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Historical Fiction

 

Date Published: 10-06-2021

Publisher: Indies United

Escaping from her childhood, Sheela, flees her aunt’s motel where she is forced to work as a cleaning maid and provide ‘favors’ for wealthy guests and winds up in Miami in Kit Malone’s fancy brothel. Beautiful and stately, Sheela becomes a high-class prostitute, a millionaire’s mistress and a Billy Rose showgirl. When she meets the love of her life in Manhattan, the charming but naïve Julius Clark, life blossoms into something both frightening and titillating. But when Sheela gives birth to her daughter, Fanny, it is this shadowy and stormy relationship that alters the course of both of their destinies and defines their future.

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EXCERPT

  • Chapter Three

No one saw Darryl again in Clearwater, Florida, for several years. Rena never said a word when Sheela came back from the park with red eyes and torn clothes. She just stared at the girl and nodded.

Her sister’s elbow jabbed her in her ribs. “Oh, shit,” Sheela heard her whisper.

Their aunt picked up a hammer from the kitchen drawer and dashed up the stairs. They heard the yelling and took off toward the back, where they crouched behind a trellis and stared up at their aunt’s bedroom. They never saw Daryl again after that day. Although it was a relief not to have him lurking about, Sheela was constantly afraid he would show up again and kill her.

“Oh, don’t worry,” Leda said. “I’m sure Aunt Rena has hammered him to death by now and fed his body to the fish.”

Rena must have divorced Darryl at some point because she found a new husband within three months of his disappearance. Chester Moody was a beefy man who liked to sit on the front porch and take naps in the rocker. He brought the girls to fierce hysterics because he snored so loudly the guests raised their eyebrows and politely glanced in another direction. Rena talked to him constantly, even when he appeared to be asleep. She put him to work in the kitchen, along with Leda and Sheela, and hired a girl to clean the rooms. A much nicer arrangement for Sheela and Leda because even though they had to clean up after him, they got to lick up all the chocolate sauce from the pots.

Sheela had a boyfriend in her senior year named Calvin Woods. He was always holding her hand and carrying her books, and he would come by every evening to sit with her on the porch of her aunt’s motel.

“Come on, Sheela, let’s go down to the beach,” he’d say.

Sheela would check to see whether Aunt Rena was around and quickly jump the porch railing to run off with Calvin.

She thought he was the best-looking boy she’d ever seen. His hair was a fine soft brown that hugged his neck in wisps that fell onto his collar, and best of all, he had deep dimples that showed up in his cheeks every time he smiled.

Every boy in Clearwater thought Sheela was the prettiest girl they’d ever seen up close and envied Calvin the luck of winning her heart.

“What do you see in him, Sheela?” they’d shout. “He’s a weirdo, so shy he stutters.”

“That’s precisely what I like about him.” Sheela wasn’t so young she couldn’t tell the difference between a bunch of roughnecks and a true gentleman.

She found it endearing that Calvin blushed around her so much of the time. He was a bookworm, too. He liked to read her chapters from favorite novels, passages he would underline in red. Calvin Woods wrote her so many love letters, they filled her chest at the motel. Sheela loved that he was so tall and lanky he had to duck through doors, and his knees were so high when he sat that even the cats didn’t know where to find his lap.

“Marry me, Sheela,” he whispered in her ear, then fell to his knees on the sand, and searched her eyes. “Be mine forever.”

Sheela contemplated the ocean and a boat so far away it looked as if she could hold it in her hand.

“I can’t,” she whispered. “But I love you, Calvin. Don’t ever forget that.”

He looked at her sadly and rose to his feet. “Okay,” he said. “I’ll wait.”

Most everyone thought they would get married after graduation. So it came as quite a shock when Sheela disappeared. Pensive and despondent for a while, Calvin eventually wound up marrying a girl from Orlando whom he’d met on a trip. There was a rumor in Clearwater that Sheela wrote Calvin a letter right after leaving town, telling him that she’d never come back to marry him. There was another rumor going around as well. People said that Sheela went and met herself a millionaire in Miami and didn’t have the time of day anymore for a poor boy like Calvin.

  • Chapter Four

Sheela had seventy-five dollars in her pocket the day she slammed the door of the Sea Spray Inn for the last time and hitched a ride to Miami. She’d been saving the money ever since that first time with Eugene Howe.

“I’ll have dinner in my room tonight.” Eugene smiled at Rena. “Do you think I can have some company? Perhaps your pretty niece, the tall one?”

Rena snapped her fingers, quickly turning her neck to find Sheela.

Oui, my niece is quite beautiful, isn’t she?” And the unstated negotiations began as Eugene put one hand on his wallet, and the other quite close to his fly.

“I’ll see what I can do,” she told him.

Eugene Howe had been vacationing at the Sea Spray Inn for years but started coming more often once he retired. He always took the best room and requested thick steaks and rich desserts. Rena always ordered a special case of whiskey when he came to town, and she spent many hours with him in the parlor, re-filling his glass and increasing his tab.

“Mr. Howe is one of the most prominent men in his home state of Alabama. Take special care of him, Sheela.” Rena leaned close and looked into her eyes. “He has a certain fondness for you. Why don’t you serve him in his room tonight? You remind him of his daughter.” She smiled with an absence of effort.

Sheela did not dislike Mr. Howe. In truth, he encouraged her to talk to him about school and what she liked to do with her time. Sometimes he brought out photographs of his wife and children. With a despondent sigh, he mentioned that his wife had died several years before, and he was very lonely.

“He has something special to show you tonight,” Rena said. “You be nice to him. These are hard times.”

Sheela looked at her aunt’s face. “And perhaps I have something special to show him, too?” she said with a sneer.

Sheela watched as Eugene uncovered a wine-colored folder that looked as if it were made of satin. He brought it to the edge of the bed and patted the space beside him. “Come sit by me,” he said as he carefully unwrapped it.

Sheela sat close to Mr. Howe in case he cried over more family photographs. The poor man’s hands were shaking, and he was breathing so heavily, the bed moved. But it wasn’t a picture of his wife that he showed her. Neither was it a picture of his daughter, Delia. He showed her, instead, photographs of naked people engaged in all sorts of odd behavior. She particularly wanted to laugh at the one with all the bare-assed ladies dancing with one another; but she intuited laughter would be inappropriate because Mr. Howe was so intensely serious. She felt him put his hand over hers, and she quickly stood up. He cocked his head at her for a moment, then he reached in his inside pocket and counted out bills. There must have been at least twenty bills that he counted and forced into her hand.

“Your aunt said you would be nice to me,” he said.

She stared at him. He was heavily bearded. She didn’t like that. His stomach rolled over so many times, he looked deformed. She didn’t like that, either. She noticed the jowls in his cheeks. He was running his tongue over his lips, looking up at her as if he would pounce like a hungry lion if she gave him the slightest provocation. She stared at the money. It made her think of what her aunt had said to her. You’d be surprised how good he’d be to you if you grant him a favor or two.

“Are you a virgin?” he asked her.

“That’s for me to know and for you to find out,” she said.

He laughed at that. “I know you have a boyfriend. This won’t interfere.”

Sheela pushed Calvin from her mind. Aunt Rena was always telling her that Calvin would never get out of the trailer park. She stared back at Eugene Howe. She wanted money. Her witch of an aunt didn’t give her a dime. She just needed a little money to get out of Clearwater forever, and away from all those damn dirty dishes and smelly toilets.

