THE UGLY SISTERS - Danny King - E-Book

THE UGLY SISTERS E-Book

Danny King

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Beschreibung

For hundreds of years, readers have been enchanted by the tale of Cinderella, of how a nobleman's daughter escaped a life of servitude with the help of a pumpkin, a pair of glass slippers and her Fairy Godmother. But the truth is very different from the fairytale yet no less extraordinary. Marigold and Gardenia Roche have simple dreams; to marry well and live happily ever after. Yet this is a tricky proposition when neither heralds from money nor could be considered a great beauty. But two events are about to change the lives of everyone in the tiny Kingdom of Andovia: the first is the announcement of a great ball, at which the Crown Prince has vowed to choose a bride. The second is the arrival of a widowed French nobleman and his beautiful daughter. Two events, seemingly unconnected, and yet both will have dire consequences for all – unless something is done. Marigold and Gardenia's lives are about to become entwined with the girl who would be Queen. And yet few will ever know the dangers they faced nor the sacrifices they made to save a vainglorious Kingdom from the damsel with the crocodile smile. Every child knows the story of Cinderella. But this is the story of Marigold and Gardenia Roche – otherwise known as THE UGLY SISTERS. And it is no fairytale. »One of the few writers to make me laugh out loud.« – David Baddiel, Comedian »One of Britain's best kept literary secrets.« – The Big Issue in the North

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The Ugly Sisters

The Ugly Sisters © 2023 Danny King © 2023 by ICARUS Publishing, an Imprint of Luzifer Verlag Cyprus Ltd.www.icarus-publishing.com

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and should not be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

 

Cover: Michael Schubert

 

ISBN: 978-3-95835-977-2

 

All rights reserved.

For Katie, Scarlett & Frankie, beautiful sisters all three.

Table of Contents

The Ugly Sisters
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-One
Chapter Fifty-Two
Chapter Fifty-Three
Chapter Fifty-Four
Chapter Fifty-Five
Chapter Fifty-Six
Chapter Fifty-Seven
Chapter Fifty-Eight
Chapter Fifty-Nine
Chapter Sixty
Chapter Sixty-One
Chapter Sixty-Two
Chapter Sixty-Three
Chapter Sixty-Four
Chapter Sixty-Five
Chapter Sixty-Six
Chapter Sixty-Seven
Epilogue
About the Author
Acknowledgements

Chapter One

It was a fine day for a stroll. The sun was shining, the gardens were in full bloom and the good people of Andovia were out in force.

Of those enjoying the air were two sisters, Marigold and Gardenia. Marigold was the older but Gardenia was the fairer. They never missed a Saturday afternoon stroll and, as ever, were dressed in the season’s latest fashions — Marigold in strawberry pink, Gardenia in pineapple yellow — with corsets, crinolines and countless petticoats to buff up their outfits and hold it all together. Some might’ve argued they’d overdressed for the occasion, with more layers of satin and lace to lug around the park than most, but the sisters had a reputation to uphold as the best-dressed maidens in all of Andovia and they weren’t about to let an Indian summer come between them and that.

“I say, ’tis frightfully clement for the time of day, ’tis it not, Marigold?” Gardenia observed, fanning herself relentlessly to make up for the lack of breeze.

“That it is, dear sister, but do save some air for the rest of us,” Marigold replied, taking Gardenia’s arm in an attempt to halt the constant wafting locomotion that had been following her since lunchtime.

Gardenia gave Marigold a withering glance and folded her fan away. She knew better than to argue with her sister. Besides Marigold was right. It wouldn’t have been prudent to let the gentlefolk of their fair city suspect that her fine gown was causing her any sort of discomfort on this warm September afternoon. She would simply have to endure just as her beloved mother had always taught her to do. For appearance’s sake. Because in Andovia, appearances, like reputations, were everything.

“Good afternoon, ladies,” Monsieur Eames said, doffing his top hat as he passed by with his wife on his arm. Madame Eames was a client of Mother’s. She’d bought five dresses from her to date and was putting the latest through its paces before recalling Mother for alterations.

“Good afternoon, Monsieur Eames. Madame,” Marigold and Gardenia gleamed in unison, with Marigold adding, once they were out of earshot, “Such nice people the Eames. And their eldest comes out this autumn.”

“Isabella is fifteen already?” Gardenia said.

“Just in time for the Prince’s ball,” Marigold confirmed.

“We must send the Eames a card to congratulate them on Isabella’s debut,” Gardenia suggested.

“Mother has them on the list,” Marigold assured her.

They walked along the lakeshore and through the shade of the cherry tree groves but Gardenia found no relief from the heat that had built up between the hoops of her underskirt.

“If only I could air my ankles for a moment,” she gasped in exasperation.

“And perhaps dip your buttocks in the duck pond while you’re at it?” Marigold sympathised.

“Don’t tempt me,” grumbled Gardenia.

“Then be my guest,” Marigold smiled. “Only do take care to weigh your knickers down with a rock when you kick them off as we wouldn’t want them to blow across the park and cause a scene now, would we? Good afternoon Captain Durand.”

Captain Durand came to attention with a snap of his heels to acknowledge the sisters’ greeting. The handsome officer looked resplendent in his blue tunic with gold braiding and Gardenia couldn’t help but notice that the colours matched his eyes and hair.

“I hear he’s a favourite with the Prince,” Marigold said with a covert backward glance. “Some say he’ll make Aide-de-camp when the Prince becomes King.”

“How exciting,” Gardenia cooed, overcome with the urge to start fanning herself once again. “What have you heard of his arrangements? Is he promised to anyone yet?” Captain Durand had the most exquisite features in all Andovia.

“Steady yourself, Gardenia. She who is too forward will more often than not finish last.”

“Well, I think he looks very handsome in his uniform,” Gardenia said.

“So does the messenger boy’s mother, my dear, but we must be realistic. You are a pleasing girl but I fear the Captain may be beyond your reach and the stain of such a rejection will only further limit your options.” Indeed, Gardenia was pleasant enough to look upon, with fair hair, a babyish round face and cheeks so rosy that they took several layers of foundation to tame. But there were fairer in the land. Fairer and from better families. As the elder sister, Marigold had already learned this bruising lesson the hard way. Gardenia still had it all to come. “Choose your target well. And never ask a question of a gentleman that you don’t already know the answer to.”

