Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Historical,
People & Places,
Paranormal,
Juvenile Fiction,
Fantasy & Magic,
Europe,
Love & Romance,
School & Education
nothing too long.â Another gown gone.
Her fingers traced the sheen of a blue satin tunic. âToo bold for an introduction to a duke? What do you think, Caro?â
âI â¦â Caroline clearly didnât know what to think. âI imagine so?â
âAgreed.â The tunic was tossed to Lillian. âAh, wait. I have it. Yes. Here we are.â
She used both hands to free a new gown from the mess, shaking away all the rest in a tumble of unwanted glimmer. She turned around to me with it held up in front her, a smile at last breaking through the calm.
The dress was beautiful. Of course it was; all of them had been. This one was floaty and silvery gray, the color of the moonlit mist of my dreams. It had a silver sash and a dash of silver sequins along the bodice. I knew straightaway it was worth more than Iâd make in a year as a governess.
Probably more than five years.
âTry it on,â Sophia said.
I didnât move.
âOh.â She looked around the room, sighing. âRight, everyone out. Give her some privacy. Go on.â
Lillian went first, still mindlessly clutching the discarded dresses. The others filed out in an unenthusiastic line.
âYou, as well,â Sophia said pointedly to Mittie, whoâd stayed on the bed.
âWhy should I? Itâs my room, too.â
Lady Sophia only stared at her. Mittieâs mouth tightened into a downward curve, her pug face gone sour. She was no match for Sophiaâs ranking in the pack, and she knew it.
âFine,â she huffed, and went. The door slammed hard behind her.
Sophia looked back at me. âYou neednât be concerned about undressing in front of me. I donât care a whit about your body or your modesty.â She walked over, shoved the dress into my arms. Layers of gauzy silk puffed against my chest. âTry it on.â
âWhy?â I demanded. âSo you can tell me to take it off and then kick me out in my knickers? Or, better yet, tell me I may borrow it and then accuse me of stealing it?â
âNo,â she said, flat again. âI want you to wear it to the tea.â
âWhy?â I wasnât going to play her game, not without proper answers.
âBecause Chloe will be there. And I want to make her as miserable as I possibly can.â
My arms dropped. The silver dress felt light as paper in my grip.
âSheâs my sister,â Sophia said. âDidnât you know? Stepsister, actually. Her mother wed my father four years ago.â
âYou hate her,â I said. It wasnât a question.
âYouâve no idea.â
âHow will me in this make Chloe miserable?â
âAnything that drags attention away from Chloe makes Chloe miserable.â
The lamplight flickering on Sophiaâs desk behind her burned a halo around her pale hair. She gazed at me bright and hard, an unlikely angel in a schoolgirlâs shape.
I lifted a shoulder. âFair enough. Iâll wear the dress.â
Her distant smile returned. âGood.â
The route back to my tower lay thick with night. I knew the way well enough now not to need illumination. My feet took me where I needed to go.
Sophiaâs dress was a silken veil across my arms. It tugged at the shadows behind me, murmuring to the dark as I climbed.
My door was closed, as Iâd left it. But there was something at the base of it. Something new.
It was a box. A small one, cardboard, unadorned. I picked it up and felt a weight sliding around inside, singing as it moved.
By the light of my window I pried open the box to find a circlet of tiny roses made of solid gold, perfect as true life, attached to a pin.
It was a brooch.
A message had been written on the inside lid. It read: For your tea. And I didnât come in.
Chapter Twelve
Tranquility at Idylling was surely the largest, oddest house ever graced with the word tranquil in its name. It was much newer than the usual
Colleen Hoover
Christoffer Carlsson
Gracia Ford
Tim Maleeny
Bruce Coville
James Hadley Chase
Jessica Andersen
Marcia Clark
Robert Merle
Kara Jaynes