“If I turn out to be a virgin, it’s going to cost you more than this.” She stared into his eyes and put the money on the bed.

Eugene stopped licking his lips. He also stopped his deep breathing. His mouth drooped a little as he watched her.

“You’re made for this.” He grinned as Sheela’s fingers traced the buttons on her blouse.

  • Chapter Five

Throughout Sheela’s final year in high school, Eugene sent her gifts: garters and lace brassieres that he told her to wear for him on his next trip down to the Sea Spray Inn. He visited Clearwater at least once a month to see her. One month he sent down a friend, Wes Monroe, a boisterous, handsome man at least six feet tall. With his striking mane of thick black hair and a dramatic mustache, her Aunt Rena said he was a dead ringer for Clark Gable. But though he gave Sheela even more money than Eugene, he never touched her. He only wanted her to watch him while he slowly disrobed, paraded himself in front of her, and pulled on himself until he ejaculated all over his hands and fell to his knees, groaning and sobbing.

Sheela was generous with her money. Her aunt took most of it, but she had enough to take her sister to the movie theater whenever they could sneak away from the motel. She sent money to both her brothers, and she promised Leda she would send her money from Miami.

“Find a place of your own, Leda,” she said, handing her a fistful of ten-dollar bills. “Leave that bitch in the dust.”

It was just one week after her high school graduation that Sheela took Leda by the arm and led her off toward Cleveland Street.

“I’ve got enough saved now,” she excitedly told Leda. “It’s time for me to get the hell out of here.”

“Out of here to where, sister?” Leda asked, looking at Sheela like she’d lost her mind.

“Miami.”

Sheela had no concrete plan. Miami was a random choice because it sounded like the most exciting place to be. She knew by now that she’d never starve: that there would always be a man around to fill her purse.

“What about Calvin?” Leda asked.

Sheela looked away. Calvin respected her. When he got carried away and tried to touch her in all her secret places, he would stop himself and apologize. He begged her forgiveness over and over until she finally told him he didn’t have to worry about his hands anymore. But being with Calvin was like leading two lives. After the time with Eugene Howe, it all changed. She couldn’t think of lying down with Calvin and accepting his tenderness, not after Eugene.

“I don’t know,” Sheela said, taking in her sister’s shock.

“I thought you loved him,” Leda said, her confusion apparent.

Sheela had become distant with Calvin after Eugene soiled things. She pretended to have stomachaches and leg cramps. Calvin would bring two aspirins out from his mother’s cupboard and hand them to Sheela with a cup of water.

“Feeling better now?” he’d ask while the crinkles over his nose deepened.

“Uh-huh,” Sheela would tell him and watch the way the sun played on his hair with a halo of streaks that turned the brown to gold.

Sheela took her sister’s hands and sat her down on a bench.

“Sometimes I dream that Calvin and I are married, and we’re so happy we never stop laughing. But then the dream changes and Calvin turns into Eugene Howe, and the walls in our house suddenly fill up with Mr. Howe’s dirty photographs. I try to escape, but then Papa shows up and puts wax in the keyholes so I can’t jimmy the lock. I scream and beg to be let out, but Papa ignores my cries. Then Aunt Rena appears with a salacious sneer on her face. She locks me in with Mr. Howe and throws the keys to all the rooms into the sea.”

Leda looked into her gaze. “I understand,” Leda said tearfully. “I’ll pray for you, Sheela, every day.”

Sheela didn’t say goodbye to Calvin the day she left Clearwater. She hitched a ride from Cleveland Street with a traveling salesman, feeling as free as a fish in water. It was an adventure for Sheela to ride out of town, knowing she was never coming back. It was like digging a hole in the sand and really discovering China.

  • Chapter Six

The house had a silver dome and stood majestically on three quiet acres of land. The ceiling curved and gently rested on beveled columns with gilded posts. The marble floor was almost nude in color and captured footsteps in its shine. The deep rich mahogany staircase lifted with a grand sweep, like an arm in reach. The upstairs rooms were carpeted in muted tones and lit by Tiffany-shaded lamps. Chaise longues covered in satin nonchalantly stretched before drapes of silk and stared back at beds smothered in velvet. 

Sheela had been greeted at the front door as if she were someone’s best friend or, at least, a relative not seen in years. The tour of the mansion lasted half an hour. Overwhelmed, Sheela breathed in the perfumed air and followed Kit Malone into the “afternoon parlor.”

“I call it my ‘afternoon parlor’ because of this wonderful light.”

Sheela looked past tall windows and onto trees that shaded rose bushes and tulips.

“Please be seated.” Kit pointed to a couch that looked as if it had been spun with gold.

Sheela sank into pillows that seemed to hug her body from all directions. Kit sat across from her in a chair with long, clawed arms and legs that stood on point like prima ballerinas frozen in motion.

Sheela guessed Kit was her Aunt Rena’s age, at least forty-five, though it was hard to tell. Kit was still beautiful. Her golden yellow hair wound around her head in a crown of waves; her hands and legs were long and slender, and her breasts round and curved up from her low-cut blouse, revealing skin that looked as soft as a baby’s cheek. She smiled at Sheela.

“We’re going to work on that accent. You’re a bit too Southern.”

Sheela nodded. She would do anything Kit told her to do. It hadn’t been an easy decision to enter the house, but now she was inside, she was sure she had made the right choice. She had almost turned back. She had circled the property three times before she decided to ring the bell. The man who had told her about the mansion said she’d be a fool not to hitch her horse to Kit’s wagon. He told her she’d make more money than she ever dreamed possible. Word had it that Kit Malone was good to her girls, and her clients weren’t street scum, either. Kit’s client list included some very well-known, wealthy men about town. The man had spoken to her like a school adviser suggesting a course of study. Then he had put his hand in hers, kissed her on the cheek and told her to get out of that two-bit bar they were in and cash in on her class.

“Though men do like a bit of a Southern drawl, you’ll find that my men like a refined, well-spoken woman.” Kit leaned forward and reached for her afternoon tea. She stared at Sheela and smiled again. “You will have men eating out of your hand.” She laughed, and the sound of her laughter was as lighthearted as morning birds.

Sheela tried to maintain focus on Kit’s eyes as she spoke and not to stare at the paintings that hung on the walls like rectangular paper coffins, revealing effigies of naked women, unnerving the beholder with their sad and seductive stares.

Kit sipped her tea and continued, “Pleasing men is an art that can be cultivated and learned. For God’s sake, listen to everything they say, or pretend to. Stroke their egos even more tenderly than their genitals.” She sat back in her chair. “And remember, beautiful women are feared as much as they are desired. Power is always with a woman if she knows how to use it. I tell you this so you can have everything you want in life. Most people don’t know how to get what they want. It’s so simple. First, you must be committed to it with all your heart, and then ask yourself how you’re going to attain it. Are your assets in place?” Kit leaned forward and placed her tea on the table. “Beauty and brains, my dear, those are the assets of choice for a woman. You must have both, and clearly, you do. You will use your assets wisely in this house. Exercise your sense of humor, listen with rapt attention, and never disagree with a man unless you do so as softly as melting butter. Always tell men what they want to hear. Build your fortress!”

Kit got up and went to the window.

 “We do not work before 4 P.M or after 2 A.M.” She drew back the drapes and turned to Sheela. “I want you to meet someone.”

Kit’s tone changed as she called out toward the yard. It took on an uncharacteristic excitement. “Alice! Bring her inside!”

