Page 2
D iana, the widow of Lord Hensley and young mother of the future Duke of Huxton, smiled as she listened to Lady Prescott explain her plans for her next needlepoint creation.
She smiled, but her mind wandered. It wasn’t Lady Prescott’s fault, or the topic for that matter.
For years, she’d enjoyed discussions on needlepoint, but recently, such conversations left her restless.
She was bored. The thought startled her.
Diana had no reason to be bored. She was exactly where she should be, having tea with other ladies who were either married or widowed, their seasons long gone.
Yet at thirty-one, she had the alarming feeling she wasn’t doing what she should be.
The first few times she felt it, she assured herself it was only because of her grieving process.
She’d lost her husband, Stuart, two years ago and even now still missed him fiercely.
But deep down, she knew this was different.
It was the blasted article. She didn’t understand why it rankled her. It shouldn’t.
“What do you think, Diana? Shall I do the landscape next or the dog portrait?” Lady Prescott said, snapping her out of her odd thoughts.
Diana smiled. “I think the landscape would be lovely and a wonderful gift.”
Lady Prescott nodded. Diana wondered how old she was.
She couldn’t be much older than herself.
Diana’s eyes roamed the room, taking in all the various factions of ladies congregating for tea at the Duchess of Peyton’s home.
Once mired in scandal, the duchess’s events were now quite popular, and her invites highly sought-after.
Diana was always invited as her sister married into the duchess’s family years ago.
She continued to peruse the room, assessing the little groups that formed at these society gatherings. Standing in the middle of the enormous drawing room were the young ladies considered the smashing successes of the season. They would be married before the end of the year.
Her focus shifted to another group: the firmly on-the-shelf wallflowers who congregated at the tables closest to the room’s walls.
They sat with the ease of someone who accepted they wouldn’t ever marry but understood they must attend the never-ending events of London society.
Her gaze continued to the group that comprised the ladies who were neither smashing successes nor wallflowers.
Diana, during her season, would have been considered one of them.
A sigh escaped her, and the ladies at her table glanced at her with concern.
“Is something amiss, Lady Hensley?” Lady St. James asked.
Diana flushed. “I’m fine. I’m feeling a little out of sorts. I think I will go for a walk around the room.”
Diana stood, and Lady Prescott appeared ready to join her. “Please stay. I will return momentarily. I need a bit of movement.”
Standing over her friends, some whom she cherished dearly, she could see a variety of lace caps pinned to their heads.
The slips of fabric matched the ladies’ dresses to perfection, just as hers did—the perfect accessory for a middle-aged married woman.
A wave of restlessness shot through her, and she had the irrational thought that it was the dratted pieces of lace’s fault.
She turned and made her way not around the room but to the foyer.
She needed a moment away from everything.
She did her best to walk gracefully, even though her mind screamed to run.
Diana continued to survey the room as she walked, taking in her sister’s group of friends.
They were all married but somewhat different from Diana’s circle.
None of those ladies wore a cap or seemed as if their lives had passed them by.
She frowned at her cruel thoughts. Life hadn’t passed her friends by.
Diana tore her gaze away. The urge for silence and privacy intensified within her.
A howl escaped the scandalous Lady Hawley while she spoke with friends.
The woman’s laugh was almost as notorious as her reputation.
She didn’t seem to mind that most of society found her unsuppressed chortling shocking. Or maybe she didn’t care?
At events, Diana often spotted her laughing from the depths of her being.
What must it be like to be so carefree, she wondered?
Rumors of late suggested she was planning something over-the-top.
Some said it was likely prompted by her fury at discovering that her estranged husband had taken one of her closest friends as his lover.
Diana supposed eventually all would be revealed, but tonight the lady appeared completely unconcerned about society’s opinions.
Lady Hawley’s group consisted of married ladies who flouted convention.
As Diana walked by, she spotted the much-talked-about woman, who smiled back.
Diana’s eyes widened. Not once could she remember a time that Lady Hawley had ever greeted her.
The lady’s smile dimmed at Diana’s expression.
