The Midnight Dress

Free The Midnight Dress by Karen Foxlee

Book: The Midnight Dress by Karen Foxlee Read Free Book Online
Authors: Karen Foxlee
Tags: Contemporary, Mystery, Young Adult
his hand for Pearl’s book. ‘ The Alchemist’s Daughter .’
    He flips the book over, reads the back, smiles.
    ‘How much is it?’ asks Pearl; she seems flustered now that Rose is beside her.
    Paul waves his hand.
    ‘A gift,’ he says.
    For the first time ever, Rose sees Pearl blush.
    Outside, the day has grown dark and oppressive. The palm trees that line Main Street are violently green against the storm clouds.
    ‘He reminds me of a spider,’ says Rose.
    ‘Oh, Rose, don’t say that,’ Pearl says, laughing. ‘That’s so mean.’
    ‘No really, it’s so weird, this whole old man in a shop thing.’
    ‘He’s not old,’ says Pearl. ‘He’s only thirty.’
    ‘How do you know that?’ Rose raises her eyebrows.
    ‘I read it in the newspaper. He plays for the Leonora Lions. He’s been to university. He studied literature. No one ever goes anywhere in this town. He knows so many different things.’
    Rose shakes her head.
    ‘Oh, it’s only a game, anyway,’ says Pearl, exasperated. ‘He’s only here till the end of the crush. He’s just helping out his mother. His father died. It’s so boring in this town. So boring I could die.’
    The first of the cold droplets hits their faces. Pearl closes her eyes and tilts her head skyward.
    ‘I’m going home,’ says Rose.
    She has drawn her eyeliner très thick and painted black lipstick immaculately on her bow mouth. She has tried to powder over her freckles. She wants the effect to be startling, frightening even, although she doesn’t know why she wants to scare Edie, of all people, who rescues ceramic blue birds and keeps them in a flock on her kitchen wall. There’s a box of them too, beneath the table, all their wings in pieces, waiting to be repaired.
    Looking into that box now makes Rose feel fidgety.
    ‘You wouldn’t believe how many of those birds are out there,’ says Edie. ‘You’d be surprised how many people own the things then throw them out at the dump or hand them in to Lifeline or sell them at garage sales. I don’t go out much any more, of course, so I think my flock is nearly done.’
    Rose sits sullenly. Edie has not made one mention of her make-up.
    ‘Did you come through the cane?’
    ‘Yes,’ says Rose.
    ‘You have to be careful of snakes,’ says Edie.
    Everyone’s always going on about snakes. Rose hasn’t seen a single one. Leaving the caravan park, she started on the road but then cut through a cane field along a row, and then a vacant paddock rife with milk thistle. It cut almost fifteen minutes off the forty-minute walk. The afternoon clouds hang motionless in the sky and when they move they’re like huge ships unmoored, dragging their shadows behind them.
    In the fields she’s closer to the mountain, she realised, almost in its shade. She can see the places where the mountain pleats and the open scrub turns to rainforest. When she leaves home she can see the Leap, on the sea side, and as she walks Weeping Rock comes into view. That rock makes her shiver, stirs something in her like a half-forgotten dream.
    Edie hands Rose a pile of old confirmation dresses, once white, now yellow, heavily rust-stained. Rose sits staring at them on her lap until Edie lifts up one of the skirts.
    ‘It’s the tulle petticoats we want,’ says Edie, holding up the hook again.
    Rose opens up the dress carefully and looks for the seam.
    ‘Shall I tell you a love story?’ says Edie.
    ‘I hate love stories,’ says Rose.
    ‘It involves the great-great-great-great granddaughter of Jean-Claude Mercier, remember him, and a Mr Jonathan Baker, who was born right here in this very house in the very first room down the hallway. He nearly killed his mother coming out. She was very small, Lillian Baker, even smaller than me.’
    Rose starts to unpick. She gives the old woman nothing.
    ‘The great-great-great-great granddaughter’s name was Florence and she was the only daughter of Herbert Mercier of Herbert Mercier & Sons Gentlemen’s

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