Alice entered with a confidence that made Sheela take notice. She was a serious young woman who appeared no older than seventeen. Her skin was a cocoa brown, and her loveliness was apparent even in her unflattering black uniform. In her arms, she carried a tan-and-white King Charles spaniel. Kit quickly fell to her knees and held out her arms.

“Sweetie Pie, come to Mama.”

The puppy ran around in splendid circles kissing and licking his mistress with the exuberance of a crazed lightning bug, her little tail ticking from side to side like an over-wound clock. Sheela let out the first laugh she had had since she left Clearwater.

“Come on, Sheela,” Kit called to her. “Come, say hello to Sweetie Pie.”

Sheela fell to her knees and let the puppy jump up and nip at her nose. Kit arched her back, squared her legs, and then chased the dog around on all fours, while Sheela followed. They scuffled around the “afternoon parlor” after Sweetie Pie, as the puppy leaped on and off chairs and flew over small tables. Alice looked on in quiet amusement and Sheela laughed so hard, her sides hurt.

“Miss Kit was a Ziegfield girl,” Alice told her while Sheela unpacked a small bag she had brought back from the rooming house over the bar. “She’s well over forty. Shouldn’t be crawling around the floor like that at her age.”

“Really?”

Sheela easily imagined Kit in a chorus line with her hair touching on her shoulders and her long shapely legs strutting across a stage as if she were Queen of the Nile.

“Where you from, girl?” Alice asked as she reclined in the chaise and stretched her legs out with a deep and tired breath.

“Jacksonville,” Sheela said quickly. She would never tell anyone she was from Clearwater. That was just a place haunted by senescence and speckled with little hotels like her Aunt Rena’s. Home was the little two-story house on Cherry Street with the long yellow wall and the torn wallpaper that had followed her up the stairs with tiny, faded roses opening and closing. It was where she lived when her Mama was alive.

“Jacksonville? That’s my home. My daddy and brothers are still there. I send them money. Guess what? I make more money than my daddy.”

“No kidding?” Sheela looked at her and smiled politely. “I wonder if we ever passed each other on the street.”

“I doubt it,” Alice said with a tilt to her eyebrows.

Sheela felt the blush on her face appear. The only time she ever really saw any colored people was when her mama took her to see a Baptist choir at the old cathedral on Third Street once.

Alice smiled and lit herself one of Sheela’s cigarettes.

 “You know, she brings that little dog out every time a new girl comes.”

“Why?” Sheela put the last of her belongings away and jumped onto the bed. It gently moved to the bounce and then settled back. “Oh, what a bed,” she said as she let out a sigh that might never have ended if Alice hadn’t interrupted her.

“You don’t have much, do you, girl?”

Sheela didn’t answer. Her hands back over her head, she settled against a large plum pillow.

“No matter. Miss Kit going to buy you some clothes.”

“Why does she bring the dog out?” Sheela asked as she stared up at the vaulted ceiling and smiled at the cherub mural.

“If a girl don’t take to the dog, she don’t get hired.”

Alice rested her hands back under her head, too, and kicked off her slippers.

“Why not?” Sheela crawled to the foot of the bed and stared at her new friend.

“Miss Kit says if a girl don’t like the dog, she’s too cold to be worth anything. She says men like to marry cold women, but they like their whores warm and friendly.”

Sheela rolled over in laughter. Alice was startled at first, but she welcomed the chance to share the humor and soon joined Sheela in her fit of hysterics. By the time their ten minutes of complete loss of control ended, they were both curled up on the Persian rug and holding their sides.

“Are you one of the girls?” Sheela finally asked her.

“Shoot, no.” Alice sat up and wiped the tears from her eyes. “Ain’t no colored girls working here. I take care of things for Miss Kit.”

“I bet she’d take you on. You’re real pretty.”

“She did once ask me if I was interested.” Alice produced a warm round smile, and the memory of the moment made her laugh again.

“What’s so funny about a proposition?” Sheela leaned back on her hands and rested her feet up against the bed.

“I said, ‘Miss Kit, with all due respect, I don’t want to work in your whorehouse. I’m saving myself for love.’”

Sheela sat straight up and giggled. “You said what?”

“Hell, girl, ain’t enough money in whoring to make me deliver used goods to my man. And besides, there’s more money in running a brothel than spreading yourself all over the place. That’s where there’s real money. You getting thirty percent, she’s getting seventy.”

“Where did she get this mansion?” Sheela asked. Her curiosity was piqued now, and she wanted to know everything there was to know about Kit Malone.

“This was a gangster’s house during prohibition. He got himself killed in 1928, and they tried to turn the place into a hospital, but it never happened. So it just sat around doing nothing till Miss Kit bought it in 1932.”

“Where does she come from?”

Sheela wondered how anyone could accumulate enough money to buy a place this big. But the door opened then, and Kit entered. She smiled at the girls on the rug. Sweetie Pie hung from her arms in a pant, her regal little face looking oddly childlike and affable. Alice stood up quickly and dusted off her uniform. 

Miss Kit pointed her finger at Alice and slowly moved it from side to side.

“What’s the rule of the house, Alice Henry?”

“Colored help don’t mingle,” she answered with her head bowed.

Alice kept her eyes to the floor. Sheela noticed the deep glow to her cheeks.

Sheela stared at Kit, her own face turning color.

“What else, Miss Henry?” Kit asked her sweetly and softly.

“Colored girl here to serve,” Alice answered slowly.

Kit held out the dog and told Alice to take it to bed. Then she said goodnight to Sheela and nonchalantly added that she’d make friends with the other girls soon enough and not to distract the colored help.

About the Author

Vera Jane Cook was born in New York City and has been a city girl ever since. As an only child, she turned to reading novels at an early age and was deeply influenced by an eclectic group of authors. Before Jane became a writer, she worked in the professional theatre and appeared on television, in regional theatre, film and off Broadway.

At the age of fifty Jane began to write novels. Some of her titles include Dancing Backward in Paradise, winner of an Eric Hoffer Award for publishing excellence and an Indie Excellence Award for notable new fiction, 2007. The Story of Sassy Sweetwater and Dancing Backward in Paradise received 5 Star ForeWord Clarion Reviews and The Story of Sassy Sweetwater was named a finalist for the ForeWord Book of the Year Awards. She has published in ESL Magazine, Christopher Street Magazine and has written early childhood curriculum for Weekly Reader and McGraw Hill.

Jane still lives on the upper west side of Manhattan right near Riverside Park where she takes her delightful dogs for a jog, Peanut and Carly. She comes home to her spouse of thirty years and her two cats, Sassy and Sweetie Pie.

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Historical Fiction

 

Date Published: 10-06-2021

Publisher: Indies United

Escaping from her childhood, Sheela, flees her aunt’s motel where she is forced to work as a cleaning maid and provide ‘favors’ for wealthy guests and winds up in Miami in Kit Malone’s fancy brothel. Beautiful and stately, Sheela becomes a high-class prostitute, a millionaire’s mistress and a Billy Rose showgirl. When she meets the love of her life in Manhattan, the charming but naïve Julius Clark, life blossoms into something both frightening and titillating. But when Sheela gives birth to her daughter, Fanny, it is this shadowy and stormy relationship that alters the course of both of their destinies and defines their future.

About the Author

Vera Jane Cook was born in New York City and has been a city girl ever since. As an only child, she turned to reading novels at an early age and was deeply influenced by an eclectic group of authors. Before Jane became a writer, she worked in the professional theatre and appeared on television, in regional theatre, film and off Broadway.