Gardenia recognised the words. They were the same ones their dear sweet mother had sung them in place of a lullaby when she’d tucked them to bed each night — over and over again — in preparation for things to come.

“Besides, Mother has an eye on Lieutenant Olivier for you. Do you not feel he would make an agreeable match?”

Gardenia kept her thoughts about Lieutenant Olivier to herself. He may have been more attainable — and the Grand Duke’s youngest son to boot — but he was no Captain Durand. Not that Marigold would’ve understood. She, like their mother, followed her head rather than her heart when it came to the question of marriage. To them, love was like a chess match, not a waltz, and every maiden in Andovia was a Grand Master. But this just depressed Gardenia even further. An advantageous union was all well and good but where was the romance? Where were the thrills and spills, the heady feelings of punching one’s way through the clouds and leaping off sheer mountains and into the arms of your one true...

“Good afternoon, ladies!”

“Good afternoon to you, kind sir... urgh!” Gardenia grimaced when she turned and saw Andovia’s filthiest tramp saluting them from his favourite park bench with a chicken bone he’d sucked almost translucent. Gardenia quickly looked away and hurried after Marigold before anyone saw her talking with Dirty Didi, as he was universally known around town.

Once again Marigold waited until they were out of earshot before delivering her verdict. “Shall I make enquiries as to his arrangements too?”

***

The line at Stefano’s Ice Kiosk was always long on a Saturday afternoon but today the warm weather had stretched it halfway around the boating lake. Fortunately for Marigold and Gardenia, the lines in Andovia didn’t work on a first-come-first-served basis. There was a protocol and everyone knew their rightful place.

“Good afternoon ladies,” said the unaccompanied gentlemen at the very back of the line as they stepped aside for Marigold and Gardenia, doffing their hats as they passed by.

“Good afternoon to you, kind sirs,” Marigold and Gardenia replied, making quick progress as they passed the lower ranks and up towards the business end of the line.

Once past the unaccompanied gentlemen, the sisters reached a cluster of couples — courting first and then married before them — who were also required to stand aside for two single ladies.

“Our compliments to your mother,” Marigold and Gardenia were wished as they now passed these customers by.

“I would be pleased to pass it on,” Marigold smiled with a bow, noting that the Perrins were three places in front of the Legrands this week, adding fuel to the fire that Monsieur Perrin was indeed in talks with the Grand Duke about supplying the army with beef this winter. Nothing had been officially announced, of course, but the line never lied. Marigold made a point of wishing Madame Perrin a “Good day” and nudged Gardenia to do likewise.

“So lovely to see you out and about again,” Gardenia smiled, clearly getting Madame Perrin confused with Madame Perez who’d died three weeks earlier.

Marigold almost tripped over her own feet. Had anyone picked up on Gardenia’s blunder or had it just been her? No one seemed to be recoiling in horror so it looked as though they’d got away with it but Marigold would need to have a word with her when they got home. A faux pas like that could derail a girl’s prospects as effectively as a cold sore at Christmas. She had to learn to be more circumspect.

Finally Marigold and Gardenia arrived at the head of the line. Here there were no men, only girls, a couple of small boys and a few old widows who tried to stand their ground until Marigold’s tut-tutting finally compelled them to step aside.

Five customers now stood between the sisters and Stefano’s hallowed serving hatch. The Moreau boys were not yet ten but were only too keen to show how grown-up they were by letting the sisters in. The same, alas, could not be said of the Laurent girl. She and Marigold were approximately the same age. Their mothers both ran successful businesses and their fathers had both passed away. Yet Nina Laurent’s father had been felled by smallpox whereas Marigold’s had been felled by a musket ball at the Battle of Widows’ Ridge, therefore no one could dispute whom should stand aside for whom. It was simply a matter of Nina Laurent acknowledging Marigold’s superiority.

“Sweet Nina,” Marigold smiled icily. “Your mother still has the bakery in the square?” Marigold didn’t need to elaborate any further. The threat was clear and Nina stepped aside before she could heap any further shame upon her family’s good name.

“Do please communicate my best wishes to her when you see her,” Marigold cautioned, letting Nina off the hook but making a mental note to sign her next Christmas card “Season’s greetings” rather than “Kindest regards” to put the jumped-up little brat back in her place.

Next came Claudia Ricci and Suzette Weiss. Claudia had just received her ice cone from Stefano and was out of contention but Suzette had yet to be served. She took one look at the approaching sisters and immediately stepped aside with a gracious smile.

“Sweet Marigold, dearest Gardenia, please after you.”

But this time Gardenia made no mistake. She remained where she was and met Suzette’s smile tooth for tooth.

“Oh no dearest Suzette, we insist, you first.”

“Are you sure, sweet Gardenia? I don’t mind waiting,” Suzette parried, checking the younger sister’s resolve.

“I’m still making up my mind. I would be curious to know which dessert you decide to have,” Gardenia said, ending any lingering doubts in Suzette or anyone else’s mind.

“You are too kind,” Suzette simpered, touching Gardenia’s hand to signal that the contest had been called.

Marigold breathed a sigh of relief. She’d stayed out of it because this had been Gardenia’s clash but her sister had acquitted herself well and had paid Suzette the correct amount of respect. The line looked on with silent approval. The Weisses were an important family. Their grapes covered the slopes of their vast Combien vineyards. More importantly, their wines filled the cellars of a dozen noblemen and it was even said that the King himself had a few bottles put aside for informal occasions.

“A lemon sorbet, if you please, Monsieur Stefano,” Suzette requested when she turned back to the hatch.

“An excellent choice, Mademoiselle,” Monsieur Stefano said, snapping his fingers to relay the request back to Hans in the rear.

Marigold’s heart began to flutter when Hans brought out a little dish of flavoured ice. He looked more rugged than ever, with his dark floppy hair, square jaw and emerald eyes. They lit up when they fell upon Marigold but she didn’t return the compliment. She wasn’t being rude or dismissive. She simply couldn’t converse with Stefano’s boy when he was at work. Or indeed, when he was not.

