by Juliana Gray
“You see, I had some concern that you would dismiss my proposal out of hand.” The slightest suggestion of color came to the tip of his nose, and the outer edges of his thick cheekbones. “I thought there might perhaps exist some prior engagement.”
“A prior engagement?”
“Between you and my friend Silverton.”
I confess, I was surprised to hear this. I had thought this subject would have been thoroughly covered by the two of them by now; certainly after such a night of manly comradeship as had occurred the day before last. Had the question of Emmeline Truelove’s affections not been raised at all?
And yet, why should it? Nothing had been settled, after all. I had not given Silverton an answer. He hadn’t pressed me for one.
I turned my head to the window, which overlooked the village square. The white sun blinded me, but I could still make out the shapes of the central statue, the wandering townsfolk. Silverton among them, no doubt, swinging his jaunty cane, chewing his pipe, tying up his loose threads.
With Silverton, I supposed, there were always loose threads.
I have few clear memories of my mother; they are mostly of the dreamlike variety, bedtime kisses and the scent of her skirts and something to do with paper dolls. Even the image of her on her sickbed is lost to me. But I do have this: a visit to the village confectionary, a much-anticipated reward for some childish achievement. I remember looking at the rows of sweets in an agony of indecision. I gazed back and forth between a glossy fruit marzipan—I can still see the luscious purple curves of the grapes, perfect in every detail—and a round chocolate bonbon, containing a brandied cherry, and I burst into tears, because to have one was to relinquish all hope of the other.
And my mother bent down next to me and put one warm arm around my shoulders, and she didn’t scold. “Emmie, darling,” she said, “every day of your life you will have to make choices, and you can’t waste a single precious minute mourning what you have lost. Only be grateful for what you have gained.”
I remember the comfort of her words, though at the time I did not fully understand them, and as I stood there in that simple room in the center of the Aegean, contemplating the new spring sun, I thought I could feel my mother’s arm upon my shoulders once more, and smell the scent of her dress, as if she were standing again beside me.
I returned my gaze to the Duke of Olympia and smiled gravely.
“In fact,” I said, “I am quite at liberty.”
Discussion Questions
A Most Extraordinary Pursuit begins with the death of the Duke of Olympia, a fictional titan of the Victorian Age, and Emmeline links the duke’s death to the death of the nineteenth century itself. What changes do you think took place during the turn of the twentieth century? How do you think Emmeline feels about them? How do these themes play out in the book as a whole?
What were your initial impressions of Lord Silverton? How did they change during the course of the narrative? Do you think he would make a good match for Emmeline? Why or why not?
Do you think the ghosts of Queen Victoria and Mr. Truelove are “real,” or simply figments of Emmeline’s imagination? What role do they play in the story? What is the nature of the Queen’s apparent bond with Emmeline, and vice versa?
Were you surprised to discover that Emmeline has a lover in her past? Why do you think she held this information back from the reader for so much of the narrative? Do you think Emmeline is a reliable narrator? Why or why not?
Emmeline is a woman holding down a man’s job in 1906, executing those duties competently and holding her own against her male companions, and yet at many points in the book she expresses traditional views about social, economic, and sexual politics. Do you find this contradictory? Why do you think she feels this way? What kinds of internal conflicts might Emmeline be experiencing, other than those she tells us about?
What did you think of the “retelling” of the myth of Theseus and Ariadne? Do you believe that myths and legends originate from real historical events? What role do you think myth and storytelling play in human society?
Max Haywood, the new Duke of Olympia, doesn’t appear until the last section of the book. What impression did you have of him before he finally entered the story? Were your expectations realized or confounded? How does he compare to Lord Silverton?
How would you cope if you discovered you had Max’s power? Would you use that power in some way, or leave it aside? Why?
What do you think of the possibility of time travel? Would you be afraid of affecting other events through the domino effect? Or do you think those effects are already “written” into history?
Do you think Emmeline made the right decision at the end of the book? Do you think Lord Silverton really loves her? Which man would you choose?
