Emmeline

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Emmeline Page 12

by Jennifer Moore


  Her words cut off when the door opened and Dahlia Lancaster herself burst into the library.

  The four ladies stared, and Miss Kirby fell silent.

  Miss Lancaster’s eyes were frantic as she looked from woman to woman and finally rested her gaze on her cousin. “Oh, Elizabeth, here you are.” Her shoulders slumped, and her voice came out as a whine. “Oh, whatever am I to do?”

  Miss Miller blinked and put the broadsheet behind her back. “Cousin, this is the library. Surely you’ve made a mistake. Your friends—”

  “Friends!” Miss Lancaster’s voice was dangerously close to a shriek. “How can you call them my friends?” She rushed across the room and dropped onto the sofa, burying her face against the arm and sobbing.

  Sophie could guess what the others were thinking as they looked between one another and then at their weeping intruder: Why was the young lady alone? Sophie didn’t think she’d ever seen her without Prissy and the rest of their group of close friends, the Darling Debs—Sophie had bestowed the nickname for the group in her articles, and just like the West End Casanovas, the name had been adopted happily by those it referred to—so where were the other ladies? And even more pressing and bewildering questions arose: Why wasn’t Miss Lancaster in the ballroom for the announcement of her engagement? What had happened?

  Miss Miller folded the broadsheet and set it on the side table, then sat beside her cousin, putting an arm around her shoulders, and voiced Sophie’s thoughts. “Cousin, whatever is the matter? Where is Lord Ruben? Shouldn’t you be—?”

  “He’s marrying Lorene.” Miss Lancaster’s voice was muffled as she spoke against the sofa arm.

  “I don’t . . .” Miss Miller glanced at the others. “What do you mean, dear?”

  Miss Lancaster lifted her head and wiped tears from her cheeks. Her eyes were red. “Lord Ruben, my Lord Ruben, is engaged to Lady Lorene Stanhope. The marquess announced it just now.”

  Sophie and Miss Thornton gasped.

  Miss Miller put a hand to her mouth.

  Miss Kirby watched Miss Lancaster thoughtfully.

  “Had you any idea?” Miss Miller said after a lengthy and rather uncomfortable pause.

  Miss Lancaster shook her head. “None. He . . . we . . . I thought we . . . that I . . .” Her lip quivered and her face crumpled. She laid her head back on her arms and cried.

  Though not titled, Dahlia Lancaster’s family was old and wealthy, and all of Society considered her to be not only the most beautiful debutante but also the most accomplished. That she would be Lord Ruben’s wife had been taken for granted. Sophie’s heart sank. Even though Miss Lancaster certainly wasn’t one of her favorite people, she couldn’t imagine the humiliation the young lady must have endured standing in the ballroom while the engagement was announced.

  “Those arrogant Casanovas.” Miss Miller scowled.

  “I am sorry, Miss Lancaster,” Miss Kirby said.

  Sophie sat in a leather wing chair on one side of the couch. Miss Thornton, from her matching chair on the other side, lifted a hand as if she might pat Miss Lancaster’s head, but lowered it again. She bit her lip, and her expression mirrored the others’ confusion at how to console the young lady.

  Miss Lancaster spoke after a long bout of weeping. “I don’t understand. What am I to do now?” She took Miss Miller’s offered handkerchief and dabbed at her eyes, sniffling. “My heart is shattered, and I . . . I simply can’t go on.” She choked on a sob. “I just can’t.”

  “You most certainly can.” Miss Miller sat taller and spoke in a commanding voice. “The world will not end because you do not marry Lord Ruben.”

  Miss Lancaster twisted the handkerchief in her hands. “But how could he do this? He loves me.”

  “Men of his rank do not always have the privilege of marrying for love,” Miss Thornton said in a gentle voice.

  “Perhaps it is best that you found out now what sort of man he is, instead of once you were married,” Miss Kirby offered.

  Miss Lancaster glanced at her and then shook her head. “I shall never marry,” she said in a small voice. “Not after this.”

  Sophie winced. The young lady’s reputation should remain intact, but Dahlia Lancaster’s name and humiliation would certainly be on everyone’s lips. A scandal indeed.

  The poor woman sighed. She looked down at the handkerchief she was twisting and, noticing a ruby bracelet on her wrist, she loosened it and slipped it over her hand. “He gave the very same bangle to Lorene. He has . . . they’ve kept their relationship secret. She was my dearest friend, and he . . .” Her lip quivered, but this time a spark of anger lit her eyes.

  Sophie recognized the look. Frustration at knowing one was powerless to change her situation was all too familiar.

  Miss Miller took the bracelet and studied it, shaking her head.

  Sophie’s stomach was heavy with discouragement. All of these women wanted something different from the hand they’d been dealt, and all felt powerless to do anything about it.

  “Well”—Miss Miller handed back the bracelet—“this could be a good opportunity.”

  “Yes,” Sophie agreed. “You have a chance to do something new, to focus on yourself and your own ambitions.”

  Miss Lancaster folded the wrinkled handkerchief in her lap and gave a delicate snort. “Ambitions? For the last two years my entire objective was to marry Ruben, and now . . .”

  “Now you can stop worrying about him,” Miss Miller said. “You can do whatever you wish. Set a new course, become a new person, if you’d like.”

  “I don’t have . . . I’ve never . . .” Miss Lancaster’s porcelain forehead wrinkled.

  “Well, we shall do it with you, shan’t we, ladies?” Sophie looked at the others, raising her brows meaningfully. She hoped they would catch on and join in to bolster Miss Lancaster’s spirits. “I propose we each declare an objective we hope to accomplish.”

  “A marvelous idea.” Miss Miller took her cousin’s hand and gave a

  firm nod.