Marigold and Hans had known each other their whole lives and yet barely a dozen words had passed between them. Work and circumstance made meeting virtually impossible. Hans rose at 3am every morning to trek up to the summit of Mont Magie for the day’s ice. The snow caps up there never thawed, even in the hottest of years, and once his barrels and panniers were full he would wrap them up to trap the cold and transport them back down the mountain to replenish the tubs of Stefano’s ice room. It was gruelling work and desperately long hours but Stefano had no wife or child to leave his kiosk to. One day it would all belong to Hans and he’d have a boy to fetch the ice for him. And on that day, it would be deemed acceptable for a girl of Marigold’s standing to speak with a boy of Hans’s. But not before.

Gardenia knew nothing of Marigold’s feelings. Nobody did. And after years of lecturing her younger sister on the importance of making a good match, it would’ve been impolitic to confess to longing after Stefano’s bucket boy.

But it wasn’t complete double standards by Marigold. Gardenia was fairer than her, after all. So much so that her comely charms had been turning heads since she’d bloomed a year earlier. Whether or not she had enough to bag a gentleman, this was to be seen, but this was the name of the game. And in Andovia everyone played it.

The sisters were now close enough to the serving hatch to feel the cooling breeze drifting out of Stefano’s kiosk. It brought the tiniest breath of relief to Gardenia, who was sure she would melt if she didn’t get a snow cone in the next sixty seconds but Suzette was in no hurry now that she’d got hers.

“Such wonderful gowns,” she complimented, leaning back against the hatch as she licked sorbet from her silver spoon. “Your mother’s designs I take it?”

“We are so lucky,” Marigold confirmed, feeling Suzette’s eyes running her up and down looking for loose threads. She would find none. “You still have yours made by Monsieur Vasseur?”

“His family has served mine for over a hundred years,” Suzette replied to underline her pedigree.

Marigold smiled and looked Suzette’s summer dress up and down. “I guess this is why he is such a genius at turning out such... traditional designs.”

Suzette almost choked on her spoon but there was no coming back from that one. She’d walked into Marigold’s trap and was now reeling from the suggestion that she was behind the times simply because she hadn’t worn her Sunday best on Saturday afternoon. All eyes were now on Suzette. All eyes, that was, but Marigold’s, who took the opportunity to steal a glance at Hans and was rewarded with the flicker of approval as it danced across his lips. No one messed with his girl and got away with it.

Suzette’s humiliation was only cut short by the clatter of top hats being doffed as yet another thoroughbred filly rode her family name to the front of Stefano’s line.

“Oh come on!” old widow Renard exclaimed as she was relegated back another place for the umpteenth time. She’d barely moved an inch since two o’clock despite Stefano running a roaring trade and was ready to give up on her lemon lolly altogether when she saw the latest eyeful sail past. The Moreau boys jumped so far back that they almost fell into the boating lake and Nina Laurent left the queue altogether. She had seen the face of the future and it didn’t resemble hers in any way, shape or form.

Suzette, Marigold and Gardenia all stared at the girl before them and were dumbstruck at her beauty. Her eyes were like diamonds and her skin the pallor of milk. Her hair of pure gold had been tied back into a simple ponytail and her elfin-like features were unspoilt by greasepaint or powder. She was Marigold’s height and yet had the waist of one of the Moreau boys — the younger one. Her clothes were fine but not too fine. They were elegant and unfussy and they enhanced her natural beauty without overshadowing it. Gardenia felt all at once overdressed and naked in this stranger’s company and didn’t know whether to step aside or go for her throat.

Suzette seized her chance and moved on to leave Marigold grappling over the issue of who should be served first. The line knew who they had their money on but Marigold wasn’t about to be pushed aside by some mystery girl who had yet to realise she was a swan swimming in a duck pond.

Marigold threw down the gauntlet and dared this new girl to pick it up.

“Please, my dear, after you,” she smiled, stepping aside to give her a clear view of Stefano’s serving hatch.

“Thank you,” said the girl with an unmistakable French accent, stepping forward to ask for two dozen sorbets in all different flavours before Marigold knew what had hit her.

“What’s going on? What do we do?” Gardenia panicked as Marigold looked down the line for its reaction and didn’t like what she saw.

Mother had not prepared her for situations like this.

Five minutes later and the sorbets were still coming, but none in Marigold or Gardenia’s direction. Just how many puddings did this strange girl want anyway? Stefano plonked ice dishes onto the hatch until there was little room for any more.

“Two dozen, in all different flavours, as requested,” Stefano finally said without asking why she should want so many.

The girl handed Stefano an unfamiliar gold coin and asked if it would cover the cost and Stefano confirmed that it would, after first biting it to check it wasn’t chocolate.

Only now did Marigold understand when a huge crowd of street children appeared from out of nowhere and began leaping about with excitement as the girl passed out the desserts amongst them. There was even one for Didi, who licked his glass clean and handed it back with a sticky burp of satisfaction.

Gardenia was aghast and refused to let that particular glass out of her sight, horrified at the thought of getting her own dessert in the same.

With these actions, by definition, the girl had ranked all these scruffy urchins and, Didi too, as better than every lord, lady and gentlemen in Stefano’s queue. It was nothing short of scandalous and yet no one batted an eyelid. Had the world gone mad? Did etiquette and protocol and all they’d grown up clinging to count for nothing if the face was pretty enough?

“Look at their joy. Have you ever seen anything so wonderful?” the girl asked, basking in the radiance of her own good deed.

“Simple pleasures. What more can one ask for?” Marigold echoed, wondering what more indeed. If a maiden’s eligibility could elevate her prospects then who knew how high this girl could ascend. Of course, it all depended upon her family. Who was she? Where had she come from? Who was her father? And what did he do?

“Do you know these children?” Gardenia asked, lending her voice to the least of Marigold’s questions.

“I do now,” the strange girl smiled, handing Gardenia an empty dish before scampering off to cries of, “Who wants to go for a paddle?”

Gardenia dumped the empty dish on Stefano’s hatch while Stefano complimented the sisters on their outfits and asked what he could get for them. But Gardenia no longer wanted anything and Marigold was not listening. She was watching Hans as he picked up the dishes that had been left on the grass, hoping to catch his eye. But Hans never turned around. He just kept looking over at the lake —

— and the heavenly figure slipping out of her shoes by the cool water’s edge.

