The Official Site of Robert Barclay, Author

Novelist Robert Barclay

CASSIE'S SONG

A searing story of love, glamour and sacrifice

Cassie’s Song tells the story of three women’s journeys.

One is moving on with her life after her husband’s murder. One is at the peak of her fame on the international concert stage. One is fighting against murderous corporations destroying the world’s forests.

 Cassie’s Song rambles along briar paths in Hampshire villages with Katy, sashays with Clara across the globe’s glamorous fashion capitals and treads the horrific, secret world of greed in the prehistoric rainforests of Kalimantan with Cassie.

Two families face the devastating price paid for beauty and lay bare the grim world of human rights abuses and environmental bastardry. 

Two mothers will be uplifted by their magnificent daughters and face loss that must be endured as the rivers tell time, not the clocks.

There are monsters as well as angels in this life.

Other books In The Butterfly Dynasty Series

The Diary of Katy Yehonala – Nominee, Miles Franklin Award 2022

The Girl in the Orphanage – Nominee, Miles Franklin Award 2023

1
CASSIE'S WAR

Locals say this picturesque corner of England’s green and pleasant land has only witnessed two insurrections since Magna Carta. 

          The first arose in 1911 when the Boughton Temperance Society marched down the village’s main street in the wake of the formidably buxom Mabel Blake, their self-appointed president. The Dowager Lady Blake’s bosomy prow loomed no less impressive than her transom; both flared to bursting in a tightly laced whalebone girdle. A step behind strode the black-suited parson, the sepulchral Reverend Twyford, his eyebrows hornlike over pince-nez spectacles, propping up a bowler hat.

          Adding a battle cry to the occasion, the Band of Hope’s deep-toned brass instruments oompahed a bountiful harvest of raspberries to their anthem, Sound the Loud Timbrel, and Mabel’s fleet of acolytes, resplendent in their ostentatious bonnets and corseted finery, sang in full voice under their banner while children skittered between their ranks in knickerbockers and flat caps. A half-dozen men marched too, either husbands kept firmly under the thumbs of their God-fearing wives or teetotallers lathered with self-righteous indignation.

          Besieged locals and a dozen cows taking a shortcut to a new pasture on the other side of the village paused to watch the procession. The cows got their rumps smacked with sticks, moving them aside so Mabel Blake’s armada could sail past unhindered. A few flicked their tails while their brown eyes contemplated the scene, bemused, offering the odd moo and a cowpat to the refrain. Locals’ rumps needed no such encouragement to yield right of way.

          The fleet dropped anchor on the gravelled village square to be harangued by the Reverend Twyford from a makeshift pulpit—the bench usually attended by passengers as they waited for the twice-daily Andover motor bus service. The pious congregation responded with an energetic appeal to a higher authority that the new tavern, The Fox and Hounds, be cast to rubble by a divinely inspired thunderbolt. In an affront to God, or at least to godliness, the new pub stood shamelessly across the village square from St Mary’s Church, their Norman bastion of rectitude, which had presided over village sobriety for a thousand years. 

          The looming sacrilege of The Fox and Hounds offering sanctuary (and beer) to dissolute men recovering from Reverend Twyford’s fire-and-brimstone Sunday sermons marked a bridge too far for the Boughton Temperance Society. ‘What next?’ thundered the good reverend. ‘Guzzling the demon drink inside the Lord’s house like the Catholics!’

          Their pleas to the Almighty went unanswered. As it happened, another pub, The Greyhound, opened five years later with no protest. By then, the hosannas of the Temperance Society had changed to Onward Christian Soldiers as The Great War swept up the patriotic men of the village, dissolute and devout alike, into its horrors—even the Reverend Twyford, summoned to meet his maker from the muddy carnage of Passchendaele.

 

Boughton’s second insurrection arose a hundred years later, led by another woman. This one less Rubenesque, yet her fiery passion more than made up for what she lacked in Mabel Blake’s voluptuous majesty. She was Cassandra Spencer, the 21-year-old daughter of Emily and granddaughter of General John and Elizabeth Spencer—Jack and Liz to their many friends among Hampshire’s county order.

