A School for Brides (6 page)

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Authors: Patrice Kindl

BOOK: A School for Brides
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“Indeed?” said Mr. Crabbe. “You interest me.” And withdrawing a monocle on a gold chain from his pocket, he screwed it into his eye, the better to observe Miss Asquith as she pilfered the slice of bread and honey from Miss Franklin's plate behind that young lady's back and began to eat it with an abstracted air.

5

AS THE SCHOLARS
of the Winthrop Hopkins Academy made the acquaintance of Mr. Arbuthnot's friends, one of their number was absent on a daily errand.

“Letter for you, Miss.
Again!

Miss Millicent Pffolliott blushed as she took the missive from Mrs. Hodges at the post office, feeling certain that the old lady's sharp eyes could see right through the envelope. For Miss Pffolliott had a secret, and feared exposure above all things. The secret required that she volunteer to walk to the post office every day without fail to intercept the mail. The excuse she gave was the need of exercise—“I cannot lace my corset! I am growing stout!” This was nonsense, but since it meant that a servant need not be sent, her instructors were willing to allow her this indulgence.

Sometimes she thought her secret a glorious one, and sometimes she thought it dreadful; the feelings it aroused reminded her of the experience of jumping from the hayloft in the barn at her grandmother's house as a child: one moment of glorious flight followed by a sickening crash and a broken leg.

Like many of the students' at the Winthrop Hopkins Academy, Miss Pffolliott's had been a solitary childhood. Her mother had died in childbirth after a hasty and ill-advised marriage, a marriage that made her grandmother's mouth go tight and grim whenever it was mentioned. Within moments of her mother's death, her father had sent his infant daughter away to be cared for by his wife's family, and then seemed to forget her existence. He was reported to be charming, gay, and expensive in London, Bath, and the great cities of the Continent, but had never shown his face in unfashionable Scunthorpe, where his daughter was being raised. Miss Pffolliott could not even spin the fantasies of a lonely child round his portrait miniature, for she did not possess one. All she had of him was one letter, much read and reread, sent on the occasion of her sixth birthday, which exhorted her to be a good girl and to obey her grandfather (who had in fact succumbed to apoplexy three years earlier).

When her grandmother contracted the last illness of her life, she had enrolled Miss Pffolliott in the newly established Winthrop Hopkins Academy, dying but a few weeks later. Evidently, having foreseen her own demise, she had wished to provide some structure for her grandchild, knowing the girl's father would not. Before sending her away she said, “Now, Millie, your grandfather wrote his will so that your father cannot claim a penny of our money. Mr. Trevelyan”—the lawyer—“will be constrained by the terms of the will, and neither you nor he will be legally able to make over
any
funds to your father. So if the rogue ever contacts you, remember that! You cannot give him money even if you wish to.”

However, after her grandmamma's death she did not see nor hear from her father himself. She did hear from his lawyer, who directed her to write to him in the event she needed to contact her father, and that was all. Hers had been a life lacking in correspondence; she could count the letters she had received in seventeen years on the fingers of one hand.

And now, quite unexpectedly, there were a great many letters, and from a secret admirer.

They had begun two months after she had arrived at the school. The first came addressed in an unfamiliar feminine hand, and purported to be from an aunt on her father's side. So little did she know of the man that she might have possessed any number of such aunts without being cognizant of it, so she accepted the letter with simple pleasure and sat down to read it openly and without disguise.

After that brief paragraph, however, the handwriting altered to a man's vigorous script, explaining that the introduction had been written by a friend at his especial request. The true purpose of the letter was to state his unrestrained esteem and approbation.

You do not know me—may I call you my dear Miss Pffolliott?—yet I know you. At last I cannot refrain from telling you how much I admire and respect you. Your lovely face, your delicate, graceful form, that intelligent eye and placid brow that promise such riches of mind and heart! I can only beg you to forgive me for addressing you in this manner, without permission from your guardians.

The last line read:
I shall write again, and can but hope you will forgive my audacity to the extent that you will not burn my message unread.
It was signed
Your Humble Servant
.

As the letter had no return address, she was unable to reply and ask the gentleman to apply to her father before writing again. That she ought not to be receiving such missives without his knowledge she knew very well, but how could she approach such an intimate subject with a man she had never met and whose address she did not even know?

When the next letter arrived, she nearly wept with vexation, realizing that her proper course was, in fact, to burn it unread.

Yet
that
also seemed out of her power. No one ever had said such things to her before; she had never dreamt that such things
could
be said to her. Her grandparents had discouraged any feminine vanities, believing that her mother's rash marriage and early death were entirely due to an appetite for admiration and flattery. They were unwilling to give any praise for her personal attractions beyond a grudging “You would do well enough, if only your hands were cleaner and your hair tidier.”

