Polonaise

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by Jane Aiken Hodge


  ‘Ostentation?’ She fingered her pearl choker, remembering what it had cost her, then smiled and held out her glass to a passing footman. ‘You still don’t entirely understand us Poles, do you, Mr. Rendel? And who can blame you! But, don’t you see, this extravagant party, which I hope you are enjoying,’ she gestured to the footman to top up Glynde’s half empty glass, ‘this party is a public declaration of my confidence in Wysocki. Poor man, I’m afraid he is anxious enough about his first venture into politics! I had him for too long this morning, wanting reassurance about the part he is to play at Warsaw.’

  ‘Yes, he told me.’

  ‘I’m delighted to hear it! I hope you helped him to clear his mind of the absurd quixotries he had been harbouring.’

  ‘You mean his odd notion that he should give his vote according to the facts of the situation as he finds them rather than on instructions received from your Highness before he even left home? I’m afraid you must blame me for that absurd idea, Princess.’ He drained his glass. ‘I have had it on my mind that I should say this to you. We have talked a great deal, Wysocki and I. If he shows signs of understanding what a democratic parliament is all about, I think you should blame it on me rather than on him. Or even on Napoleon!’

  ‘Napoleon?’

  ‘Yes. As an Englishman I hate and fear him, and you should never forget that. But as a democrat, I have to respect what he is doing here, in Europe. Wherever he has taken that conquering army of his, he has left law and democratic government. Look at the difference between Rendomierz and Vinsk. Here you are served by free men; there by slaves. That is what will make the difference, when it comes to war.’

  ‘That’s what you told Leon?’

  ‘Of course. Let the free Poles rise and show their brothers in Russia what freedom means, and the victory is yours.’

  ‘Victory?’ she said thoughtfully. But if it was indeed Glynde Rendel who had carelessly talked Wysocki into his astonishing moment of resistance it was more than time she brought him to heel. ‘Mr. Rendel; Glynde. It is so long, so very long since we talked, you and I. Give me your arm. Let us take the yew walk where I once had to faint for the Tsar’s benefit. We can be private there, and you can explain this odd advice you seem to have been giving my poor muddled Leon.’

  ‘Odd, Highness?’ What else could he do but take her arm?

  ‘Odd indeed. You know how I care for my serfs. The villages I have built, the schools I have founded, the chances they have. Well, have. Well, look how they have flocked into the army, shaved their beards, become men. And have I stopped them? Never!’

  ‘No.’ He did not add, but could you have?

  ‘It’s gone far enough,’ she said. ‘If this mad idea Bignon seems to have favoured of a universal Polish rising, of master and man off to fight Russia together … If that should really happen, it would be the end of Rendomierz, the end of civilisation.’

  ‘It might mean victory over Russia,’ said Glynde.

  ‘At such a price? You, as a member of a landowning family, must know how many people – call them serfs, peasants, what you like – it takes to run an estate. I remember the people at Petworth House … the keepers, the beaters, the men in the fields. They may not have been serfs, but they were not much different. And we need them, we landowners, you and I!’

  ‘You, Princess. Not I.’

  ‘By birth you are. By breeding. That is why we have always understood each other so well.’ They were in the dark yew alley now, moonlight above, shadow all around. She paused, pulling gently back on his arm, turning to face him, her eyes raised to his. ‘Glynde! Do you remember how we understood each other?’

  ‘Remember?’ His blood throbbed with the message her flesh was giving to his. ‘Highness, how could I forget?’ Moon mad? He was pulling her into his arms. All those years … He was a young man again, pacing a room; waiting for a summons that did not come. And now: ‘Isobel!’ He bent, found her lips awaiting his, met them. Felt the passion of her response. And knew, too late, that he felt nothing.

  ‘At last! Oh, Glynde, after all these years!’ She drew away a little to smile up at him. And at that moment a boy’s hand pulled the lever that controlled the joke fountains and they were suddenly drenched from either side.

