He smites those who have been thorns in my side.â
It took Livia a moment to realize that Lady Holmes was referring to Lady Amelia Drummond. That name had never been brought up in the Holmes household, certainly not in Liviaâs hearing. But Lady Ameliaâs abrupt deathâsheâd been in perfect health and vigor only the day beforeâhad been quite the topic of gossip for the past fortnight.
Lady Holmes shoved past Livia.
âWait. Is that all you know? Are there no other details?â
Lady Holmes stopped and thought for a moment. Then she snorted. âMrs. Neeley said Roger Shrewsbury is devastated. Said he is sure his disgrace sent his mother into an early grave. How typical of a man, to think the world revolves around him.â
âWait. Isââ
Lady Holmes marched on in the direction of Livia and Charlotteâs room. âWhen will you learn to be quiet, Olivia? I have other things to do than standing there and answering your questionsâespecially today.â
The silence, as Lady Holmes threw open the door, was thunderous.
Her question, when it came at last, deafened. â
Where
is Charlotte?â
Charlotte had been everywhere in London this day, or at least it felt that way to her throbbing feet.
By midmorning sheâor rather, Miss Caroline Holmes from Tunbridge, typistâhad secured a room at Mrs. Wallaceâs boardinghouse, a very respectable place at a very respectable location near Cavendish Square.
The rest of her first day of freedom was spent whittling away at her scant funds. She was obliged to acquire a tea kettle, a chipped tea service, a spirit lamp on which to heat water, silverware and flatware, tooth powder, towels, and bed linensâplus a number of other miscellany that a young woman accustomed to living at her parentsâ house never needed to worry about.
She tried to think of her purchases as an investment for the future, for when she and Liviaâand Bernadine, tooâwould have a place of their own and direction over their collective existence.
But that dream was taking its last labored breaths, wasnât it, all alone in a ditch somewhere?
Bernadine might not care much one way or the other, but Livia, Livia who was so proud, so fragile, and so constantly doubtful of herself . . .
Livia who mistrusted humanity yet feared being alone.
Charlotte had been Liviaâs companion; she listened when Livia wanted to talk and remained quiet when Livia wanted to hear herself think. And Charlotte, too, had been a target of Lady Holmesâs wrath, with her refusal of proposal after proposal. But now Livia was unsupported and unshielded. Now she was all alone before both a scornful Society and a pair of livid parents with no other outlet for their anger.
Charlotte passed Cavendish Square, the trees and shrubs of which were dingy with soot. The air in London had always been terrible, but far more so for a woman who must walk all day long than one who had a carriage at her disposal. By midday, as she stood before the mirror in her new room at Mrs. Wallaceâs, the top of her ruffled collar was already marked by a ring of grime on the inside. She didnât want to think of its advanced state of soil after several more hours out and about.
Turning onto Wimpole Street, she made a stop at Atwell & Dewsbury, Pharmaceutical Chemists. Mrs. Wallace had recommended the place for the purchase of incidentals. Charlotte had visited the shop earlier in the day to buy bathing soap and matchesâand to take a look at the selection of books that customers could borrow for a penny apiece.
But of course she hadnât thought of everything. This time Mr. Atwell kindly sold her some stationery. And a package of one hundred perforated pieces of tissue for the water closet, wrapped in brown paper and without either of them ever mentioning it by name.
As she stepped out of the shop, a dapper older gentleman sauntered past on the
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