          A rabid environmentalist and equally enthusiastic feminist, Cassandra, or Cassie, as she preferred, earned her degree in community law and a left-wing, take-no-prisoners attitude from the Panthéon-Sorbonne in Paris. She loved the vibrancy of the rive gauche, the jazz bars, the Latin quarter, and the bohemian writers, artists, and student philosophers who still inhabited the area long after Sartre, Gertrude Stein, Joan Miró, and a host of others of the Lost Generation left their indelible marks. She said the southern bank of the Seine taught Paris and Cassie Spencer how to think.

          An early foray into the protest movement also began at the Panthéon-Sorbonne. There, she joined other resolute women to send a message of solidarity to their Muslim sisters after the “burkini bans”, calling out Islamophobia and demanding the French authorities respect the right of every woman to wear whatever she chose to the beach. Not a popular stand at the time following a spate of jihadi terrorist attacks, which had left officials xenophobic and panicky. Even so, not even the threat of being labelled a terrorist sympathiser deterred Cassie Spencer.

          The youthful firebrand had inherited her mother’s English-rose looks and grace, though she did her best to hide her privileged background behind an anorak, flashing blue eyes and a mop of long sandy-blonde hair. If you claimed her friendship, you knew a different Cassie, one with a sunny disposition and a brand of satirical humour unique to the well-educated English that made her popular with those who got past the rapier tongue. Being at least halfway intelligent helped to cross that bridge, as did finding yourself among the oppressed. 

          What aroused Cassie’s insurrectionist ire and sparked Boughton’s second mutiny followed the Hampshire Council’s decision to lease her cherished Boughton Down to wealthy county landowners, the Hanfords, who’d won grazing rights for their cattle and sheep. Cassie favoured skulduggery better described their victory. The South Downs, or Boughton’s end of them, preserved the last natural woodlands and rolling hills not yet leased to farmers where she’d roamed and played in her childhood, as had generations of villagers.

          For the outraged Cassie Spencer, enough was enough. She rounded up five Sorbonne anarchist-inspired friends and descended on the village, setting up camp at the Spencers’ country estate, Boughton Manor, where they plotted their militancy. On the morning of battle, they dispatched their lawyer to the Winchester courthouse to obtain an injunction against the “rape of the downs” while Cassie and her partisans prepared to blockade the only access road to the woods.

          ‘I’ll come along,’ said her grandmother in a show of solidarity.

          ‘My God, Gran, you can’t come. You’re much too… um…’

          ‘Let’s just say a senior citizen, shall we, Cassandra? And please try not to be blasphemous, dear. Besides, I didn’t realise there’s an age limit for chaining oneself to a tree and having a cup of tea. I love those downs as much as anyone. Not to mention, I’ve called a few of my friends; they’re going to meet us there, and they’re bringing sandwiches. What’s the dress code for a protest, dear? Che Guevara t-shirts?’

          ‘Your usual tweeds will do, Gran.’ 

          ‘I’m going too,’ said her mother, Emily. ‘Someone who’s not barking mad ought to be there.’

          ‘Well, the more, the merrier.’ Cassie rolled her eyes and laughed. ‘Good grief, I can’t believe I’m going to war with a PC version of Dad’s Army.’

 

The protest turned out to be the most excitement Boughton had experienced since VE Day. Rumours about the general’s granddaughter and her planned blockade became the gossip on everyone’s lips. Surprisingly, twenty or so men, women and children even turned up with placards to join Cassie and her friends. Newspaper reporters and photographers also converged on the downs, eager to cover something more enthralling than church fêtes or the parish cricket team’s customary hiding on the village green.

          Cassie told her story to the reporters, then she and her co-conspirators chained themselves to large beech trees and sat on the track. Linking arms, they blocked the way of the expected vehicles; their spirits shored up by John Lennon and Alessia Cara’s Earth Day songs. Having dipped their beaks in civil disobedience, they waited for the consequences. 

