As they waited their turn before the conductor, Edwina scanned the lobby. Directly across from the entry doors was a high paneled counter that showed remarkable, if grimy, workmanship, manned by a harried elderly clerk passing out brass keys as the passengers signed in. Beside the counter rose a steep staircase that led to a banistered mezzanine off which doors into the upstairs rooms opened. To the right of the entry, an archway opened into a dining area, now deserted in the midafternoon lull, while to the left stood a closed door, which led, judging by the tinkling piano music and loud voices, directly into the reprobates’ saloon.
“She with you?” a voice asked.
Turning, Edwina found the conductor frowning at her, his small, faded blue eyes flicking to Pru, who stood slightly behind her. Edwina read disapproval in his expression and felt her ire rise. “She is.”
The conductor’s lips thinned beneath his bushy gray mustache. “You’ll have to share a room. That all right by you?”
“Of course it’s all right.” Edwina started to add,
and why wouldn’t it be, you pinhead?
when a sharp tug on the back of her coat choked off the angry retort. Pru hated scenes.
The conductor licked the tip of his stubby pencil and squinted at his list. “Names?”
“Edwina Ladoux . . . Brodie. And this lovely lady with me”—ignoring her sister’s warning glare, Edwina swept a hand in her direction—“is my—” Another jerk almost pulled her backward. Before she could recover, Pru stepped forward to say, “Maid. Prudence Lincoln, sir.”
While Edwina coughed, Pru accepted their room assignment, nodded her thanks, and shoved Edwina on into the lobby, where the front desk clerk was directing passengers to their rooms.
“You almost choked me,” Edwina accused, rubbing her throat.
“Hush. People are looking.”
“At my vicious
maid
, no doubt.”
“Welcome, ladies. I’m Yancey.” Showing stained teeth—what few were left, anyway—in a broad smile, the hotel clerk, a grizzled old man with eyebrows as fat as white caterpillars, beckoned them forward. “Room number?”
Before Pru could answer, Lucinda stepped past them and up to the counter. “Room twenty.” Setting her valise on the floor, she gave Pru and Edwina an apologetic smile. “I told the conductor we would share. I hope you don’t mind. It’ll be safer,” she added in a whisper. Then without waiting for a response, she turned back to the slack-faced clerk, plucked the pen from its holder, dipped it in the inkwell, and smiled sweetly. “Where shall I sign?”
“Twenty?” The old man was clearly aghast. “But that—that’s the Presidential Suite!”
“So I’ve been told.”
“But you’re not the president.”
“Alas, no.” Turning the full force of those dazzling green eyes on the befuddled Yancey, Lucinda leaned closer to whisper, “But Uncle insisted I take it if I ever came to Heartbreak Creek. Will that be a problem?”
“Goddamn.”
Apparently, that meant it wasn’t. After ordering a freckled boy to take fresh linens and water to “the big suite,” he reverently placed the key in Lucinda’s gloved hand and bowed them toward the stairs. “Last room at the end of the hall, ladies. The boy is setting it up now.”
As they headed toward the staircase, Edwina gave Lucinda a wondering look. “Are you really Grant’s niece?”
“Grant? Who said I was Grant’s niece?”
“But, I thought . . . you mean, you’re not?”
Lucinda laughed. “That old drunk?”
Not much of an answer, but apparently all Lucinda was willing to give. As they trooped up the stairs, Edwina mused that there were a lot of unanswered questions about Lucinda, not the least of which was what was in that valise that she guarded so protectively. Edwina sensed that like her, Lucinda had been through hard times and devastating loss. But Lucinda had chosen to fight back, while Edwina had chosen to run.
But, really, what choice had she? Raised in the lap of luxury without a care beyond what to wear to the next ball, Edwina barely knew how to survive. Oh, certainly she had skills—dancing, flirting, performing parlor tricks like finding water with willow sticks or playing the piano blindfolded—but that hardly put food on the table. Other than her meager sewing income—which Pru augmented with sales from their vegetable garden and the occasional household position that came her way—the only thing that had kept them going through the last hard years was hope. But after five years of the excesses of the Reconstruction, that was gone, too. Now all that remained of her past was a weed-choked cotton plantation sold for back taxes, her father’s watch, and a graveyard full of new markers.