  Chapter 32

  Reaching Vinsk at last, Jan found the fires dying down. The moon showed nothing but desolation. ‘Miriam!’ His voice sounded strange against the last whispers of the flames and the great silence beyond. ‘Miriam!’ he called again, knowing it hopeless. Palace, outbuildings, stables: everything was reduced to the same dark rubble. His only comfort was the silence. No screams, no groans, human or animal. No horrible smell of burned flesh. Occupants and animals alike must have been out of the place before it was set ablaze. But to what fate?

  No hope of an answer here. He turned his horse along the familiar track to the village and paused at the corner to look across the valley at the Russian camp. And there, too, was nothing but darkness and silence. Not a camp fire burned. The whole detachment must have marched during the few days he was away. Forward, to confront the French? Fool, idiot to have relied on their protection for Miriam.

  Where was she now? Reaching the village, he was relieved to find its hovels still standing, but here again there was nothing but silence, no cackle of hens, no smoke from the chimneys. Had Miriam had notice of disaster and taken her people to safety? But where? He had come some way along the Vilno road and seen no sign of their passage. Above him, a nightingale sang, making the moonlit scene more lonely still. But he must make sure. He dismounted, tethered his horse where it could get an illicit meal from the thatch of one of the hovels, and made his way to the hut of the village’s headman. His knock on the door sounded harsh in the silence. The nightingale stopped singing. Nothing else.

  He stood there in the moonlight, facing disaster. Miriam had vanished into the vastness of Russia. Was dead? Or so savagely treated that she had crept away to hide? Where was the nearest convent? Would its nuns accept her? A Jewess. And how should he find it? He must find her. He must know. If she was alive, he would marry her, whatever had happened. It was all his fault.

  If she was alive she would not have gone without leaving a message for him. Suddenly he was sure of that. Even if it was only goodbye. Could he have missed it, back at the palace? He did not think so. Here, surely? He knocked again on the headman’s door, shouted against the enveloping darkness. ‘It is I, Jan Warrington, looking for Miriam, looking for my wife.’ Strange that it should be so difficult to shout into this alien darkness, but he repeated it, over and over again, walking up and down the village street, pausing to listen.

  Nothing. No sound. No movement. It was past midnight now, and he and his horse had been travelling for almost twenty-four hours. Sheer exhaustion made up his mind for him. He settled his horse for the night in the noisome lean-to that passed for the headman’s stable, ate the last of the food he had so casually taken from the feast at Zakret, wrapped himself in his cloak and fell asleep on filthy straw.

  Sunshine slanted on his face. But it was not this that had waked him. Outside, someone was whistling Dombrowski’s March, very low – a whisper of a whistle. He peered through what passed for a window and saw a boy walking down the village street, looking nervously, eagerly, this way and that, whistling as he went. He was in the usual rags of a serf; his haggard face showed the tracks of tears.

  ‘Here!’ Jan opened the door. ‘I’m here!’

  He might not know the boy, but the boy knew him. ‘Lord Jan!’ None of Miriam’s serfs had ever managed the name Warrington. ‘Thanks be to the Virgin and all her angels. She said you’d come today.’

  ‘She?’

  ‘The lady.’

  ‘She’s safe?’

  ‘Safe?’ The boy hurried to join Jan in the hut and close the door. ‘With the Russian wolves on one side, and the French on the other! But, yes, she is alive. With Them. I’m to take you to her.’

  ‘Thank God!’ He bent to pick up
his cloak.

  ‘No, no. Not now. Not till dark. The French are everywhere. Foraging, marauding, murdering. They killed my father.’ He spat. ‘He was telling them we were their friends, offering to share everything with them. And they shot him. Just like that. They’ve no friends now. Not among us.’

  ‘But the lady, Miriam, what happened to her?’ Recognising the boy’s sick exhaustion, he pulled him down to sit beside him on his cloak, a friendly arm around him. ‘I am so sorry about your father. There will be a vengeance, I am sure of it.’

