He thought as he spoke that it would be the best thing that could happen, but his words brought a flood of tears and protestations.
On one occasion Luise even knelt at his feet, pleading with him, begging him with the tears falling down her cheeks not to leave her.
In his dealings with women the Count had always been very much the dominant figure.
In fact his name was apt in that he was indeed the victor, the conqueror, and the women he made love to invariably surrendered themselves completely to everything he demanded of them.
At the same time the majority were sensible and sophisticated enough to safeguard their reputations.
The Count often thought cynically that it was the women who listened, even when they were at their most abandoned, for a footstep on the stairs, a creak of the door or the faintest sound that might mean discovery.
He had made a mistake, he realised, in choosing someone as young as Luise, apart from the fact that her whole temperament was obviously unsuited to intrigue of any sort.
He might have been excused for not realising how she would behave in as much as she had been married for four years, given her husband the heir he craved and could therefore no longer be thought of as being a young and innocent bride.
What he had forgotten was that Luise had never, until she met him, been in love.
She was swept off her feet and like many women before her thought the world well lost as she was awakened for the first time to the ecstasy of passion.
The Count was a very experienced lover and he was also when he made love considerate and tender as he never was at any other time.
Men thought him ruthless and it was only in moments of intimacy that a woman could see the softer side of his nature which at other times he was rather ashamed of.
Never before in all his years of enjoying the favours of the fair s*x whenever they were offered to him had he known anyone so wildly, almost insanely, in love as Luise.
Aloud now, without turning round, he asked,
“What, ma’am, does Willem intend to do about it?”
“I have already spoken to him,” the Queen Dowager said. “He is, as might be expected, extremely bitter and would wish, if it was possible, to kill you!”
“I think that would be unlikely,” the Count remarked involuntarily.
“That is not the point,” the Queen Dowager retorted sharply. “You know as well as I do, Viktor, if one word is known about this, it will cause a huge scandal that will reverberate throughout Europe and harm the Queen. That is something I cannot allow.”
“No, of course not.”
“I decided when I became the Regent,” the Queen Dowager then went on, “that, because Wilhelmina was so young, the Court must set an example of purity and propriety.”
The Count wanted to say, ‘very commendable’, but he thought it might sound sarcastic.
The Dutch Court had, he thought, never been anything but an example of dull uninspired Monarchy, which most other Courts had no wish to emulate.
But he knew by the serious manner in which the Queen Dowager was speaking that she felt very strongly about the direction where her duty lay.
“It is,” she was saying, “as you can easily imagine, impossible for you and Willem to meet. That is why I have decided on a solution that I think will solve, for the moment at any rate, his problem and yours.”
The Count turned from the window.
“What are you asking me to do?” he enquired.
“I am telling you,” the Queen Dowager replied, “that you must leave here immediately and take a ship that I have already learnt is sailing from Zetland tonight for the East Indies.”
“The East Indies?”
The Count was so surprised that his voice as he said the words was unexpectedly loud.
“I shall inform the Privy Council that I have received news from the Island of Bali,” the Queen went on, “and have sent you as my Personal Advisor to report what is happening in that part of the world.”
“Bali!” the Count repeated as if he had never heard of the Island.
“Provided you leave today,” the Queen Dowager continued. “Willem will not announce the death of his wife until tomorrow, when you will have left the country.”
“How can it be possible for him to postpone the announcement?” the Count enquired automatically.
“Fortunately the doctor who attended Luise is one of my private physicians,” the Queen Dowager replied, “and he, Willem, you and I are at the moment the only persons who know that Luise is dead apart, of course, from her lady’s maid, who had been with her since she was a child and can be trusted.”
The Count said nothing and after a moment the Queen Dowager went on,
“You should be very grateful to Willem that, when he found that Luise was dead, he came at once to ask me what he should do. As an old servant of the Crown he was aware that knowledge of his wife’s action would be detrimental to the Monarchy.”
“You wish me to leave today?”
“If you are to catch the ship that I intend you to travel in,” the Queen Dowager said, “you will have only a few hours to pack your things.”
She paused as if she expected the Count to speak. When he did not do so, she continued,
“Before you leave you will receive your credentials and all the secret papers that you will carry on my behalf. And, of course, the names of those Officials whom you will interview on arrival in Bali.”
The Count still did not say anything and the Queen Dowager thought for the first time since she had known her cousin that he seemed for the moment unsure of himself.