Chapter Two

“Mother! Mother! There was a girl in the park who went paddling with the children,” Gardenia said, the moment the sisters got home.

“Never mind about that. Get out of those dresses immediately. I want to take a look at them. How did they hold up? Who did you see?” Mother asked, dismissing Gardenia’s red-hot news as inconsequential tittle-tattle as she turned her around and began unlacing her from behind.

“But Mother, she was in the lake. I saw everything, for Heaven’s sake!” Gardenia exclaimed, scarcely able to believe what she’d witnessed. The girl had kicked off her shoes and waded into the shallows, hoisting up her skirt as she went. She’d shown the world her knees. It was unthinkable.

“What are you blathering about, child?” Mother asked, pulling Gardenia’s yellow dress over her shoulders and pulling it down past her hips so that she might step out.

“A strange girl. In the park,” Gardenia simply repeated, at a loss how else to describe what she’d seen.

Marigold confirmed all she said, adding that this girl was no farm girl taking in the sights. She was a girl of breeding with gold to spend and a face to acquire more.

“I will make enquiries,” Mother reassured her girls. “But she sounds like a serving girl who’s gone potty and made off with her Lordship’s coins. Chances are she’ll be wearing chains by the end of the day.”

Mother hung Gardenia’s dress on the dressmaker’s dummy by her cutting bench and set to work helping Marigold out of hers.

“You saw anyone else while you were out? Besides Lady Godiva I mean?”

Marigold rattled off the names of those they’d passed, not forgetting to mention where the Perrins and Legrands had stood, but she couldn’t help but feel that none of this was as significant as their final encounter. Their paths would cross again, of that she had no doubt. But the next time she would be ready.

The bell above their front door let out a telling tinkle. Mother helped Marigold step out of her dress and then headed through the curtains to greet this hour’s caller.

“Madame Eames, what a pleasure it is to see you again. And what can I do for you?” Marigold heard Mother ask.

“Madame Roche, I saw your lovely daughters in the park a little earlier on and was quite taken with Gardenia’s dress. Do you think you could manage something similar for my Isabella? She debuts at the Prince’s ball next month and we so want her to make a good impression.”

“It would be an honour, Madame Eames. I will call on Isabella first thing in the morning to take her measurements. And she shall be the belle of the ball.”

Marigold hung her dress on a second dressmaker’s dummy while Madame Eames went through a bundle of swatches with Mother. Mother’s gowns were indeed the finest in all Andovia and her reputation was slowly spreading. She’d worked hard to get to where she was and Marigold and Gardenia had done their bit, not least of all on days like today, parading themselves around town in her latest designs like mannequins come to life. The sisters might not have liked it, and their poor father might’ve turned in his grave at the thought of his daughters reducing themselves to clothes horses, but every girl played the cards they were dealt.

Or at least, learned to cheat better than everyone else.

***

Mother’s own story had almost ended before it had begun. Abandoned on the steps of the cathedral when she was just a couple of days old, she was so tiny and frail that the Bishop saw no point in dispatching her off to the orphanage.

“This cherub will not survive the night,” he solemnly predicted, thus becoming the first person to fall foul of Mother’s legendary stubborn streak. For two days and two nights, she wailed in protest at being denied any form of nourishment (spiritual asides) before the Bishop finally relented.

“Her cries have so offended our Lord that He hath chosen not to take her unto His bosom. Remove her at once. And may God have mercy on thy keeper’s soul.”

Duly, the infant was delivered into the hands of the parish orphanage while the Bishop was delivered into the Lord’s just two weeks later when he keeled over whilst pouring the communion wine.

Much has been written about the cruelty of orphanages: the terrible conditions, the appalling food, the filthy wretches that reside inside. But what is not considered is that every spoonful of oats that goes into an orphan’s mouth must first come out of a rich man’s pocket. Charity pays for food. Charity buys clothes. Charity repairs the roof when a storm blows through the Kingdom. And charity settles the doctor’s bills when the children grow sick — or more usually the undertaker’s. Without charity, there was no orphanage. Charity was life. And yet for so many in Andovia, charity began at home — for those who were lucky enough to have one. The orphanage did the best with what it had. Very few did more.

The first thing the superintendent gave its newest resident was a name: Catherine because she had been found on the steps of the Cathedral. And Petit, because she was so undernourished and frail.

In the years to come, Catherine would tell her daughters very little about her time in the orphanage. She felt it would’ve been ungracious of her to hold it to account for its shortcomings after all it had done for her. This hadn’t been much, admittedly, but it had been more than her own mother had been prepared to do. Gruel, rags and a leaky roof: these basic requirements were all she had known until her twelfth birthday when the superintendent deemed Catherine old enough to fend for herself. The orphanage was overcrowded and underfunded. Beds were needed. Extra mouths were not. Catherine was given a pair of shoes, an old blanket, a hessian sack and an emotionless farewell. Her childhood was over.

The world was a dangerous place for a young girl in those days, particularly one left to fend for herself. Catherine may have been scrawny and undernourished from birth but she had an innocence that shone like a beacon in a world of long shadows. Many was the time she had to run for her life. Danger lurked around every corner. But Catherine was a fast learner. She lived by her wits: stole food, begged for pennies and evaded the authorities for two long years until one December night, three days before Christmas, her luck finally ran out…

***

“This way! This way! I see the little thief!”

Catherine could hear the cries of soldiers all around her. The entire army seemed to have taken up the chase, all for a couple of turnips. She knew these woods well but they had numbers on their side. Why hadn’t she waited until after midnight like last time? Why had she taken such a risk?

Catherine hurried through the trees clutching the turnips inside her hessian sack as though they were gold. She hadn’t eaten in three days and hunger had forced her hand. The night had been dark but her footprints in the snow had alerted the sentries to her larceny. Now there was no hiding from them. Whichever way she ran the fresh snows continued to betray her.

“Stop or we’ll shoot!”

Catherine didn’t stop. She didn’t even pause. The punishment for looting from the army was death so what difference did it make if they shot her in the back or tied her to a stake in front of their flag?

She’d come the way she always came when pilfering their stores, through the slopes where the woods were at their most impenetrable. She was small and she was sprite and she could duck through brambles a field mouse would think twice about entering. She’d done it several times before, since the army had made its camp in her neck of the woods, but this time they’d been ready for her.