LOOK FOR THE NEXT JULIANA GRAY BOOK FEATURING EMMELINE TRUELOVE, COMING FALL 2017 FROM BERKLEY BOOKS.
Dear Reader,
You might know me by another name. As Beatriz Williams, I write historical fiction set primarily in that tumultuous center of the twentieth century, after the First World War blew apart the remnants of Romanticism and ushered in the modern era. A Hundred Summers dissected the habits and family secrets of a New England beach community during the summer of the hurricane of 1938, while The Secret Life of Violet Grant introduced Vivian Schuyler, a dashing 1960s Manhattan career girl uncovering the scandalous history of her long-lost Aunt Violet. In Tiny Little Thing, Vivian’s older sister Tiny tells her story as a photo-perfect political wife hiding a devastating mistake in her past, during the telegenic age of Camelot.
But Tiny and Vivian have another sister, Pepper, who’s the most tortured—and the most beautiful—of the Schuylers. She’s pregnant with the child of a prominent (and very married) United States senator, from whose savage political ambition she needs a refuge. She finds that refuge in the form of a rare vintage Mercedes Roadster, whose previous owner takes Pepper under her protective wing. As Annabelle Dommerich’s story of passionate young love in 1930s Europe unfolds alongside Pepper’s search for safety and redemption on the 1960s Florida coast, the two women forge a deep and complicated bond.
I hope you’ll enjoy this excerpt from Along the Infinite Sea, a novel that took me on a profound emotional journey through a historical moment that has no equal for human heartbreak and fortitude. When I finished this book, I felt it was my best yet, and I can’t wait for you to meet Annabelle and Stefan, Johann and Florian and Pepper, and the rest of the Schuyler family.
Happy reading!
Beatriz
KEEP READING FOR A SPECIAL EXCERPT FROM
Along the Infinite Sea
BY BEATRIZ WILLIAMS
Overture
To see all without looking;
to hear all without listening.
CÉSAR RITZ
King of Hoteliers, Hotelier of Kings
Annabelle
PARIS 1937
All you really need to know about the Paris Ritz is this: by the middle of 1937, Coco Chanel was living in a handsome suite on the third floor, and the bartender—an intuitive mixologist named Frank Meier—had invented the Bloody Mary sixteen summers earlier to cure a Hemingway hangover.
Mind you, when I arrived at Nick Greenwald’s farewell party on that hot July night, I wasn’t altogether aware of this history. I didn’t run with the Ritz crowd. Mosquitoes, my husband called them. And maybe I should have listened to my husband. Maybe no good could come from visiting the bar at the Paris Ritz; maybe you were doomed to commit some frivolous and irresponsible act, maybe you were doomed to hover around dangerously until you had drawn the blood from another human being or else had your own blood drawn instead.
But Johann—my husband—wasn’t around that night. I tiptoed in through the unfashionable Place Vendôme entrance on my brother’s arm instead, since Johann had been recalled to Berlin for an assignment of a few months that had str
etched into several. In those days, you couldn’t just flit back and forth between Paris and Berlin, no more than you could flit between heaven and hell; and furthermore, why would you want to? Paris had everything I needed, everything I loved, and Berlin in 1937 was no place for a liberal-minded woman nurturing a young child and an impossible rift in her marriage. I stayed defiantly in France, where you could still attend a party for a man named Greenwald, where anyone could dine where he pleased and shop and bank where he pleased, where you could sleep with anyone who suited you, and it wasn’t a crime.
For the sake of everyone’s good time, I suppose it was just as well that my husband remained in Berlin, since Nick Greenwald and Johann von Kleist weren’t what you’d call bosom friends, for all the obvious reasons. But Nick and I were a different story. Nick and I understood each other: first, because we were both Americans living in Paris, and second, because we shared a little secret together, the kind of secret you could never, ever share with anyone else. Of all my brother’s friends, Nick was the only one who didn’t resent me for marrying a general in the German army. Good old Nick. He knew I’d had my reasons.