          An hour later, two police vehicles bounced up the rutted track, followed by a pick-up with a gang of labourers aboard, ready to begin fencing and clearing works in the woods. Bringing up the rear drove a council vehicle, which disgorged an officious-looking sheriff. Four burly policemen from the nearby towns of Andover and Romsey stepped from the police vehicles, dressed in overalls and army boots, accompanied by the village policeman. All six lined up facing the protesters, unsmiling, showing a version of persuasion that looked a lot like intimidation and brute force. Meanwhile, the workers in the pick-up lit cigarettes and sat back, waiting for the entertainment.

          The village policeman stepped forward, painfully aware he would have to live with the consequences of today. Despite having lived in Boughton for five years, he lacked the generations of residence to be accepted as a local. He hoped an appeal to the protesters’ better judgement would work before reinforcements became necessary. Surveying the now slightly nervous group, he singled out their ringleader.

          ‘Good morning, Miss Spencer. Cassandra, I know you and your family well, and you all know me. I’m here this morning officially and must ask you and your friends to move along peacefully so these workers can access the woods.’

          ‘Good morning, Constable Lesley. Am I to assume your pleasant greeting is intended as an official move-on order?’

          ‘If you insist. Yes, Miss Spencer, I’m instructing you and your friends to remove yourselves from the area. I’m in possession of a council order and a reasonable belief you are likely to exercise a breach of the peace.’

          Constable Lesley glanced at Emily and the ageing Elizabeth Spencer in what he hoped they would interpret as a plea for help. Their cool stares offered nothing. He swallowed, feeling his collar chafing against his throat, and turned back to face Cassie.

          ‘Please, Cassie, none of us wants any unpleasantness in the village. However, I have a job to do, and I’m obliged to do it according to the law if you refuse to move.’

          ‘Constable, my friends and I do not have the remotest intention of obeying a move-on order. We are lawfully protesting the council’s wilful decision to allow the destruction of protected wildlife in this public space. The Wildlife and Countryside Act protects critically endangered flora growing in these woods from damage by heavy vehicles, domesticated animals and those questionably domesticated workmen over there. Do your duty as our local police officer—inform that bumptious toad hiding behind you about the law!’

          Constable Lesley exhaled, finding himself in the last place he wanted to be. He turned to the sheriff, who removed some papers from his jacket and stepped forward. Puffing out his chest, challenging the shirt buttons around his ample stomach, the sheriff read the council edict aloud but was swiftly drowned out by the protesters’ repetitive chanting of slogans. Their voices swelled, along with their confidence, under Cassie’s combative leadership.

          The sheriff glowered at Cassie after completing the formalities. ‘Young lady, no representations have been made to Council about endangered flora, and the time for such submissions passed two weeks ago. Therefore, you are legally obliged to let these vehicles pass, or you and your posh bolshie chums will be arrested and charged.’

          Incensed, Cassie stared down the sheriff, shouting over the raucous taunts of her companions, ‘Listen to me, you obnoxious little man, I’m not your or anyone else’s “young lady”—I’m telling you again, we’re here in a peaceful protest defending critically endangered flora, which English law allows. We bolshies will resist any effort to remove us from the woods. We’ll fight to keep the downs free for people to enjoy, and you can be sure we won’t be touching our forelocks to the loutish tyranny of council flunkeys!’

          ‘Officer, you’re instructed to do your duty,’ bellowed the sheriff, battling to be heard over the protesters’ whistles and handclapping.

          Constable Lesley gave a resigned nod, and one of the police officers came forward with bolt cutters and severed Cassie’s chain, freeing her from the tree. 

          ‘Cassandra Spencer, I’m arresting you for failing to obey a lawful order to move on from this public place. You aren’t obliged to say anything, and I warn you to be careful what you do say. You will be charged with an offence against public order.’

          Cassie immediately sat down again. Her friends surged forward, jeering and mocking the police who moved in to arrest and handcuff her. Three brawny officers dragged Cassie roughly to her feet and carried her to the police wagon, kicking, struggling and protesting lustily. 