“I said stop!” CRACK! The sound of a musket shot made Catherine change direction.

A thorn scratched her cheek as she darted between two shrubs but the cold had numbed her face so that she barely winced. More painful were her feet. They were soaked through and frozen and the shoes the orphanage had given her were falling apart. She’d lost all sensation below the knees and could scarcely stay upright but she pushed herself on, through the snows, the woods and the pain.

“Go right! Cut off the flank!”

Another thicket, another gash, this time it took a chunk from her thigh. The shock knocked her into the snow and sat on her back while she screamed in silent agony. This was more than any girl could endure but there was simply no choice. She had to get up and move. The crunch of boots on snow got louder as her pursuers got closer and soon they were closing on all sides.

“In the bushes, there. Use your bayonets. Use your torches. Flush the little rat out!”

Catherine scrambled through the undergrowth and tumbled down a short slope. The mention of bayonets drove her on in spite of her injuries. At the bottom of the slope, she found a gulley and used it as cover but it only took her so far. Torches to the fore soon stopped her in her tracks. They fanned out left and right while others found the entrance to the gulley. She was surrounded on all sides and had nowhere to go.

Catherine reasoned she had one last chance and threw herself into a snowdrift. She kicked and burrowed in a last desperate attempt to conceal herself but it was too late. Before she knew it a hand had grabbed her ankle and she was dragged out to face the consequences of her desperation.

“Got ya, you little rat!” the soldier cackled from behind a flaming torch, but that was all Catherine heard. Panicked through with terror and bleeding from head to toe, her wits finally deserted her and she passed out where she lay.

Chapter Three

Isabella liked the pink satin but Madame Eames liked the blue. And while the customer was usually right, Mother would let them have neither. Isabella had fabulous hazel eyes, she told Madame Eames upon their next housecall. It had to be apple green or nothing.

“Do you think so, Madame Roche?” Madame Eames asked, holding the swatches against her daughter’s brow to contrast the colours.

“There are no second chances to debut, Madame Eames. If Isabella is to make a grand impression she must use what nature has so generously provided. And your daughter’s eyes are surely the most beautiful in all the Kingdom.”

Isabella giggled with delight and ran straight to her parlour mirror to scrutinise herself at length. She always suspected she had nice eyes but here was independent confirmation. They were not only nice eyes, they were beautiful eyes, nay the most beautiful in all the Kingdom. And if a person’s eyes were the windows to their soul, then surely it followed that she must have possessed the most beautiful soul in all the Kingdom too.

Just as she also always suspected.

From this moment onwards she would always wear green. It would be her colour.

Gardenia flicked through the swatches.

“Purple’s nice too,” she said without thinking.

Mother snatched them out of her hand and sent her off to join Isabella at the mirror. It had taken her almost 45 minutes to settle their minds on green and she wasn’t about to have Gardenia plant a seed of doubt now. Especially with that job lot of green satin she had taking up all the shelf space in their stockroom back home.

“I believe I have all the measurements I require for now,” Mother said, rolling up her tape measure and dropping it back into her sewing kit. “I will send word when the garment is ready for Isabella’s first fitting and arrange a time that is suitable for you and your daughter.”

“And my husband too,” Madame Eames insisted.

“Of course. That goes without saying,” Mother said with a flicker of fatigue. Three critics were always harder to appease than two. And fathers generally offered more opinions than ideas when it came to their daughter’s state of dress.

“Excellent. I shall look forward to seeing you then,” Madame Eames smiled as she rose from her chaise lounge and walked towards the oak-panelled double doors that led out to the hallway. “Good day to you, Madame Roche.”

There was no invitation to stay for tea. There never was at the Eames but that was just as well because the Eames were quite the most dreadful company imaginable. And that was saying something in a town where the competition for that particular accolade was exceptionally stiff.

“I will have my man help you with your bags,” Madame Eames said, pulling a rope hanging next to the door to set a bell tinkling somewhere off in the depths of her château. “Hmm, now, whilst I have you here, would you be so good as to take a look at my lace trim. It snagged against the coach this morning and it seems to have lost a thread.”

Madame Eames turned to show Mother her offending rear. This was the freebie. Whilst there was never tea at the Eames there was always a freebie. Madame had waited until she’d rung for the footman before asking for Mother’s advice because Mother was now off the clock. It was an unwritten rule but those sorts of rules were often the most binding.

“I would be happy to do so, Madame,” Mother said, popping open her sewing kit and kneeling behind Madame Eames with a long sharp needle in her hand. Oh, the temptation. But such an act of folly would’ve hurt Mother more than it would’ve hurt Madame Eames so she swallowed her pride and set to the work applying a few strategic stitches to the hem of her dress.

Of course, Madame Eames hadn’t really torn her hem on the coach this morning. Madame Eames hadn’t even left the house this morning. But she couldn’t very well bring a torn dress down and ask Mother for a freebie on something that she wasn’t already wearing, could she? That would’ve been premeditated. And you couldn’t expect a professional dressmaker to apply her skills for free on something other than an incidental inconvenience.

“What a lovely ring,” Madame Eames said, glancing down at Mother as she worked on her hem, eyeing the large opal ring on her left forefinger. “It is beautiful, Madame Roche. Where did you get it from, might I ask?”

“It was a gift,” Mother replied without looking up.

“From a grateful customer, no doubt,” Madame Eames fished. She had always desired a ring such as that. And it didn’t matter that she had a dozen just like it and bigger in her jewellery box upstairs, it was the one on Mother’s finger she now coveted. Tradespeople sometimes made gifts of their own possessions to help secure future business but Madame Eames would be disappointed today.

“From my late husband,” Mother told her.

“It is so very beautiful,” Madame Eames repeated, wondering just how attached to it Mother was.

“Thank you,” Mother said, adding, “as was he.”

Madame Eames took the hint but made up her mind there’d be no tip for Mother this Christmas. Not that there’d been one last year or the year before. But that was beside the point. Mother’s attitude justified Madame Eames’s fiscal prudence.

“Look at my eyes,” Isabella said across the parlour, finally managing to tear her gaze away from herself and glare, unblinking, at Gardenia. “Do they not sparkle like magic?”

