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The Golden Illusion

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Since her mother’s death, the beautiful but innocent Linetta Falaise has led a sheltered life under the wing of her kindly French Governess. So she is heartbroken to find that her beloved Mademoiselle is at death’s door and that she, Linetta, had unknowingly been living off her meagre savings for the last two years.As she now has no money, there is no alternative but for Linetta to travel to Paris and ask Mademoiselle’s niece, Marie-Ernestine, to help her find suitable employment, perhaps teaching English to French children.Almost as soon as she boards the cross-channel Steamer heading for Calais, her innocent eyes are opened to the wicked ways of the world when a strange man’s unwanted and frightening attentions drive her to seek the protection of a handsome and noble stranger, the Marquis of Darleston, who is travelling to Paris on a secret mission for the British Prime Minister.After they part company, Linetta is introduced to the heady glamour of Paris Society by the glamorous Marie-Ernestine, who is really the celebrated and infamous Blanche d’Antigney.Linetta is appalled by Les Grandes Cocottes, who sell love to the highest bidder, especially since she is expected to join them because she is so young and enchanting.Afraid, alone and beset by lecherous ‘gentlemen’, Linetta remembers the handsome distinguished Marquis she met on the Steamer and prays fervently that he will come to her rescue yet again.

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Author’s Note
Author’s NoteThe history of Blanche d’Antigny and Marguerite Bellanger is authentic. Blanche inspired both the novel Nana by Zola and the picture of Nana by Edouard Manet. She was the prototype of a cocotte. Her lovers were incalculable because she was warm-hearted and generous and could never say ‘no’ to any man who wanted her. Maharajas, Khedives and Shahs frequented her on their visits to Paris and Princes, Noblemen, bankers, actors and paupers beat their way to her Salon des Amoureux. She not only appeared on the stage in Paris but also in London where she fell in love for the first and only time with an actor. When he died of consumption she borrowed the money for his funeral because she explained, “I don’t want him to be buried with the money I’ve earned in bed.” She died of smallpox when she was thirty-four. Marguerite Bellanger attended Napoleon III’s funeral when he died in exile in England. Like many cocottes she longed for respectability and was well known for her charity work. In 1886 walking in the grounds of her Château, given to her by one of her lovers, she caught a chill, which developed into acute peritonitis. A jealous old servant turned away the village Curé who wanted to administer the last rites to her and slammed the door in the face of her family. Marguerite died alone in her forty-sixth year.

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