          Incandescent with maternal fury, Emily charged forward, hurling abuse like red graffiti at her daughter’s assailants. ‘What bloody heroes you are! So it takes three of your Gestapo to arrest one young woman!’ Her belligerent eyes fixed inches from Lesley’s. ‘Are you proud of your bloody self, Constable! You cowards wouldn’t be so brave if my father were here! If any of your thugs harm even as much as a hair on my daughter’s head, I’ll chase you through every damn court in England.’

          ‘Mrs Spencer, I strongly advise you to be careful about_’

          ‘Emily, dear, don’t say anything else to get yourself into trouble,’ advised her mother, stepping between them and gently squeezing Emily’s arm. ‘Come away, dear. Cassie will be fine. Honestly, I’d be more worried about the officers. Go home and let Jack know what’s happened. He’ll know what to do.’

          Elizabeth Spencer turned to Constable Lesley.

          ‘It’s David, isn’t it?’

          ‘Yes, Mrs Spencer.’

          She smiled disarmingly. ‘David, as you’ve arrested my granddaughter, I’m afraid you must now arrest me. Do you intend to set your bullyboys on me as well? I’m sure all these nice reporters and photographers will be happy to record you—now, what’s the word—“strongarming” an eighty-year-old woman.’

          ‘Mrs Spencer, please don’t put me in an impossible position. At worst, Cassie is only likely to receive a small fine and a warning. I’ll even do my best to ensure it’s just a warning. Leave the woods peacefully, and we’ll say no more.’

          ‘David, you’re missing the point entirely. You are our local policeman; frankly, you should be ashamed of yourself. You know this village and the people who live here. It would be best if you also understood these downs are part of Boughton’s heritage, from when the Celts lived here a thousand years ago, even before the Romans came. My granddaughter doesn’t care a hoot about the fine. Neither do I. However, we do care passionately about our countryside and our history_’ 

          ‘Mrs Spencer, please don’t mak_’

          ‘Oh, do be quiet, David. There comes a time when resisting officious bureaucrats, and their high-handed edicts is morally right. And this is one of those times. We’re all disappointed you chose not to use your authority to support the village in this fight, and it’s too bad you’ve put yourself in an awkward position. Now, you will find out I am a determined old woman in full support of my granddaughter, and I’m quite prepared to be clapped in irons.’

          With the protesters’ enthusiastic cheers ringing in her ears (and with some help from Emily), the old woman lowered herself onto the track and folded her arms. Her implacable expression left no doubt this situation would not turn out well for David Lesley.

          Faced with his duty of arresting the elderly wife of the village’s most distinguished citizen, retired General John Spencer DSO MC, after just taking his beloved granddaughter into custody, Constable Lesley swallowed hard before taking centre stage in his personal Waterloo. ‘Elizabeth Spencer, I am arresting you for disobeying a lawful order to move on and hindering the passage of traffic.’

          He turned to his colleagues and shouted over the jeers of the rowdy mob and the flash of cameras, ‘Help Mrs Spencer to her feet and escort her to the wagon; there’s no need to handcuff her. Please come along quietly, Mrs Spencer.’

          The woods echoed with the sarcastic applause of the protesters and the workers, thoroughly enjoying their ringside seats. The Spencer matriarch shrugged off her escorts, gave them a withering look and walked with head high towards the paddy wagon. There, to hearty British cheers, she joined Cassie on the austere bench seating. She waved to the other protesters as the door clanged shut behind her, then gave her granddaughter a self-satisfied smile. Courtesy of the cameras, Cassie’s War would be on the front pages of tomorrow’s morning papers. Before long, Cassie’s five boisterous friends joined them, a little the worse for wear after determinedly resisting arrest. The officers drove the newly ordained “Boughton Seven” to the police station.

          Believing the worst to be over, Constable Lesley turned away from the departing vehicle, only to see twenty locals seated mutinously on the track, inviting their own arrests. He absorbed his abrupt elevation to pariah and pondered the world’s great injustices.