“They are most beautiful,” Gardenia confirmed with a happy smile.

Gardenia liked Isabella. She was a sweet-natured girl but utterly self-absorbed. Many girls Isabella’s age were and that was no one’s fault of their own. After all, when a girl of breeding’s only expectation was to be pretty and gay it was little wonder that most spent more time in front of the mirror than the bookcase. And now, with her big debut only a month away, Isabella’s vanity had begun exerting such a powerful force on her that she was in danger of disappearing completely up her own prospects.

“Do you think Lord Hubert will notice my eyes?” Isabella said, fluttering her lashes at Gardenia in a clumsy first attempt at sexual semaphore.

“He would need to have lost his own not to,” Gardenia reassured her, stifling a yawn and wondering how much longer they were going to be here. But this was Gardenia’s job today. Mother took care of business while Gardenia bonded with the customers. Marigold had performed this role for many years but Gardenia was closer in age to Isabella, hence the mantle had been passed from one sister to the next today.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone with eyes such as mine,” Isabella said as she fluttered her heavy eyelashes, drawn once again to the sight of her own reflection.

The most depressing thing about the whole experience was that Gardenia recognised aspects of herself in Isabella. They were both young, they’d both been brought up to believe that they were pretty and they were both expected to make good matches. And while Gardenia had been urged to temper her own expectations, Isabella had not, buying wholesale into the notion that she was life’s first prize in spite of all evidence to the contrary.

“I suppose you can never wear green because you do not have the eyes for it,” Isabella told Gardenia, sounding almost sorry for her companion whilst simultaneously forgetting that Gardenia had worn green the last time they’d met only two weeks earlier. “So, what shall you wear to the ball, dearest Gardenia?”

The question caught Gardenia by surprise. Until now, Isabella had simply used Gardenia as though she were another mirror, so Gardenia hadn’t expected to be asked about her own plans.

“I... I... I don’t really know,” Gardenia said, having been so busy helping Mother dress every girl in the land that she’d not really had time to consider herself. “I’ve not really thought about it,” she confessed.

“How can you not have thought about it? What else is there to think about?” Isabella exclaimed, her mind in a spin at the very notion. She took Gardenia into a sisterly embrace. Gardenia, as ever, was wearing a delightful dress of cream and yellow. Mother had gone to great lengths this morning to ensure that she looked just right for their house call — fabulous and yet no threat to Isabella. It had taken a little extra thought but it had paid off with Isabella talking to Gardenia as though she were an equal while at the same time taking her under her wing.

“My dearest friend, you mustn’t put off your preparations any longer. You have a pretty face, of sorts, and a cordial nature. You will surely find favour amongst many of the second-born gentlemen of court,” Isabella reassured her, adding as a stark warning. “After all, you would not wish to end up like your sister now, would you? You have so much more to offer.”

Poor Marigold, still single at 19 and how the good folks of Andovia knew it.

Mother finished her repairs on Madame Eames’s hem just as the footman entered to carry her bags.

“There you go, Madame, as good as new,” Mother said, climbing to her feet and closing her sewing kit once again.

“Oh, Madame Roche, you are a marvel,” Madame Eames said, twisting her neck to stare at Mother’s handiwork. “Now, do let me know the moment Isabella’s dress is ready to be fitted, won’t you?”

“Of course, Madame, I will give it my highest priority,” Mother assured her.

“Thank you,” Madame Eames beamed gratefully, checking her smile just a little to add; “And do pass on my warmest regards to your other daughter... er...”

“Marigold,” Mother reminded her.

“Yes, that’s it. Marigold,” she said with a sad shake of the head. “Such a pity.”

Chapter Four

Marigold had no use for pity. Unbeknown to most, she was already secretly betrothed. The only problem was that her secret was so closely guarded, she wasn’t even sure if her intended was aware of their betrothal.

Marigold used the opportunity whilst Mother and Gardenia were out to rendezvous away from prying eyes. It meant an early start but the moment Mother and Gardenia left for the Eames’s, Marigold threw off her summer dress and pulled on her riding leathers. They were dark and dowdy clothes, not the type Marigold was used to being seen out in, so she was confident she could slip out of town without being noticed.

Mother and Gardenia had taken their tap pulled by Queenie but that still left old Liquorice. He might not have been up to standing outside the houses of the great and the good anymore but he could still ride like the wind with Marigold at his reins.

Liquorice snorted with approval as Marigold strapped on his old cavalry saddle.

“Let’s go,” she whispered into his ear, giving his neck a loving pat and climbing onto his back in the most unladylike fashion possible. She ducked under the stable doorway as Liquorice set off at a canter and steered him around the back of the house, through the lanes and away from the town centre.

Andovia was the name of the city as well as the Kingdom, which left its citizens with the unsettling sense that no matter how far they strayed from the shadow of the King’s grand palace, they were always in Andovia. It also made the street signs somewhat confusing for travellers with milestones for Andovia reading “30 miles” next to others which declared “Welcome to Andovia”. But Marigold needed no milestones this morning. She knew exactly where she was heading and turned north, away from the cobblestones of Andovia and towards the windswept steps of Mont Magie, or Magic Mountain as it was otherwise known. Also in Andovia. But only just.

Once outside the city gates, the countryside opened up. Greys and browns of Andovia’s thoroughfares gave way to greens and yellows of her fields and orchards. Wheat stems stirred in the morning’s breeze, apple trees sagged against their heavy loads and wild berries seasoned the air with their sweet zests. Mother Nature was in full bloom, spurring Marigold on to her destination.

Without warning, Liquorice pulled up sharply, almost throwing Marigold from her saddle.

“Woah! What is it, boy?” she said, pulling back on his reins as she tried to settle her ride. In his cavalry heyday, Liquorice had seen seven kinds of hell so he wasn’t the type of horse to startle easily.

Marigold heard them before she saw them. A low irritable buzzing barred their way. Wasps. They’d made their nest in the low branches of an old apple tree and were growing drunk and cantankerous on the fermenting fruit that lay all around them. Liquorice reared back and Marigold steered him away.

“We’ll give them their space,” Marigold whispered, patting his neck and leaving the wasps to their bounty.

