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Queen of Always
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THIS book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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Queen of Always
Copyright ©2015 Sherry D. Ficklin
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-63422-144-3
Cover Design by: Marya Heiman
Typography by: Courtney Nuckels
Editing by: Cynthia Shepp
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For Linda Beth Fristoe.
Thank you doesn’t seem like enough.
“To tempt and to be tempted are things very nearly allied - whenever feeling has anything to do in the matter, no sooner is it excited than we have already gone vastly farther than we are aware of.”
~Catherine the Great
**Author’s note**
In keeping with the real life of Catherine the Great, this story is filled with both violence and sensuality. It’s not intended for young or sensitive readers. Though I took many liberties with the narrative, I have tried, always, to remain true to the compelling, strong woman who was Catherine the Great. Though it is not completely historically accurate, I hope you will enjoy this final piece in her saga, as remained by a great fan.
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
About the Author
My eyelids are heavy when a rough shake pulls me from the depth of my slumber. I blink against the dim candlelight and young Dashka, my newest lady-in-waiting, stands over me, her expression near panic. I sit up quickly.
“What is it, Dash?”
A slip girl, Dashka is the youngest of the Vorontsova sisters. She looks so much like my dear friend Rina, with her blonde locks and sharply sloped nose—even the shape of her eyes betray their relation—that it had been impossible not to immediately love her. She’d come to Oranienbaum Palace when Rina first fell ill some months ago, and she has been serving me in her sister’s stead since.
“It’s Ekaterina, Your Grace, she’s asking for you,” she says, her voice as fragile as a silk thread. I pat her arm gently, and she helps me from bed. A cold chill washes over me. It’s as I feared. My dearest friend has been ill for some time. Each day, I watch as she grows smaller, paler, and weaker. I’ve been praying for a miracle, all the while knowing that I don’t deserve one.
Not after what I’ve done.
Dressed and quickly groomed, I emerge from my chamber into the eerie stillness of the hall. The palace is unusually quiet at this hour. There have been no feasts roaring into the night, not since Peter’s last tantrum, in which he publically wished his aunt, the Empress Elizabeth, would “Die already and be done with it.”
Of course, word of his careless speech reached the ears of his incapacitated but still very alert aunt, who quickly withdrew court funds for such events, plunging Oranienbaum Palace, or the little court as they have taken to calling it, into a state of eternal dreariness.
I can’t say I’m sorry, though. Whenever I feel in need of entertainment or distraction, I simply host games, songs, and dancing in my private rooms, which allows me the freedom to pick and choose those who attend, granting me a reprieve from Peter and his garish mistress Elizavetta. Or at least, I had done so, until Rina took ill. Since that day, a dark cloud has settled over my heart and there is no escape from it.
As I walk down the hall toward the room where Rina is resting, I spare a moment to glance behind me, putting a face to the third set of feet hitting the ground behind me. I’m not surprised to see my personal guard there. My ever-present shadow and devoted protector, Grigori barely leaves my side these days. Despite the hour, his dark blue uniform is pressed, his hair combed back and tied at his neck with a leather lace, and his sword is on his hip.
“Don’t you ever sleep, Grigori?” I ask lightly. In Sergei’s absence, all pretense of formality between us has fallen away, and Grigori has become more a friend than simply a guard. I often invite him to my private gathering where he pretends, quite gracefully, to lose to me at cards.
“Not on nights like tonight,” he says cryptically, his brow furrowed over his blue eyes. “There’s a wrongness tonight. I can feel it in my bones. Dark skies on the horizon.”
I just shake my head. It seems recently that my life is nothing but a series of dark skies. It’s been over a year since I poisoned the empress’ tea, and she still manages to cling to life. Over a year since my lover Sergei was sent away, leaving me without respite from the tedium of my existence. Over a year since my child was ripped from my arms.
Dark skies aren’t on the horizon at all. They are firmly settled directly overhead.
Pausing outside the door, I take a deep breath, preparing myself for the worst.
Struck down in her youth with the wasting sickness, Rina has been clinging to life by the frailest thread. Her fever has raged out of control for weeks as she refuses to eat, literally fading before my eyes. And now, now the coughing has begun, always sprinkled with spittle and blood. The physician says there is no more he can do, that it is in God’s hands. Now Archbishop Novgorod waits in eerie stillness outside her door, no doubt having just administered her last rites. He bows when I approach, his wizened face dark beneath his long, gray beard. I acknowledge him but say nothing. He alone has taken my confession and knows my greatest sin. My greatest weakness, my utmost sorrow. He has been an immense comfort, if only in his firm belief that I am deserving of redemption. He urges me to pray for it, but I haven’t the heart.
Or perhaps, I am too proud for regret. Either way, I am glad he is here.
