Georgie said all this in an urgent undertone, between bouts of coughing, as they walked back to their hotel. She was engrossed, Fitzgerald saw, in the symptoms of the case—many of which she must have heard long before, from the Consort, but which she was cataloguing in her mind now, as she talked to him.
“Gunther says that given the fragility of the boy's frame, it is a matter of conjecture whether he will reach adulthood; and, as such, he treats him much as he would any other little boy—encouraging him to move freely and gain strength by virtue of exercise out-of-doors, regardless of whether he might sustain an injury.”
“Surely he does not take undue risk,” Fitzgerald protested, “with the Queen's son in his keeping?”
“Not undue risk,” Georgie conceded, “but he certainly grants the child more liberty than his nurse or his mother should do. That is a very
“German, English—what does it matter?” Fitzgerald demanded. “The poor man's not from another planet!”
He was sharply tired, all of a sudden—of the endless travel, the incipient anxiety, and this constant emphasis on race. It was Theo and his social theorists all over again.
“Well,” Georgie said mildly, “in a manner of speaking, he
Twenty-six. Exactly Georgie's age. Had she enjoyed talking to Gunther, Fitzgerald wondered—someone equally conversant with science? As opposed to the middle-aged Irishman who understood nothing?
“How long have you known Rokeby?” he demanded. Another fellow with taking manners and an easy competence; his eyes had followed Georgiana throughout the evening, and he had studiously avoided Fitzgerald whenever possible.
“Some years. His brother will be a duke.” She shrugged. “One met him everywhere before he joined the diplomatic service. A pleasant enough fellow—and not at all dissipated, which is a relief among his kind. Gunther tells me he has behaved most intelligently toward young Leopold.”
“How so?”
“—By leaving him in the Bowaters' charge, of course. There was some concern that the loss of Sir Edward would throw all their plans into disarray, but I gather the entire household is to remain at Château Leader through February, as originally planned.”
“Does Gunther know his trade?”
“He did admit that he observed several similar sufferers during his studies at the medical college in Bonn.”
“And? Is he likely to save the child?”
Her footsteps slowed. “I hardly know. He talked a good deal of theory. That illnesses are more or less common because certain populations remain isolated—that is to say, they have limited contact with the broader world, and circulate their disorders among themselves, through social intercourse and even intermarriage. In some cases, Gunther says, such populations are less susceptible to disease—they appear to grow accustomed to it, and resist it better than those who are not. In other cases, parochial societies
“But he might not have done,” Fitzgerald countered. “He might have got mine.”
“Exactly. Not everyone inherits every aspect of their parents, Patrick. Otherwise, we should all look and act exactly the same—whereas in nature, variety is infinite.” She studied him measuringly. “To mention Theo, again— appearances can be deceiving. He
Fitzgerald was speechless. He felt raw, exposed—all his vulnerabilities tossed at his feet. She had seen, then, how strained was his bond to Theo; had seen as well how much the boy mattered. How he yearned for an expression of love from his son.
“I confess that I find Gunther's theories quite intriguing,” she continued serenely.
“Lord, they seem dead obvious.” Her knowledge of him was too shaming. “Families resemble each other. And so?”
“—If the appearance of a nose, or a pair of eyes, or a facility for writing poetry can be inherited,” Georgie said patiently, “then, too, can be a
“Inherited? From the Queen? Or the Consort?”
Georgie's eyes were suddenly alight; he had hit on the point of the whole conversation at last. “Prince Leopold's malady is exclusively found in males, Gunther says—at least, in Germany.”
“So it came from Albert?”
She shook her head. “A man with the disease never has a son with the same disorder.”
“So it
“Please, Patrick—allow me to explain. A man who bleeds will have a healthy son. Males cannot pass it to males. But a bleeder's
“The illness skips a generation?”
“And is apparently
“Victoria.” Fitzgerald kneaded his temples, trying to comprehend what this might mean. “You're saying the Queen caused the flaw in the boy's blood?”
“As much as anyone can, when the thing is so entirely in God's hands.”
“But she's had three other sons! And none of them—”
“None of them got the Duke's nose. That's the way of it, with families.”
His footsteps slowed as they neared the hotel. Something she'd said, just now—something she'd said a week ago, in London . . . “Georgiana, have you thought of what you're saying? About the heritability of Leo's disease?”
She looked at him searchingly. “What is it, Patrick?”
“The poor lad got his flaw from his mother. Well and good. But where did
“Who knows?”
He shook his head. “That won't fadge, love. I've never heard a
Georgiana frowned. “There's something in what you say. The Hanoverians have always been known for a lurking madness—old King George, for example. But not this frailty in the tissues. The Duke of Kent certainly wasn't troubled by it, at all events. But his wife—Victoria's mother?”
“What did Prince Albert think? He'd have known. The Duchess of Kent was his aunt.”
“I have no idea what he thought,” she said quietly. “I only know what he
Fitzgerald waved one hand dismissively.
“He had never encountered Leopold's disorder before,” she conceded. “Among his own people, I mean. That's what he
“And burned them.”
“Yes. Patrick—”
“If Victoria's mother didn't carry it, and her father didn't carry it, then the disease must have come from somewhere else.”
“But it's not an illness you just . . .