Thara was delighted to discover, upon her awakening the next morning, the smell of breakfast greeting her nose. She hurriedly dressed, wrapping her bandeau about her breasts and slipping into the blue silk dress George had selected for her from Lark's bureau. It was a mite too small in the hips and chest, but it would have to do. Thara looked at her reflection in the mirror and thought she stuck out like a sore thumb. It was a dress for a fair, genteel young woman, of which Thara felt she was neither. She resolved to find herself a good set of trousers, or at the very least, a linen skirt and shirtwaist.
George met her in the foyer and took her to the garden room where breakfast was being served. The little dog, whose name was Puff, wagged its tail when it saw Thara enter, and came forward from its spot by Elles's feet to lick her fingers.
Lark, who was sitting on one of the white wicker chairs, wrinkled her nose. She cast a haughty eye over her blue silk and ignored Thara completely, picking up her knife to butter her toast.
Elles was taking coffee at the head of the glass table, a newspaper spread out before her. At George's introduction, she gestured for Thara to sit and help herself. It appeared they had been there for some time, and Thara hoped they had not continued to linger on her account.
She didn't think she could ever get tired of the sheer amount of food on the table. She had not grown up poor, but she most certainly had not grown up with the abundance of—well,
everything
that she had seen thus far at Mereguilde. If her mama was as rich as Elles said, why didn't she spend any of her money? Thara believed she would have enjoyed having hot water pipes in the house, and a cook to prepare such delicious meals. She didn't care for the dresses or the snooty upper crusters like Lark—
those
things she was perfectly happy to leave behind. But everything else wasn't so bad.
She dug in to her breakfast with gusto, helping herself to a second serving of bacon and eggs. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Lark staring at her, open-mouthed in abject horror. Well, where Thara came from, it wasn't a crime to put your elbows on the table (despite what her mama said), and it certainly wasn't a crime to eat your bacon or sausages without cutting them up into bite-sized pieces.
Lark cleared her throat loudly. Elles remained blissfully ignorant, so absorbed was she in the headlines splashed across the front of the
Times.
"
Mother.
" Lark's blonde ringlets quivering in annoyance.
Elles flicked her eyes in the direction of her daughter, and, seeing the source of Lark's consternation, said, "Now, darling, I thought we discussed this last night."
Lark pursed her lips, her eyes darkening in protest. "I don't see why
she
can get away with everything and I can't."
"I'm not getting away with anything," Thara said, around a mouthful of egg. The girl was mad. Stark, raving mad.
"She's wearing my clothes, has no table manners, and you heard the way she spoke to me yesterday, Mother," Lark seethed. "I don't care that her whole family died, it's not fair!" with that, she lurched up from her seat and flew from the room.
Elles sighed, pinching the skin between her eyebrows.
"I'm sorry," Thara said immediately once Lark had gone. She felt awful at creating such tension in the house. "I know my presence here is taxing on her." She gestured to her dress. "It would probably be best, I think, if I had my own wardrobe." It was a good start, anyway.
"Of course, without a question," Elles said firmly. "We can do that after breakfast. But first, we need to go over the stipulations of your parents' will." She neatly folded the newspaper and found an unoccupied spot on the table for it. "Since the executor, Mr. Washburn, will not be back in town for another few months, I think it is a good idea to at least tell you the highlights. As I said yesterday, Mr. Washburn's missive was brief, so I apologize if I speak generally on some matters. Seeing as how you will be with us for the indeterminate future, I didn't think you should have to wait so many months until his return."
Thara felt her chest constrict. She had never known her parents to be formal, but there were, apparently, a lot of things she did not know about them, her mama in particular, so she had to stop being so suspicious of everything that came her way regarding them. Elles had, after all, shown her the photos and all those papers bearing her mother's signature. She could recognize her mama's florid scrawl anywhere, having been schooled by her in letters and sums since she was five. Still, the whole business about a mysterious will and inheritance made her nervous. It was just all too much, in too little time.
"As you are the sole surviving heir to your mother's fortune," Elles was saying, "everything will be transferred to your name. Your mother's estate has been in contact with me to take care of the details. You should be able to begin drawing from it immediately. I will take you to the bank later today to introduce you, if that's all right." She paused. "Now, there is the matter of your future."
Thara, who had been finishing up the last bit of toast, sensed the hesitancy in the older woman's voice, and cast wary eyes in her direction. Swallowing, she turned her full attention toward Elles, who looked very serious.
Oh, bollocks,
Thara thought. "My future?" she repeated curiously. "What of it?" The last several days had been such a whirlwind of changes that she had not even stopped to think about what her wardship under Mrs. Mereguilde might mean going forward. Indeed, if the past year and a half had taught Thara anything, it was not to think too much about the future, because it only caused immense worry.
"Well," Elles began slowly, "your mother had specific stipulations for you, should you come into my care."
"Stipulations?" There was a horrible sensation in the pit of Thara's very full stomach. "What do you mean?"
"We both agreed that you should have a stake in the company, now that you are on your own. If you choose, I will mentor you to take on a leadership role within Lidelle."
Thara stared at her, hardly able to believe her ears. "I would live here, and work for Lidelle?"
"If you wish."
This is my chance to start over,
Thara thought dazedly. To be involved in an enterprise that her mama had been so passionate about. It was an opportunity for change, and it would keep her family alive in her heart.
I won't have to scrub floors or wash laundry