          Within minutes, the village grapevine spread the news that “outsider” policemen had arrested General Spencer’s wife and granddaughter on Boughton Down. Within a quarter of an hour, dozens of parochial villagers began arriving in support, offended enough by the foreign assault on their rural bulwark to ensure no one would pass into the woods that day. David Lesley’s fate became sealed as the new chant seemed to imply his manhood may be questionable—even in jeopardy.

          Mercifully, as verbal exchanges threatened to descend into internecine warfare, Cassie’s lawyer friend, regrettably delayed by a pedantic magistrate, turned up with an injunction moments before Constable Lesley’s requested police reinforcements. The order stated the chalky woodlands were claimed to contain colonies of rare orchids and were thus protected, pro tempore, under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. The order banned any development, alteration, or vehicle access to the downs habitats, pending further investigation, and finished with an appendix detailing the penalties for “knowingly causing, permitting or engaging in actions likely to damage protected flora”. 

          To the cheers and applause of the protestors, Cassie’s War was over—for now.

 

Emily found her father sitting under the foliage of a shady alder next to the river. He’d dozed off in the afternoon sunshine with an open book on his lap, its pages flipping over in the light breeze. He opened his eyes as she adjusted the rug over his legs.

          ‘How did the protest go, Emily?’

          ‘Daddy, I need to have a word.’

          ‘And where’s Cassie and your mother?’

          ‘That’s why I need to have a word. Mum and Cassie got arrested and taken to gaol. I’m afraid I also quite lost my temper with the constable; only Mum saved me from getting arrested, too.’

          Jack Spencer burst out laughing as Emily retold the story. ‘Not a bit surprised. Those dimwits should’ve known better than to threaten any of you. Lesley’s a blithering oaf; man’s got the tactical brain of a cabbage.’

          ‘I’ll admit he didn’t exactly cover himself in glory today. I suspect Cassie’s War may have been his first. Unfortunately, the lawyer didn’t turn up in time to stop Mum, Cassie and her friends from being arrested and taken away, which might also have saved his reputation. I didn’t envy the position he found himself in, though. He reminded me of Guy Fawkes pleading for a bucket of water. The good news is Cassie got a court order stopping John Hanford and his cronies from letting their livestock loose on the downs—it seems they’re home to a rare orchid species. You learn something new every day, don’t you?’

          ‘They’re called red helleborine and are critically endangered. Only found in three places in the whole of England, so they say. Four now.’

‘What! How did you—or is it better not to ask?’

          ‘Consider it a military secret. You’ve done well with Cassie. We can all be proud of her.’ Jack’s eyes sparkled.            ‘Can’t wait to read the newspapers tomorrow.’

          Emily gazed at him affectionately. ‘Hmm!—she adores you, you know. I can see why.’

          ‘Call the police station and find out where they’re locked up. Then you can help me to the car and drive us there; we’ll bail them out before the silly buggers get themselves charged with sedition or high treason as well. When we get home, we’ll have everyone here for a celebration in the garden.’

          ‘Marvellous idea. I’ll get Mrs T to organise drinks and order some barbeque meat from Hinwoods.’

          ‘Best have her invite that damn fool Lesley and his wife over, too—let him know there are no hard feelings. Otherwise, the poor sod will be as popular as Prohibition down at The Greyhound and Fox and Hounds tonight.’

          ‘Well, I see you still have remnants of the benevolent conquering hero in you. As long as you live and breathe, I daresay chivalry’s not lost in England.’

          ‘Not a bit of it! Just want the bugger in range of my twelve-gauge if I find out he’s hurt Cassie or your mother.’

 

No one remembered ever seeing red helleborine orchids in the woodlands. Still, a week later, the council’s plant and wildlife officers confirmed the delicate purple-pink flowers were blooming in their now-protected glory among green wands of native grasses beneath gnarled old beech trees.

