Palace Circle

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Authors: Rebecca Dean

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: Palace Circle
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks to Carol Smith for sparking off the idea that Cairo was something I absolutely had to write about and for sustaining me with fun, friendship, and good advice as I did so. A huge thanks to Steve Rubin and all the thanks I'm capable of to Phyllis Grann for her inspired editing, and to Jackeline Montalvo and Karla Eoff. Thanks also to my agent, Sheila Crowley; to Jim Walker, O.B.E., for all the time he gave in sharing his wartime memories of Cairo with me; and to Mrs. Ragaa Gafaar, who was a tireless and wonderfully informative guide to the city. Several books were of great help:
Zamalek: The Changing Life of a Cairo Elite 1850-1945
, by Chafika Soliman Hamamsy (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2005);
Operation Condor
, by John Eppler (London: MacDonald & Janes, 1977);
I Spied Spies
, by Major A. W. Sansom (London: Harrap, 1965);
Cairo, Biography of a City
, by James Aldridge (London: Macmillan, 1970); and particularly Artemis Cooper's wonderful
Cairo in the War
(London: Hamish Hamilton, 1992).

Part One
DELIA
1911–1930
ONE

SANS SOUCI, VIRGINIA,
April 1911

The first rays of the rising sun filtered through the half-open shutters of the vast bedroom. Eighteen-year-old Delia Conisborough stirred slightly, her tumbled hair a glorious flame-red against the pristine whiteness of lace-edged bed linen.

The man beside her, snoring gently, didn't move and, much as she loved him, she didn't want him to wake. This was the morning that, as a bride of five days, she was to leave her childhood home and embark on the long journey to England and a lifestyle so different from anything she had previously known. There were goodbyes to be said. Not to people. They would come later when the Chandler clan descended on Sans Souci to wave them off as they left by train for Richmond. From Richmond there would be a longer journey to New York and then, most exciting of all, the five-day Atlantic crossing aboard the RMS
Mauretania
, the most luxurious liner afloat.

Still trying to come to terms with the realization that her surname was no longer Chandler but Conisborough and that she had a title, Viscountess—though Ivor had explained to her she would generally be referred to as Lady Conisborough—she swung her legs to the floor, her silk nightdress swirling about her ankles. It wasn't yet six o'clock and she had at least two
hours in which to say private goodbyes to all her favorite horses and all her favorite places—as well as to Sans Souci itself.

The bedroom she had been sharing with Ivor for the last four nights was not the bedroom she still regarded as being hers. That bedroom lay in the opposite wing of the house and she padded barefoot along the corridor toward it, plaiting her hair into a single waist-length braid as she did so.

“Mornin', Miss Delia,” said one of the servants, who had been at Sans Souci for as long as she could remember, as she passed him outside her father's room. “Ah sure am sorry you be leavin' us.”

“I'm sorry too, Sam,” she said, not at all abashed at being clad only in her nightdress. “But my husband has promised we'll be back for visits.”

She flashed Sam a dazzling smile and, if she had been dressed, would have hugged him. No one ever stood on ceremony at Sans Souci. The easygoing intimacy between family and servants was taken for granted, though Ivor had been shocked by it.

“Great Scott, Delia!” he'd said disbelievingly when first witnessing the way the Chandlers treated their staff. “You won't be able to behave like that in England. They would think you had taken leave of your senses!”

Now in her old bedroom she smiled at the memory, pulling her nightdress over her head and then dragging her ankle-length riding skirt and her riding jacket from the closet.

Though she was only eighteen she had enough sense to know that it was her American ways that had captivated her new husband. He certainly hadn't married her for her money. A handful of other aristocratic Englishmen, those with vast estates and little money to maintain them, had married American heiresses, but Ivor Conisborough did not fall into that category. Twenty-two years her senior, he not only came from an exceedingly distinguished family; he had also been a financial
adviser to King Edward VII, who had died a year ago, and was now financial adviser to the about-to-be-crowned King George V. As a consequence of his position and his aristocratic lineage he was very much a part of the royal circle. A royal circle of which she, as his wife, would also soon be a welcomed part.

As she pulled on her riding boots, excitement and anticipation flooded through her. Ivor's visit to Virginia—and his subsequent acquaintanceship with her father—had changed her entire future. As daughter of one of the leading families of Virginia she would, of course, have married well and always lived comfortably, but there could be no comparison between the life she had expected and the life she was now about to lead.

Chandlers rarely saw any reason to leave Virginia and it was a foregone conclusion that if she hadn't married Ivor, her future husband would have been a distantly related Chandler cousin, perhaps Beau Chandler, who was a cousin twice or three times removed. She could never remember which. Beau was handsome and fun into the bargain, but as his interests didn't extend much beyond drinking and gambling it was always fun of short duration. With Beau there would have been regular trips to White Sulphur Springs, a fashionable spa, and maybe even the occasional trip to Niagara, but there would certainly have been no Atlantic crossing and most certainly none of the sophisticated social life that lay ahead of her in London. A social life that would, in a few weeks’ time, include attending a coronation in Westminster Abbey.

In the stables she took her time saying goodbye to her father's horses. Her father had always been a keen horseman. A member of the Deep Run Hunt, he had taught her to ride before she could walk. When Ivor had asked her to marry him, it had been her only query. “I shall still be able to ride?” she had asked, her heart slamming hard against her breastbone.

