Sisi Read online
Sisi is a work of historical fiction. Apart from the well-known actual people, events, and locales that figure into the narrative, all names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Copyright © 2016 by Allison Pataki
Map copyright © Jeffrey L. Ward
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by The Dial Press, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
THE DIAL PRESS and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Pataki, Allison.
Sisi : empress on her own : a novel / Allison Pataki.
pages ; cm
ISBN 978-0-8129-8905-2 (hardcover : acid-free paper) – ISBN 978-0-8129-8906-9 (ebook)
1. Elisabeth, Empress, consort of Franz Joseph I, Emperor of Austria, 1837–1898—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3616.A8664S57 2016
813'.6—dc23
eBook ISBN 9780812989069
randomhousebooks.com
Book design by Virginia Norey, adapted for ebook
Cover design: The Book Designers
Photo-illustration (from images © Shutterstock) The Book Designers
v4.1
ep
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Epigraph
Map
Historical Overview
Prologue
Part One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Part Two
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Part Three
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Epilogue
Author’s Note on History
A Note on Sources
Dedication
Acknowledgments
By Allison Pataki
About the Author
I want always to be on the move; every ship I see sailing away fills me with the greatest desire to be on it.
—EMPRESS ELISABETH, “SISI,” OF AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
The Empress…seems to me like a child in a fairy tale. The good fairies came, and each of them laid a splendid gift in her cradle: beauty, sweetness, grace…dignity, intelligence and wit. But then came the bad fairy and said, “I see that everything has been given you, but I will turn these qualities against you and they shall bring you no happiness….Even your beauty will bring you sorrow and you will never find peace.”
—COUNTESS MARIE FESTETICS, LADY-IN-WAITING TO EMPRESS ELISABETH, “SISI,” OF AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary, known to her people simply as Sisi, has just changed her empire forever.
All around her the great dynastic monarchies are crumbling as the world’s most powerful kingdoms face rebellion from within and instability abroad. Not so in Austria-Hungary, however, and that’s due to Sisi. The beloved empress has brokered the compromise by which Hungary, a dissatisfied but crucial constituent of the fractured Austrian Empire, opted to remain in the kingdom and allowed the Habsburgs to retain dominion over much of Europe—without firing a shot.
With this stroke, Sisi has asserted her right not only to her throne but also to her place beside her husband as a leader of the Habsburg Court. She has proven to rivals and critics that she is no longer the naïve and guileless girl of fifteen with whom Emperor Franz Joseph fell passionately in love. She is the mother of the crown prince, an activist beloved by her people and her emperor, and, at last, she will be the ruler of her own life.
But the perils and demands of life at the Habsburg Court only increase as Sisi works to expand her role within it. And how many enemies—known and unknown—has she made along the way? In mid-nineteenth-century Vienna, where the palace staterooms and bedrooms buzz not only with waltzes and champagne but also with temptation, rivals, and cutthroat intrigue, Sisi faces a whole host of new and unexpected perils and adversaries. Can the beautiful, charming, strong-willed “Fairy Queen” weather these challenges? Or is she doomed to fall as the latest sacrifice made at the altar of the world’s most powerful empire?
PROLOGUE
Geneva, Switzerland
September 1898
SHE STEPS INTO VIEW, AND she is as they’ve all said she is: a beauty not of this world. When he spots the lady, his pale eyes narrow, focusing on her. The empress. Elisabeth. “Sisi.”
She glides down the steps of the posh hotel, the Beau Rivage, clutching her parasol as bright early-autumn sunshine splashes the boulevard around her. Nearby, a small crowd has assembled, and they rouse to attention as they realize it’s the empress.
“Here she comes!”
“Empress Elisabeth!”
“Sisi!”
Either she doesn’t hear their cries or she chooses not to answer them, as she continues her stride, long legged and swift, away from the hotel. He shuffles a few steps from this crowd, refusing to be distracted by their chatter, their calls to her.
She makes her way along the quay toward the boardwalk and the waiting steamer, her sole female companion hurrying to keep pace with her. Everything about her appearance distinguishes her from the common: luminescent skin the color of a pearl, her regal form tucked tight into a high-necked silk jacket and long black skirt, a black cap atop her pile of thick chestnut hair. That hair—so famous that even he has read about it—dark and wavy and laced with errant bits of silver. He looks down at his own ragged appearance, clucking with disapproval at the crescent moons of grime under his fingernails, the torn seam of his threadbare trousers.
From this close distance, he glimpses her face and notes how she blinks, wearing the skittish look of a hunted animal. Which she is, of course: hunted. Not only by him, by everyone. She, like him, is a runner. All her life she’s been stalked and pursued, ripped apart and pieced back together, taking on whatever identity the people needed to foist onto her. The way she clutches her parasol to her side, he suspects it’s more for her protection from people’s eyes and words than to fend off the gentle sun. That parasol might pose a problem for him.