          The village elders claimed the same scattered stands of beeches once concealed highwaymen lying in wait for travellers on moonlit nights two hundred years earlier—brigands who also robbed the wealthy landowners of their nefarious gains. With the aromas of vintage leather and mellow cigars in the air, descendants of the same landed gentry swirled and sniffed their after-dinner cognacs, suspecting the muddied hands of a more gender-inclusive Dick Turpin the culprit this time—as did gossip over numerous pints in The Fox and Hounds and Greyhound’s public bars.

          Keen to ingratiate himself back into favour, local bobby David Lesley decided more pressing village misdeeds needed his investigative skills. And as for the Boughton Seven? The ensuing TV and newspaper coverage created such a furore the Hampshire Council abruptly decided rare orchids were far more important than minor profiteering—and voteworthy during the upcoming civic elections. At a hastily convened meeting, the council reversed the grazing decision and dropped the charges. Thus, a new tale came to be added to the oral history of Boughton, one destined to become dressed in the mists of village folklore.

          Cassie became something of a local heroine for saving the downs. She went on to complete her master’s degree in human rights law at the Panthéon-Sorbonne and, surprising no one, joined the activist organisation Polaris International. Not long afterwards, she disappeared into the Amazon rainforests of Brazil for months at a time, then into the hills and forests of West Africa. She described her life to her friends Clara and Katy Yehonala as “confronting the grim world of human rights abuses and rainforest bastardry”.

          Unknown to anyone at the time, Cassie Spencer’s decision to devote her life to opposing crimes against humanity and exposing rainforest atrocities would later rock this picturesque corner of England’s green and pleasant land for the third time.

2

THE HOUSE OF VALENTIN

Many of the world’s wealthiest people regularly appear in the media associated with wild schemes to conquer space or for shelling out obscene divorce settlements that could pay off the debts of a small country. Nathalie Valentin, president of the luxury brand conglomerate bearing her family name and owning more than half the shareholdings, had quietly surpassed them all. Her family’s net worth recently ticked over a staggering $170 billion. The 44-year-old Ms Valentin expected to get what she wanted.

 

Shortly after seven am on Monday, a sleek Dassault Falcon banked over avenue Charles de Gaulle and lined up its final approach to Le Bourget. Armand, the flight attendant, cleared the remnants of breakfast away and reminded his two passengers to fasten their seatbelts. The two women were returning from a short visit to New York, where they’d signed contracts for Valentin’s takeover of the high-end jewellery retailer Brittany & Co in a $16.5 billion global deal. Nathalie left a small team in Brittany’s Fifth Avenue offices to manage the structural and personnel changes necessary to satisfy her stipulations. She gazed out the window at the sunflower waking on the horizon, sending petals of gold to warm the hazy Paris skyline, and turned to her friend, Camille Durand.

          ‘Well, Millie, it’s nice to be home.’

          ‘Paris is always a love affair for me, Lee, although I still feel my New York roots each time I visit the US. And congratulations, you jumped a place or two up the Forbes overnight.’

          Nathalie smiled. Camille’s shrewd and secretive negotiations over the previous six months impressed the market with a complex cash, debt and equity mix both parties saw as adding value for their respective shareholders. The two women had been friends for a long time, and Nathalie knew from experience Camille would persist in being the tactful diplomat when offered the opportunity to claim any credit. Not obsequious, Camille never shied away from expressing a healthy difference of opinion, even fomenting volatile clashes in private. They made a powerful team.

          ‘Where would I be without you, Millie?’

          ‘Exactly where you are now, I expect. I’m just here to count the beans and make sure you keep them.’

          ‘Quite a lot of beans yesterday; you’ll need your fingers and toes. Make sure you pass on my thanks to your husband. His work on the agreements featured his usual watertight, comma-correct brilliance. How is Philippe?’

          Camille tilted her head in a half-shrug. ‘Busy most of the time and wonderful for enough of the rest. He’s hatching his scheme to become Senior Partner when Marc Laurent retires next year. Having the Valentin account doesn’t harm his chances. You’ve been good to us, Lee.’

          ‘Rubbish. Philippe Durand’s a genius on international trade law, and the firm of Laurent, Petain & Renaud’s been with Valentin since my grandmother founded the company seventy-five years ago. You know better than anyone I don’t play favourites, Millie. Only winners. Oh, speaking of winners, how did young Timmy fare at the school sports last week?’

