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Authors: Leila Rasheed

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“I beg your pardon for being late, my ladies,” Céline said as she came into the room. “One of the clean shifts seems to have been torn. It must have happened in the laundry.”

“I’m sorry, Céline, that will be extra work for you,” Rose said, turning to face her. She did feel sorry for the maid—she remembered very well how her fingers had been sore after stitching and darning night after night when she would rather have been in bed. But, she thought as she watched the maid begin to unfasten Ada’s dress, Céline was a better lady’s maid than she had been. She seemed to actually enjoy her work. She was constantly encouraging Rose—in the most deferential way, of course—to peruse some of the new catalogues and magazines from London’s best dressmakers, to consider one trimming or another, to make a decision about lace or silk chiffon. The whole thing filled Rose with the deepest depression. Whatever she wore, Lady Gertrude and Lady Cynthia and all the rest of them would make sure she felt like a housemaid wearing it.

“It doesn’t matter, my lady,” Céline smiled, plucking hairpin after hairpin from Ada’s hair.

“At last,” Ada sighed with relief as her dress shimmered to the floor. Céline bent to pick it up and Ada seated herself in front of the mirror. She opened the drawer and took out a thick sheaf of papers, which she began to read. Rose glanced at them curiously.

She was exhausted, but she was also longing to talk to Ada about her engagement. She glanced across at Ada, but Ada was reading as Céline brushed her hair and did not look up. The candlelight glinted from Ada’s deep brown hair, from the silver-backed brush, and from the jewels she still wore.

“Has mademoiselle given thought to her dress for the state ball?” Céline asked Rose, as she drew the brush down in long, soft strokes. “A sample arrived from Poiret—black and pink pearls and a fan of peacock feathers—”

“Oh, goodness.” Rose stifled another yawn. “I haven’t had a moment to think of anything important, let alone dresses.”

“Mademoiselle, dresses are always important.” Céline sounded shocked.

“Yes, of course they are,” Rose said hastily.

“And particularly for
this
ball,” Céline went on. Her pretty mouth seemed to be trying to suppress a smile.

Rose glanced at Ada, but Ada was still absorbed in her reading.

“What do you mean, Céline?” she asked.

“What I hear, my lady, is that the season is quite thrown into disarray, with the return of the Duke of Huntleigh from foreign parts,” Céline said, folding up Ada’s ribbons neatly. “Those ladies who have become engaged to be married are trying to disengage themselves, just in case. Those who have not are increasing their efforts toward the state ball. Poiret will be busy. Madame Lucille has not a single free appointment.”

“Oh,” Rose sighed and yawned at the same time. “Not the Duke of Huntleigh again. I seem to have heard nothing all evening but the scandals he’s been involved in, the extent of his gambling, the reputations he’s ruined.…”

“And the size of his parure,” Céline murmured.

Rose coughed. “I beg your pardon?”

“The Huntleigh parure. A set of diamond jewelry, made for Marie Antoinette originally.”

Ada glanced up. “The Huntleighs have some Bourbon in their blood,” she said.

“Oh, I see. But he sounds awful—why is everyone so keen on him?”

“His father has just died.”

“How sad.” Rose was startled; tragedy didn’t seem to fit with the image she had formed of the arrogant young duke.

“He has come into the dukedom and a very large fortune besides,” Ada said. “The Huntleigh reputation isn’t good, but Huntleigh credit is.” She added, “That will do, Céline, thank you.”

“My lady,” Céline bobbed a slight curtsy and turned to Rose’s hair, her fast, deft fingers plucking out hairpins.

Rose glanced at Ada as she turned another page and it rustled. “Ada, what on earth are you reading? Aren’t you tired?”

“It’s the reform bill,” Ada said distantly, her eyes on the paper. “I want to have the most important passages by heart in time for Laurence’s speech.”

Céline and Rose caught each other’s eyes in the mirror.

