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Authors: Valerie

Joan Smith

BOOK: Joan Smith
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VALERIE

 

Joan Smith

 

Chapter One

 

In defense of my reputation, let me deny at the outset the
odious rumor that I went to Troy Fenners to nab a husband. That there chanced to be a few eligible gentlemen running tame at my Aunt Loo’s house was mere coincidence. That was not why I went at all.

When one has, however, an aunt possessed of a staggeringly large fortune and no children, she is not tardy to accept an invitation to visit. Add to that the fact that Papa is not at all high in the stirrups, that he has not less than four of us daughters to see matched, that life at Kent had sunk into a dismal business of hearing hints I was destined for the shelf, add to that three bickering sisters, and you will, I hope, believe that I went for the adventure and the simple pleasure of a change of scene.

My Aunt Loo, for Louise, is a dear, zany creature,
totally
unlike her brother, my papa. She is rather plump and fiftyish. She spends a great deal of her money on perfectly ugly outfits that run from the peculiar to the downright bizarre. She is a frustrated actress at heart, usually playing some role in her mind for which she unfortunately costumes her body. Having recently fallen amongst spiritualists, she brought with her a great many flowing, pale, vaguely ghostlike ensembles on her last visit home. It was while she was with us that she asked me to return with her to Troy Fenners, her estate in Hampshire. I said, “Yes, please and thank you,” before her words were hardly out of her mouth.

“You will do very nicely,” she went on, running her bright blue eyes over my anatomy. Aunt Loo’s eyes tend to protrude more from their sockets than other people’s, giving her an air of perpetual surprise. It is a look that is quite familiar to me.

There is plenty of the anatomy she was examining. Five feet and ten inches of it, to be precise. I go beyond Junoesque. No one has ever referred to me as a ladder either; the frame is well filled. My sisters are kind enough to call me a Percheron, but I like to think of myself as more of a lioness. I have hair of a lionish shade, eyes that are topaz in color and somewhat the shape of a feline’s eyes. I try to manage my large frame with catlike grace, though I cannot claim complete success in this endeavor. It is hard to be graceful when one must bend not only the head but also the shoulders to converse with other people. Then too the furniture makers scale down their sofas and chairs to accommodate smaller ladies. I am most at home in a man’s stuffed armchair.

I never adopt any posture of apologizing for my size. There is nothing so pathetic as to see a large woman trying to shrink down to match her escort by buckling her knees, bending her head, or wearing childish flat-heeled shoes. I walk tall with my head high and my shoulders back, proud of my body. Cringing and groveling are not for a lioness. Just why my particular sort of body would “do very nicely” for my Aunt Loo was not clear to me at the time. I soon learned her meaning!

Mama had a few reservations on the scheme of a visit. “You are not used to being away from home, Valerie,” she reminded me. This loomed as one of my chief desires, the change, but I could not like to tell her so.

“I’ll write every week, Mama. Twice a week, and the girls will write to me.”

“Hampshire is so far away,” she went on, with a worried frown. Mama, dear Mama, is the only person in the world who still sees me as a helpless little thing.

“Loo is lonesome,” Papa pointed out in an encouraging way to my mother.

“You must let me have her,” Loo implored. “Just for a month. A month will be long enough.”

The question
would
just arise—long enough for
what?
Being so eager to go, I only smiled and nodded. “Just one month, Mama. I’ll be back for your birthday in July.”

“I hope so, my dear. My fiftieth—we plan a large party you must know.”

Lest you take the notion that, being the eldest daughter, I am verging on some such ancient age as twenty-five or thirty, let me point out that I have two brothers, both older than I am. I am twenty-one, and still consider myself very nubile, whatever my younger sisters may say. If ever I find a man I like who is over six feet tall, and providing of course he feels the same way about me, I shall have him. I have had several offers from midgets, and have been in love a few times with non
-
midgets who failed to return the compliment, but till the present, I and my true love have failed to meet.

My sisters, excepting Sukey who is only fifteen and my favorite, were perfectly happy to see me go. Elleri’s so-called beau has lately been showing some symptoms of turning into a cat-lover (the cat in question being me), and Marie was never perfectly happy having to share a room with me. Marie is a martinet; her belongings are on hangers and in drawers within a second of leaving her body. Mine have the inexplicable habit of falling on to floors, and hanging off chairs, even landing on beds, sometimes Marie’s. I daresay I am a thorn in her side, but I am the one who actually
cleans
the room. She only
tidies
it. I am very particular about cleanliness, even if I am a little messy.

What I crave, in my deepest heart of hearts, is a woman of my very own to pick up after me, and tend to the thousands of stupid chores women have to cope with. Mending, sewing, making hideous little flower arrangements—they are women’s work, not fit for a lioness.

When Papa is in favor of anything at our house, it is done. I was allowed to accompany my Aunt Loo home to Troy Fenners, and went with no notion in my head what she wanted me for, but only the determination to have a wonderful time. We were two days and two nights on the road, for despite her elegant chaise and her team of four, she did not make a wild dart through the countryside.

We stopped at the finest inns, dined on exquisite food, with my rich aunt picking up the bill for the whole. The first evening, we stopped over at Tunbridge Wells. As the clientele at our watering hole were well into their sixties and seventies, I made no demur when we retired to our rooms early, nor even when she handed me a novel do read, to while away the evening. It was an ersatz Mrs. Radcliffe gothic book, entitled
Search for the Unknown.
I never cared much for gothics. Elleri and Marie eat them up like bonbons. I skipped through twenty pages and set it aside
.

“Don’t you like it?” she asked, disappointed.

“It’s fine. I am rather tired from the trip. That’s all.”

“Read a little more, just to please me,” she begged.

