an appropriate wordâif sheâd let Saint Arles win everything.
Portia tightened her grasp on the far-too-large handrail and hauled herself into Londonâs finest courtroom before her guard noticed anything had gone awry. An instant later, she was firmly penned in a large wooden box, forced to view the world over a stockade of varnished oak planks.
âIce Princess! Countess St. Arles!â The crowdâs clamor swelled around her, more raucous than anything sheâd endured to arrive at this hellish place. How many hours had her lawyerâno, barristerâsaid sheâd have to survive the torment?
Portia firmed her stance and wrapped herself in an attitude of arctic politeness, based on the one her mother-in-law had always shown her. If nothing else, it should fend off the rabble rousers and let her assess her true tribunal.
Winterâs cold brilliance spilled into the great courtroom from the skylight and windows, remorselessly exposing every tiny detail to the judgeâs pitiless scrutiny. It drowned out the wall sconcesâ feeble yellow glow as easily as the crowd outside ignored the policeâs attempts to keep the surrounding streets clear. It honed its blades upon the great mirror then dived upon its prey.
Portia tilted her head slightly, using her hatâs lace trim to deflect the worst glare. She hadnât been permitted to wear a veil, a decent womanâs standard protection from prying eyes. Even so, she didnât have to display every thought that passed through her mind, even if she was the accused.
The bailiffâs deep voice rang through the big room, like a horn summoning hunters to follow their master. Heavy oak paneling marched around the walls behind him, locking in potential malefactors as completely as a stockade. âEdward Henry Vanneck, Earl of St. Arles, Viscount Erddig, hereinafter known as the Petitionerâ¦â
Portiaâs husband smoothly shook out his cuffs, as calculatedly dispassionate as if he were negotiating an arms treaty. The movement had the additional advantage of distracting onlookers from his narrow shoulders and viper-thin face. His black frockcoat and white linen were perfectly tailored and quite pristine, making them permissible to be worn by the fruit of centuries of Englandâs finest breeding. Dark eyebrows curved over his heavy-lidded eyes, framing a high-born predatorâs watchful gaze.
He focused all his attention on the bailiff and the judge, of courseânever the crowd, with their sharp, ill-bred whispers and stares.
All around him, clerks and barristers took their places in a final blur of black robes, rustling papers, and heavy seats slamming down like a fortâs gate ramming shut.
Portia instinctively, unwillingly flinched. The bitter taste of failureâof being forced back into St. Arles life againâsurged into her throat.
She swallowed hard and reached for logic, whose cool shelter had protected her so well for so long. For five years, sheâd tolerated St. Arles in her bed. But not anymore, thank God. Besides, if she acted with all the speed her ancestors had shown against the Barbary pirates, she might yet salvage something for herself.
She might be damaged but she was not yet utterly defeated. She was, after all, a golden Lindsay, at least on her motherâs side.
âFor divorceâ¦â
Pencils stormed across pads while newspaper artists feverishly recorded the dayâs events. All those years of doing her best for the people on St. Arlesâ estateâbuilding schools, starting new businesses, repairing roofs and replacing others for tenants, and other deeds, all of which St. Arles had derided or fought as a waste of her money, which should have been spent on his brilliant ambitionsâ¦All that work was now eclipsed by blocks of black ink screaming her name across every newspaper in Britain.
The wordsâ stain seemed to have sunk through her clothing and into