“Do you think it’s really necessary?” Rose spoke gently, but she was worried. There was a small frown line between Ada’s eyes that had not been there before the start of the season. And now it seemed to be there all the time. “You get hardly enough sleep as it is. You will make yourself ill—isn’t it better to wait till the season is over?”

“Oh!” Ada stood up, quickly and nervously. She crossed over to her bed, still staring at the paper, and lay down, her dark hair spilling in waves across the pillow. “No, I couldn’t do that. I should go mad if I did nothing but visit and dance and dress for the next two months.” She turned another page, seemingly absorbed.

Rose sighed. “Thank you, Céline,” she said. “You may go now—you must be tired.”

She turned to Ada as the door closed behind Céline. “Ada, really and truly, are you happy about this engagement?”

Ada looked up. Her eyes gave as little away as the carved eyes of the caryatids outside.

“Of course,” she said lightly. “Laurence and I have so much in common. We are bound to be happy together.”

Rose hardly knew what to say. She knew Ada was sending her certain messages: not to ask questions, to accept and smile. In the course of the season she had begun to realize that the veil Ada wore, of good breeding, tact, and grace, was a veil of steel, not silk. It protected her…and yet it also separated her. Not just from people like Lady Gertrude, but from Rose, in whom she had once confided everything.

“I mean…” Rose hesitated. “Do you love him?”

Ada’s smile was brief. “Love grows, don’t you think?”

“I suppose so,” Rose said quietly.

Ada turned away, then seemed to think better of it and looked back. “Rose, I can do good as Lady Fintan,” she said. “I can change England for the better. That’s important, don’t you think?”

Her gray gaze was level, and Rose knew that whether she agreed or not with Ada’s decision, she had to respect it. “Of course,” she said quietly. She stood up, pulling her Indian silk shawl around her shoulders. “Good night, Ada.”

“Good night, Rose,” Ada replied.

Back in her own bedroom, Rose found a fan of fashion magazines and illustrations on her dressing table. She sat down and flicked through them, reading Céline’s neat annotations:
This velvet column is very elegant, no, mademoiselle?

This one is too ultra, I think
.…
The dull gold would be very flattering to your com
plexion
.… Rose put them down with a sigh. Céline was certainly an exemplary lady’s maid, she thought. Even for someone whose job was to be attentive to the details of fashion, she seemed quite passionate about dressing Rose well. But what was the good of being dressed well, Rose thought—glancing at her jewel cases and fan cases, hat boxes and drawer after deep mahogany drawer of fur-lined, sequinned, beaded luxury—if it meant she couldn’t be happy? If it meant Ada couldn’t be happy?

She drew her writing case toward her. She had promised to write to Annie, and now was as good a time as any. It seemed like a lifetime ago that the two of them were maids together at Somerton. And yet nothing had changed for Annie.

Rose began to write, wishing she could say the things that were really in her heart. But that wasn’t possible. Her life was an Eden compared to Annie’s, and she knew it.

Writing to Annie took her longer than she had expected, and she was glad to slip, yawning, into bed just as it grew light. Even now there was no silence; the rattle of a cart in the street outside and distant street cries haunted her until she fell asleep.

Somerton

Annie Bailey came hurrying down the servants’ stairs of Somerton Court, cap askew on her mousy hair. Five to eight, and she had time to snatch a piece of toast if she was lucky, before she had to fill the coal scuttles and carry them up four flights to the bedrooms. She could already hear Cook shouting orders, and swung to one side as the footmen hurried past with their silver trays held high, delicious smells of bacon and eggs and kidneys wafting out.

“Here,” James paused to say, “have you heard the news? Lady Ada’s engaged!”

“I’m miles ahead of you,” Annie replied. “Saw the telegram when Mr. Cooper took it up.”

“Good news, ain’t it?”

“For our wages,” Annie grinned. They all knew how close to the wind the family had been sailing—Lady Ada’s marriage would put that right, at least for the moment.