          ‘His team won, three to nothing. From what Philippe and I could tell, the victory came about despite his best efforts to help the other team. Football’s not Timmy’s forte, nor is any sport. Oh, I nearly forgot; he now insists his name is Timothée. Evidently, being fifteen makes him a grown-up.’

          ‘I’ll remember the next time I see him. Before long, he’ll be bringing a pretty girl home for approval. I envy your life, you know.’

          ‘Lord above, don’t envy the part about living with teenage hormones. Taking on a package deal with Philippe and Timmy when we married always loomed as a challenge. I’m never quite sure if I’m poking a bear or playing with a puppy when Timmy and I have a conversation these days.’ 

 

Nathalie Valentin was corporate royalty. Her rise began five years earlier when her father, Paul, a ruthless French Establishment magnate and art connoisseur, stepped down as CEO of The House of Valentin to take over the less demanding chairman’s role. On his insistence, the board elevated Nathalie, then just thirty-nine and single, as the new face of the world’s most valuable luxury empire, which included not just the pre-eminent Valentin brand but also the revered global fashion houses of Gaby, Bishop & Crowe, Zalya and Intimate Secrets, among a host of fifty other international brands, hotel chains and property portfolios. 

          Institutional investors and business analysts looked on warily after the anointing of the youthful, attractive Nathalie to fill Paul Valentin’s shoes ahead of other aspirants in the clan. She’d served her apprenticeship in the company, and none doubted her talent; however, leading The House of Valentin in one of the most cutthroat of all industries left many sceptical. Recent memories of iconic fashion houses like Gucci still echoed, where family duplicities and jealousies caused other pedigreed bloodlines to crumble through internal bloodletting.

          No such fratricidal conflicts occurred under Nathalie’s rule; she proved masterful in managing the few dynastic dissents and led the company forward, diversifying Valentin’s acquisitions and controlling stakes—Jusan Cosmetics and the mastheads of a fashion and women’s magazine global media group, Cathay Media, fell under Valentin’s control. The holding companies for the centuries-old classic vineyards of the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Australia, which produced the world’s renowned wine and spirit brands, joined soon afterwards. Nathalie clinically researched their weakened balance sheets hurt during recessions or resulted from poorly executed strategies.

          No one looked upon Nathalie’s ascendancy as nepotism anymore, and the Brittany & Co takeover would be the diamond declaring her place in the Valentin dynasty. The last five years saw the value of her family’s business empire multiply three times over, and profits increased fourfold. People who shopped for haute couture or chic ready-to-wear clothes, who amassed accessories, jewellery, or cosmetics, who stayed in hotels, bought luxury yachts, read glossy magazines or drank fine wines and spirits paid Nathalie Valentin and her family for the hedonism in their lives. 

          Camille, meanwhile, grew up as the granddaughter of a French-Jewish couple who emigrated to America in 1939. They’d set up a mortgage brokerage, Lippman’s Brokering Service, in the New York neighbourhood of Washington Heights during the war. The Lippmans survived the decades of demographic changes, ethnic conflicts and crack cocaine epidemics. Through sheer hard work, Camille’s grandparents and parents continued to grow the family business in the Jewish community enough to enable their move to the Upper West Side. Camille’s inherited work ethic and razor-sharp brain at the Bronx’s Harry S. Truman High School earned her a scholarship to Harvard Business School, where she met Nathalie. The two women bonded through their mutual proud French ancestry and drive to succeed. They became friends and embraced the tenets of laissez-faire capitalism under the spell of Ronald Reagan and junk bond king Michael Milken, as well as an occasional laissez-faire approach to nocturnal student life that would no doubt have earned their parents’ disapproval. 