At the age of fifty Jane began to write novels. Some of her titles include Dancing Backward in Paradise, winner of an Eric Hoffer Award for publishing excellence and an Indie Excellence Award for notable new fiction, 2007. The Story of Sassy Sweetwater and Dancing Backward in Paradise received 5 Star ForeWord Clarion Reviews and The Story of Sassy Sweetwater was named a finalist for the ForeWord Book of the Year Awards. She has published in ESL Magazine, Christopher Street Magazine and has written early childhood curriculum for Weekly Reader and McGraw Hill.

Jane still lives on the upper west side of Manhattan right near Riverside Park where she takes her delightful dogs for a jog, Peanut and Carly. She comes home to her spouse of thirty years and her two cats, Sassy and Sweetie Pie.

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Blog

Goodreads

Pinterest

Instagram

 

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

iBooks

Smashwords

Google Play

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A Bright Young Thing Virtual Book Tour

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A Bright Young Thing cover

 

Historical Fiction

 

 

Date Published: 7 September 2021

Publisher: Alcove Press

England, 1931

Astra Davies finds herself in rather a tight spot when her parents die suddenly, leaving her with a heap of debts and damaging family secrets to sort out. Unwilling to enter a loveless marriage with a wealthy suitor, she instead makes the audacious decision to make her own way in the world.

But the road to financial independence is a rocky one, fraught with hazards and heartbreaking choices. A brainless business partner threatens to ruin both her reputation and their company. Family mysteries and startling discoveries make her question her parents’ motives and her relationship with them. And when she catches the eye of the extremely eligible (and rather poor) Earl of Dunreaven, Astra winds up directly in the crosshairs of her longtime nemesis: the wealthy, influential Lady Millicent, who’s now hell bent on bringing her down for good.

Astra will have to dig deep and call on strength and skills she never knew she had if she’s going to prove to herself and the world that she is more than just a pretty Bright Young Thing.

A Bright Young Thing tablet

EXCERPT

Orphanhood came suddenly on a glass-clear day in February 1930. It was the first dry day that week, so my parents decided to take the new Delage out for a drive.

“Time to stretch her legs,” Father said. “We may go have a wander around Rockingham Castle. You should come along and get some roses in those cheeks.”

He ruffled the top of my head, and I ducked and playfully swatted him away. How many hundreds of times had I been hauled off to Rockingham over the years? Even my father could only make the place sound interesting so many times. Anyway, I had a cold to recover from and a poem that wanted writing. So, I stayed behind.

“Just an hour or two,” they said. They kissed me on the cheek, urged me to get some rest, and were gone. Replaced, seemingly in a blink, by Officer Anson (poor man, only his second week on the job). Helmet in hand, pale, stammering that there had been an accident. That half a mile outside Market Harborough, Mother had cut the wheel too sharply and sent the car tumbling down an embankment.

I stared at him as he stood, sweating, in front of the fire. His blue wool uniform was too tight and cut into his neck. He ran a finger around the collar every now and then and shifted his weight. Funny the things you remember at times like this.

“It’s a tricky corner, that, very tricky,” he jabbered, unnerved by my blank face and silence. “I’ve seen plenty of drivers get into trouble there—even men!” He chuckled and received in reply a long, slow blink. The fire snapped twice, sending sparks toward the chimney, and yet I felt chilly. The carriage clock on the mantelpiece hammered out its ticks, further fraying Anson’s nerves. He cleared his throat, looked down at the helmet he was still holding, as if unsure what to do with it. “They’re sure it was quick, miss. I—I’m very sorry, miss. They were good sorts, your parents. Always had a kind word.” Frowning in concern, he bent to peer into my face. “Is there . . . anyone else we should notify?”

“Notify?” The word had no meaning. Not a thing he’d said after “I’m sorry to have to inform you there’s been an accident” had actually penetrated the thick shroud that almost immediately wrapped itself around me. All I could hear was the crunch of collapsing metal. The oddly musical breaking of glass as a distant car somersaulted over dead grass and mud. But no, my parents weren’t dead. Of course they weren’t. I had that new poem to show them. It would make Father laugh.

Anson had run out of things to say, and the clock filled the silence. Finally, a voice that was not my own, but that of some frigid automaton driven by a lifetime of the right sort of training, thanked the hapless man for all his trouble. “I realize this must have been difficult for you,” the voice concluded.

He seemed puzzled. Probably wondering why I hadn’t broken down, wailed, sobbed, cursed the fates. Isn’t that what women did when met with tragedy? He hadn’t seen enough sudden grief to know that some bodies, when shocked, self-anesthetize. He would come to know it, but for the moment he clapped his helmet back on his head and made his escape, probably thinking “the quality” were a strange lot indeed.

Once he was gone, I threw my poem into the fire and retreated to my room. The shroud thickened and settled, swaddling me layer by layer in a protective cocoon in which I felt nothing. It was a relief, that.

This was the first great shock of my life. There would be others—so many others—in the coming months. They would bruise and toughen and soften me all at once. But this first, this greatest, seemed more than I could bear. How could one bear such a thing? A cataclysm that opened the earth beneath you? Left you scrabbling for a handhold as you stared into the darkness that was so eager to eat you alive, and wondering, just for a little while, if it would be easier to simply let go and let the void take you?

How do you bear the silence that follows the death?

I stayed shut away, unable to face a house that was still full of my parents. Beyond my door, Father’s aftershave lingered. His artifact collections gathered dust. The seedlings Mother and I had planted were just beginning to sprout.

Aunt Elinor came from London and made all the arrangements so efficiently, it was as if she’d been planning for this moment for years. Not even the death of her only sister could shock her into a torpor.

Friends came to coddle and care for me, to try to lift me out of my stupor. But I would not lift. I drifted through the funeral service in a somnambulant daze. Afterward, I was parked by the fire in the drawing room to receive the usual platitudes: “Such a shame! Such a lovely couple—and in the prime of their lives.” And, when they thought I couldn’t hear, “Astra will be quite the catch now, won’t she?” Appraising eyes roamed the rooms, picking up on the new furnishings, thick-pile carpets, and streamlined sculptures that spoke of wealth and style and a careless sort of spending.

I might still be there, among the curio cabinets and cream velveteen, if not for Father. One fine day in April, Mr. Edgry, our family solicitor, rolled up the drive and informed me that if I didn’t make a change to my living standards soon, I wouldn’t have a penny to my name by July.

“What sort of change do you mean?” I asked, my cottoned-up brain struggling to make sense of the ledgers and papers before me.

“Economies, my dear,” he answered, leaning back in the chair he’d assigned himself (Father’s leather armchair, naturally). “Economies must be made. Serious ones.”

“Well, I suppose we could do without a housemaid,” I suggested.

He regarded me across the expanse of Father’s desk with a mixture of pity and contempt. “You don’t seem to understand,” he said, carefully enunciating every word.

“The under-gardener too, then,” I offered, though I was loathe to lose garden staff. “Perhaps the butler?”

Beside me, Aunt El made a mortified noise, quickly strangled with a harsh cough.

Edgry closed his eyes as his face steadily reddened. His blood-sausage fingers clenched his lapels. I had the disturbing sense he was trying very hard not to throttle me. He slowly rose, looming over me.

“The housemaid must go, and the under-gardener, and the butler, and the house!” He snatched a handful of bills and waved it at me. “Don’t you understand? You can’t afford any of it. Your Father lost it all. You have nothing.”