After a couple more miles the dirt tracks turned to granite and the terrain started to slope. The mountains loomed large before her and the air grew frigid. Marigold pulled her cashmere scarf over her chin and gave thanks for the warm woollen lining inside her leather breeches. Liquorice didn’t seem to mind the conditions though and soon worked up a sweat climbing the trails until they’d reached the northern pass. If she’d continued on her way she would’ve eventually reached the equally diminutive Kingdom of Srendizi, a lawless backwater of ridges and canyons sandwiched between a frozen belt of inaccessible mountain ranges. But Marigold had no intention of going that far. No one in good conscience would. This was the point Marigold had set out to reach and she’d made it in good time. A second horse, this one with a cart, waited patiently by the side of the track for his rider to return and Liquorice greeted him with a snort.

Marigold jumped out of her saddle and looked towards the summit. All was still but for a few clouds rolling across the peaks. After a few minutes, a figure appeared on the horizon. He had three barrels with him and was rolling them down the slopes towards where Marigold was waiting. The figure stopped when he saw he had company and took a moment to assess the situation. Marigold pulled the scarf from her face and called up to him.

“I couldn’t wait for my sorbet today so I thought I’d come and get it myself.”

“Marigold?” Hans asked in bewilderment but otherwise happy to see her. “Is that you?”

Hans kicked his barrels packed with snow down the last hundred metres and pulled the dark goggles from his face to check his eyes were not deceiving him.

“You rode all this way?”

“No further than you come every day,” Marigold replied.

“But you’re a girl,” he pointed out.

“Thank you for noticing.”

Marigold wasn’t offended by Hans’s remark. The very pillars of their great Kingdom had been founded upon such expectations but it was one thing for the Eames and the Weisses of this world to underestimate her, it was another to let Hans do the same. Theirs had been an on-off-off-off-off relationship determined in part by Mother’s own expectations for her daughters. But when Marigold had reached — and then quickly passed — the age of maturity without receiving a single proposal (honourable or otherwise) Mother’s focus switched to Gardenia. Both girls had bloomed within a year of each other but Marigold’s petals weren’t quite as alluring as her sister’s.

At least, not as far as the wealthy sons of Andovia were concerned. But there were some in this tiny Kingdom who thought otherwise.

“You are alone? No one is with you?” Hans asked, scarcely believing this was possible.

“For all I know we could be the last people on Earth,” Marigold teased, making Hans’s ruddy cheeks turn redder still.

“You are so bold,” Hans said with a grin, “but clearly no tracker. Riders came through here this morning, from the north. You shouldn’t be out here by yourself.”

“I am not by myself. I am with you,” Marigold said, taking a step towards him. Hans did not know how to behave. He’d spent so many years trying to bury his feelings that he was almost as frozen as the slopes they shared. He was a lowly bucket boy. Marigold was a lady of good name. He had no right to his desires even if they were all he had.

And yet still she was here and taking another step towards him when he instinctively backed away.

“No one will know,” she said, finally cornering him between two boulders. She was close enough for Hans to feel her breath against his face. He trembled despite feeling unusually hot in his winter gear. Hans had no fear of wolf attacks or bandits or climbing sheer icy cliffs to reach sparkling icicles but his courage (and experience) faltered in the face of Marigold’s boldness.

“My lady,” Hans said, almost doffing his cap out of respect. “How shall I be? There is so much I want to say but I am afraid.”

“Don’t be. This morning is just for us.”

Hans had no idea what this meant but before he was able to say so Marigold’s ruby red lips were pressed against his. He squeaked in surprise but managed to go with the kiss despite cracking his head on an overhanging ledge. He had never been intimate with anyone before. He’d not even had a mother to kiss him goodnight or a dog to lick his face so Marigold’s advance was both alien and Earthly all at once.

Their lips parted yet their bodies remained entwined.

“I’ve wanted to do that all my life,” Marigold confided.

“Me too,” said Hans, before unnecessarily adding, “with you.”

Liquorice rasped his cheeks while Hans’s own horse stayed wisely out of it. He had no opinion on the matter. He was just a horse, and a bucket boy’s horse at that.

“I live for Saturday,” Hans finally volunteered. “All I think about is that moment I see you coming for your dessert. That is my dessert. I always try to give you a little extra but not too much otherwise Monsieur Stefano might grow wise about my feelings for you.”

“And what are your feelings for me?” Marigold asked, hoping they amounted to more than an extra spoonful of sorbet.

Hans pulled Marigold closer still, causing their winter leathers to squeak in their loving embrace.

“I feel for you as the moon feels for the sun. I am the wind and you are the mountain. We are two clouds drifting through an open sky,” Hans recited, making the mistake of thinking Marigold was yearning to hear a weather report instead of the one word that had eluded her her whole life.

“Do you love me?” Marigold asked, silencing Hans before he’d had a chance to compare their relationship to rainbows, fog or blustery Tuesday afternoons.

“I... I... do, my lady...”

“Marigold,” she said.

“Marigold,” he smiled, as if the name brought pleasure to his lips just saying it. “I want to shout your name from the top of the world.”

“Then do so,” she told him.

“And bring the mountain down on top of me?” Hans said, knowing full well the perils of making too much noise in avalanche country. “It might even be worth it.”

They kissed again, though this time it was Hans who made the running. He’d kissed her a thousand times in his dreams but the reality was more wonderful than the fantasy. The feel, the smell and the taste of Marigold: these were the things his mind could not have imagined and these were the things he quickly found himself intoxicated by. He didn’t want this kiss to end. He didn’t want to go back to the cold realities of pretence and denial. Pandora’s lid was off. How could things ever be the same between them again? But they had no choice. This was still Andovia, even all the way up here. And bucket boys and ladies of good name were not permitted to find happiness with each other.

Except on Mont Magie.

“I have to go before Mother returns,” Marigold said, pained to tear herself from Hans.

“Will I see you again?” Hans asked, holding onto her gloved hand as she tried to pull away.

Marigold knew what Mother would say, and more importantly what Mother would do, if she learned of her eldest daughter’s infatuation with Stefano’s lowly assistant. She had no truck with her children’s happiness but she was a pragmatist. Her iron heart had been forged in the fires of bitter experience. She meant well but she would’ve also tried to save Marigold from herself. And Marigold couldn’t jeopardise her only regular contact with Hans, no matter how fleeting it might be.

