Putting the irrepressible caterpillar on hold, she smiled at Theresa.
“My ankle is much better. Practically all healed.” She lifted her right leg from the sofa and wiggled her foot in an exaggerated motion. “See? A mere three days of your ministrations and my ankle is as good as new.”
“Not quite, but nearly,” Theresa agreed, propping up the slightly swollen foot on a feather pillow. Gently, she traced the circles beneath Ariana’s eyes. “Yet your mind remains troubled.”
“Baxter tells me we are practically penniless.”
Theresa shook her bead. “Your unrest is caused by more than that.”
Ariana leaned her head back, rays of summer sunlight trickling through the bay window to warm her face. “I have no other reason to be troubled; yet I am,” she admitted in a small voice. “I have a nagging feeling that something else remains amiss. …” Restlessly, she shifted the drapery, gazing out over Winsham’s southeast garden, seeking serenity … finding none.
“Amiss … perhaps,” Theresa murmured without conviction. “More likely, unsettled.”
Ariana’s head snapped around. “You know what it is,” she accused.
“As do you.”
“No. I don’t.”
A profound smile creased Theresa’s wrinkled face. “You choose not to know. But the point is a moot one. Soon the choice will no longer be yours.” Abruptly, her smile vanished. “Your blue silk day dress! I haven’t freshened it!”
“My day dress? What has that to do with my dilemma?”
Theresa shot her an exasperated look. “Well, you can hardly wear it unless it is properly pressed, can you?”
Ariana sat up, totally at sea. “I have no urgent need to wear my blue dress, Theresa.”
“Ah, but you have.” Theresa stood, glancing quickly at the imposing grandfather clock that stood in the far corner of the room. She exclaimed at the lateness of the hour, then scurried toward the door with a look of total consternation on her face, vividly reminding Ariana of Lewis Carroll’s errant white rabbit. “Fear not, my lady,” she called over her shoulder, jabbing a loose lock of hair behind her ear. “I shall have it ready for you in a quarter hour. That will give us just enough time …” Her final words were lost in the hallway, cut off by the click of the door as it shut.
Ariana shook her head, sliding down to return to her reading. “And Alice thought the caterpillar was daft?” she muttered to herself.
She had just begun to enjoy the mad hatter’s tea party when Theresa exploded back in.
“Come now, my lady,” she urged, tugging Ariana to her feet.
Ariana dropped her novel to the couch. “Where?”
Theresa supported Ariana’s right side and eased her forward. “To don your gown, of course.”
“But I am already dressed, Theresa.” Ariana indicated her beige morning dress. “Why must I change clothes?”
Theresa was concentrating on leading her mistress into the hallway, then up the stairs. “Because the blue gown suits you better, of course.”
“Better for what?”
“For your eyes, my lady.” She maneuvered Ariana gently to the second-floor landing. “The pale blue of the gown makes them shine like the ocean.”
“Thank you. But I didn’t mean why the blue gown. What I meant was—”
“Here it is!” Theresa exclaimed triumphantly, running into the bedroom and waving the full, ruffled skirt in Ariana’s direction. “I’ve added a darker ribbon at each sleeve. Every shade of blue will be reflected in your glorious turquoise eyes.”
Ariana made an exasperated sound. “Theresa, I am not taking another step until you tell me why I am donning that gown.” She waited just inside the doorway.
“Didn’t I tell you?” Theresa looked surprised.
“Tell me what?”
“Really, my lady, if your head weren’t so steeped in fanciful books, you would have heard me.” Theresa shut the door purposefully behind Ariana.
“But you never …”
“Our guests will be here any
Seraphina Donavan
Rebecca Lyndon
Annette Archer
Samuel R. Delany
Annabel Fanning
Barry J. Hutchison
Vanessa Gray Bartal
Neal Stephenson
Tawny Weber
Janwillem van de Wetering