Horrified that she may have unintentionally cut her, Diana smiled back, but Lady Hawley had already turned away.
It wasn’t Diana’s intent to ignore her. Regardless of one’s reputation, she didn’t believe in rudeness. She was just surprised the lady had said hello. In all the years they were both out in society, they’d never spoken to each other.
She continued to the door, finally arriving in the vast but quiet foyer.
Sighing, she wandered before stopping at a massive gold mirror spanning most of the wall.
She stared back at her reflection. Her eyes narrowed as she studied her perfectly acceptable features.
She had a heart-shaped face framed by brown hair.
Her eyes were probably her best physical trait.
Her husband once said he had never seen a blue so lovely.
Yet as she gazed at herself, it wasn’t her physical features she assessed. She pondered if the woman staring back at her was really who she wanted to be. It unnerved her that she was having such thoughts.
Her eyes moved to the lace cap on her head with small emerald bows.
The dratted thing was both an annoyance she wanted to fling off and also something that gave her comfort.
She pulled a piece of paper from the pocket of her skirts and unfolded it.
Diana frowned at the caricature. It was a lady in a gown similar to her own with brown hair and a lace cap. She read the words under the picture.
The uneventful but much-needed steady ladies of London society
Sighing, she looked away from the annoying article, not needing to read anymore.
Diana had studied it numerous times since it came out.
It stated there was a group of ladies who were the backbone of London respectability.
Without them, society was likely to fall into chaos and sin.
No specific women had been pointed out. Instead, the writer provided a list of key traits that personified these types of ladies.
All the qualities Diana embodied made a respectable marriage match: middle-aged, kind, elegant, morally strong, and content with their role.
She sighed. She was the epitome of a mature, uneventful, and proper lady. Yet an emotion stirred within her. One that challenged her to break free of the description that was very much her.
“Diana, are you all right?”
She spun on her heels to find her sister Clara in a lovely blue gown, minus the cap, frowning at her with concern. Her eyes flicked down to Diana’s left hand, still clutching the article.
“Did someone say something hurtful to you?”
A laugh escaped Diana at the question, and her sister walked to her, more concerned.
“Diana.”
Diana shook her head. “I’m sorry. No, it is nothing like that.”
Not believing her, Clara said, “You must tell me what’s wrong.”
Diana handed her sister the article, and Clara read it. When she was done, she looked back up, still confused. “What does this have to do with you?”
Diana struck the same pose as the lady in the caricature, and a giggle erupted from Clara. She raised a brow, and her sister sobered.
“I’m this uneventful lady they are writing about.”
Clara started to deny it, but Diana held her hand up. “Don’t.”
“There is nothing wrong with this type of lady,” Clara offered.
Diana knew she was right. Yet for some reason, she had the urge to denounce this woman who embodied so much of who she was.
“It is quite insulting now that I think about it. Do you think this paragon explained in the paper can be broken down into these characteristics? I doubt it. I would say, ‘Shame on this writer for portraying women as such simple creatures.’”
Diana smiled at Clara’s attempt to write off the words that so strongly affected her. “Truth be told, I have always liked being this type of lady, but for some reason, lately, I feel adrift.”
Clara’s eyes widened at her revelation. Her sister took her hand. “You can be and do whatever you want, Diana. You are so young.”
Diana snorted. “Not true.”
“I mean it. There is a whole world to explore out there, but do it because you want to. Not because this article reduced your circle of friends to caricatures.”
Diana squeezed her sister’s hand.
“Are you missing Hensley?” Clara asked.
She always missed her husband. Even two years later, she wished he were by her side, but she couldn’t shake the sense this was not because of his passing. This was something more, but she didn’t know what.
“Of course, but this feels different.”
Clara turned them so they looked in the mirror. “Diana, you can and should do whatever you like.”
Diana smiled at her sister as their eyes met. “Thank you for your support.”
Still, all she saw when she stared back at herself was the caricature of the uneventful lady. And, until now, she would have been fine with that lady. What changed?
*
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2 (Reading here)
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53