CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

The next morning, it was Caroline's turn for an encounter with more people from her husband's past, one of whom was very well known to her, by name at least, as a result of a series of poison-pen letters over several years, and one of whom she would not recognise from Eve.

With her husband off with his manservant, Jules, to shop on his own and call upon their recently re-established embassy, Caroline, along with her maid-servant, Marianne, and the garrulous and charming Jean, began a shopping trip of her own… the sort of shopping which unfaithful husbands owe their wives, and long-suffering women deserve.

There was a parfumerie that Jean-Joseph had mentioned, the very best, most exclusive shop in all of Paris, which was to say, the best in all of France, which, also left unsaid the very best in the world.

It was called La Contessa's, just off the Place Victor, and its scents could be discerned even before the front of the store was reached. A bright red door-set between matching bow-windows filled with arrays of vials, jars, and droppers of scents, with sachets for armoires and dresser drawers, with scented soaps, face powders, and cosmetics-opened to the accompaniment of the gay tinkling of a shop bell hung over the transom.

'Oh, it smells grand, Jean!' Caroline enthused, pausing to inhale and gaze about.

'Madame?' a young clerk enquired, drawn by the bell. It fell to Jean-Joseph to explain that Mrs. Lewrie's French was not all that good, and that he would be translating. The young girl lifted her nose and almost sniffed in derision, even while she maintained her smile. Dealing with Anglais travellers was odious enough, and those who could not even attempt to speak French, garbling as bad as hairy-armed Gascons, were even worse.

As Jean-Joseph glibly continued, requesting that La Contessa herself attend his charge, knowing that La Contessa was somewhat fluent in English, a couple entered the shop behind them.

The young fellow was a Major in the dark green, scarlet-collared and -trimmed uniform coat of the Chasseurs, very gay and charming. The young lady with him was stunningly beautiful, with blue-grey eyes and chestnut- coloured hair, done up in ringlets framing her face, Chinois bangs on her forehead, and a chignon behind.

'… Madame Lewrie wishes to sample your scents, your colognes, and bath powders, mademoiselle,' Jean-Joseph went on, tipping the girl a wink to let her know that Madame had money and would not know if she was being gulled. 'Your very best, n'est-ce pas?'

At the mention of Caroline's name, the girl with the chestnut hair blanched and seized her companion's arm for support.

Lewrie! C'est lui? Impossible! she thought, her mind areel; it cannot be!

'Charitй, you are unwell, ma chйrie?' the young Major enquired.

'The uhm… the richness of the aromas overcome me,' she told him, recovering her aplomb and plastering gay coquetry on her face; moving deeper into the store so she could look back, from beneath lowered lashes, at the woman who went by the name of Lewrie.

She is very attractive, Charitй Angelette de Guilleri thought; for a woman in her… fourties? she sneeringly over-estimated. Is she his widow or another sanglante… a 'Bloody'?

For here we meet someone else who'd 'crossed hawses' with Capt. Alan Lewrie; Charitй Angelette de Guilleri had once been the younger daughter of a rich Creole planter family in Louisiana, the belle of any gathering in her beloved New Orleans… even if that original French colony had been traded off long before to the grubby Spanish, an odious fact that she, and many other French Creoles, had resented.

Everyone wished to restore Louisiana and New Orleans to France. They debated it, talked about it, emoted over it, yet… so few tried to do anything about it, so long as the rice and sugar crops were good, the prices high, the ships came from round the world for their produce, and the moribund, lazy Spanish officials left them alone. As light and as weak as the Spanish yoke was, it was still an onerous occupation, so much so that, at last, Charitй and her brothers-oh, her clever and active, handsome brothers, long dead now!… Hippolyte and Helio, with their impoverished cousin Jean-Marie Rancour, whose family had fled the slave rebellion and bloody massacres of whites and landowners on St. Domingue with less than a tithe of their former wealth-had sworn to take action, to set a patriotic example for everyone else of like, but timid, mind. The spirit of revolution stalked the Earth, after all… first among those barbarous Yankees in the American Colonies, then in the beloved belle France. To rise up, to strike, was their patriotic duty! The civilised world would be re-made!

Two old privateers from the French and Indian War, Boudreaux Balfa and Jйrфme Lanxade, had access to schooners and their old crewmen downriver in the bayous and bays, and to raise the funds to start a revolution, to purchase the arms required for the time when the people would rise up, they had engaged in piracy.

Thrilling piracy, against all ships but French, which, admittedly were rare in the Gulf of Mexico in 1798 and 1799, Spanish ships the most preferred, but any nation's would suit, so long as they had rich cargoes to sell off, and money aboard.

Thrilling, too, was the life of a pirate, a secret sea-rover, an unsuspected rebel, like the bare-breasted heroine of the French Revolution, the emblematic Marianne with the flagstaff of the Tricolour in one hand and a bayonetted musket in the other, in the forefront of the battle line and urging the others on against tyrants and oppressors!

Exciting, too, had been living two lives: she was Charitй the demure coquette in the city, but aboard their schooner Le Revenant she donned buccaneer clothes, riding boots and skin-tight breeches, loose flowing shirts and snug vests, with pistols in her sash and a sword on her hip, and she'd been a good shot, too, as much a terror to the crews of the ships they took as the fabled women pirates of an earlier age, Anne Bonny and Mary Read… even if they had been Anglais!

But that sanglant, that Anglais salaud Alan Lewrie had come upriver to New Orleans, play-acting a penniless but skilled English adventurer and merchantman mate, in civilian clothes, to spy out a source of their piracy. Unsuspecting 'til it was much too late, Charitй had found him amusing, attractive, and eminently satisfying at lovemaking.

She blushed as she recalled how she'd almost recruited the bastard into their covert band, considered him as something more permanent than a wicked fling, and, for a brief, naпve time, felt love for him!

To be betrayed at Barataria Bay when Alan Lewrie and his frigate and a schooner had turned up, landing sailors and Marines on the ocean side of Grand Isle, sailing in himself and killing poor old Jйrфme Lanxade with a sword, taking his schooner, and ordering his men to kill both her brothers and her cousin in the foulest way!

She and that Laffite boy, and Boudreaux Balfa and his son, had fled in a pirogue. Lewrie had pursued them in a rowing boat, and with tears of rage in her eyes, she'd levelled a Girandoni air-rifle, taken aim square in the middle of Lewrie's chest, and, despite her tears, was sure she'd killed him! The range had been nearly fourty yards, he had been standing amidships of his boat, and had fallen backwards as if he had been pole-axed, not to arise as long as his boat was in sight.

The scandal had been hushed up, kept from the Spanish authorities, and Charitй had been sent packing, declared dйbile by the murder of her brothers and cousin, allegedly by runaway slaves round Barataria. She was doomed to live a mundane life with distant relatives, the LeMerciers, in the 'quaint' town of Rambouillet, outside Paris. She'd quickly fled that, had found a way to inveigle her way into the company of the elite of the late Directory period and the tripartate consulate; into the best salons, where, with her beauty, her outspokenness, her coquetry, and feminine charms, she had gotten close to the Director of National Police, the clever if ugly and bald Fouchй, the elegant but lame Foreign Minister, Talleyrand, and, after his seizure of power, the First Consul, Napoleon Bonaparte himself!

Her 'slaying' of the Anglais Navy Captain, her attempt at revolution in New Orleans

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