave a tantalizing glimpse of the girl’s high, rounded breasts. Her slightly raised knee left to the imagination of the observer what had been so intricately detailed in the previous painting. To Blair, it only made her more desirable. This girl was no milk-and-water English miss. The nostrils of her strong nose flared slightly, and her luscious, full-lipped mouth parted in a half-smile. Her magnificent eyes, somewhere between green and brown, seemed to both invite and disdain the onlooker’s gaze.
“My God,” Blair said under his breath.
“Reminiscent of Manet’s Olympia,” someone behind him muttered. “Another superb painting of a courtesan.”
“Eighty pounds,” called Lord Ogilvie.
Blair raised his hand. “One hundred.”
Heads turned to look at Blair with knowing faces.
“One fifty,” countered Ogilvie in a challenging voice.
“Two hundred,” Blair said.
“Two fifty!” Ogilvie’s eyes narrowed and he turned to glare at Blair.
“Five hundred pounds,” Blair said meeting his glance coolly.
There came a collective gasp from the fascinated onlookers.
Ogilvie stood so quickly his chair fell to the floor. Ignoring everyone, he threw down his catalogue and stalked from the room.
“Going, going ….” When no one bid further, the auctioneer’s gavel dropped. “Gone! To Mr. Dunleavy for five hundred pounds.”
“I say!” Horace clapped Blair on the back. “Not totally immune to good art, eh?”
“Not at all, my friend,” Blair replied, leaping to his feet. “I intend to find that model.”
Knowing laughter followed him from the room. In the office, behind a curtain, Blair arranged payment and had the painting wrapped. It would be perfect for the boudoir of his London townhouse where he could enjoy it–until he found the real thing. Unfortunately, he couldn’t delay his return to Ireland for even another few days. Damn, he wished he hadn’t sent that letter.
Returning to the foyer to collect his silk top hat, cane, and overcoat, he found Horace retrieving his cloak. Horace favored a certain poetic style of dress that required an ill-tied cravat and a waistcoat held together by one button, his curly hair, wildly disordered. He had a good stock of quotations from the poets and even dashed off some poetry of his own, which unfortunately, was rather bad. He had the grace to admit it, and it did make him popular with the ladies.
“Not so wise to humiliate Ogilvie a second time, d’you think?” Horace asked.
“That wasn’t my intention. But if I have, I don’t regret it.”
“Well he took it that way. Damned peculiar fellow. You accusing him of cheating at that card game brought him unstuck, y’know.”
“It’s no secret he’s been cheating for years.”
“Trouble is, young Blackeny was there,” Horace said.
“So?”
“Ogilvie was courting his sister, Elizabeth. That’s not going to come about now.”
Blair shrugged. “Luckily for Elizabeth.”
“Ogilvie needed the infusion of funds that marriage to Elizabeth would bring him. He’s seriously strapped for cash. That castle of his in Caithness is crumbling into the sea.”
“Can’t say I’ll shed any tears over it,” Blair said. “Have you seen the way he treats his cattle? Saw him whipping a stray dog in the park, too. Took the whip off him and broke it. The man’s a monster.”
Horace’s eyebrows rose and he shook his head. “You’ve made an enemy there. Wouldn’t care to have him against me.” He ran his fingers through his riotous curls and put on his hat. “A few of us are going to the theatre. We feel the need of a little feminine company. I trust you are coming?”
“Not tonight.” Blair tucked his cane under his arm and pulled on his gloves. “I’ll pick up a cab at Hyde Park Corner and go home.”
Horace looked askance at his handsome, dark-haired friend. “Home? It’s only ten o’clock. You aren’t sickening for something, are you?”
“Not in so many words, Horace.”
“It’s that painting.” Horace stared at the wrapped parcel. That’s not like you. I declare, I believe you to be bewitched. Remember, it is the spectator and not life that art really mirrors.”
Blair smiled. “Are those your words, my friend?
Horace chuckled. “I am not known for such erudition sadly.” He gestured to the painting.