The South she loved was no more. She had realized that the day Pru had been spat upon by a white man just because of her dark skin, while she, a white woman, had been vilified for sharing blood with a woman of color.
No, she wasn’t running away. She just had no reason to stay.
As they neared their room at the end of the landing, the door swung open and the freckled boy darted out. “All set up, ma’ams. You need anything, just yell over the banister to Yancey.” Then he was off at a run down the hall.
“Set up” meant tattered linens were stacked on the unmade beds in each of the two bedrooms opening off the sitting area, and a pitcher of cold water sat on the bureau. Edwina peered down into its murky depths. “Is this the water we’re not supposed to drink?”
“I’ll stick with brandy,” Lucinda muttered, carrying her valise into the bedroom on the left.
Maddie stopped beside the pitcher, took a look, and shuddered. “It looks used. How vexing.”
“I wonder what’s wrong with it?” This whole water thing confused Edwina. “With a creek running right through the middle of town and all those waterfalls streaming down the slopes, how could the water be so bad?”
“Probably the mine,” Pru said as she hung her coat on a hook beside the door. “They often use harsh chemicals to leach gold or silver from the raw ore. If it seeps back into the ground, it can taint the entire water table.”
Edwina turned to stare at her. “How do you know these things?”
“I read.”
“About mining practices?” Edwina shouldn’t have been surprised. Her sister took in information like a starving person gobbled up food. But mining practices? “Why would you read about mining practices?”
“Why wouldn’t I?” As she spoke, Pru set herself to rights, straightening her sleeves, brushing her skirts, running a hand over her tightly pinned hair. “I’m only guessing, of course. But since the mine is upriver from the town, and I did see some sluices and a thick canvas pipe running down from one of those waterfalls to what I assume is a concentrator, I can only deduce the water is being used to leach out unwanted chemicals.” She paused in thought, one long, graceful finger gently tapping her full lower lip. “Or maybe it’s for a water cannon. I’ll have to check.”
“Oh, please do!” Shaking her head, Edwina walked into the bedroom she was to share with Pru.
An hour later, their valises were unpacked, their beds made, and they were as refreshed as four women could be, sharing one pitcher of cold water between them.
“We’re famished,” Lucinda announced, walking into the sitting room with her valise in her hand and Maddie on her heels. “Shall we brave the cooking in this wretched place and go down to the dining room?”
“Dare we?” Edwina asked.
Pru straightened her collar and checked her buttons. “I’m willing.”
“Excellent.” Swinging open the door, Lucinda motioned the other ladies into the hallway, stepped out after them, and locked the door. “And while we eat,” she said, following them down the stairs, “Edwina can tell us all about her new husband, and Maddie can tell us about her errant husband, and Pru can tell us what she hopes to do with all that astounding book learning.”
And perhaps while we’re at it,
Edwina added silently,
you’ll tell us what you have in that valise you guard like stolen treasure.
Two
O
h, drat!
Filled with foreboding, Edwina picked up the note bearing her name that someone had shoved beneath the door while they had been choking down a barely edible dinner in the dining room below. She had a fair idea who had left it there. While the other three ladies filed past her into the sitting area, she forced herself to open it.
The familiar script. This time, only six words:
Eight o’clock outside the hotel. Brodie.
“What is it?” Pru asked, moving on toward their bedroom.
“Not bad news, I hope.” With a deep sigh, Maddie plopped into one of the worn wingbacks by the flyspecked window. “I deplore bad news.”
“Do you, Pollyanna?” Shooting her a look of amusement, Lucinda sank gracefully into the other chair. “How odd.”
Maddie’s cheerful optimism was the antithesis of Lucinda’s cynical outlook, and the two women had enlivened their dismal meal with gentle banter. Lucinda had accused Maddie of having her head so far above the clouds she couldn’t see the rain falling on her feet. Maddie had retaliated by asking if Lucinda was a misplaced Scot.
But now, seeing the stricken expression on Edwina’s face, Lucinda’s smile faded. “What’s wrong?”
Edwina gripped the note in a tight fist as if she had the man himself by the scruff of his neck. “He’s here! And he expects me to meet him outside the hotel tomorrow morning.
