by Aya Ling
I give a huge, dramatic sigh and turn round a corner. Discordant sounds—sounds of hollering and yelling—reach my ears. Before me lies a long, narrow street that’s teeming with people. Judging from the smart yet neat style of their clothes, my guess is they consist mostly of the middle-class.
“Miss?” A pasty-faced young man hands me a yellow pamphlet with black bold printing. “Care to take a look at our campaign?”
I take the paper and almost drop it. The headline reads, The Curse of the Factory System. My report, complete with the twelve interviews, occupies the front page and the next. A few places are edited—I’ve made some spelling and grammatical errors—but all the gruesome, horrifying details are kept intact.
“It’s all over the headlines now,” the young man tells me. “Don’t suppose you’ve read the story of the miserable fate of those children working in factories?”
Of course I have. ‘Cause I wrote it. I look for my name, but it isn’t printed with the report. Only something like “An investigator has visited the factory and conducted a series of interviews…” is revealed in the first paragraph.
At the end of the street, the people are densely packed around an elevated platform. The few men who stand on the stage look familiar—a man turns around and his ponytail reminds me of Godfrey. Actually, it is Godfrey!
“We are here,” Godfrey bellows, “to declare that no more blood shall be shed! We are here to protest that the murderers of our children shall not be allowed to carry on with their killings!”
Cheers rise from the crowd.
“Well said!”
“No more killings!”
Godfrey continues, “You have all read the report, which faithfully records what our little ones have been suffering. Tell me, do you want the future of our kingdom to grow up in this hellhole? Or to not even be able to reach adulthood?”
“NO!” The crowd shouts. A few punctuate their passion with fists raised in the air.
“Do you agree it is murder to work a child more than twelve hours a day?”
“YES!”
“Do you agree a law must be made to prevent more injuries, more killings?”
“YES!”
The other men beside Godfrey—familiar faces I recognize from Mr. Wellesley’s shop—start distributing stacks of paper.
“Then I urge you,” Godfrey shouts, “to sign this petition, so we can convey our fury to the government! Let our voices be heard! Let the cruelty be stopped!”
My eyes fill up. When I wrote the report, I only wanted to do what I could to help. But even then I hadn’t expected the impact would be this big.
As the petitions are circulated and the crowds scramble for pens, another voice comes over the noise.
“Excuse me sir.” A man dressed in an immaculate black suit mounts the stage. “I beg to question the veracity of this report.”
Godfrey regards him with slanted eyes. “What have you to say?”
“Since you ask,” the man says. “How are you to prove that everything written in this report is true? For one thing, all the children are given false names.”
“That is to protect their identities,” Godfrey growls. “A precaution never hurts.”
“Then what of the author?” The man wags his finger. “Is he a coward who writes inflammatory material, yet does not bother to sign his name? If the plight is truly as miserable as you say, then how was the author able to visit the factory and interview so many children in one afternoon, when they’re supposed to be working and there is an overseer to supervise their activities?”
“Are you saying the report is a pack of lies?” Godfrey’s face is now livid.
“I didn’t mean to imply that, sir,” the man says, though his expression is smug. “I only mean to say that the report seems to exaggerate, and that the questions are put, may I say, phrased in a way to incite sympathy for the children.”
Godfrey looks furious. He grabs the man by his collar and growls, “Exaggerated, is it? Why don’t we go down to the factory together and see for yourself?”
“No!” I shout. If Godfrey hits the guy, then it’ll reflect badly on the petition for support. “Don’t hit him, Godfrey!” Then, when heads swerve in my direction, I take a deep breath. “Sir, I can assure you that everything written is true. Because I wrote the report.”
Silence. The pasty-faced man near me drops the stack of pamphlets he’s distributing. Murmurs run through the crowd and some are even laughing.
“A young lady conducting an interview?”
“Is she out of her mind?”
I push through the crowd until I reach the platform. It’s probably a stupid thing to do, but I can’t let this chance slip by. I can’t afford to let seeds of doubt be planted in the audience, just when they’re willing to sign the petitions.