Those words—you have nothing—somehow penetrated the cocoon I’d been sheltering in. They tore right through it—riiiiip—and light and air flooded in, stripping the last comforting threads away and shaking, slapping me awake. Everything was too loud and too bright: the tweeting of the robins in the stone birdbath just outside hammered at my skull, and the brilliant blue of the morning glories stung my eyes.

Something began expanding in my chest, ballooning so massively it would surely blow me to pieces. Instead, it traveled upward into my throat and came out not as tears, as expected, but as hysterical laughter.

Edgry was so startled he leaned away, as if he thought I might suddenly be a danger to him. Aunt El, in horror, hissed: “Astra, control yourself!”

And then the tears came. I’d laughed hard enough for my sides to hurt, but the laughter vanished just as soon as it had come, and I exploded into loud, messy sobs that utterly defeated the handkerchief Aunt El shoved toward me.

“H-how could this happen?” I gasped. “How?”

“Millions of people all over the world are asking themselves that question.” Edgry pushed away from the desk and paraded angrily around the room. “The fact of the matter is, Astra, your Father, God rest him, was a fool. No sense at all, that man. And then of course he started to get desperate when your mother—”

Another noise from Aunt Elinor interrupted him—a bizarre sound this time, like a goose being throttled while playing a trumpet. Edgry glanced at her, then cleared his throat and pressed on, circumnavigating the room as he spoke.

“Well, you know how it is. Plenty out there in the same pickle you’re in, my dear. At least you still have something of worth.” He waved his arm at the walls as he came to a stop at the window overlooking the garden. After a few moments’ silence, he turned to me, hands clasped behind his back, and said, “The best thing you can do is to sell up. Go live with your aunt and cousin, pay off the debts, and put away anything left.”

Aunt El stifled another cough and agreed. “Yes, of course you must come stay with Toby and me.” Though I could practically see her calculating the cost of housing another person.

“Sell Hensley?” With everything that had happened, I would lose my home as well? Leave the echoes of my parents behind and let them become the property of strangers? And that was even assuming I could sell it. I didn’t know anyone who was buying places like Hensley. Most people were getting rid of them. “I’m not selling the house. The Davieses have been here for a century. My mother built those gardens.” I gestured to the flowery expanse beyond the French windows. “There must be something else I can do.”

I grabbed a ledger and scanned it, wishing I’d been better prepared for this sort of thing. But my governess had said, “What does a girl need sums for? You’ll scare off your suitors.” And Mother had smiled and promised to teach me what I needed to know “when the time came.” Had that time not come and gone? I was twenty-three years old—what had she been waiting for?

“What’s this?” I asked, pointing to an entry for Vandemark Rubber. It looked like the only thing in the ledger that didn’t have a minus sign next to it.

Edgry huffed and flopped back down into the chair. “I told your father not to get mixed up in that, but he never listened to me,” he said. “‘Helping a friend,’ he called it, and gave that fool enough money to buy a twenty-five percent stake in the company.”

“Well, it couldn’t have been such a bad idea,” I pointed out. “It’s making money.”

His face darkened. “Not for long, I’m sure. It’s owned by the Ponsonby-Lewises.”

My cousin, Toby, who up until now had been content to recline on a sofa and watch the show, groaned.

“There’s nothing wrong with the Ponsonby-Lewises, Tobias!” his mother snapped. “They’re a fine family. And sit up like an adult, for heaven’s sake!”

“They aren’t fine at all, Mums,” Toby countered, slowly rising and giving me a pitying look. “They’re an old family, and that’s not the same thing. I knew their son and believe me: this is a family whose tree hasn’t branched enough.”

“What are some of these others, then?” I asked, again turning to the ledger and hoping for a miracle. “Who’s this Clarence Ha—”

“Never mind that. It was something that didn’t work out, just like the rest of them.” Edgry snatched away the ledger and snapped it shut. After tucking it away in his satchel, he folded his hands over his belly and glared at me.

“If you’re determined to be foolish about this and hold onto the place, you’ll have to let it to someone,” he said. “You don’t have the money to keep it up; you can hardly even pay the servants. Your father was about to start mortgaging it just to keep you all afloat. Get a tenant until you can find a man who can afford to help you keep it.”

Even through my confusion, I resented that last bit. Was it so outrageous that I find a way to keep up my own house?

And so, the house was let. I was surprised, given the state of things, that we found someone. But though millions suffer, there will always be some people with money. The one we found was a flash theatrical producer who wanted his family out of London so he could continue his affair with a promising young actress from the chorus line of Rio Rita.

“They agreed to a generous price,” Edgry told me in a tone that still indicated disapproval. “Between that and what comes in from Vande-mark Rubber, you should have an income of around a thousand pounds a year. Do try not to spend it all on hats, will you?”

So, to London, with its tarry air stinking of motor oil, coal, and manure. London, with its cacophony of noise: the clatter and crash of traffic and trains, tooting horns and bleating whistles, bellowing newsboys and beggars and buskers—all clamoring for money and attention. Streets that darkened prematurely, hiding tramps and pickpockets hovering just outside the ghostly ring of light cast by globe-shaped lamps.

To Aunt El’s house on Gertrude Street, one in a row of staid, respectable homes. White stucco on the ground floor and brick above. Inside: decor that had been very popular the year Prince Albert died.

I arrived on a clammy day in November and took in my new surroundings: the saints and crosses, threadbare carpets, heavy furniture, and light-smothering draperies. And I thought, I need to go home.

But to go home, I needed money.

How far would a thousand pounds a year stretch? What did I need? What could I trim and set aside? It had taken this disaster for me to realize I didn’t know what the simplest things cost. And I needed to know because economies, as Edgry had said, would have to be made. So the day after my arrival, I sat down and, using one of Mother’s account books as a sort of guide, attempted a budget. Two hours later, this was what I had:

Income: £1,000/year 

Projected Expenditures:

Lady’s Maid: £65–100

Clothes:

Entertainment: free, with the right friends Card games: £100–200 (?)

Travel: variable

Just like Edgry’s ledgers, Mother’s accounts were a mystery to me: pages and pages of pounds and pence and who was paid and who was owed, but nothing to suggest money was coming in. How was she paying for these things? And what were some of them? I puzzled over entries for something called “Rosedale”: the rather princely sum of 50 pounds paid promptly the first of every month, going back as far as the ledger did. It was nearly the only thing paid on time. And more recently, “Dr. H” appeared, accompanied by amounts so large my stomach actually knotted.

But that was the least of it. There were huge sums that I knew could be attributed to me. To the things I needed to be a fashionable young lady. Dressmakers and travel expenses and gifts for friends who were get-ting married or having babies. I almost cried at the sight of them. Where to even begin?

As I gaped at the ledger, Toby strolled in, glanced at my work (if you could call it that), tsked, and commented, “Grim stuff, old girl.” He patted me on the shoulder and eased over to the window to claw back the layers of curtains and starched net. A feeble finger of sunlight penetrated the gloom for all of ten seconds before retreating behind a passing cloud.

Toby sighed and turned his attention to the sofa, pummeling cushions that, under the pressure of nearly half a century’s worth of bottoms, had redistributed most of their plump to the outermost edges, as if the stuffing were trying to flee.

“You may,” he continued, “have to start buying your frocks from the shops. And—dare I say it?—you might need to trade your holiday in Cannes for a week in Biarritz instead.” He tossed me a cheeky smile before giving up on the sofa assault and stretching across the cushions with a wince.