“The artist may well have taken poetic license with his subject. It’s doubtful the real flesh and blood woman will measure up to his concept of her.”
Blair raised an eyebrow. “If we must lapse into literary quotations, here is one that is surely apt: Life imitates art far more than art imitates life.”
Horace waved his silver cane. “Touché! Shall we have a bet that my premise is correct, should you find that model?”
Blair nodded. “Why not indeed.”
“A hundred pounds.”
“Done.” Blair shook Horace’s hand.
“And should I be proved right, don’t despair. There are many beauties in London,”
Horace added with a grin.
“I’m well aware of it. Have I not accompanied you on your sojourns these two months past?”
Horace laughed. “I’m not sure what it is about that painting that has captivated you.
Women of the demimonde are ruthlessly self-seeking. They will tear a fellow’s heart to pieces should you become too fond of them. Treat them lightly, or you’ll pay a high price with your heart and with your pocket.”
“Spoken from experience, Horace?”
Horace nodded with a sour look.
Blair grinned and slapped him on the back “You are indeed a good friend, Horace. Keep your own advice in mind tonight. I wish you a good evening.”
Then sadly, I must relinquish your company,” Horace said, “And hope to see you restored to sanity at the Athenaeum tomorrow. I’d like to spend some time with you before you disappear back to that big, rambling house of yours in Killarney.”
* * *
Gina Russo raised her eyes to the attic window above her, where driving rain had caused a leak to form.
Water dripped down onto the floorboards, forming a pool at her stepfather’s feet. Milo seemed completely unaware of it, but then, when he was painting, the building could burn down around him.
She put her hands on her hips. “You must move your easel, Milo. Your trousers will be wet and in this miserable, moldy climate, you’ll catch your death.”
He stared at her blankly, paintbrush poised above the canvas where he painted a still life.
“But, the light, Gina!”
“I do not intend to be orphaned in this cold-hearted city. What would I do without you?” The thought chilled her through.
He laughed and wiped his brush on a cl
oth, then threw it down onto a table piled with brushes and half-squeezed tubes of paint. “You have made a good point. You’re not just pretty, my girl, you have something up here,” he tapped his forehead smearing it with red paint.
She helped him move his things away then ran to place a bowl under the drip.
“When will you pose for me again, Gina? I have great hopes for the last painting I did.”
“When you have sold another painting and we can afford some coal,” she said. “I am not stripping off in this cold. Not when I am hungry. We need decent food.”
“I can taste a tender turkey breast stuffed with sweet Italian sausage and chestnuts, and we shall have it too, when the money comes in. I made a mistake with my early paintings not demanding I be paid on delivery; several buyers still owe me money. And I’m not getting the prices I think I deserve.”
“I told you not to hand them over unless they put the money in your hands. You’re too trusting. We shall soon be eating your Still Life with Apples, Milo.” Gina watched as he settled at his easel once more, and picked up his brush. There would be no more conversation for the afternoon.
Frustrated, she grabbed the broom and swept the floor at the far end of the room. She worked to warm herself. It needed sweeping again. No matter how many times she scrubbed it, sooty grit scrunched under her shoes. Work helped to clear her mind. She was constantly thinking up schemes to leave horrid, foggy London. She had been thirteen years old when her mother brought her to England, old enough to remember the sunny days and green hills of Tuscany.
She turned to study the bowl of wizened fruit and vase of wilting flowers she had purchased from the market that morning for Milo to paint. The sun-ripened fruit of her homeland would be sweet. Her mother had been like a delicate flower, she had not thrived in an English winter. She hated the cold and fog and was fond of saying that Italians knew how to live and the men knew how to love.
It was certainly true that the Englishmen who pursued Gina had wallets filled with money where their hearts should be. They knew nothing of a love that took hold of you, mind, body, and soul. To them, she would be an acquisition, someone they could flaunt in front of their friends and boast about in their clubs. No matter how hard things became, she would have none of it. She had promised her mother.
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