Firstlife (Everlife, #1)

I picked it up.

The tenor was speaking of how glad he was that I’d finally seen him sing in his favorite opera and of how much he hoped one day I would join him onstage as his Leonora. He said this as I moved the flower along my dress, searching for a place to pin it. I wanted just a breath before the rest that was to happen; I could survive it if I could have just another breath.

Without stopping his conversation, he reached over and took my hand, taking the rose back before carefully pinning it over my heart.

When at last I looked up, his face was unexpectedly tender, even kind. His expression told me how strongly he believed he was in a story in which I was the contrite penitent he’d already forgiven for running away.

Thank you for returning to me, he said. He reached up and touched my chin, searching my eyes with his eyes.

The Comtesse smiled approvingly and touched the enormous coil of pearls at her neck.

The tenor’s eyes changed suddenly, concerned, as he looked past me and reached to my ears. He traced one of the emerald earrings. These are an emperor’s ransom, he said, turning to my teacher.

Yes, the Comtesse said. Yes, they are.

After all my time among the Empress’s secrets that no one but the Comtesse would think to keep, I had become one.





Act IV





First Love





One


MY THEME HERE is love. Love and the gifts of love, love kept secret, love lost, love become hatred, war, a curse. Love become music. Love and those who died for love.

Love—and, especially, first love. My first love, the one I could not keep and could never, will never, lose.



If you were to have visited me in my apartment on the avenue de l’Opéra, you would have been greeted in the foyer by an onyx falcon on a wrought-iron pedestal beneath an enormous chandelier, displayed as if it were the most valuable thing I owned. And it was very fine—the claws were gold; the eyes, carved rubies; the feathers outlined carefully, so that they glittered even in the dark. A small gold dish for visiting cards sat by its feet, and beneath that, hidden in the pedestal, was a jewel safe.

This was a trap of a kind, bait for thieves.

Inside were some jewels I did not value, my real treasures in another safe hidden elsewhere.

I kept the emerald earrings from the Comtesse there. My hope was that if a thief found them they would convince him he had discovered my trove and he would leave immediately and take nothing else.

So far no thief had been thus blessed.

Jewels told you a story each time you put them on, as Faust’s Jewel Song made plain. Sometimes the story was of your future, sometimes of your past. You sold them when you never wanted to hear the story again. I had never found cause to sell even one emerald, but neither did I wear them more than a few times in the years that followed the night she gave them to me. I was sometimes asked as to their provenance, and each time I could only shrug.

A gift, I would say.

With time, they had proven to be a spur to the richest of my admirers who sought to do them one better, jealously imagining my spending other evenings with the one who could afford such gifts, and I could never say otherwise. They’d had their uses, I suppose. But that night with the Emperor had never come to pass, and now that he is dead, it never will.

I never doubted my sense of their provenance. I’d had an education in jewels since, and the handiwork, even the color of the stones, told me the story the Comtesse would never tell. I am sure that the Emperor had them made at the same time, perhaps even from the same stone, as the color and style were a perfect match. Had the Comtesse ever worn them in front of the Empress? Or had the Comtesse, in turn, ever seen the Empress’s brooch? Each would have known at once, as I had.

Divided stone, divided heart.

The Comtesse had come to Paris well after the marriage to the Empress had been made, which meant the Emperor had kept these, perhaps meaning to give them to the Empress later on the occasion of an anniversary of some kind or the birth of a son, but he instead gave them to the woman who would go to her death believing she should have been empress.

That the Comtesse had kept these earrings all this time told me she had been nursing some secret hope for herself and the Emperor. On the night she gave them to me, these were that hope’s grave. And by instructing me to wear them if I went to him, she sought to create a certain moment. When I would undress for the Emperor and he pulled back my hair, these were what he would see.

I had imagined the scene in my head many times as I waited, trying to prepare if I was called, and I am certain this was her plan. Some days I imagined him enraged, some, come over with passion. Or both.

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