“Hardly the time for jokes!” I rubbed my forehead as the deep pulsations of an impending headache began. How much did aspirin cost? Could I still afford headaches?

“Au contraire, my dear. The bleak times make for the best jokes. Gallows humor and all that. Something about dreadful situations brings out the cleverness in people.”

“Not me.” I put my pen aside and slumped in the chair, feeling defeated.

“Oh, give it time, darling. Once the dust has settled, I’m sure you’ll come up with something.” Toby drew a tortoiseshell cigarette case from his pocket and scrutinized the contents before selecting one.

“I’ll have to, won’t I?” I said, shaking my head as he offered me the case. 

“No, thank you. A whole one will make me jittery. I’ll draw off yours.”

Toby’s eyebrows rose. “You’re lucky I’m a generous soul.” He struck a match, lit the cigarette, took a drag, and leaned back, eyes closed, slowly exhaling the smoke. He smiled, a private, satisfied sort of smile and then handed the cigarette to me. I took a quick puff and returned it.

Toby mournfully shook his head as he accepted the cigarette. “You have to learn to appreciate things.”

“You know how your mother feels about girls smoking,” I reminded him, glancing toward the door to make sure Aunt Elinor hadn’t suddenly appeared, summoned by sin. “And that’s just what I need—to have her toss me out.”

“Nonsense, Mother would never do that. Throwing over the orphaned niece would put her hopelessly behind in the sainthood stakes.” Toby took another careful drag of the cigarette and began absently rubbing his left knee. “You’re assured of a roof over your head for the time being, at least.”

“But not the roof I want. How can I find enough money to save Hensley when I don’t so much as know the cost of a hairpin?”

“It’s less than a thousand pounds. You should be safe there.”

“But what about everything else? It’s not the individual things—it’s all of it together. And just look at this! I’m hopeless.” I waved the budget in the air, then tossed it back onto the writing desk and began attacking the fire with the poker. Angry sparks shot upward and out, spattering and hissing on the hearth.

Toby sat up and eased away before he got singed. “There, there,” he soothed. “No need to burn the house down over it. Why don’t you do as Edgry said and find a nice, rich young man to marry you? I’m sure you could find someone. You’re not so decrepit.”

“Oh thank you very much. But I’ve reviewed my current offerings, and they aren’t promising. No, I’ll just have to get myself out of this mess.”

“Well, you might be at risk of a matching, whether you want it or not,” he warned. “Mother’s got plans. She’s been after me to invite friends ’round to throw at you.”

“Bachelors bouncing around like tennis balls,” I groaned.

“And you joyfully swatting them away!” he chortled. “I think that might be rather entertaining. I may sell tickets!”

“Ahh, we’ve found the way to make my fortune at last,” I declared. Then, more seriously, “How long before she starts serving in earnest?”

“I give her fifteen minutes the next time she sees you.”

“Goodness!” I sank back into the armchair. “She is desperate to get rid of me.”

Toby waved his cigarette case. “No. She’s just of the generation that thinks the only thing for a girl to do is to marry well and quickly, before the bloom’s off the rose.”

“If that’s how she feels, then why did she wait so long herself?” Toby struck a match and lit the cigarette. “She was waiting for the right man to sweep her off her feet.”

We laughed, both at the idea of Aunt El being swept and of pliant, colorless Augustus Weyburn doing the sweeping. My uncle’s death had probably been the most dramatic thing to ever happen to him, and even then he went as quietly as he lived: choking to death on a grape. Poor man.

Toby gave me the cigarette, and I puffed away for a moment, thinking.

“There is Vandemark Rubber,” I mused. “That’s something. I spoke with Mr. Ponsonby-Lewis, and he said the business was going quite well. They make tires, he said, and they’ve got an exclusive contract with Mr. Porter to supply his automobile factory.”

“Not sure I’d take P-L senior’s word for it,” Toby warned. “He’s a bit . . . off. A few years ago he got it into his head to create a line of green chickens, and when breeding them that way didn’t work, he just had his flock dyed.”

I paused. “All right, he may be a bit eccentric,” I allowed. “But he seemed confident. Maybe I could work on Mr. Porter. Convince him to increase his order or something. I could charm him.”

Toby chuckled. “Yes, I daresay you could.”

I stood and examined myself in the spotty mirror over the fireplace, assessing my qualities. I was fortunate as far as looks went. Like both of my parents, I was tall and willowy, with Father’s dark eyes and heart-shaped face and Mother’s chestnut-colored hair. It fell to just below my ears, in carefully arranged waves and pin curls. My lips could, perhaps, be a little rounder, but lipstick could fix that.

I sighed. Was this all I could do? Become someone’s decorative wife or simper to an old man?

In disgust, I threw the remains of the cigarette into the fire, watch-ing the coals eagerly consume the last of it. “It isn’t fair, Toby, that things should be so hard.” I turned and leaned against the mantelpiece, arms crossed, scowling. “You men can always go out and . . . I don’t know, discover something or build a railway somewhere.”

He laughed. “Can we indeed?”

“You can. And you do. You’re all usefully educated.”

He threw back his head and laughed. “No, my dear, you have it quite wrong: the more expensive the education, the more useless it is. I spent most of my schooldays on Latin verbs, and what good is that? I can assure you, very little has ever been accomplished purely by saying ‘veni vidi vici’ properly.”

“That’s still more than I can do. The sum total of my education was curtseying, music, and penmanship. I know how to properly address a duchess but don’t know the price of a packet of tea.”

“Surely that’s in the ledger somewhere?”

“The thing is practically written in code.” My eyes moved toward it. “You don’t know what ‘Rosedale’ or ‘Dr. H’ are, do you?”

Toby shrugged and shook his head.

“Well, I think they have the Davieses to thank for their holiday in Cannes.”

I turned back to the fire, clutched the mantelpiece, closed my eyes, and silently counted to ten. It was a soothing technique my mother had taught me.

“And if that doesn’t calm you, imagine a flower slowly unfurling,” she’d said.

I heard the flutter of paper as Toby picked up the budget. A moment after, he said, “Perhaps you could do without the lady’s maid.”

I shook my head. “No, I can’t. It’s not respectable for me to travel alone, now I don’t have Mother to accompany me. And every heiress I know got one as soon as she was able. It’ll be a dead giveaway if I don’t have one.”

“Would it? No one cares if a man doesn’t have a valet.” He shrugged and lit another cigarette.

“Of course they do; they just don’t make quite as much of a thing of it. If I don’t have a maid, everyone will start to wonder why, and then they’ll guess I’m hard up.”

Only those with titles and great names to hide behind could be poor and still receive invitations to everything. Others who fell on hard times quietly slipped out of the social circle and were forgot-ten. A family I knew had once owned three mills near Leicester, but they’d shut down, one by one, and then the family had simply disappeared. Sold up and went somewhere without so much as a goodbye. I’d heard the eldest daughter was working as a waitress, but I was sure that couldn’t be true, because Effie was as clumsy as she was stupid. At the time, I hadn’t felt much pity for them—they were a brash and spendthrift lot—but now I was thinking of them a little more kindly. But that was really the best one could hope for: pity. And I would not be an object of pity.

“Suit yourself.” Toby examined me critically. “Probably for the best: you’re starting to look like a woman who does her own hair.” He shuddered.

“Beastly creature!” I lobbed a needlepoint cushion at him. “Make it up to me by helping me persuade your mother this is a good idea. We’ll need to do it soon too. I’ve already placed the advertisement for the post and need to have someone hired by the time I go to Gryden Hall in two weeks.”

