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Mary Perry: The Wild Princess: A Novel of Queen Victoria's Defiant Daughter

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Mary Perry The Wild Princess: A Novel of Queen Victoria's Defiant Daughter

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Four of the five daughters of England's Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were regal, genteel, and everything a princess should be. But one was rebellious, scandalous, and untamed. This is her story. . . . To the court and subjects of Queen Victoria, young Princess Louise—later the Duchess of Argyll—was the "Wild One." Proud and impetuous, she fought the constraints placed on her and her brothers and sisters, dreamed of becoming an artist, and broke with a three-hundred-year-old tradition by marrying outside of the privileged circle of European royals. Some said she wed for love. Others whispered of a scandal covered up by the Crown. It will take a handsome American, recruited by the queen's elite Secret Service, to discover the truth. But even as Stephen Byrne—code name the Raven—vows to risk his life to protect the royal family from violent Irish radicals, he tempts Louise with a forbidden love that could prove just as dangerous. In the vein of Philippa Gregory, Mary Hart Perry tells the riveting story of an extraordinary woman—a princess who refused to give up on her dreams, including her right to true love.

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DOMINE SALVAM FAC REGINAM NOSTRAM VICTORIAM PRIMAM. O Lord, keep safe our Queen Victoria the First.

Could he? Could Brown, or anyone, keep her safe?

“You’re riding with her then, as planned, in the forward carriage?” Byrne said.

“Doc’s orders, and I’m glad for it.” Brown brushed a fleck of cinder from his kilt. “I’ll be right beside her, some idiot tries anythin’.”

Byrne nodded. It was good the little queen had such a stalwart champion. Byrne held no grudge against Victoria. She believed she was doing what was best for her people, her family, even for Louise—though to his mind she’d gone about it in all the wrong ways.

“There she is,” Brown said.

Byrne looked up to see the queen, dressed in her customary mourning black, appear from the porte cochere in her wheeled garden chair. A flash of red from a ruby brooch on her left shoulder and starched white lace collar brightened the somber effect. Brown took off at a run. He’d lift her out of the chair and into the brougham, and do the same for her at the church, where the Mikado’s sedan chair waited.

Byrne drew a deep breath then let it out, wishing to God he knew what the day would bring. He looked toward the gold-encrusted coronation coach. Anyone watching the procession would assume Victoria was in it. She’d of course acknowledge the crowds of onlookers lining the streets from her smaller carriage, if she felt well enough to do so. But any plans the Fenians already had in mind should be concentrated on the far more elaborate conveyance displaying the obvious Royal Coat of Arms. Only members of the royal family and the guardsmen knew of the last-minute switch.

But this still left Louise and others of her family riding in the coronation coach, and that worried him.

Byrne rode down the line of carriages. The immense coach, encrusted with gold, was third in line from the front, right where Byrne had thought the queen should be for maximum protection. Unfortunately Victoria had pressed her own wishes on the captain of the guard.

“If I’m to ride in what might as well be a pony cart, I’ll at least be up front.”

And so her carriage led the way, just behind the forward contingent of mounted guard, followed by the carriage transporting the Prince of Wales, his wife Princess Alix, and their two sons. Third came the coronation coach, carrying Louise and Lorne, princesses Beatrice and Alice, and Alice’s husband—Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt. Other members of the royal family followed behind in lesser but still elegant conveyances. Disraeli and Gladstone each had been invited to ride in the procession but had declined, choosing instead to be seated in the church to await the queen’s arrival.

He made one last ride, quickly, up and down the line, looking for anything out of the ordinary, any clue that a carriage or harness had been tampered with. If an axle snapped or wheel came off in the middle of the procession, the parade would come to a halt. He figured a stalled carriage made a far easier target than a moving one. As it was, on Brown’s orders they would drive at a faster clip than normal parade pace, even if this meant less comfort for those in the carriages. Faster was safer.