When I open the door, the desire to rush to Rina and take her hand is powerful. But I know I cannot. There is a chair, not far from her bedside, under the window, which lets white moonlight stream in, and I know I must take my seat there. I am the Grand Duchess of Russia, and I cannot risk my health for even a moment. To do so would mean leaving my son Paul, and my country, unprotected and in the hands of my idiot husband Peter and his cruel aunt, the Empress Elizabeth. For that alone, I remain distant, though everything inside of me is demanding to hold her.
Glancing around the room, I see Alexander standing in the back alcove with his arms folded around the little boy clinging to his chest. The boy is bigger than I remember, his face still chubby in his youth, his hair
the same dark, wavy mass as his father. He looks tired and perhaps a bit confused. Seeing me, he smiles hesitantly.
Many afternoons have been whiled away playing with him in the nursery at Oranienbaum, chasing each other through the massive gardens on the estate grounds, or even just singing sweet lullabies with him and his fair-haired mother. He has been, in so many ways, a surrogate for my own son. Now he looks at me hopefully, and I cannot help but offer him a reassuring smile. He’s my godson, after all, and I cannot bear to allow even this to darken his sweet spirit.
Alexander, however, stands stoic. His dark hair is disheveled, his eyes deep and dark with exhaustion. He’s pale, paler than I’ve ever seen his normally olive-toned skin, and his mouth is set in a hard line. He glances at me only briefly before returning his eyes to her. My own gaze follows his.
I can barely tell her pallid skin from the linens. Her color is gone, even her normally golden hair is faded to a pale, shimmering white. Her eyes are open, only just, and she lets her head roll to the side, smiling at me through dry, cracked lips.
“Your Grace,” she begins. “Catherine. I’m so glad to see you.”
“And I’m glad to see you as well. But you should be resting,” I urge.
She licks her lips. Her voice is faint and wispy, like a summer breeze. “Alexander, may I have a moment with my friend?”
He shifts the boy in his arms, nodding once before turning sharply and leaving.
“What is it, Rina?” I ask. “What can I do?” The question is vague, but it’s all I can manage because I know there is nothing. The knowledge pains me more than I thought possible.
She smiles again. “The doctor says I don’t have long now.” I open my mouth to say that is nonsense, but she continues. “He’s right. I can feel it. It’s a heaviness. Feels a bit like falling asleep, actually. The pain is mostly gone now.”
As if to betray her words, she begins to cough violently, covering her mouth with a bloodstained rag. I stand, but she waves me back down.
“It grieves me to think of the world without you in it,” I say honestly, struggling to hold my voice firm. “I need you.”
“You will be fine. You are so strong, Sophie. So much stronger than you think.”
I flinch at my given name, spoken for the first time in so long. Everyone has taken to calling me Catherine now, even Sergei. It’s difficult to hear, to be reminded of that simpler time.
“Tell me, how is Sergei?” she asks, changing the subject.
I exhale sharply. “I honestly don’t know. He’s been traveling, at the empress’ behest. He was back at Winter Palace only days before she sent him away again. She thinks to keep him far from me, I think, and far from Paul.” I don’t have to explain why. Rina alone knows the truth of Paul’s paternity. She knows it is likely Sergei, and not Peter, who fathered the child. I only wish I could see my son again, to look into his small face and be sure. Surely, he will look like Sergei, and then there will be no doubt. Even as I think it, my heart sinks. “Truthfully, I haven’t had word from him in weeks. His letters grow infrequent and impersonal. I fear he may be tired of me, or worse, he may have found another.”
“I doubt that very much,” she says, her eyes drooping a little more. “It seems to me that your love is like a fine brandy to men. Once they’ve had a taste of it, they will crave it all their days.”
I frown, instantly feeling the sting of her accusation. Alexander, her husband, had nearly been my lover. We had, in the foolishness of youth, nearly run away together, so madly infatuated were we. It was the empress’ rage that forced him and Rina to marry, all to punish me for even considering abandoning my obligation to her—to Russia.
“Oh, I didn’t mean to upset you,” she adds softly. “It’s true though. You shouldn’t worry so.”
I rub my eye with my finger. “I’m sorry,” is all I can think to say. It doesn’t feel like enough.
“Don’t be sorry. I loved you too. Sometimes, I think I even loved you best, better than all the others, because I loved you enough to share you.” She grins. “Silly, jealous boys.”
“I never wanted you to be unhappy,” I say, standing and facing the window.
She coughs again. “Why on earth would you think I am unhappy? I have a wonderful husband and a beautiful son, and my dearest friend is here with me, at the end of the night.”
I turn back to her. “I can’t help but think you deserved so much better than this.”
