“I thought it more prudent that she should keep the ring, than have an unsightly mark on her finger. I didn’t mention it.”
The dresser turned and twisted involuntarily from side to side.
“I did right, chief, didn’t I? It was only a ring. It was clean, silver.”
The Kislar Agha fixed him with a stare. Then with a shrug and a wave of his hand, he dismissed him from the room. The dresser backed out, bowing nervously.
The Kislar Agha picked up a peach and bit into it. The juice ran down his chin.
“Do you think he took it?”
Yashim shook his head.
“A bit of silver, why would he bother? But somebody took it. I wonder why?”
“Somebody took it,” the Kislar Agha repeated slowly. “So it must still be here.”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
The black man leaned back and examined his hands.
“It will be found,” he said.
[ 36 ]
His excellency Prince Nikolai Derentsov, Order of Czar Peter, First Class, hereditary Chamberlain to the Czars of all the Russias, and Russian ambassador to the Sublime Porte, watched his knuckles whiten against the edge of his desk.
He was, as he would have been the first to admit, an extraordinarily handsome man. Now in his late fifties, well over six foot, his broad shoulders exaggerated by a high-collared, cutaway coat, his neck in a starched cravat, lace at his sleeves, he looked both elegant and formidable. He wore his steel-grey hair short, and his side-whiskers long. He had a fine head, cold blue eyes, and a rather small mouth.
The Derentsov family had found that life was expensive. Despite vast estates, despite access to the highest positions in the land, a century of balls, gowns, gambling and politics in St Petersburg had led Prince Nikolai Derentsov to the uncomfortable discovery that his debts and expenses greatly exceeded his income. His ability to attract a very beautiful young wife had been the talk of the late season—although beautiful young women are as common in Russia as anywhere else.
What animated the talk—what spurred the envy and congratulation—was that through his marriage the prince had also secured the benefit of her considerable fortune. Not that the people Derentsov moved among always put it that way. Behind his back they sniffed that the girl—for all her beauty—was Trade. Her father had made millions in fur.
“It appears that you have been careless,” Derentsov was saying. “At my embassy I cannot afford to maintain people who make mistakes. Do you understand me?”
“I am so sorry, Your Excellency.”
The young man bent his head. Nikolai Potemkin certainly looked sorry. He
He was, like his chief, over six foot tall; but he was not handsome. His face, scarred from a sabre cut received in the Turkish war, had never healed well: a livid weal ran from the corner of his left eye to his upper lip. He was very fair, and his almost lashless eyes were watery and pale. In that struggle with a Turkish cavalier he had grappled the sabre with his bare left hand, and three of his fingers were now curled into a useless hook. Young Potemkin had come to understand that it was the diplomatic or…nothing. Five thousand acres on the borders of Siberia. A third- rate estate, shackled with debt, a thousand miles from anywhere at all.
Prince Derentsov drummed on the desk with his finger tips.
“The damage is done. In a few minutes we will talk to an emissary of the Sublime Porte. Let’s get it clear. You met the men once. You spoke in French. You gave them a lift and dropped them—where?”
“Somewhere near their barracks, I’m not sure. I’ve only been out in the city a few times.”