He falls in step behind her, his blood thrashing inside of him, his body surging with a heady brew of anticipation and exhilaration. Several hundred meters away her steamer waits, bobbing at the nearby dock as its stacks belch out black into the clear blue-sky day. He reaches into his pocket, and his fingers find the blade, stroking it, tenderly, as he might stroke a baby’s cheek. It’s only a small thing, no more than four inches long. And yet, he knows, with that tiniest of blades, he’ll entwine his own fate with that of Empress Elisabeth, the most beautiful, most beloved woman alive. All those who love her will have to remember him, as well.
CHAPTER 1
Gödöllő Palace, Hungary
Summer 1868
Sisi could have offered any number of explanations as to why it was so different. Had someone asked her, it would have been simple enough for her to provide an answer. But what was the truth? she wondered. Why was it that twilight here in Gödöllő, her country estate just outside of Budapest, felt so different from twilight in Vienna?
She might have said that it was the view: the unruly, wild, perfectly inviting view. Here, in the soft light of the coming evening, the grounds rolled open before her, unfurling in waves of gentle green before meeting thousands of acres of virgin woodlands. Clusters of wildflowers dotted the meadows, so different from Vienna’s imperial grounds and gardens, where sensible, stately tulips intersected lawns so symmetrical and tight clipped that it looked as though mankind had heeled nature into complete submission. Which of course, in Vienna, it had.
Or was it the sound of Gödöllő at dusk? Evenings out here echoed with the bark of her sheepdogs; the carefree laughter of the Hungarian stable boys as they scrubbed down her horses; the first stirrings of the crickets and frogs as they welcomed dusk from the overgrown fields, nature’s unrivaled orchestra tuning up for its nightly symphony. It was a collection of sounds so entirely unlike those to be had in Vienna, where Sisi might hear the one-two of polished boots as the imperial guards paraded across the courtyards; the clatter of coaches rolling past the Hofburg gates; the cries of the Viennese mob gathered outside the palace at all hours, begging for her to give them a florin coin or a glimpse of her celebrated silhouette, her legendary hairstyles.
Perhaps it was the aroma in the air. Here, a medley of sweet scents traveled across the breeze: the faint trace of wild rose and acacia, the earthy musk of the stables, the heady perfume of overgrown grass and straw and mud. It was a lush bouquet of smells so natural and pleasing, entirely different from what she might breathe in back in Vienna, where she inhaled the cloying eau de parfum of obsequious courtiers; the stink of so many bodies and chamber pots jammed into the Hofburg Palace; the fear of the noble men and women who were always watching, calculating as to how they might raise their own status or knock down a rival’s. Yes, fear was something one could smell. Sisi knew that, after all of her years in Vienna.
But no, it was not the view, or the sound, or the scent that made twilight in Hungary so different from twilight in Austria. It was not anything outside of her or around her; it
was a sensation entirely inside of her. It was how she felt each evening at dusk that made Gödöllő so different from the Hofburg.
In Vienna, by this hour of the day, Sisi would feel withered. Her head would ache from the unpleasantness of an argument with her husband or his iron-willed mother. Sisi’s stomach would be coiled into a gnarled mess, her chest tight with anxiety from a day of sorting gossip and rumors from truth, of watching for and trying to address the judgment or disapproval that seemed to pass across every courtier’s face. She would be looking drearily ahead to a night spent with the Imperial Court—a tedious evening ensconced in the damask and gold gilt of the staterooms, the sound of the violins overpowered by the chatter about trivial scandals. Hours spent watching women fawn before her husband, forcing a weary smile while men paid her the same trite compliments they used night after night. Days in Vienna were long, but the nights were interminable—and Sisi would limp back to her room each evening feeling spent, depleted. So fatigued that she already dreaded the next day before that day even came.
Here in Gödöllő she felt spent, too, but in the best way possible. Like a vessel poured out, light and free of burdens. Today, like all days at her Hungarian estate, she’d been free. She’d been outdoors since five in the morning, having risen at four. In keeping with her daily routine, she’d ridden hard and returned to the palace just briefly for a light broth at midday. The afternoon found her atop her horse once more and back in the fields and woodlands, where she practiced jumps, galloped to the point of breathlessness, and joined her charming neighbor, Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, in chasing foxes and racing across the untamed landscape.
That was why twilight in Gödöllő was always so different. By the time the sun began to sink over the western fields in the direction of Budapest, Sisi’s body would ache with a pleasant, well-earned fatigue. Her cheeks, brightened by the clean country air and the physical exertion, would glow a deep rose. Her heart would feel light, her spirits buoyant, and her body strong.
And that was precisely how Sisi felt on this sultry late-summer evening, as she handed her horse off at the stables and thanked the Hungarian groom with an easy smile. She turned toward the palace, its red-domed roof cutting a fanciful outline against the fading sky. Even this structure, so whimsical and unpretentious, stood in contrast to the stately, solid form of Vienna’s imperial residence, the Hofburg. As Sisi looked now over the strawberry-pink and cream façade, her eyes moved to the second floor, finding the window on the eastern wing of the house. She smiled, picking up her pace. She had almost expected to see the tiny cherubic face peeking back at her from within a glow of early-evening candlelight; and suddenly she couldn’t wait to be back inside the palace, this place where she had made a home for herself, carving out a safe corner of domesticity and freedom away from the crushing hold of Vienna and the Imperial Court.