“Gryden!” He flinched. “Bit of a mixed blessing, that.”

“I know. But I need to start getting out, and Cecilia’s just dyyyying to see me! That’s how she put it in the letter, too—lots of extra ‘y’s’.”

He chuckled. “Sounds like her. She probably can’t wait to see a friendly face after having been trapped out in the godforsaken countryside with that sister of hers.” Toby gave me a warning look. “Tread carefully, my dear.”

“I can manage Millicent. She’s the least of my worries.”

“It’s not just her you have to worry about. They’ll all be staring you down, all weekend long. Couldn’t you have found a more relaxed event for your return to public life? Weren’t there any drawing rooms at Buckingham Palace?”

“Not a single one. Everyone’s off hunting, the king included.”

He rolled his eyes. “Yes, of course. They’ve all run off to stand around

in the damp and deliver England from the scourge of grouse.” He shuddered again.

“Well, anyway, Cee says that Joyce and David will be there too. It feels like years since I last saw Joyce.”

“Ahh, still married, then? There’s a wager I’ve lost.”

I had run out of cushions to throw, so I just settled for a glare. “Yes, still married, and enjoying it. At least, I haven’t heard any complaints from Joyce, and you know I would have if she had any.”

“She does speak her mind,” he agreed. “Must be the American in her.” The clock on the mantelpiece chimed the hour. “Ahh, teatime. Gird your loins, Mums will be here any moment. But perhaps talk of this lady’s maid will distract her from the bachelors.” He stretched back out on the sofa, grinning.

With a sharp cough and a terse: “Hasn’t Jeffries brought the tea yet?” Aunt Elinor announced her arrival.

“Ahh,” Toby crowed. “Speak of the devil!”

His mother paused in the doorway, the very picture of Severe: spear-straight posture, tightly scraped back dark hair, high-necked, floor-length black dress.

My spine stiffened as soon as I saw her, but Toby drawled: “Afternoon, Mums.”

“Tobias!” his mother gasped. “You’re smoking!” Her hand reflexively clutched the cross she wore around her neck.

“Am I?” He glanced at the cigarette in his hand. “Why, yes, I believe you’re right.”

“You know I abhor smoking, Tobias! The smell never leaves the furniture. Put it out this very moment.” Aunt Elinor sailed over to an armchair and settled on its edge, coughing once more as soon as she had landed.

“Terribly sorry, Mums,” Toby said. “But since the damage has prob-ably already been done, may I finish my ciggie?”

“You may not, and don’t use slang. And sit up straight!”

Toby sighed, handed the cigarette off to me, and hauled himself into a sitting position. I smiled sympathetically as I tossed the cigarette into the fire, resisting the urge to sneak a final drag.

“I’ll be hungry now,” Toby fretted. “Hope Jeffries brings the tea soon.” Right on cue, the door opened and the butler entered, magisterially wheeling a cumbersome tea cart laden with the teapot and a single plate of bread and butter sandwiches. He eased awkwardly around my piano, which had been jammed into the overstuffed room and was already proving a trial for anyone expecting a clear path through the door.

Toby groaned, “Bread and butter! Can’t we have cake or something, Mother?”

“I don’t see why we should eat extravagantly when it’s only the three of us. Plain food is good for the soul, don’t you agree, Astra?”

“I’m sure it is, Aunt Elinor. Nothing like a penitent’s diet to consider one’s sins.”

She pulled out a handkerchief and coughed into it as I began pouring the tea.

“You really should see someone about that cough,” I commented, handing her a cup.

She waved a hand at me even as she coughed again. “Never mind that. Come and sit by me, dear, we need to have a talk.”

Toby raised his eyebrows and looked pointedly at the clock as I took a seat next to his mother. “She’s quick off the mark: that was under five minutes,” he murmured.

Aunt El set her teacup aside, took both my hands, and smiled in a way she probably meant to seem kind, but which actually felt slightly menacing. Smiles did not come naturally to her.

“Now, Astra, it’s been some months since your tragedy, and of course it’s entirely proper that you took plenty of time to mourn your parents. But now you must start considering practical matters. I don’t need to remind you how dire your situation is . . . ”

No, she certainly did not.

“And while I’m content for you to be here, you can’t expect to stay indefinitely.”

“Don’t you feel welcome, my dear?” Toby asked with a half smile. Aunt El continued: “The best thing for a girl in your position is to secure herself a husband.”

“Ah! You see, Astra, what did I tell you?” Toby crowed.

“What are you going on about?” Aunt El asked sharply.

“Nothing at all.” He winked at me and smirked into his teacup.

“Well, there it is, dear,” she said, turning back to me. “Now, since you show no urgency in the matter, despite having been introduced to any number of excellent young men, it seems to have fallen to me to find someone suitable.” She sighed, as though put out by this inconvenience.

I tried not to look too horrified, but dear lord, what sort of man would Aunt Elinor consider an appropriate life partner? Probably some-one like—God help me—her.

She scowled. “Don’t look at me like that, young lady! You children nowadays think you have all the time in the world to do what you want, but you simply don’t. You must start thinking seriously about this; you’re leaving things rather late.”

“You can’t have it both ways, Mums,” Toby piped up. “Either Astra’s a child or she’s socially ancient. You have to choose one.”

“It’s foolish of you to sit by and expect suitable men to keep appear-ing,” Aunt El told me, ignoring her son. “All of your friends are starting to snap them up. Why not Lord Beckworth? His mother’s gone off to France, and now I hear the poor man’s quite lonely.”

“He can get a Labrador, then,” I suggested tersely. “What does he need me for?”

“I wouldn’t subject an animal as intelligent as a Labrador to life with Ducky,” said Toby. “I think they have laws now against animal cruelty.”

“There’s nothing wrong with Lord Beckworth, Tobias!” his mother snapped.

“Nothing at all, Mums. But mark my words: when we were at school he definitely wasn’t one of the finest minds of his generation, and, like this sofa, he hasn’t improved with age. No, Mums, keep your desperate bachelors: nobody’s good enough for our Astra.” Toby made a gallant half bow, twirling a sandwich in the air. I giggled.

“For heaven’s sake, Tobias, be serious!” Aunt Elinor snapped. “There must be some friend of yours Astra hasn’t been introduced to yet.”

“If she hasn’t been introduced to him, there’s probably a very good reason.”

“Oh, come now, they can’t all be idiots,” she huffed.

“Of course they are, Mother. But they’re the finest idiots in Britain. One must have standards.”

“You’re being deliberately difficult,” she snarled.

Toby shrugged. “Maybe Astra doesn’t want to be married.”

“Of course she wants to be married. What else is there for her to do?” 

“I’ve been thinking about that,” I said. “I’m trying to work some things out, just . . .” I went and picked up the ledger. “You don’t know what Rosedale is? Or Dr. H?”

Somehow, she managed to stiffen further. “Never mind about any of that,” she said in a tone so chilly I actually shivered. “We have important matters to settle. My friend Mrs. Jeffries has a box at that new Noel Coward play next weekend. I’ll ask her to invite you and Lord Beckworth along. And you’ve accepted Lady Cecilia’s invitation to Gryden Hall?”

“I have,” I confirmed warily.

“Good. I’m sure there’ll be some worthwhile young men there. Lord Hampton wouldn’t miss out on that shooting. He was so solicitous after your parents’ funeral. I’m sure you could make some inroads if you just tried.”