“You'll be able to ride every day in London,” he had said reassuringly in the clipped English accent that sent tingles down
her spine. “Many of my late wife's friends ride daily on Hyde Park's Rotten Row. It's a bridle path with stabling nearby. And if you want to hunt—”

“I shan't,” she had said, before he could finish. “Pa hunts. I never have.”

“You may change your mind when you find friends disappearing to Leicestershire every November,” he'd said drily. “We'll wait and see. One thing is certain: once people see how you take a horse over a five-foot gate fence, everyone will know what a superb rider you are.”

She had wanted to ask how far Shibden Hall, his family seat, was from Leicestershire. She knew it was in Norfolk but had no idea how far both counties were from each other, or from London.

“But London is where we shall be spending the most time,” she said now to her horse, Sultan, mounting him unaided.

Riding bareback, she cantered out of the cobbled yard and past the paddocks. It was a glorious spring morning, the air thick with the scent of summer. On mornings like these it seemed to her that the lush rolling Virginian countryside was as vast as all eternity. The softly rounded peaks of the Blue Ridge Mountains were hazy in the distance and nearer were belts of thick woodland edging a swift-running river and half a dozen creeks. She knew the names of all the trees. Red maple, tulip, black gum, sassafras, hickory, dogwood, and sourwood. In autumn their leaves were a blaze of color. Now, in April, it was wildflowers that were at their best.

By the edge of the nearest creek she could glimpse the delicate pale mauve of wild geraniums and, beyond them, flashes of maroon-red trilliums and swath after swath of marsh marigolds, their deep-yellow petals glinting like gold.

She reined in Sultan and with the reins slack in her hands she stared at the landscape she loved. The trouble was, she also adored Ivor and Ivor's life was in London—and not only
London. He was just as familiar with Paris and Rome and St. Petersburg as he was with New York and Washington.

That she was the wife of such a distinguished cosmopolitan man thrilled her. The moment she had been introduced to him she had been bowled over; but he was of her parents’ generation, not hers. Even when her father told her that their visitor was a widower it had still not occurred to her that he might show romantic interest in her.

It had been her aunt Rose, her mother's spinster sister, who had set out to catch his eye. Her mother, when Ivor had extended his stay in Virginia, had thought that perhaps Rose had a chance. Her father had always been far more perceptive.

“Lord Conisborough's marriage was childless,” he'd said when Delia had ever so casually brought up the subject of her aunt Rose's hopes and aspirations. “When Conisborough marries again it will be to a woman much younger than Rose. He'll want an heir and, because of his age, he'll want one fast. Poor Rose. I'm afraid she's going to be out of luck again.”

Her father was right, but when it became known that Lord Conisborough had asked for Delia's hand in marriage, Rose had been poleaxed.

Delia, too, had hardly been able to believe it.

Her father had believed it, though, and had done so gleefully. “An English viscount! A peer of the realm! Dammit, girl! I
told
you he'd be looking for a young wife! Wait until
The New York Times
gets hold of this! They'll have to describe us as Virginian aristocracy!”

Her mother had been far more restrained. “He's been widowed for only such a short time, Delia,” she had said, seated beside her on the edge of her bed, her hand holding her daughter's. “And he is so much older. I'd hate to think you were marrying because your head had been turned by the thought of an English title.”

“It hasn't,” she'd said adamantly. “I'm marrying him because
I'm in love with him. I'm marrying him because he's different to any other man I have ever met or, living in Virginia, am ever likely to meet. He's cultivated, sophisticated, intelligent—and
very
good-looking. Don't you think he is very good-looking?”

Her mother thought of Ivor Conisborough's chiseled features, the aquiline nose, the faint hollows under the cheekbones, the well-shaped mouth that betrayed an arrogance that could never be wholly hidden, the dark-blond hair, arrow-straight and silkily smooth, and had, with a marked lack of enthusiasm, agreed with her daughter.

As Delia now turned Sultan's head in the direction of Sans Souci, she hoped her mother's lack of enthusiasm was because Ivor was the complete opposite to her father. Always chewing on a plug of tobacco, her father was on the short side, no more than five foot eight or nine, with broad shoulders and a barrel chest. Most comfortable in shabby, well-worn riding clothes, he seldom wore anything else and wherever he went there was a ruckus of talk and laughter.

Ivor was tall, at least two inches over six foot, favored Cuban cigars, and was accompanied on all his travels by a valet. His starched collars were higher than anyone else's in Virginia and he always wore either a homburg or, in deference to the Virginian heat, a straw hat with his fashionable lounge suits. Exquisitely tailored though they were, Delia privately thought he never looked quite at ease in them. He was a man who suited formal clothing. In the frock coat and top hat he wore whenever they visited Richmond, he looked superb.

Unlike her father, he never spoke unless he had something pertinent to say, and there was something in his manner that commanded immediate respect. Even Beau, who had volubly declared he had no intention of fawning to English nobility, had referred to him as “Your Grace” on first being introduced to him.

By then Delia had been conversant enough with the way
to address and introduce Ivor to know that Beau had made a social gaffe.

“Refer to me as Ivor or as Conisborough,” Ivor had said, tired of giving the instruction to Delia's army of relations. “Only dukes are addressed as ‘Your Grace,’ and then only by servants or anyone with whom they are having nonsocial communication.”

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