  ‘So long as I live, no Frenchman is safe. I swear it!’ Having said this, the boy took a deep breath, as if he felt better. ‘As to the lady, may the Virgin care for her, even if she is a Jewess! If it was not for her, we’d none of us be alive today. First it was the Russians, see? They came at dawn, demanding every horse in the stables. Why? the lady asked. What was the need? They belonged to the Princess. He spat at her, the Russian officer, said he did not take questions from Jews. Said she was lucky they were in such haste. She asked again, why the haste? He struck her, lord, with his whip, across the face. She’ll bear the scar until she dies. “That’s how I answer you scum of Jews,” he said. They took every horse and pony, all the food they could find. But they were in great haste. I speak Russian,’ he said proudly. ‘The lady’s sons were my friends, they taught me. You know about them, lord.’

  ‘Yes, I know.’ Did he remember often enough?

  ‘And I’m just a boy. I pretended to help with the animals. At least it made it better for the horses, having a friendly hand on the bridle, and nothing would have made any difference. I listened to what they said to each other. The French are across the Niemen. The Russian army is retreating, on the Tsar’s orders.’

  ‘Retreating?’ He could not believe it.

  ‘That’s what they said. That’s what they did. My cousin watched them go back to the other side of the valley, the way to Vilno. He told the lady. That’s when the trouble started.’

  ‘More trouble?’

  ‘There’s been no end to it. When the Russians had gone, the lady stood there, blood streaming down her face, said it would be the Princess’s wish that the French be welcomed as friends. Gave her orders for it. She even had French flags, the tricolor, that she and the other women had made in secret; said they were to be hung at the great gate. She would receive the French there, she said.’

  ’Brave!’

  ‘She’s a lion! But, there are some among our people have never liked being ruled by a woman, and a Jewess at that. Kin of the old steward the Prince sent to Siberia years ago. They said it was every man for himself now. With the war begun, you see, they had only to join the army, shave their beards, be free men if they survived. When the lady spoke of their duty to the Princess and the little Prince they just laughed. It began to look very ugly. We were all out in the courtyard, shouting at each other, her friends gathering around the lady – not many men, but we’d have died for her. That was when the French came. They were upon us before we knew. No flags! No welcome!’ He was shivering convulsively, and Jan pulled out his flask and gave him a few precious drops of brandy. ‘That’s good!’ He wiped his mouth with a filthy hand, tears trickling down his cheeks. ‘It would have made no difference. They were savages. Hungry savages. The lady tried to speak to them, in French, tell them we were friends – as she had planned – that the Russians had taken the horses. That made them angrier still. They wanted food, forage for their horses, drink, of course. We did what we were told. Except my father. After they killed him we obeyed. What else? Rushed about, fetching what the Russians had missed. There was plenty; they’d been in such haste. They ate like pigs, those French, in the courtyard, as if they’d not had food for days. And drank. Some fool showed them where the cellar was; the lady had pretended there was nothing but small beer. Her face was bleeding all the time, blood soaking into the front of her gown. She took no notice. Served them. Went on trying to talk to them in French. There was one, a sergeant, I think: the boss.’ The boy was crying freely now. ‘He listened to her for a while; sitting on the mounting-block, at his ease; she stood by him, speaking, pleading, the blood still flowing. Lord, he laughed. He threw away his tankard, stood up, tore her dress off her. There, in the yard, in front of us all. It was like a signal. The lady had tried to keep the other women close to her. My mother was there, my little sisters. Some of our men tried to protect them, and were struck down. I’m a coward, like the others. I hid my eyes and listened to them scream.’

  Jan was shaking too. He drank, silent and deep, from the flask and passed it to the boy. ‘But they’re alive?’

  ‘By God’s goodness. There was commotion at the gate, suddenly; another party of Frenchmen rode in. A real officer, medals and a sash. He shouted something. Furious. It all stopped. Just like that. The lady got up from the ground, very slowly, as if it hurt her to move, mother-naked. I’m sorry!’

  ‘No. I have to know. She’s alive.’

  ‘Oh, yes. The officer said something, wrapped her in his cloak. The other men were letting our women go. They’re all alive. For what it’s worth. My mother won’t speak. My sisters won’t stop crying.’

  ‘Life is worth a great deal,’ said Jan, working it out, slowly, in anguish, for himself. ‘You must tell your mother and sisters that. So then what happened?’

