to clean up after the royal poodles, who were numerous, unruly and not at all house-trained.
‘Yes, My Lady?’ said the servant, who was a young girl no older than myself. She was pale, had plain mousy hair and was dressed in the neat, starched dress of the lowest-ranked house servant. She also looked tired, worn and old before her time. But she somehow held herself upright, with the last vestiges of human dignity.
‘Do you love your Princess, girl?’
‘Begging your pardon yes I do, My Lady,’ she said with a small curtsy, ‘and am surely grateful for the career opportunities your family’s benevolence has brung to me.’
‘Well said,’ said the Princess happily. ‘There will be an extra shiny penny in your retirement fund; it will await you on your seventy-fifth birthday.’
‘Her Ladyship is most generous,’ replied the girl and, knowing when an audience has ended, went back to cleaning up after the royal poodles.
‘You see?’ said the Princess.
‘A character reference from a Royal Dog Mess Removal Operative Third Class is hardly compelling, Princess. Our minds are made up. If Miss Strange agrees, you shall take counsel from her, and try to improve yourself.’
The Princess’s mouth dropped open and she gaped inelegantly like a fish for some moments.
‘Take counsel from an
orphan
?’ said the Princess in an incredulous tone.
I could have taken offence, I suppose, but I didn’t. You kind of get used to it. In fact, truth to tell I was getting a bit bored, and was instead wondering whether Once Magnificent Boo was safe in the Cambrian Empire, and if my Volkswagen had ended up in a tree or something.
‘You may shake hands with Miss Strange,’ continued the Queen, ‘and then we will discuss your education. Is this acceptable with you, Miss Strange?’
‘Only too happy to help,’ I said, not believing for one second that the Princess would agree to such a thing.
‘Good,’ said Queen Mimosa. ‘Shake her hand and say “good afternoon”, Princess.’
‘I’d rather not,’ retorted the Princess, looking me in the eye for the first time. ‘I might catch something.’
‘It won’t be humility,’ I replied, staring at her evenly, and figuring that this was probably what they thought the Princess needed. If my head was off my shoulders in under ten minutes, I was wrong. The Princess went almost purple with rage.
‘I have been
impertinenced
,’ she said finally. ‘I insist that this orphan be executed!’
‘I’m not sure “impertinenced” is a word,’ I said.
‘It
is
if I
say
it is,’ said the Princess, ‘and Daddy, you did say for my sixteenth birthday I could order someone executed. Well, I choose her.’
She pointed a finger at me. The King looked at Queen Mimosa.
‘I
did
sort of promise her she could do that, my dear. What sort of lesson is it if I don’t keep my word?’
‘What sort of lesson is it to a child that she can have someone executed?’ retorted the Queen, and glared at him. Not an ordinary glare, but one of those fiery, hard stares that leave your neck hot, cause you to fluff your words and make you prickly inside your clothes.
‘You’re right, my dear,’ replied the King in a small voice.
Updating his style of medieval violent monarchy to Queen Mimosa’s benevolent dictatorship was a bitter pill to swallow, but the King, to his credit, was at least trying.
‘I will not be talked to like this—’ began the Princess, but the Queen cut her short.
‘—You
will
shake Miss Strange’s hand, my daughter,’ she said, ‘or you will regret it.’
‘Come, come, my dear,’ said the King, attempting to defuse the situation, ‘she is only a child.’
‘A child who is vain, spoilt and unworthy to rule,’ said the Queen. ‘We will not leave this kingdom in safe hands if the Princess is allowed to continue her ways. So,’ concluded the Queen, ‘are you prepared to greet Miss Strange, Princess?’
The Princess looked at her parents in