Looking at his handsome face, her eyes softened and there was definitely a kindlier note in her voice as she said,
“I am so sorry that this has occurred, Viktor, but you have no one to blame but yourself.”
“No one,” the Count agreed.
*
It was a sentence that he was to repeat to himself over and over again on the voyage.
The ship he travelled in was a comfortable one and in deference to his rank and prestige he was treated in almost a Royal manner from the moment he had stepped aboard.
It was only when, during the long days and even longer nights at sea, he had time for introspection that he acknowledged that his sins had caught up with him and the punishment was indeed well deserved.
The Count was, as it happened, a highly intelligent man and, while he was prepared to take the blame for Luise’s death, he also was aware that the same thing might have happened to any man who aroused her emotions.
Most women were unpredictable, but there were those who, taken out of the rut that they had lived in all their lives, could easily become completely out of control or to put it in one word – unhinged.
This, however, did not console him for having to leave his estates and his houses, which he had arranged to his own satisfaction and the admiration of everyone else, as well as his many personal activities.
What he resented more than anything else was the boredom of the sea voyage.
He had been more concerned about what books to bring with him than his other personal effects which he had left to his valet.
Even so it was hard to know how to pass the time and he found the limited intelligence of the other passengers and the Captain unendurable long before they reached the Red Sea.
He had plenty of time, however, to learn something about Bali, which he knew very little about and he discovered with some surprise that only the North part of the Island had been acquired by the Dutch.
He had imagined that, as in Java, the Dutch reigned supreme, but instead most of Bali was still under the jurisdiction of the Radjas.
To the Count it was natural that the Dutch should make every effort to consolidate their Empire in the East, but from what he read he realised that the days of open aggression were frowned on and to justify a conquest the conquerors had to embrace a cause.
Motives, however, to satisfy both conscience and natural aggrandisement were not hard to find.
The invasion of North Bali, he understood reading between the lines, had required only a flimsy pretext obviously magnified for the occasion. When the invasion was successful it was followed by the conquest of the neighbouring Island of Lombok.
The Count might well be ruthless in many ways, but he was human enough to dislike an unequal contest whether it was between man and man or nation and nation.
He could very readily understand for his peace of mind that the Radjas and their retainers were brave men, but they had been no match for repeating rifles and modern cannon.
He also had a suspicion that the Dutchmen, as conquerors, had been unnecessarily cruel and insensitive and he decided that, if he saw anything that he disapproved of, he would not hesitate to make certain that measures were taken when he returned to Holland.
In the meantime, however, that seemed to him a long way off.
He had been so totally bored on the outward journey that he could not for the moment contemplate embarking on what he was certain would be an identically boring return.
Whatever Bali was like, he now told himself, he would have to put up with it for a time, which was what the Queen Dowager wanted him to do.
He knew that, his mission in Bali accomplished, there were a great many other places that he would find of interest and not only in the immediate vicinity.
It would be amusing to visit India and compare the role the British played as conquerors with that of his own countrymen. There was also Siam, which would be well worth a visit and perhaps, nearer to home, Persia and Constantinople.
Those places sounded considerably more alluring than Bali and the Count cheered up at the thought of them.
He told himself, however, first things first and, as he looked around critically, he decided that the sooner he had his first report ready for the Queen Dowager the better.
He had been met at the Port by the Governor with what seemed to be a most efficient conveyance drawn by horses that the Count would have thought beneath his dignity to own had he seen them in Holland.
The Governor himself was a large overweight man in his late thirties with a complexion that made the Count suspect that he imbibed too frequently and too copiously.
He spoke in the sharp staccato way of a man who was used to giving orders to inferiors and the Count suspected that it was with somewhat of an effort that he made himself polite and conciliatory to his guest.
“We have been greatly looking forward to your visit, mijnheer,” he began.
The Count was quite certain that it was untrue, but he acknowledged the politeness with a faint smile and, as they drove away from the Port, looked about him in what he hoped the Governor would think was an interested manner.
He had expected, because he had read about it, that the women would be graceful and he saw now that he had not been mistaken.
The custom of carrying everything that needed to be conveyed on their heads had given them the carriage of a Goddess and the slimness of a long-stemmed flower.
The Count was also intrigued by the fact that they were naked to the waist and the only coverings on their golden skin were bead necklaces that swung and shimmered.