“Hello, Shadow.” Sisi’s favorite dog, an oversized mound of wagging white fur, trotted up, lapping a sloppy greeting on her as she reached the front door. “You miss me today?” She stroked the massive hound a moment before nodding at the nearby footman and walking into the front hall, her dog trailing behind her in accordance with his name.
“Empress Elisabeth.” Ida Ferenczy, Sisi’s attendant and longtime friend, curtsied as the empress entered. Beside her snored the empress’s other dog, a heavy Saint Bernard named Brave. Her mother-in-law despised oversized dogs—the Archduchess Sophie only ever kept dogs small enough to sit in her lap. Perhaps that was why here, in Gödöllő, Sisi surrounded herself with the enormous, lovable beasts.
“Hello, Ida.” Sisi tossed her riding gloves onto a nearby chair as she crossed the spacious, high-ceilinged front hall toward her attendant. “I will change quickly out of these riding clothes. I miss my little one. Is everything as it should be in the nursery?”
“The Archduchess Valerie is in perfectly good health this evening, thanks be to God.”
“Has she cried today?”
“Only the normal fretting of any small baby. But the nurse reports that the little archduchess has had her milk without incident, and she should be in good spirits for Your Majesty’s visit to the nursery.”
“Good. I’ll change and then go straight to her.”
“Of course. And was Your Majesty’s ride pleasing today?”
“Yes.” Sisi nodded, making her way to the broad, curving staircase that led upstairs toward her suite of private rooms. “It was a wonderful day. The fox thought he had found a safe haven in the southern woodlands, but Nicky rooted him out, and we nearly—” Sisi paused on the steps, her mind pulled in several directions at once. “That reminds me, Ida, we shall be four for dinner tonight instead of three. Nicky—rather, Prince Esterházy—practically begged me for an invitation, and I hadn’t the heart to refuse him. He’ll join the two of us and Countess Marie.”
“In that case, Madame, I believe that we shall be five instead of four.” Ida’s lips curled upward in a sheepish smile, but she offered nothing more by way of explanation.
“Who?” Sisi asked, her hand bracing on the stairway’s carved balustrade. “Who else is coming?” Had Franz decided to plan a last-minute visit? Sisi’s stomach coiled—the emperor’s presence, as rare as it was out here, had a way of disrupting the fragile, carefree peace she fought so hard to cultivate in this household.
As an answer, Ida held forth the small golden mail dish, piled with papers. “Your Imperial Majesty’s personal correspondences.”
“Thank you.” Sisi took the dish, riffling through the pile. “You’ve forwarded all of the official petitions and letters on to my secretary in Vienna?”
Ida nodded.
Sisi’s eyes landed on the one calling card, its lettering long and graceful—and familiar. No, this was not news of the emperor. This was a sight so longed for that Sisi felt her heart lurch in her breast, aching now with the first kindling of hope. Andrássy! But could it be? Was Andrássy back in Hungary? Sisi fixed a questioning gaze on her attendant, aware of how her eager tone betrayed her as she asked: “Did he…did Count Andrássy come by today?”
Leaning forward, her voice low, Ida whispered: “Count Andrássy came calling while you were riding. He said he’d return for dinner.”
Sisi clutched the banister, her heart feeling like it might trip down the carpeted stairs even as she stood frozen in place. “Well, that’s a surprise. A most pleasant surprise. Come, I must dress at once.”
As she dressed for the evening, Sisi made her way through the remaining pile of letters, her mind wandering every few moments back to Andrássy. Had he missed her these past months as she had missed him? How long would he stay? Would all be the same between them? She blinked, forcing herself to focus on the news from her family; she had only so much time to read these letters and visit the nursery before dinner. Before he arrived.
There were several letters from Bavaria, where Sisi’s beloved older sister, Helene, had recently returned to the family home at Possenhofen to live with their parents. “Poor Néné.” Sisi could almost see the tears that had fallen as her widowed sister penned this note. Helene, the eldest sister and the only one of the five Wittelsbach girls to be happily married, had found her groom—a kindly prince of Thurn and Taxis—later in life. She hadn’t married until her twenties, and yet she’d lost her husband just a few precious years after the wedding. Helene wrote of her own deteriorating health, of her daily sadness, but also of her deepening faith. She, who had once longed for a life in a nunnery, wrote Sisi now that daily prayer provided “the one balm against grief in the otherwise chaotic environment of our childhood household.”
Sisi sighed, her heart heavy for Helene as she turned to her next letter from home. This one came from her darling younger sister Sophie-Charlotte.
My dearest Sisi,
I am to be married! You cannot possibly know how happy my heart is. Or perhaps you can, and do, understand my bliss; I was too young to witness it when you yourself fell in love with your husband and accepted his hand.