I read on, trying to become interested in an insipid heroine who fell into a fit of hysterics every ten pages or so. When she began receiving bumps on the head in the dark, threatening messages, and most particularly when a dashing gentleman entered into the story, my simulated interest became more genuine. I read half the book at the inn at Tunbridge Wells and finished it the next night at Horsham. The heroine’s uncle was the villain; her dashing hero uncovered the plot, for Debora hadn’t the wits to know even that she was in love with him, or he with her.

“How did you like it, Valerie?” she asked eagerly as soon as I closed the cover.

“Very much. Do you have any more by this writer? What’s her name? Ah, Mrs. Beaton. I don’t recognize her.”

“No one does,” she answered, with a sly look on her face. She was trying to narrow those little pop eyes, which had the strange effect of pushing them out farther.

“What do you mean?”

“Oh, nothing,” she said, with elaborate nonchalance, pulling a fold of pale pink chiffon over her knees.

“You know Mrs. Beaton. Who is she, Auntie? Do I know her?”

She could contain her marvelous secret no longer. “It’s me!” she squealed, then threw back her brindled head and laughed in pure glee. “I am so glad you like it.”

It was not necessary to do any playacting. I could not have been more surprised had she told me the incredible events in the story were true. I made all suitable exclamations of surprise and congratulation.

“Oh, good, then perhaps you won’t mind helping me,” was her reply.

She had chosen poorly. Writing, like sewing, is one of my more pronounced aversions. Marie was the one she ought to have brought back with her. When Marie is not tidying her room, she is making up lists of good resolutions, of her belongings, of things to do and read, anything to give her a reason to sit at a desk writing. A lengthy book to be copied out in copperplate would be a boon to Marie.

Before I had time to begin making my excuses, she went on, “The thing is, you see, I want to murder someone, and as soon as I saw what a great, strapping, strong girl you are, and so very bold, I realized it could be done very easily.”

“Oh! But really, Auntie, I—I am not much good at—
murder?”

“You can do it if you put your mind to it.”

“Who is the victim?”

“Mr. Sinclair,” she answered promptly.

My aunt’s married name is Sinclair. Of course she was a Ford, like Papa, before her marriage. The intended victim was not her husband; he had been dead for ten or more years. Sir Edward Sinclair was his name, some kin to the noble St. Regis family. A first cousin to Lord St. Regis I believe was the kinship. Just which relatives she planned to dispose of was unclear, but the whole idea was of course repulsive.

“Papa would never allow me,” I told her, my tones rising to strange heights. My normal voice is low-pitched.

“He shan’t know a thing about it, dear. How should he? I would not tell him for worlds. It will be our little secret. I have it all planned out. You must climb up the trellis outside of his window, after first entering in the afternoon and making sure the window is not locked, then you raise the window, crawl in, and—well, I have not decided whether to shoot or strangle him. Maybe a dagger would be nice,” she said, setting a finger to her chin to ponder this detail.

I was beginning to think a straitjacket was what was called for. “Yes, but it is illegal, you must know, to go killing perfectly innocent men.”

“Innocent?” she demanded, the eyes shooting forward. I feared they would depart from their sockets entirely. “It is nothing of the sort. He is the foulest villain ever darkened the countryside.”

“What did he do?” I asked, my interest soaring.

“As to that,” she said more mildly, “I haven’t quite sorted the details out. But he is to be the very blackest sort of villain, who will stop at nothing. He is after Gloria’s money, you see. I think he will have a wife already stashed away in a corner, while pretending to make love to Gloria.”

“Auntie,” I said, weak with relief, “is this your next
book
we are discussing?”

“Mrs. Beaton’s next,” she laughed merrily. “I had thought to call it
Madness Most Discreet,
from Shakespeare of course, but wonder if
Tenebrous Shadows
is not scarier. Walter will advise me; he is excellent at titles.”

“Walter—who is that?”

“A friend, a neighbor of mine. He is the one gave me the idea a mere female could not perform the feats required of Gloria in killing off the villain, but as soon as ever I saw how
huge
you are grown, and so bold, my dear Valerie, I knew perfectly well it could be done. I shall make Gloria
you,
you see, like I have made the villain Mr. Sinclair, and if you can do it, she can. Only of course I shan’t call her Valerie, because her name is already Gloria, which is a much prettier name. I am a little famous for my exactness of detail, if I do not puff myself off unbecomingly to say so. They may praise Mary Brunton to the skies all they like, I think
Self-Control
was a vastly overrated piece. How should it be possible for the heroine to escape in an Indian canoe down a wild, treacherous river in America? I doubt it could be done, and I’ll tell you this, Valerie, if Mrs. Beaton were to have written it, she would have tested it out first.”

“Elleri liked the book,” I was so foolish as to say.

“Walter Scott liked my book!” she retaliated. “As to Elleri,
I
never saw her open any book but the fashion magazines the whole time I was at your place. I had a most kind note from Mr. Scott, forwarded to me by my publisher. I wish he would have showed the book to Lord Byron instead, but he don’t care for novels. It may work its way into his hands yet. I know Byron’s has got into the hands of the butcher, for I got a flitch of bacon wrapped up in “Childe Harold,” which I thought ever so miserable an end for it. The
poem,
I mean, for the bacon ought to have been honored.”

“What else does Gloria do?” I asked, to stem the tide of useless details from Auntie.

“She jumps her mare over the tollgate booth, which I am sure you can do very well, for it is only five or six feet high. The gate you jumped at home is not much lower.”

“Yes, but the gate at home is not five feet
wide
as well.”

“I shall procure you an excellent jumper for the occasion, my dear. I have already arranged for that.”

Any scheme that put an excellent jumper under me was not much argued. “We shall see. What else?”

BOOK: Joan Smith
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