“A little boy I knew died from working in Andrew McVean’s factory. Half of his head and shoulder was crushed from the machine when he rolled beneath it to collect leftover cotton,” I say. A few gasps from the women. “His mother just recovered from a severe illness and has medical bills pending. But there is no compensation. She couldn’t even afford the funeral.” More gasps from the crowd. The man in the black suit looks like he wants to say something, but I send him a glare.
“So I wanted to do something. I could have just done a charitable deed and paid for the funeral, but I know that’s only a temporary solution. I didn’t want more children suffering. So I decided the best way would be to expose the reality to the public.” My heart pounds furiously and my throat itches, but I force myself to continue speaking. “I went to the factory. I knocked out the overseer, Mr. Tolliver, with my umbrella.”
Someone snorts. Although the faces remain sympathetic, many of them also have eyebrows raised. They don’t believe I could take out a full grown man. But I can’t tell them about Krev.
I raise my voice, trying to sound more confident, more strong. “Of course, I didn’t succeed on my first try. It took three beatings on the head and him slipping in the mud.”
A few of them smile. Encouraged, I continue, “Then I told the children to halt the steam power so we could conduct the interviews without the machines running. They were frightened, but also eager to have a respite from working. The older ones were able to talk, but most of them simply fell asleep. That shows how tired they were.
“It’s a horrible place, the factory. It’s so humid and warm that the sweat pours down your back. The air is terrible because there’s a hundred people crammed in one big room with machines running. I don’t think I could stand being in there for one hour, but children about this high—” I gesture at my elbow “and this thin—” I depict a length that the most severe corset can produce, “are forced to work there for at least twelve hours, sometimes up to sixteen, a day. Not to mention at risk of their lives! I saw the machines move like huge, whirling monsters. One wrong move, and you can lose a finger, a limb, or even your head.” I shudder at the memory. “It’s a nightmare,” I add, my voice softening. But since the crowd is practically silent, I’m sure they heard every word.
“I, Katriona Bradshaw, stepdaughter of Earl Bradshaw, swear that everything I’ve said is true. If you have one ounce of sympathy in you, I urge you to help us pass the new bill that reduces the working hours to eight a day. I…I don’t ever want to see a dead child again.”
My courage fails me. I slip off the platform and make my way through the crowd. A few people try to speak to me, but I shake my head and break into a run. Only a brief moment on that platform, and I’m mentally drained. My forehead is damp with cold sweat, my palms slick and moist.
Oh, why did I have to go and behave like an idiot, blabbing my involvement up there? What will the aristocratic circle say when the story gets out? Lady Bradshaw is going to hang me from the chimney!
I didn’t know that retribution was coming for me only a moment later.
THIRTY-ONE
When I left, all I could think about was finding a place less crowded. U
nsurprisingly, I got lost in the maze of streets and alleys. I find myself in an area with a rather dingy-looking pub—this looks a far cry from the fancy shops that Lady Bradshaw dragged us to. Panicking, I look around and try to figure out which way I should go. Just moments earlier, I wanted nothing more than to leave the cramped shoe shop, but now I’d kiss the window panes.
A violent push on my back sends me sprawling on the ground.
“Ow!” My chin and elbows hurt from smacking on the hard surface. I make an effort to get up, but then a boot kicks into my side, right above the hips.
“Meddlesome wrench!” A voice bellows. Still reeling from pain, my gaze follows the boot to the person wearing it. Stout figure, pointy chin, and a scar running down his right arm. Talk about coincidence. The overseer, Mr. Tolliver, towers over me, his eyes bloodshot and burning with rage as he brandishes a bottle in the air.
“Because of you,” Tolliver spits his words like venom, “I’ve lost everything. Everything!” He grabs my arm and yanks me toward him. He reeks of alcohol, his breath sickly and stinking.