She shakes her head just a bit. “I have no complaints and no regrets. You should know that. Life isn’t just beginnings and endings. It’s the things in the middle that matter most. And my middle has been wonderful.”
I fight back the tears pooling behind my eyes.
“Make sure he knows that I loved him, that I loved you both. Make sure he knows it was enough,” she says, her voice rattling deep in her chest.
“I will,” I promise, facing her again.
Her eyes flutter closed for the last time, and I hear the hiss as her final breath escapes her body. It cuts through me like a knife, leaving nothing but a hollow ache in its wake.
I cover my face with my hand, doubling over against the pain and slipping from the chair onto the floor. Sitting like that until I can gain my feet again, I stare at her, so small in the large bed.
I didn’t deserve her. Rina was so much more than a lady-in-waiting; she was my closest friend. She deserved a manor in the country, a husband who thought the sun rose and set on her face, and an army of children nipping at her heels. She deserved all that and so much more.
Bolting from the room, I run into the hall, right into Elizavetta. Her red hair hangs in limp, lifeless waves around her pudgy face. Her eyes are round, like her sister’s, only in a murky shade of green and rimmed in red. Her pale pink satin gown is wrinkled and disheveled. I can only wonder if she’d just woken, or if she has yet to sleep. Taking a quick step back, I right myself, pulling my shoulders back and wiping my eyes. She looks me over with a disinterested frown.
“Is she dead then?” she asks, her nasal voice haughty.
I know, because she is Rina’s sister, I should have some sympathy for her, but I can’t muster a single ounce. Nodding, I fight against the crushing weight inside my chest.
With one hand, she flips her hair off her bare shoulder. “I suppose I shouldn’t be too upset. At least she’s finally free of that facade of a marriage.”
I feel my mouth open before I even decide to speak. “In case you’ve forgotten, it was your fault she was forced into that wedding.”
She stares at me blandly. “In truth, I think we share the credit for that. You were, after all, the one whoring yourself out. All I did was report your actions to the empress.” Her accusation draws me up short, mostly because she’s not entirely wrong.
“That’s rich, coming from my husband’s whore,” I say as calmly as I can manage.
She continues, ignoring my comment. “And, of course, I’ll need to notify Father. He’ll be sorely missing the income her husband was providing. But then, soon enough, he’ll be receiving income from my husband—more than enough to cover his debts.”
I should leave, I know it. But there’s something in her tone that makes me sickly curious. “Why is that? Is Peter finally marrying you off to some lord or other in a valiant effort to repair your damaged reputation? Because I fear it is far too late for that, Elizavetta.”
She snorts in a most unladylike manner. “Of course not. He’s going to marry me.”
It’s all I can do not to laugh. “Oh? Taken to polygamy now, has he? Well, don’t set your heart on it. You know well how fickle Peter’s attentions can be. Soon, he’ll be crowned, and I along with him. Whatever shallow promises he may make to get under your skirts, remember that he is married to me.”
She steps close, far too close, near enough that I feel her wine-bitter breath on my face when she speaks, her expression one of disdain. “Peter loves me. I have always been loyal to him, unlike you. Soon, he will have a
ll the power he needs to finally divorce you and put me in your place, as his one true wife and empress.”
I feel my ire rise and step forward, forcing her to back up just a fraction. “Don’t think for a moment to threaten me. I am Peter’s wife in the eyes of God and Russia, and I will not be removed so easily.” My voice is tight as wound thread, ready to snap.
She glances from me to Alexander, who stands with his back against the wall, speaking in hushed tones to the archbishop, and then back to me. Her implication is clear.
“Your love is poison; can’t you see that? To be loved by you means nothing but ruin and death. If only I’d known sooner, I could have warned my dear sister away from you. Every life you touch withers and dies. It’s a good thing you never loved Peter. He’s safe from you in that respect, at least.”
My hands ball into fists, the tendons in my knuckles tugging at the joints. I have to force them open, have to force my voice to a manageable tone. “Have care how you speak to me, Elizavetta. I am the grand duchess and in every possible way, I am your better.”
Her mouth twitches. “Your threats mean nothing. You will never be empress. Peter has promised me this. You will be set aside, and your brat will be illegitimated. Neither of you will ever sit upon the throne of Russia.”
My hand is moving before I can stop myself. When it connects with the side of her face, the sound is sharp and the impact reverberates down my arm. She’s thrown off balance and collapses to one knee.
I lean over her. “I will be empress and so help me, if you ever speak to me in such a way ever again, I will have you hanged for it. Be grateful for the scraps you are given, Elizavetta, and do not think to demand more. My patience with you died with your sister.”
When she looks up at me, there is hatred in her eyes. I can only imagine the emotion is mirrored in my own.