“I’ll see you on Saturday,” she smiled sadly, climbing back onto Liquorice and leading him back down the stony trail and back to the lives they were expected to lead. Perhaps one day it would be different. Perhaps one day, when Mother had finally given up all hope of Marigold making a favourable match and Stefano had handed over his scoop to Hans, they might dare to dream of a life together. One day. But not today.

“And I shall see you,” Hans called after her. “On Saturday. And I shall give you all the sorbet in the world, because I love you, Marigold Roche. I love you and I will always love you until the day I die.”

The cold mountain winds prised the tears from Marigold’s eyes as she made her way back home. She’d come here to check Hans still had feelings for her after Saturday’s brush with the mystery girl. And while she’d at least managed to lay these doubts to rest, she had foolishly kindled her own fires only to come away with nothing to burn.

Mother had always warned her girls to guard their hearts. Mother, as ever, knew what was right, even when it felt so wrong.

“Marigold!” she heard Hans sing after her. “Marigold! Marigold! Marigold!” It was more of a whisper than a cry but she heard it all the same. He wasn’t calling her back, simply rejoicing in the sound of her name, saying it as loudly as he dared —

— as though they were the last two people on Earth.

Chapter Five

The footman showed Mother and Gardenia out, placing their bags in the back of Queenie’s trap and helping both into their seats.

“You are most kind,” Mother thanked the footman. She always made a note of thanking the staff. It wasn’t customary. In fact, it was downright unusual in this town but it cost nothing and helped oil the gears. The aristocracy might’ve owned Andovia but it was their servants who ran it.

The footman bowed cordially then turned when he heard the crunch of footsteps approaching from behind. It was Madame Eames’s gardener, Monsieur Samuel. He drew near with his cap in his hands and looked up at Mother and Gardenia in their seats.

“Madame Roche. I heard you were calling this morning and wanted to extend my respects,” he said with due reverence, only too aware of the liberty he was taking but compelled to do so anyway.

Mother looked down at the gardener’s disfigured face. A white scar cut through his top lip, exposing his crooked teeth and pulling his mouth into a permanent leer. Gardenia recoiled at the sight of him but Mother smiled and reached down to touch his broad shoulder.

“Monsieur Samuel. How are you, dear friend?”

Samuel’s green eyes lit up upon hearing his name and he seemed to shed a couple of years.

“Honoured that you remember me after all these years,” he said, looking from Mother to daughter and then back again.

“The honour is all mine,” Mother replied. “You know my youngest?”

Samuel bowed to Gardenia and smiled in wonder.

“She is a credit to you, Madame. We are all so very proud of her,” he said, causing Gardenia to look at him in confusion.

Madame Eames appeared at the parlour window and caught sight of the impromptu reunion taking place on her front drive. The footman gave a cough to draw their attention to Madame Eames’s disapproving gaze and Samuel reluctantly withdrew to let Mother and Gardenia go, not wishing to get them into bother with the mistress of the house.

“Wonderful to see you again, Madame Roche,” he said, giving Mother one final bow. He thought for one moment and then whispered solemnly, “For the King’s men”.

“For the King’s men,” Mother replied with a veiled nod, jigging Queenie’s reins to clatter their way down Madame Eames’s pebble drive.

Gardenia looked back at the gardener as he replaced his cap and headed back to work.

“Who was that, Mother?” she asked as they passed through the gates and back out onto the main thoroughfare.

“Just an old friend,” Mother said without telling her anything that she hadn’t already gathered.

“I guessed that but how does he know me? And what did he mean they are all so very proud of me? Who’s proud of me?”

“We are all proud of you, Gardenia. You should take it as a compliment and not make so much of a fuss about it,” Mother deflected. Gardenia could tell she was deflecting and changed her tack.

“Who are the King’s men?”

This time Mother said nothing and hoped not to have to but Gardenia pressed the matter.

“Mother?”

“I will tell you when you are older,” Mother said, adding intrigue to Gardenia’s growing curiosity.

“Tell me now.”

“When you are older,” Mother insisted.

“When’s that?”

“Some time from now.”

“Why not now?” Gardenia nagged.

“Because you are not yet blessed with the gift of circumspection,” Mother replied as they passed Captain Durand leading a squadron of Guards towards the city gates. Mother welcomed the distraction but Gardenia wasn’t put off for long.

“Does Marigold know about it?” she asked, trying to find a different route into the enigma.

“This is not a matter to be discussed with anyone, even your own sweet sister,” Mother told her. “I mean it, Gardenia, I will tell you when you are ready to know but you must never mention a word of this to anyone. Do you promise me?”

“Why can’t you tell me?” Gardenia said in frustration.

“Do you promise?”

“Ohhhh...” Gardenia groaned but she knew it was hopeless. “Okay, I promise,” she finally relented, slumping into her seat to stew on her disappointment.

“Don’t slouch,” Mother said, denying Gardenia even her sulk.

They clip-clopped through the main square, past the cathedral and the Palace beyond. Gardenia stared up at the royal residence as they cantered past, with its turrets, balconies, parapets and keeps, and she wondered what it must be like to live in such a magnificent building. She’d never even set foot inside the Palace grounds but it had always been her dream. To tread the hallowed halls, even once, would’ve been a fairytale come true.

“Mother? Will I go to the ball?” Gardenia asked.

“Of course,” Mother replied.

“As a guest?”

“Dear child, you know that is impossible.”

“But as your attendant?” Gardenia said, still happy to know that she was going in some capacity.

“As a ladies’ attendant,” Mother corrected her.

Gardenia would attend many balls in the years to come but not the Prince’s ball. That, like the handsome Captain Durand, was beyond her station and an invitation to the most eagerly anticipated event of the year was reserved for the daughters of ennobled fathers alone.

Gardenia accepted this and thought some more.

“What shall I wear, Mother?” Gardenia asked.

“I haven’t decided yet,” she replied.

“Shouldn’t we start thinking about it?”

“One of the benefits of being a dressmaker is that you get to see what everyone else is wearing before you have to decide for yourself,” Mother explained, steering Queenie around the Palace walls and towards the far end of town and home.

Gardenia felt reassured by the explanation but still wondered something.