They’d reduced the risks considerably, but would it be enough? Byrne didn’t know.

When he passed the coronation coach, he slowed the Arabian to a walk and glanced inside. Louise was seated at the far window, resting her head back against the cushioned seat, eyes closed. She looked pale and unhappy . . . and breathtakingly beautiful in her white silk gown with peach blossoms tracing the low neckline. Lorne sat beside her, leaning in and talking to her, or rather at her, since she seemed intent on ignoring him and wishing herself elsewhere. The others in the carriage—Princess Alice and her husband, Princess Beatrice—sat with formal stiffness, waiting for the procession to move forward.

He wished he could somehow signal Louise that he was still here, looking after her and her sisters, without risking Lorne seeing him. He didn’t trust the man not to inform the queen he was still around.

Byrne scanned the faces in the crowd outside the palace’s black wrought iron fence, jostling one another to get as close as possible to the main gate through which the carriages would soon emerge. Everyone seemed in a festive mood. Some carried flowers to toss at the queen’s coach. Some had brought baskets of food and jugs of ale to tide them over during the long wait.

He looked for Rhodes among the mob. He didn’t see him. As clever as the man had been at concealing his connection to the Fenians, Byrne hadn’t really expected him to put in an appearance. Not here at the palace. Maybe at a critical position to observe the result of the Fenian assault, if there actually was one. On the other hand, Rhodes might be on the run, suspecting he’d been found out. The police were busy at all ports, checking departing ships for America, Europe, and elsewhere.

Byrne brought his mount up behind the queen’s modest black carriage and surveyed it from an angle that wouldn’t put him in Victoria’s line of sight. The family’s coat of arms was neatly stenciled in gold over the glossy black lacquered doors.

Byrne thought for a moment then rode back a ways to shout at one of the pages stationed at attention along the parade line. “Boy, go tell the carriage master I need a tub of good black axle grease, nice and thick. Fast now!”

The lad gave him a suspicious once-over.

Byrne leaned down from his saddle and tweaked the boy’s ear. “Now, son, orders of the queen’s agent.” Something in Byrne’s dark gaze encouraged motion. The page took off at a run. The Scot would be furious if he saw what he was about to do. And he didn’t dare imagine Victoria’s reaction. But to his mind, that damned crest, though far less obvious than the elaborate carved carbuncle on the gilded coach, still attracted too much attention. Hopefully the carriage master would assume Byrne was trying to correct a sticky wheel.

The captain of the Hussars gave the order to move out. Byrne looked around anxiously for the page. Another few seconds and they’d be out the gates, among the populace, and it would be too late. Someone was bound to see him and raise a ruckus, thinking he was defacing the carriage.

Suddenly the boy appeared, carrying a tin bucket. “Sir?”

“Good lad,” Byrne said. “Now back to your post.”

Byrne sidled his horse up to the left rear wheel of the queen’s carriage. He scooped up a handful of the thick, evil-looking black goo. He leaned down from his saddle and smeared the coat of arms with grease then repeated his cloaking treatment on the other door. The coverage wasn’t complete, but it was good enough to obscure the crowned English lion and Scottish unicorn guarding the royal shield.

He left the pail by the side of the drive and wiped his hand on a post, getting off most of the grease. “Sorry there, fella,” he apologized and completed the job by scrubbing his hand over his mount’s rump. “You’ll get an extra good brushing and oats for your trouble, after this is over.”

The gates opened, and the carriages began to move forward.

Fifty-one

Louise felt the carriage jolt. She opened her eyes and looked out at the cheering crowd lining the street as the carriages left Buckingham’s gates. She loved London, loved its people. It broke her heart to think of leaving this city. But what she most missed, already, was her Raven.

She had said nothing about this to anyone, of course, but somehow her husband must have read her thoughts.

“I’m truly sorry you’re unhappy, my dear.” Lorne kept his voice well below the camouflaging roar of the cheering crowd. “But it’s all for the best, you know.”

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