I struggle as hard as I can, but his grip is like iron. Still, I twist and squirm—there’s a bottle in his hand, for Gods’ sake! If he cracks it over my head, I’m done for. For a second, a question flashes through my mind: can I actually die in Story World?
“Let me go!” I yell. “Get away from me!”
“Not till I’ve taught yer a lesson,” he snarls, raising his bottle. “Teach yer not to go poking your nose where it doesn’t belong…”
He stops. Like a deflated balloon, he sinks to the ground, unconscious. The bottle hits the ground with a resounding thunk and shatters into several pieces.
It’s Bertram, Edward’s personal attendant with the body build of a gorilla and a sweet face that still has baby fat. Right now, he looks more like King Kong than an angel. There’s this menacing expression on his face as he lowers a meaty fist. I actually take a step backward.
“Lady Kat.” He strides toward me. “My deepest apologies that I didn’t arrive earlier.”
“How did you find me?” I look around, wondering if Edward is also here, but apparently only Bertram has come.
“It’s my day off, lady. I was just having a pint over there,” he nods at the pub, “when I heard someone yelling. Then I thought my heart was going to jump out from my throat. If something happened to you, His Highness would feed my flesh to the dogs. You’re all right, are you not? I’ll take you to the doctor’s right away.”
“I’m fine,” I say, though I can’t repress a shudder when seeing those broken pieces of glass on the ground. “I’ve got to head back though. I was out shopping with my mother and Bianca.”
“Getting a new dress for the ball?” Bertram grins, then wags a finger at me. “You oughtn’t bother, when His Highness is clean swept off his feet. Never saw him so bewitched before, as it was usually the girls throwing themselves at him.”
I choose not to reply.
“Ah, but I’m embarrassing you, ain’t I? Now, let’s get you back before your family starts worrying.” Bertram grabs Mr. Tolliver and slings him over the shoulder like a sack of potatoes. “Got to deliver this scum to the nearest constable. Can’t have him lurking around and attacking you again.”
When we’re back on the main street, I’m relieved to see Bianca and Lady Bradshaw emerging from a jewelry store.
“Thanks a million,” I tell Bertram. “You saved my life today.”
“Don’t mention it, Lady Kat. Soon you’re to be part of the royal family, so I’m just starting my job a bit early.”
I can’t have him blabbing out my relationship with Edward in public, so I quickly thank him again and turn away.
“Katriona!” Lady Bradshaw adjusts her spectacles. “Who’s the young man you were talking to?”
“He appears to be in the prince’s service,” Bianca says, her eyes narrowed. “Since when did you make the acquaintance of a servant of the prince?”
“Oh, so he works for the prince?” I pretend to be confused. “I just dropped my handkerchief and he picked it up for me.” To divert their attention from Bertram, I add, “so did you buy anything that’s fit for a princess?”
Lady Bradshaw sniffs. “Hardly anything worth purchasing is left. It must be the ball. All the young ladies with the means have raided the store.”
I fight to contain a grin. Anything that goes badly for Bianca is a plus for me.
Soon, however, I am back to pacing the floor and trying not to rip my hair out. I still don’t have a plan for leaving the house and embarking on a quest for the fairies. I have no idea how to escape. I can’t engage Van to drive me this time, no matter how I might bribe or threaten him. Not to mention I’m scared of traveling alone. Even though I’m pretty used to Athelia by now, making a week-long journey by myself is pure terror.
What if robbers attack the carriage? What if I’m kidnapped and raped and my corpse is left to rot in some deserted forest?
Geez, Kat. You sure have a morbid imagination.
“Miss Katriona,” Martha pokes her head inside. “Miss Poppy has come to see you.”
One glance at Poppy tells me something is wrong. Her eyes are swollen, and she seems to be fighting back a deluge of tears.
I spring up and make her sit down. “Martha, get her some hot chocolate. With plenty of milk.”
Then I hang up her coat and gloves, find a clean hanky, and pull up a stool facing her.
“Can you tell me what’s wrong?”
One big fat tear rolls down her cheek.