The salon was hot, and Nick was in his shirtsleeves, though he still retained his waistcoat and a neat white bow tie, the kind you needed a valet to arrange properly. He turned at the sound of my voice. “Annabelle! Here at last.”
“Not so very late, am I?” I said.
We kissed, and he and Charles shook hands. Not that Charles paid the transaction much attention; he was transfixed by the black-haired beauty who lounged at Nick’s side in a shimmering silver-blue dress that matched her eyes. A long cigarette dangled from her fingers. Nick turned to her and placed his hand at the small of her back. “Annabelle, Charlie. I don’t think you’ve met Budgie Byrne. An old college friend.”
We said enchantée. Miss Byrne took little notice. Her handshake was slender and lacked conviction. She slipped her arm through Nick’s and whispered in his ear, and they shimmered off together to the bar inside a haze of expensive perfume. The back of Miss Byrne’s dress swooped down almost to the point of no return, and her naked skin was like a spill of milk, kept from running over the edge by Nick’s large palm.
Charles covered his cheek with his right hand—the same hand that Miss Byrne had just touched with her limp and slender fingers—and said that bastard always got the best-looking women.
I watched Nick’s back disappear into the crowd, and I was about to tell Charles that he didn’t need to worry, that Nick didn’t really look all that happy with his companion and Charles might want to give the delectably disinterested Miss Byrne another try in an hour, but at that exact instant a voice came over my shoulder, the last voice I expected to hear at the Paris Ritz on this night in the smoldering middle of July.
“My God,” it said, a little slurry. “If it isn’t the baroness herself.”
I thought perhaps I was hallucinating, or mistaken. It wouldn’t be the first time. For the past two years, I’d heard this voice everywhere: department stores and elevators and street corners. I’d seen its owner in every possible nook, in every conceivable disguise, only to discover that the supposed encounter was only a false alarm, a collision of deluded molecules inside my own head, and the proximate cause of the leap in my blood proved to be an ordinary citizen after all. Just an everyday fellow who happened to have dark hair or a deep voice or a certain shape to the back of his neck. In the instant of revelation, I never knew whether to be relieved or disappointed. Whether to lament or hallelujah. Either way, the experience wasn’t a pleasant one, at least not in the way we ordinarily experience pleasure, as a benevolent thing that massages the nerves into a sensation of well-being.
Either way, I had committed a kind of adultery of the heart, hadn’t I, and since I couldn’t bear the thought of adultery in any form, I learned to ignore the false alarm when it rang and rang and rang. Like the good wife I was, I learned to maintain my poise during these moments of intense delusion.
So there. Instead of bolting at the slurry word baroness, I took my deluded molecules in hand and said: Surely not.
Instead of spinning like a top, I turned like a figurine on a music box, in such a way that you could almost hear the tinkling Tchaikovsky in my gears.
A man came into view, quite lifelike, quite familiar, tall and just so in his formal blacks and white points, dark hair curling into his forehead the way your lover’s hair does in your wilder dreams. He was holding a lowball glass and a brown Turkish cigarette in his right hand, and he took in everything at a glance: my jewels, my extravagant dress, the exact state of my circulation.
In short, he seemed an awful lot like the genuine article.
“There you are, you old bastard,” said Charles happily, and sacré bleu, I realized then what I already knew: that the man before me was no delusion. That the Paris Ritz was the kind of place that could conjure up anyone it wanted.
“Stefan,” I said. “What a lovely surprise.”
(And the big trouble was, I think I meant it.)
First Movement
Experience is simply the name
we give our mistakes.
OSCAR WILDE
Pepper
PALM BEACH 1966
1.
The Mercedes-Benz poses on the grass like a swirl of vintage black ink, like no other car in the world.