  ‘They all rode away, taking everything: food, forage, all kinds of treasures from the palace. We had hardly time to speak, to think, to try to imagine what to say to them, to each other, while the women were indoors, finding clothes to cover their nakedness. I noticed it first!’ He was proud of this, and it helped him. ‘The smell of fire! As they were going, the first Frenchmen must have set it, angry at being denied their pleasure. It was everywhere. And all the palace wood-built. There was not a hope, not a chance. That was when the lady came out, wrapped in furs, as if she would never be warm again, the blood running more slowly from her face, and took charge. No hope of fighting the fire, she said. We would all come here, to the village. But when we got here, it was empty. The French had been here too. They had all fled, and who can blame them? At least they didn’t bother to fire it. While we were standing, wondering what to do, one of Them came out of the forest, masked and cloaked. You know about Them, lord?’

  ‘Yes, I know.’

  ‘So did the lady. He had come for her. She talked to him a little, then turned to us. There was a safe place, she said, in the forest, for those who wanted to come, but the life would be hard. She was so white that the wound across her face looked like … looked like … Was there a saint, lord, who got such a wound? She had a duty, she said, to tell us, that if we came, we would be throwing in our lot with the French: “The ones who are true friends of Poland. Like those who rescued us.” We must not judge all Frenchmen by a few villains, she said. But any of us who did not wish to come were free to go our own ways. She promised us this, on the Princess Ovinska’s authority. Of course I went with her, and my mother and sisters. Most of the women, some of the men. I’ll take you to them tonight.’ His voice was dwindling as he gave way to shock and exhaustion. ‘Were there saints, who were raped and saved their people? If she is not a saint, she is most certainly a hero. I think we’d all be dead, were it not for her.’ And then, more sleepily still, ‘The Frenchman who saved us knew her, I think.’

  He slept all day while Jan sat beside him, cold to the heart. At first he just sat, absorbing the full horror of it, but then, gradually, made himself think. He would need his own mind crystal clear if he was to persuade Miriam that they still had a future together. Making himself face it all, he saw that his own presence at Vinsk would almost certainly have made no difference. Except that he would be dead. The French soldiers who had savaged Vinsk must have been entirely out of control. What had happened to Napoleon’s Grand Army, his disciplined, devoted troops? And what would happen to them if they moved on into Russian Poland like this, undisciplined, ravaging, making themselves hated? How many Poles would go on supporti
ng them? He was facing not just the personal disaster of what had happened to Miriam, but the collapse of all his hopes, of all he had been working for.

  In a way, it made everything easier. Towards evening, he sighed, allowed himself one tiny sip of brandy, and went out quietly to forage for food. The boy would be hungry when he woke. They shared raw beet leaves and a crust of mouldy bread and started as soon as the moon rose, Jan leading his tired horse. There seemed nothing left to say, except, ‘How far?’

  ‘Two hours, if we don’t lose the way.’ The boy’s name was Michael. ‘I was named after the lady’s older son. He’d be a man now. The poor lady … Will she kill herself, do you think?’

  ‘No!’ Explosively. After that, they were silent for a long while as they penetrated more and more deeply into the forest.

  At last, Michael paused at the top of a slight rise. ‘Nearly there,’ he said. ‘Wait here, till I come back.’ And went ahead, whistling, very softly, Dombrowski’s March.

  It must have been a castle once, when Lithuania was rich and free, and its owner had been affluent and foresighted enough to build it of imported stone. Its walls bulked huge in the moonlight and when they had passed through a narrow entrance they found themselves in what felt like a thriving village. It was good to hear sounds of life again: a child cried, a dog barked, they could smell meat cooking. And strangely now, for the first time after all the day’s anguish, Jan felt his eyes fill with tears. He turned, put a hand on Michael’s shoulder. ‘Don’t forget,’ he said, ‘it’s life that matters.’

  ‘Thank you, Lord Jan. Here is your way.’ He flung open a door. ‘I must go to my mother.’

  Firelight, the smell of food stronger than ever, guttering tallow candles, and a tall man waiting quietly to greet him. ‘Mr. Warrington,’ he took a step forward, holding out a hand, speaking English with a French accent, ‘I am more sorry than I can say.’

 

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