To be called lovely, delicate, graceful! Miss Pffolliott read and reread the words with greedy attention. When her eye fell upon the word
intelligent
, she hesitated and frowned. She was an honest girl, and glimpses in the mirror suggested that she was also a pretty one; but nothing in her observation of life had shown her that she was any cleverer than other girls. However, she reasoned, perhaps the fact that she questioned her own intelligence meant that at least she was more intelligent than those who did not. Beyond this point of deduction her wits would not carry her, and gradually she had begun to take her admirer's evaluation of her worth as the correct one: she was both clever
and
beautiful.

To destroy another letter, which might contain repetitions of those assurances, or perhaps even something new of an admiring nature, was unbearable. In the end she had opened it, and the ones after that, and breathed deep the intoxicating fumes.

“Well? Aren't you going to read your letter, Miss Pffolliott?” Mrs. Hodges's gaze was intent.

Miss Pffolliott blushed again. “I—of course I will, later,” she stammered.

Mrs. Hodges produced a grubby-looking lemon drop and pushed a straight-backed chair toward her. “Have a sweetie, Miss, and take a seat,” she suggested in an insinuating tone. “Rest thyself after that long hot walk—reckon it'll do you good. And you can have a peek at your letter whilst you sit. Is it from your mam and da, then?”

“No, no, thank you, Mrs. Hodges. I—I'll go now. Good-bye!” She made her escape, heart beating loudly in her chest. Mrs. Hodges obviously suspected something and, starved for entertainment in Lesser Hoo, was anxious to pry it out of her. She walked quickly, waiting until she was out of sight of the keen eyes of the postmistress before secreting her own letter in her pocket, away from the half dozen other missives she carried back to the school.

When she arrived, the visitors had departed and the daily routine resumed. In intervals between her lessons, she felt the edge of the paper in her pocket for reassurance that it was still there. Its mere presence was enough to make her speak crossly to Miss Victor when she asked for help with an arithmetic problem. At last, after tea, she had a few moments of leisure alone in her room. She took it out and broke the seal. Carefully unfolding it, she began to read.

I find that I cannot bear the distance between us any longer. I have struggled with myself; I have tried to reconcile myself to merely corresponding with you, never to touch your hand, or to see your lovely face. But I must beg of you—

“Miss Pffolliott! Do come downstairs. Miss Briggs requires a partner for Italian grammar practice.”

With a tiny scream of frustration, Miss Pffolliott tried to shut out the intruding voice.
What?
What must he beg of her? But it was of no use. She had only time to run her eyes over the next half sentence—
tho' well do I know that I am not worthy of such a great
—before she heard running footsteps approaching and she was forced to crush the partially read letter back into her pocket.

She stood and said, “Indeed, Miss Quince, I was just coming.”

Never did a list of irregular verbs last so long. Miss Briggs was unbearably stupid about them; she wandered unhappily amongst the conjugations of
andare
,
cadere
, and
avere
, and had to repeat every variation five or six times before she got it right (“I expect Italy is a perfectly horrid country,” Miss Briggs muttered rebelliously. “If
I
lived in it I should refuse to speak a word!”). And every time Miss Pffolliott moved, the letter in her pocket crackled in the most provoking manner.

But long before she was able to strain her eyes in the guttering light of the last half inch of candle at bedtime to read the remaining words, she had settled in her own mind what promise her secret lover sought to extract from her.

All that remained was for her to decide: would she, in direct violation of the rules of propriety and decorum, without proper supervision or the knowledge of those responsible for her welfare, consent to meet with him? And,
who was he?

The last line of her precious missive read:
Look for me when you least expect me!

Miss Crump, alone in the state bedroom down the hall, was already asleep and dreaming. In her sleep she contracted into yet a smaller and smaller area of the bed, until she became no more than a slight disturbance in the coverings on the northwest corner. She had been given the largest and finest room in the house, but she used so little of the space that she could hardly be said to be occupying it at all. Miss Asquith had on more than one occasion looked longingly at the shining, unused surfaces in this elegant chamber, but when she had ventured to hint to the only-too-obliging Miss Crump that they trade accommodations, Miss Evans had spoken to Miss Asquith quite sharply, and the suggestion was withdrawn.

Miss Crump had also received a letter that day, and reading it had caused her to dream. She dreamt of the governess who had had charge of her from the time she was ten years of age. It was not a comforting reverie on childhood past; in fact, rather the reverse.

“Jane, I want you to do something for me.” In the dream Miss le Strange was sitting in her high-backed chair in the library, the one that made her look like a queen in a fairy tale. Miss Crump's heart turned over and she whimpered a little in her sleep.

“Yes, Miss le Strange,” whispered the dream–Miss Crump.

“I want you to climb to the top of the tower, Jane—”

“Oh no, please, Miss le Strange! Please, not again!”

Miss le Strange leaned back in her chair and regarded the child before her. “Now, Jane, you know we must overcome these foolish fears of yours. And the best way to do that is to
face
them! As I say, I want you to climb to the top of the tower and then, this time, I would like you to get quite up on top of the parapet and
wave your arm
. Wave hard! I shall come out and watch that you do it.”

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