“Get a move on, James! It’s breakfast you’re giving ’em, not lunch!” Cook shouted from the kitchen. James ran on up the stairs and Annie went down into the kitchen.

“Toast me some bread while I wash up, Martha,” she told the scullery maid, and headed for the sink to rinse the ashes off her hands from laying the fire.

Martha went on talking to Thomas without pause as she moved from the washing up to the toasting fork. “It’s like every night I can hear the scream, and the Horrible Thud,” she said, shuddering.

“What are you on about?” Annie demanded, shaking her hands dry.

“The blinkin’ murder, as usual. I wish you’d give it a rest, Martha,” Thomas said. “Pass me that kedgeree.” He grabbed it from Cook’s hands and hurried back upstairs.

“I might rest, but his poor murdered spirit won’t be so lucky,” Martha said darkly.

“I don’t know about his poor spirit.” Annie checked her reflection in the piece of broken mirror lodged on the windowsill, and straightened her cap. “I met Simon Croker, and he was a nasty piece of work, I can tell you—not that I’d wish him dead. I think it’s a shame about Oliver.”

“So do I,” said Cook, taking a moment to look up from her breakfast-time preparations. “Poor lad. I can’t imagine he’d be capable of murder.”

Annie didn’t reply at once. The kitchen door was ajar to let out the heat, and there was a view out across the courtyard to the stables. As Annie watched, a boy with tousled dark-blond hair and freckles crossed the cobbled, straw-strewn yard, leading Lady Georgiana’s white mare, Beauty. He was so handsome that Annie couldn’t help staring. The new stable boy, she thought. Of course, Mr. Cooper had mentioned engaging someone. He disappeared around the corner.

“What I’m wondering,” Martha said behind her, “is whether he’ll get murder or manslaughter. Murder’s hanging. Here’s yer toast, Annie.” She banged a plate onto the table.

Annie turned away from the window and sat down to eat, still thinking about the handsome stable boy. It would be fun to go to the fair with him.

“I’ve never seen a hanging,” Martha went on.

“You wouldn’t go and watch!” Annie was half shocked, half fascinated.

“I’d feel I had to, just to get the sense that justice had been done,” Martha said virtuously. “Did I say as how I hear his bloodcurdling scream and hear his skull cracking against the stone floor every night like that jam pot James dropped last Sunday—”

“Yes,” chorused everyone, “you did.”

“And we wish you’d give over when we’re trying to eat!” Annie said through a mouthful of toast. “Poor Oliver. He was a good valet to Mr. Templeton, for all I’ve heard, better than that Croker. Better looking too,” she added sadly.

“But it’s such a scandal for the house,” Martha went on. “I can’t go near the conservatory without a shudder—”

“And quite right too,” said a firm, quiet voice from the doorway.

Annie jumped. Mrs. Cliffe was framed in the kitchen doorway, an elegant, sober figure in black. Annie dropped her eyes and an awkward silence fell. It was hard to be the same around Mrs. Cliffe these days, not now they knew all about her and Lord Westlake. And yet no one, she noticed, dared cheek her to her face.

“You have no reason to go anywhere near the conservatory,” Mrs. Cliffe said, giving Martha her sternest glance. “A shudder is the least you ought to feel if you find yourself so far out of your place.”

Annie glanced around at the others as Mrs. Cliffe went on down the corridor. Their expressions were resentful, except for Cook, who looked concerned.


She’s
a nice one to talk about getting out of her place,” Martha whispered with a rebellious snigger.

“That’ll do, Martha.” Cook wasn’t laughing, and her voice was low.

The bell rang out, the new electric sound shrilling through the kitchen.

“Ugh!” Annie groaned and put her toast down. “Lady Georgiana? What does she want at this time?”

“Off you go, Annie.” Martha grinned. “No rest for the wicked.”

Annie ran for the stairs. The world might have turned upside down for Mrs. Cliffe and Rose, but for everyone else it was work, work, work as usual.

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