Toby shook his head. “Mustard’s spoken for, mother,” he informed her. “Jossie Bfyddlye told me all about it last week.”

“What?” she cried, aghast. “Lord Hampton engaged? That can’t be correct, I would have heard.”

“It only just happened, Jossie said. But he had it right from the horse’s mouth after Mustard had one drink too many. He never could keep secrets, old Mustard. Not when he’s spifflicated, anyway.”

“Who’s the lucky girl?” I asked, pleased for Hampton.

“Belinda Avery.”

“What? Lord and Lady Crayle’s girl?” Aunt El exploded. “That plain little bit of nothing! What an absolute waste of a coronet!” She bit a sandwich in half with such rage I was sure she imagined it was Belinda’s head.

“I say good for him,” I declared. “She’s a nice girl, and that’s just what he needs.” I didn’t want Hampton anyway, despite his future dukedom. He was sweet, but he wasn’t for me.

Aunt El sighed and raised her eyes skyward, clenching the cross once again. Having evidently prayed for patience, she released the cross and leveled her eyes at me. “Now, Astra, about Lord Beckworth . . . ”

“I promise I’ll give him some serious thought if you agree to just one thing.”

Her eyes narrowed to slits. “What’s that?”

“Allow me to hire a lady’s maid.”

I braced for her reaction. Unsurprisingly, she looked at me as though I’d just proposed something utterly outrageous.

“A lady’s maid! You must be joking!”

“Not a bit. Even the most hard-up people keep personal servants. No man wants to marry a pauper,” I added slyly. “And anyway, the expense won’t be too great. I could probably get one quite cheaply with things the way they are right now.”

“Don’t talk about money, Astra—it’s common,” said Aunt El.

“Astra must have a maid, there’s no question about it,” Toby piped up. “Of course you’d say that,” Aunt El huffed. “You’ve always taken her side.”

“Well, she’s always right. It seems a good policy to back the person who’s always correct. Let her have the maid, Mother. She’s right about it being a dead giveaway if she doesn’t have one—see how frumpy she’s looking lately! No man wants a frump either.”

“I’ll contribute to the cost of her upkeep, of course,” I added. “Shall we say”—I grappled for what seemed a reasonable amount—“two pounds two shillings a month?”

She turned to me in horror. “Two pounds two shillings? What do you intend to feed this person, caviar and Montrachet? One and one should be more than sufficient.”

“One and one it is, then.”

At least now I knew the cost of a bread-and-butter diet. Not much, but certainly a start.

About the Author

Brianne Moore

Brianne Moore is a writer, editor, baker, knitter, and lifelong history lover. Born and raised in Pennsylvania, she spent her childhood spinning tales of bold princesses and brilliant ladies and developing a deep love for British history.

She moved to the glorious, history-soaked city of Edinburgh nearly 10 years ago and felt like she’d finally come home. She now lives by the sea in an East Lothian town with its very own castle with her husband, sons, and bulldog, Isla.

Her debut novel, All Stirred Up, was published by Alcove Press in 2020.

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Salvation Virtual Book Tour

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Historical Fiction / Biographical Fiction

 

Date Published: September 15, 2021

Publisher: TouchPoint Press

No one ever talks about what happened …

Summer 1971, Del Munro, a single mother of four, is struggling to make ends meet when Mother Franklin, a traveling evangelist, offers to take her daughters to the beach in Savannah.

For nine-year-old Willie June and seven-year-old Glory, restless at the end of a long, hot summer in Charlotte, it’s a dream come true. To their beleaguered mother, it’s a much-needed reprieve.

But what seemed like a blessing soon turns into a nightmare when the girls are pressed into service by the morbidly obese Mother Franklin whose needs are as outsized as her ambitions.

When the girls fail to return, Del, evasive about the details of her arrangement with Mother Franklin, panics. People begin to wonder if instead of sending her daughters on vacation, she sold them to the evangelist.

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Excerpt 

 

Luther was Mother Franklin’s driver. At least that’s how he thought of himself. He spent a lot of time waiting around on her; her being so big and all meant she was a slow mover. He’d stand for what seemed like hours waiting for the old woman in one churchyard or another. This time of year, when the grass was brown and crackly and clover was the only thing showing green on the ground, he would kick at it with his shoe, grinding the clover until it disappeared in the red dirt.

That’s what that fat old woman was doing to him.Grinding him down.It wasn’t like she was really paying him.He was just part of her—what’d she call it?—retinue. My driver. A plate for my driver, she’d demand and the church ladies always did provide. It wasn’t begging. But it was charity. What he’d like was a little cash in his pocket. Even when they pulled into a filling station she’d get the bills out of her black square of a pocketbook and not let go of them ’til he was done pumping. Two dollars, she’d bawl in her wheezy old voice, and not a drop more!

Even though technically the station wagon wasn’t his, Luther watched over it like a jealous lover, noticing every little hint of trespass—fingerprints on the windows, mud on the floor, crumbs. He kept a little whisk broom under the driver’s seat and a red rag, worn soft, that he folded in half and then in thirds and tucked up under the visor. Every time they stopped for gas, he swept the floorboard on the driver side and wiped down the dash. When Mother Franklin was doing her business, he’d whisk her side of the car as well.

He was sure this dust-covered, paneled wagon would do better if they just filled it up to the top of the tank every once and again.He wasn’t anything more than a shade tree mechanic but he knew where to poke around under the hood and it was looking like there were going to be some serious problems soon enough.

About the Author

Avery Caswell

Avery Caswell is an award-winning writer whose debut novel, Salvation, will be published on September 15, 2021. Her previous work includes a collection of short stories, MOTHER LOAD, which Kirkus called “stunning” and LUCK: A COLLECTION OF FACTS, FICTION, POETRY & INCANTATIONS, which Lee Smith said was “a feast for the eyes, the intellect, and the imagination.” She studied at Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Duke Writers’ Workshop, and holds MFAs in Creative Writing and Design.

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Apricot Marmalade Blitz

 

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Historical Fiction, Humor

 

 

Published: July 2021

Publisher: ‎Page Publishing

A satirical romp through 1968 Thailand follows a team of US intelligence agents matching wits with enemy operatives.

It was 1968 and the war was not going well. The surprisingly-effective Tet Offensive in January had humbled and embarrassed the South Vietnamese and their American allies. It had sent a powerful message to the folks back home that this Vietnam thing wasn’t going to be over anytime soon. Americans in general were growing weary of its intrusion into their living rooms every evening on the six o’clock news.

Meanwhile in Bangkok, Thailand, just a stone’s throw from the battlefields, the special agents assigned to the 187th Military Intelligence Detachment, the US Army’s counterespionage arm, are dealing with the war and its implications for the rest of Southeast Asia in their own way. They dress in civilian clothes and carry credentials while performing counterintelligence investigations and surveillance of suspected enemy agents. As a group, they are an unruly and undisciplined lot whose often humorous attempts to carry out their assignments and stay out of trouble rarely succeed. The tone of this book has been compared to that of the classics “MASH” and “Catch 22.”

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About The Author

Lon Orey

Lon Orey served in Military Intelligence in the late sixties. Much of that time was spent in Bangkok, Thailand, after studying the language for a year at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California. While this is a work of fiction, the framework within which the story is told reflects his real-world observations of the country and the various intelligence services operating there, as enhanced by a fertile imagination. Those intelligence services included the CIA, the KGB, and Thailand’s own intelligence agency, AFSC. He had fun writing this book, with tongue planted firmly in cheek, and he hopes you will have fun reading it.

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