He knew the Frenchman Gobineau even from across the room: the pretence at conversation with a lady while a speculative stare took in Renzi’s every move, the faultless Paris fashion of high-collared quasi-military full dress, the superfluity of ornamentation. Before long the man appeared in front of him, made an exaggerated bow and, ignoring the elderly Dane Renzi was with, said smoothly, ‘My lord Farndon! Since no one seems inclined to introduce me I will do so myself. Theodore Gobineau, Comte de Mirabeau and charge d’affaires to the French Empire in Copenhagen.’
Renzi returned a slight bow and regarded him with lordly disdain. A saturnine, worldly-wise individual, whose every movement and gesture seemed calculated. ‘Since you seem to know my name and style, sir, I will refrain from returning the compliment.’
‘In these uncertain times you visit this fair city for a holiday with the countess, n’est-ce pas?’ His innocent puzzlement was a trifle overdone.
‘I come on a mission of some importance I’ll have you know, sir,’ Renzi said scornfully.
‘At such an eminence, I’ve every expectation it is,’ replied Gobineau. ‘Now do let me guess. You are a personal emissary from King George.’
Renzi took a glass from a passing footman. ‘Do go on, M’sieur le Comte.’
‘To make intervention at a kingly level in the decisions that must face the Danish court at this time.’
Encouraged by Renzi’s wordless acceptance he continued silkily, ‘The essence of which can only be that you are in this palace to begin negotiations in the delicate matter of seeking union between the Houses of Oldenburg and Hanover, namely the marriage of the Princess Caroline of Denmark to Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, son of the King of Great Britain.’
His breath taken away by the claim, Renzi could only stare. Then he spluttered, ‘Sir, how dare you pry into the affairs of our royal houses? This is a private matter of the highest degree and does not concern the French government in any wise.’
The man’s barely concealed look of triumph was all that he needed, and Renzi finished irritably, ‘I find this conversation both tasteless and odious. Good night to you, sir.’
Gobineau bowed and backed away with a faint smile.
Chapter 45
‘The minister Count Bernstorff,’ intoned the newly arrived Jago next morning after breakfast. Renzi’s retinue had followed on behind.
‘Ah. I will see him in the withdrawing room.’
Cecilia gave an enquiring look, but Renzi shook his head. ‘We’ll see what he wants first, my love.’
She knew his mission, for he’d given the matter much thought on the passage to Denmark and had come to the conclusion that it was more risky to have her in ignorance of his objectives and an unwitting hindrance than to break secrecy and divulge his goals.
His predecessor, Lord Stanhope, had rarely travelled on his own missions without his wife. Without a doubt they must have come to a similar conclusion, but the good lady had never once given indication that she was privy to deadly secrets. Cecilia would be following in the same tradition.
Bernstorff rose and bowed. ‘Lord Farndon, I’m here to inform you that an audience with the King has been arranged for four this afternoon. Would that be convenient?’
‘Perfectly,’ Renzi said, relieved. The sooner the preliminaries were out of the way the quicker he could get to the real work.
‘Then it would give me great pleasure, my lord, to show you and the countess something of Copenhagen. As you may see, the weather is looking more kindly on us this day.’
‘That is most generous in you, sir,’ Renzi answered politely. There had to be something behind it, a busy minister taking the time to conduct a tour with an idle aristocrat.
‘Then might we say carriages at ten?’
Copenhagen gave an impression of both hardihood and calm: neat and clean, frowning Lutheran churches, and houses in bright Scandinavian colours, charming shop-lined canals and imposing public squares.
Their first stop was at the Dyrehavsbakken park to enjoy its deer and amusements. With Cecilia and Hetty exclaiming happily ahead, and two attendants behind, the men fell into step beside one another.
‘A very proud and ancient country,’ Bernstorff offered. ‘Gorm the Old dated from before your own Alfred, which renders Denmark yet more venerable than England, I believe. And with Harald Bluetooth, Sweyn Forkbeard and, of course, the peerless Cnut, we have modest claim to a history much entangled with yours, sir.’
‘Vikings descending on the northern monasteries have been mentioned in some accounts,’ Renzi agreed.
‘We are a small, hardy race and have found ourselves so many times caught between the fires of nations far larger than ours.’
Renzi murmured in sympathy.
‘Yet we have found a sturdy refuge in neutrality that has served us well. Do you blame us for this, my lord?’
‘Sir, I am not a political and cannot possibly speak to that.’
At coffee in the medieval Norregade, which Bernstorff introduced as the Latin Quarter, Renzi was startled to hear conversations that sounded different from the jagged sibilances of Danish. ‘Latin! The students practising?’
‘Just so. Lord Farndon, do forgive my raising the subject but it is imperative, I know. My position at court demands it.’ He leaned forward intently. ‘Tell me, are you here in contemplation of opening negotiations towards the marriage of Princess Caroline to the-’
‘Minister Bernstorff, I can solemnly declare to you that our sovereign king has no intentions whatsoever in this regard.’
‘Oh. I had it on good authority, you’ll understand.’
‘I see.’
‘Well, if Lady Farndon feels she is able to bear it, we shall go to a most colourful and curious part of Old Copenhagen.’
It turned out to be Nyhavn, the busy waterfront facing the Sound. Dark, smoky taverns with enticing signs of mermaids or crude model ships lined the place where the canals of Copenhagen met the sea. Tall warehouses, in dashes of colour that would never be seen at Wapping, stood along cobbled lanes, some with ornate escutcheons of merchant houses on their elaborate doors, others with votive statues high on their walls. Everywhere there was bustle and noise, with carts and stevedores.
‘My lord, this is what I brought you here to see,’ Bernstoff said, escorting Renzi to the end of the wharf. ‘Be so good as to look to seaward.’
On the left the channel led to the open sea and, in the distance, a long island with a peculiar rectangular appearance, while immediately ahead was what could only be the entrance to the harbour proper.
‘You are privileged, Lord Farndon. This is a sight denied to your fleet under Nelson when they came to teach us a lesson in 1801. That island is the Trekroner Fortress, which you are seeing, from the inside. The naval dockyard and base is to your right. It was a hard fight, in truth.’
Out there, not so very long before, the British fleet had been locked in mortal conflict with the Danes, a battle dearly won in which Admiral Nelson had famously made play with his telescope and blind eye.
‘And so unnecessary,’ Renzi murmured.
‘It was,’ Bernstorff said shortly, ‘even as we were in a League of Armed Neutrality with the Russians at the time, which was a foolish action for both trade and honour.’
‘And news of its dissolution and Tsar Paul’s assassination came only days later?’
‘Yes. Well, if you come again you will find we have not been idle – over there is Provesten, an artificial island whose entire nature is to make unwelcome visitors rue their arrival. With our gun-rafts and dozens of ships-of-the-line I rather fancy it will be a different tale told the next time.’
‘Sir. You have been an attentive and considerate host and I would not have you misled. I will speak frankly. My presence here has only one meaning. It is to obey my king’s wish that your court understands his distress at the deplorable state of our nations’ relations and earnestly to seek a way through, sovereign to sovereign, before it is too late. No more, sir, no less.’