peopleâs daughtersâor pollute someone elseâs home with my infamy. Plenty of firms need typists. And more women have become secretaries of late. I can type. Iâve practiced shorthand on my own for when Iâd have to transcribe at school. Iâm qualified for many positions.â
Livia squeezed her eyes shut for a momentâthe idea of Charlotteâs flight into the wilds of London was utterly overwhelming. âI donât doubt your qualifications, butââ
âThen thereâs nothing to fear.â Charlotte stepped out of her summery frock and reached for a traveling dress of russet velvet. âIâll be fine. I should have done this long ago, as soon as I came of age.â
âBut Charlotte, how much money do you have? A few pounds wonât get you very far if you donât find employment right away.â
Livia hoarded the miniscule allowance she received from Lady Holmes, but Charlotte had a tendency to spend hers on books, bonbons, and odds and ends like a typewriter or a chemistry set.If she had more than five pounds to her name, Livia would be shocked.
âIâll be fine, Livia. I expect the process to move quickly.â
There wouldnât be âthe woman questionâ if it were so easy for a female to leave her home and achieve independence. Granted, Charlotteâs mind had to be one of the finest in the land, but she was and would forever be a woman who had lost her respectability. A pariah. That had to be a monumental impediment, even away from the froth and vanity of the Upper Ten Thousand.
That said, Charlotteâs steely confidence was inspiring. Good old Charlotte, who knew everything, observed everything, and deduced the rest, if there were still anything left to be deduced. If anyone could succeed at this mad endeavor and liveâno, prosperâto thumb her nose at her hidebound parents, it would be Charlotte Holmes.
However, at the thought of their parents . . . âWhat about Mamma and Papa? What will they do once they learn that youâve run away?â
âMamma will be hysterical. Papa will be furious. Mamma will wish to tear the city apart to find me, so she can slap me some more. Papa will agree with her initially, that I should be brought home to be firmly dealt with.
âBut whether he decides to confide his troubles to the police or a private investigator, before heâs dressed to go out, heâll change his mind. Why should he take the trouble to haul me home when Iâll most likely run away again? Why not let me be defeated by Londonâand life outside his sphere of protection? That way, when I come knocking, in helpless despair, heâll be sure Iâll stay put in the country for the rest of my life.â
Livia clutched at her temples. âThatâs heartless.â
âThatâs logical and our father considers himself a clever man. BesidesââCharlotte marched to the window and peered out, straightening her cuffs as she did soââMottâs here. Itâs time.â
While Mott secured Charlotteâs luggage to the top of the carriage, Charlotte said her good-byes to Bernadine. Livia wasnât sure whether she would have taken the trouble: All Bernadine ever did was spin things, spools on a wire, wooden gears, paper windmills. She never spoke to anyone and Livia sometimes wondered if she could distinguish members of her family from strangers on the street.
She watched Charlotte with Bernadine, but for only a moment. It always made her both dejected and angryâat God himself, perhapsâto see the futility of anyone trying to interact with Bernadine. Charlotte was less bothered by Bernadineâs condition and spoke to her softly and calmly, an adult to another adult.
Livia waited in the passage until Charlotte was done. Then she accompanied her sister to the carriageâand climbed in first. âIf you think Iâll limit myself
D. S. Hutchinson John M. Cooper Plato