  “I have an ambition,” Miss Kirby said. “I, Vivian Kirby, should like to complete my steam-engine model and enter it for display in the International Exhibition of Industry and Science.”

  Sophie blinked, both surprised at the woman’s words and the confidence behind them. She’d never heard of a woman entering the International Exhibition. An ambitious objective indeed.

  “Excellent, Miss Kirby,” Miss Miller said.

  She gave a small smile and tipped her head. “Please, call me Vivian.”

  Miss Miller replied with a nod and took Vivian’s hand. “I, Elizabeth Miller, wish to open a finishing school for young ladies of underprivileged upbringings.”

  Sophie’s heart raced as she scooted off her chair to kneel in front of the sofa. She took Vivian’s free hand in hers, looked at each of the women, and took a breath. A solemn feeling came over her, as if she were making a vow. They were really doing this. They were taking charge of their lives. What had begun as simply a gesture to console Miss Lancaster had become something real. She let her breath out slowly. “I, Sophie Bremerton, would like to report a real story—something important that must be uncovered, for which I must review sources and verify facts. I want to be an actual newsagent.”

  Vivian smiled in approval, and Elizabeth nodded.

  The ladies turned to Miss Thornton.

  “Have you a goal?” Elizabeth asked.

  Miss Thornton came to kneel beside Sophie, taking her hand. She glanced at the others and took a breath, looking nervous. “I, Hazel Thornton, hope to finish nursing school, to achieve nurse probationer status.”

  Sophie squeezed Hazel’s hand.

  “Very good,” Elizabeth said in a tone that reminded Sophie the young lady was a teacher. She turned to her cousin. “Now, Dahlia, it is your turn.”

  Dahlia looked down at her
hands. “I really cannot think of anything.”

  “You are to inherit your father’s company,” Elizabeth said. “Your goal could be to understand the management of the business.”

  “That sounds very worthwhile,” Hazel said.

  “It certainly does,” Vivian agreed.

  Sophie nodded. As an only child, Dahlia Lancaster would be one of the first women of means to benefit from the recently passed Married Women’s Property Act. Her inheritance would remain her own, even after she married.

  Dahlia glanced at her cousin. “I suppose such learning could be advantageous.”

  “Do not merely suppose,” Elizabeth said, giving an encouraging nod.

  Dahlia frowned and, for a moment, looked as though she would argue. But as her gaze moved to each of the women, her lips pressed together and her expression cleared in determination. She sat up straight and took Hazel’s hand, completing the circle. “I, Dahlia Lancaster, will work to understand the bookkeeping, operations, and management of the steamship company I am to inherit.”

  The air in the Marquess of Molyneaux’s library seemed to thicken as the women sat in silence. Sophie felt her wish turn into something concrete, and a surge of confidence in her own abilities grew within her. She looked at the other women, feeling their hopes and strength join together. Her skin tingled. She could do this. They all could. And none would have to do it alone.

  “It is settled, then.” Elizabeth’s voice sounded much quieter than before.

  “When shall we meet to report our progress?” Vivian asked in her practical manner.

  “The next ball?” Sophie suggested. “Lord Everston has a fine library.”

  Hazel smiled, and Vivian nodded.

  Elizabeth looked at her cousin.

  Dahlia hesitated, but after a moment, she nodded as well. The shadow of a smile pulled at her lips. “Shall we gather in the library at midnight?”

  Once the time and place had been agreed on, Elizabeth clasped her hands together. “We shall do remarkable things this year, make ourselves into remarkable people, and none of us will need to rely on marriage to make it happen.”

  Dahlia’s eyes went wide. “Elizabeth, be careful. Such talk is dangerous.”

  Elizabeth smirked. “I should hope so.” She lifted her chin dramatically and pointed at the ceiling. “And we shall call ourselves the Dangerous Bluestocking Sisterhood. I like the sound of it. Positively scandalous.”

  Vivian patted Elizabeth’s arm. “Perhaps it is a bit too . . . controversial.”

  Dahlia nodded. “To say the least.”

  Elizabeth looked as if she would argue with her cousin but stopped when Hazel cleared her throat.

  The shy woman glanced at the others hesitantly. “In India the orchid represents femininity.” She smiled at Elizabeth. “And there is a blue variety of the flower.”

  “I have never seen one; it must be very rare,” Sophie added.

  “To the ancient Greeks, deep blue symbolized strength and bravery,” Vivian added. “A blue orchid, therefore . . .” She spread a hand in front of her, as if leaving the others to deduce the meaning for themselves.

  “Blue orchid,” Elizabeth said slowly, tapping her lip with her forefinger. “It’s perfect.” She grinned.

  “I like it.” Hazel smiled.

  “I do as well,” Dahlia said, glancing at the others and for the first time looking a bit excited.

  Vivian and Elizabeth nodded.

  “Then, ladies,” Sophie said, “we shall officially be the Blue Orchid Society.”

  TO READ MORE CLICK HERE

  Other Books By Jennifer Moore

  Regency Romance

  Becoming Lady Lockwood

  Lady Emma’s Campaign

  Miss Burton Unmasks a Prince

  Simply Anna

  Lady Helen Finds Her Song

  A Place for Miss Snow

  Miss Whitaker Opens Her Heart

  Miss Leslie’s Secret

  The War of 1812

  My Dearest Enemy

  The Shipbuilder’s Wife

  Charlotte’s Promise

  The Blue Orchid Society

  Emmeline

  Solving Sophronia

  Stand-Alone Novellas

  “The Perfect Christmas” in Christmas Treasures

  “Let Nothing You Dismay” in Christmas Grace

  “Love and Joy Come to You” in A Christmas Courting

 

 

 


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