          After completing their MBAs, when Nathalie returned to Paris to begin her career in the family company, she offered Camille a job at Valentin. Over the next twenty years, Camille’s naturally self-effacing presence led many boardroom directors with inflated egos to underestimate her—to their regret, she gave human form to the strategic and legal brains behind Valentin. Nathalie knew Camille’s gift for challenging conventional thinking and negotiating creative mergers and takeovers had been instrumental in Valentin’s meteoric rise into a $60 billion company—and in Nathalie’s rise to the ranks of the three wealthiest people on the Forbes list. 

          Camille’s marriage to Philippe Durand, also five years ago, had so far caused no personal difficulties or conflicts of interest—quite the opposite. Nevertheless, Nathalie had been careful to ensure Valentin’s relationship with Philippe and his law firm never became more than a professional though friendly one, managed by Nathalie’s deputy, Patrice Faucher.

          The silver-haired, urbane Patrice had been deputy CEO under Nathalie’s father. Nathalie lived without illusions, knowing Patrice briefed the chairman on everything happening on the executive floor. However, she respected Patrice’s wisdom and pressed his extensive networks into service to smooth the way for her aggressive growth plans. She knew he posed no threat to her; his loyalty to Valentin and her father remained beyond question. She sought private advice from her father on crucial decisions affecting the family’s business anyway. If they disagreed, which seldom occurred, she took no prisoners defending her actions. 

          She’d taken up arms for her China strategy with him and the board and knew she commanded their full support once the dust settled and salve applied generously to their wounds. She also understood consent lasted as long as success did; if she failed, half a billion dollars spent on a vision and the ignominious reputational damage wouldn’t go unpunished. Past glories counted for little at Valentin, whether you happened to be the CEO or an account manager in Melbourne, Australia. The costs of failure might be different, not the price.

 

Nathalie and Camille left Le Bourget in a black Maybach, accompanied by their bodyguard, Henri Bouchard, and driver. Within a few minutes, they swept past the Basilica de Saint-Denis, a masterpiece of gothic art and the final resting place for centuries of French royalty, on their way to 71 rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, an exclusive address in the 8th Arrondissement housing the world headquarters of Valentin.

          ‘Are we prepared for tomorrow, Millie?’

          ‘Yes. Nicholas and Patrice have been working on the proposal, and Andrew Chang’s arriving from Shanghai this afternoon. We’re meeting in the boardroom at ten tomorrow morning.’

          ‘Good. You and Nicholas are getting along?’

          ‘Healthy conflict, nothing to worry about. The Souliers are part of the French aristocracy, and his blueblood DNA won’t accept a Jewish refugee’s daughter as an equal. Ever.’ She laughed. ‘Despite lacking the common touch, he’s a gifted marketing director; he left nothing to prove after rescuing Gaby and repositioning Bishop & Crowe at the top of classic British fashion culture. We keep each other honest.’

          ‘The China project is far more important than any personal feelings. Do I need to make sure he understands?’

          ‘No, there’s no need. I can manage him. He may lack the gift of relating to us lesser red-blooded mortals, but he’s the one to carry this project. If anyone can make it happen, it’s him. There won’t be anything other than harmless skirmishes between us. We’re grownups and know how important the project is to Valentin.’

          ‘Not to mention to each of us personally. I need Philippe on this, too. Getting the agreement right with Clara Yehonala could make or break us. Are we close?’

          ‘Patrice believes we might be successful. He’s been meeting with her agent, Max Santini, over the last three months and keeping Philippe abreast of the issues. Max is keen, and Clara listens to her. They’ve been partners since Clara won the Osaka music competition and started performing on the world concert stage more than ten years ago.’

          ‘Partners?’

          ‘They lived together for a few months. Max is much older and has a reputation for protecting Clara from the world, and Clara depends on her for most things. She’s somewhere between mother and mentor. We don’t know if there’s anything more to their relationship; we’ll get an update tomorrow from Patrice.’

          ‘This is our opportunity to open up China, Millie, and the riskiest strategy we’ve ever undertaken. If we get it right, we’ll be at least a year ahead of the curve, and in our business, being first means winning. I’ve got the board behind me, but you know as well as me what “enjoying their support” means in my family.’ 

 

EXCERPT ENDS

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