You’d never guess it to look at her, but Miss Pepper Schuyler—that woman right over there, the socialite with the golden antelope legs who’s soaking up the Florida sunshine at the other end of the courtyard—knows every glamorous inch of this 1936 Special Roadster shadowing the grass. You might regard Pepper’s pregnant belly protruding from her green Lilly shift (well, it’s hard to ignore a belly like that, isn’t it?) and the pastel Jack Rogers sandal dangling from her uppermost toe, and think you have her pegged. Admit it! Lush young woman exudes Palm Beach class: What the hell does she know about cars?
Well, beautiful Pepper doesn’t give a damn what you think about her. She never did. She’s thinking about the car. She slides her gaze along the seductive S-curve of the right side fender, swooping from the top of the tire to the running board below the door, like a woman’s voluptuously naked leg, and her heart beats a quarter-inch faster.
She remembers what a pain in the pert old derrière it was to repaint that glossy fender. It had been the first week of October, and the warm weather wouldn’t quit. The old shed on Cape Cod stank of paint and grease, a peculiarly acrid reek that had crept right through the protective mask and into her sinuses and taken up residence, until she couldn’t smell anything else, and she thought, What the hell am I doing here? What the hell am I thinking?
Thank God that was all over. Thank God this rare inky-black 1936 Mercedes Special Roadster is now someone else’s problem, someone willing to pay Pepper three hundred thousand dollars for the privilege of keeping its body and chrome intact against the ravages of time.
The deposit has already been paid, into a special account Pepper set up in her own name. (Her own name, her own money: now, that was a glorious feeling, like setting off for Europe on an ocean liner with nothing but open blue seas ahead.) The rest will be delivered today, to the Breakers hotel where Pepper is staying, in a special-delivery envelope. Another delightful little big check made out in Pepper’s name. Taken together, those checks will solve all her problems. She’ll have money for the baby, money to start everything over, money to ignore whoever needs ignoring, money to disappear if she needs to, forever and ever. She’ll depend on no one. She can do whatever the hell she pleases, whatever suits Pepper Schuyler and—by corollary—Pepper Junior. She will toe nobody’s line. She will fear nobody.
So the only question left in Pepper’s mind, the only question that needs resolving, is the niggling Who?
Who the hell is this anonymous buyer—a woman, Pepper’s auction agent said—who has the dough and the desire to lay claim to Pepper
’s very special Special Roadster, before it even reaches the public sales ring?
Not that Pepper cares who she is. Pepper just cares who she isn’t. As long as this woman is a disinterested party, a person who has her own reasons for wanting this car, nothing to do with Pepper, nothing to do with the second half of the magic equation inside Pepper’s belly, well, everything’s just peachy keen, isn’t it? Pepper will march off with her three hundred thousand dollars and never give the buyer another thought.
Pepper lifts a tanned arm and checks her watch. It’s a gold Cartier, given to her by her father for her eighteenth birthday, perhaps as a subtle reminder to start arriving the hell on time, now that she was a grown-up. It didn’t work. The party always starts when Pepper gets there, not before, so why should she care if she arrives late or early? Still, the watch has its uses. The watch tells her it’s twenty-seven minutes past twelve o’clock. They should be here any moment: Pepper’s auction agent and the buyer, to inspect the car and complete the formalities. If they’re on time, and why wouldn’t they be? By all accounts, the lady’s as eager to buy as Pepper is to sell.
Pepper tilts her head back and closes her eyes to the white sun. She can’t get enough of it. This baby inside her must have sprung from another religion, one that worshipped the gods in the sky or gained nourishment from sunbeams. Pepper can almost feel the cells dividing in ecstasy as she points herself due upward. She can almost feel the seams strain along her green Lilly shift, the dancing monkeys stretch their arms to fit around the ambitious creature within.
Well, that makes sense, doesn’t it? Like father, like child.
“Good afternoon.”
Pepper bolts upright. A small and slender woman stands before her, dark-haired, dressed in navy Capri pants and a white shirt, her delicate face hidden by a pair of large dark sunglasses. It’s Audrey Hepburn, or else her well-groomed Florida cousin.