“Is it about Mr. Davenport?”
Her lip quivers and she starts to cry. I just sit still and let her be. When Martha brings the chocolate, I simply put it on the dresser and tell her to shut the door.
“I…I wrote home and told them about Jonathan,” Poppy says, still drying her tears. “Today I got a letter from Papa. He’s FURIOUS, Kat. He says he expected more of me than to develop an attraction for a tradesman. And he’s coming to the capital to take me home.”
“That’s awful.” I pat her on the back. “I’m really sorry to hear about that. I guess because Mr. Davenport isn’t good enough for him?”
“Jonathan is better than any of those rich and titled peacocks I met,” Poppy says fiercely. “I don’t care if he’s only a solicitor. He earns an honest living on his own. Most dukes and earls haven’t worked one day in their lives.”
I’m tempted to pump her hand up and down and yell “You go, girl!” but I just nod. Mentally she has my support, but I can’t ignore practical matters. Mom married Dad due to a fit of wild passion, and look how that turned out.
“Poppy, suppose you two get married. Marriage brings responsibility. There’ll be bills to pay. The house mortgage, water and electri—I mean, water and coal. Three meals a day. And if you have a baby, that’ll mean a lot more bills. Have you thought about those problems?”
Poppy looks impressed. “Kat, you know a lot about housekeeping.”
“Not that much,” I say hastily. “Anyway, did you discuss that with Davenport?”
“He’s calculated everything. We must live modestly, which means I can’t afford to buy a new dress every week, and there’ll be no parties or soirees.”
“And what did you say?”
“‘Thank God for that,’” Poppy said, grinning. “At first I loved going out to the theater and balls, but now I’m tired of the Season and honestly speaking, I’m more used to simple life. I’d rather be asleep at a decent hour than dragging my sore feet to bed at three in the morning.”
“Okay. As long as he’s willing to support you. So when your father arrives, Davenport will try to convince him?”
“I am not sure we can risk it.” Poppy looks down on her hands. “Papa can be an awful tyrant. He wrote that if I can’t marry above my station, then he’ll arrange for me to marry my cousin Wilkie, rather than let an outsider get his paws on my dowry.”
“Your cousin?”
Poppy nods. “Wilki
e isn’t as intolerable as Algernon, but he’s such a bore. He holds no affection for me either, but he’ll take me if Papa tells him to. So I told Davenport that the only way I can avoid Papa and Wilkie is to elope. We’ll go to Ruby Red.”
I almost knock over my mug of hot chocolate. “You’re kidding.”
“What did you say?” Poppy looks confused.
“Er…you can’t be serious.”
“Kat, you are the one who suggested we elope.”
“Yes, but I didn’t really believe that you would listen to me.”
Poppy takes my hand and holds it with both of hers. “Kat, can I ask you a huge favor?”
“If I can help you…of course,” I stammer. She looks so serious.
“Can I ask you to come and be our witness at our wedding?”
I can’t freakin’ believe it. “Me?”
“Because the law now states that the witness in any wedding that takes place in Ruby Red must be a non-native, unless the witness is directly related to the couple. There have been too many people running off to Ruby Red in order to do without parental permission. Davenport asked his friends, but most of them are hard pressed to give up an entire week of work. And then I heard from one of your servants that the late Earl Bradshaw has an estate near Ruby Red…well, I thought maybe you wouldn’t mind taking a trip back.” Poppy bites her lip and knots her fingers on her lap. “Sorry, Kat. I realize it’s a tall order and your mother probably wouldn’t approve—”
“I’ll go.” This offer can’t have come at a better time.
Her eyes go round and wide. “Really, Kat? Positively sure?”
“A trip to the estate sounds nice,” I say, trying not to appear too eager. Seriously, this is my only chance to find the fairy godmother. “I’ve had enough socializing for a while as well. A change of scenery will do me good. So, when do we leave?”
A determined look comes into Poppy’s eyes. “In two days. We must disappear before Papa finds us.”
Excellent.