Tomorrow!
” Apparently the washout hadn’t damaged the road enough to make it impassable.
Maddie turned to Lucinda. “I’m assuming she means her husband.”
Edwina had told them about Declan Brodie and his four children, and her growing reservations about marrying a stranger. Maddie had tried to reassure her by explaining that arranged marriages were not uncommon in Britain. “Although mine wasn’t, of course. Ours was a love match.”
“And see how well that turned out,” Lucinda had remarked, adding, “Married or not, men are as steadfast as a loose woman’s virtue.”
“What should I do?” Edwina now asked her new friends.
“Run,” Lucinda advised.
“Meet him,” Maddie countered. “He deserves at least that.”
“Pack.” Moving to the wardrobe in their bedroom, Pru pulled out her carpetbag and set it on the bed. She began packing garments inside.
Edwina studied the note again, thoughts jumbling in her mind. “Perhaps he just wants to talk. Pay his respects. Perhaps he doesn’t intend to actually
leave
tomorrow.” She looked hopefully at the two women seated by the window. “That sounds reasonable, doesn’t it?”
Lucinda shrugged.
“What does he say exactly?” Maddie asked.
She told them. “Twelve hours
.
That’s all I have left.” Too restless to sit, she began pacing the small sitting area.
“It could be a grand adventure.” To sweet Maddie, every cloud was woven with golden threads and sprinkled with diamonds. “This marriage might very well be all you’ve ever dreamed.”
“Surely you don’t believe that, Maddie,” Lucinda challenged. The worldly New Yorker had made it clear what she thought about marriage and men. Though she seldom spoke about herself—and when she did, offered little information—it was obvious she held both the wedded state and the male gender in low regard. “Have you ever seen a truly happy couple?”
“Angus and I might have been, had he ever stayed around long enough for us to get to know one another.”
“Or you might have been utterly miserable. Two letters in five years. The man should be shot.”
“Maybe he was. Maybe that’s why he hasn’t written.” Maddie sent Lucinda a worried look. “Surely I would have been notified if he had been, don’t you think? I wouldn’t want him to be dead.”
Too distracted to attend their conversation, Edwina wandered into the bedroom and plopped down on the bed beside Pru’s valise. She needed her sister’s steady calmness now. She needed to hear that everything would be all right, even if it was a lie.
“Why is he in such a hurry?” she complained. “He could have waited a few more days.”
Pru looked at her.
From the other room, Maddie called, “Perhaps he can’t wait any longer to meet his lovely bride,” which elicited a chuckle from Lucinda.
Realizing any words spoken in the bedroom could be easily heard by the two women watching through the open door into the sitting area, Edwina shot them a scolding look. “We can hear and see you.”
“We can see and hear you, too,” Lucinda responded gaily. “Although it would help if you spoke up a touch.”
Edwina flopped back across the ratty counterpane. “Such haste is unseemly. I’m not a cow to be herded around. I’m a gently bred lady.”
“You’re a nitwit,” her sister muttered. “That’s why we’re here.”
“Nonetheless, I deserve better. I
had
better.”
“You’ve been married before?” Maddie called.
Lucinda’s muttered response was just loud enough to carry into the bedroom. “And she’s doing it a second time?”
“Yes, I was, and he was such a sweet boy.” Edwina stared up at the ceiling and tried to picture Shelly’s face as he had appeared nine years ago on their wedding day. Both scarcely seventeen and oh, so foolish. “He looked so handsome in his sword and sash.”
“One does get pulled in by the uniform,” Maddie mused. “Angus is with the Tenth Hussars. Assuming he’s still alive.”
Barely listening, Edwina let her thoughts drift back to those early days, when hope and southern pride had flowed through the South like summer wine until they’d all become drunk on Confederate patriotism.
It had been a summer wedding. They’d held it in the garden under the wisteria arbor. Bees had droned in the flower beds, and the air had been heady with the scent of sweet alyssum and dianthus and stocks.
Then had come the wedding night, and the realization that she had made a terrible mistake in marrying a childhood friend who was more like a brother than a sweetheart. After that one fumbling, awkward night—the memory of which still gave Edwina the shivers—poor Shelly had marched off in his smart gray uniform, only to return four months later, minus a leg.