The Now Former Lady Deveroux Ch. 07

Babes

Chapter Seven

It is a warm day, and something about that fact feels right to Samantha. A cool breeze allows the scattered array of tiny leaves and pockets of pollen to dance and twirl in the air. A few of those seed pods she loved, the ones which whirl and spin as they find their way to the ground, make her feel nostalgic in a way she couldn’t, and wouldn’t explain. Though, it was entirely possible that the grips of mild melancholy and fond memories which nestled against her were not the seeds’ doing. 

It had been difficult to stare up at the small, square, upright stone. She’d sat in the grass for what must have been a quarter hour before she could truly take it in. She had visited before, of course, but it had been years. She stopped letting herself count the anniversaries some time ago, though was never quite sure when. She hadn’t brought flowers, or left a note since before even then. 

Samantha pushes the air out of her nose, feeling, on the one hand, dejected for neglecting this duty, and on the other, peaceful to honor it again today. She tugs at the strands of grass peeking up through the small rows of gravel around her, wondering and wondering why it feels so different this year. She knows why, of course, but it feels right to be sure. 

Here lies Susanna Holm, 

Mother, Servant, Friend. 

Taken too early by illness. 

God be with her. 

It wasn’t the fanciest gravestone, but it was a miracle. When the fever had swept her mother out from the world which she so loved, the world which she still had business in, it was an unfathomable kindness that Katherine Jones did not kick Samantha out upon the street. She and Susanna had been great friends, just as her daughter, Cordelia, and Samantha were. Katherine, the mistress of one Lord Hastings, petitioned him to purchase a plot to bury her longtime servant and friend, and to Samantha’s surprise and relief, he was willing. 

“Oh, what would you think of me?” She says aloud. It feels strange, and if the graveyard had not been tucked away into a quiet part of Bellchester where she could be alone and unheard, Samantha would never bring herself to speak at a stone. She sighs and shakes her head, wondering if the Sister’s were really right that her mother was still out there somewhere, existing in Heaven or whatever it might be. Her voice tickles as it leaves her throat, soft and shameful in its wish to be heard.

“I’m not a collar, I didn’t stay in the life of a servant,” she says like it was an accomplishment. In sight of her mother’s name, it feels hollow. “I used to think you’d be so proud I was a Lady. I escaped the hardships we faced.” Samantha pauses, shaking her head only slightly as she thinks. “Now? Now, I’m not so sure. Maybe you’d be glad I left that world.” 

Left… Even at a grave she still struggles to admit the depth of her failure. Her mother would understand, she tells herself. Though, Samantha never was much good at hiding things from her, her honest eyes always pulling the truth out of her one way or another. How wretched it would be to allow her mother to discover the person nobility turned her into, how painful it would be to admit she never found love, or joy, or happiness, or any of the things Susanna would have respected. She never quite felt wrong for having cheated on her husband, Revier was never much a person who cared for her beyond appearances either, but there’s pangs of remorse for all the women she picked up and discarded. 

“Sometimes…” She attempts to continue, pausing for a moment until the inertia of speaking resumes. “Sometimes, when I was with Revier, just lying there and resenting him… not even sex, just listening to him snore… I’d wonder if that feeling in me was what you felt with my father. Maybe you were also secretly glad to be rid of him.” 

She tucks her legs under herself, sitting with them crossed and her back bending forward a little. “Were you also like me?” Samantha asks, narrowly avoiding the words catching in her throat. She doesn’t need to cry, at least as far as she can tell, but the whispers of tears threaten an appearance. “When things first began with Cordelia and I…” She furrows her brow, tilting her head to the side as she thinks. “I wondered if you and Katherine felt the same about one another, wondered if that was just what friends did. Looking back, it feels impossible to know. 

“Did I inherit this from you?” Samantha drops her hands down frightfully into her lap, laying them down with her words like an accusation. “Is it passed along like some sort of disease? Was your mother also always struggling to find her place in this wretched world of men?” She can feel her throat constrict, her mouth drying out as she croaks, “Did she also only feel alive with a woman’s touch?” 

The tears do push forth now, gentle and steady, tickling her cheekbones and causing her to wipe them away hastily, as though in leaving them there the gravestone would scorn her sorrow. She swallows, trying to keep up Maltepe travesti appearances, though she wasn’t sure for who. “You would have liked Esther, I can tell. The two of you have the same optimism, the same belief in the goodness of people,” she says fondly. “I don’t know if you would have approved of… of this… but the child in me thinks you would.” She gives it a moment of thought, then nods resolutely. “I like that idea. I think you would. You believed in love enough that you wouldn’t care who it was, so long as I loved her. 

“I do,” she croaks, mildly embarrassed to feel it summon forth such depth of emotion from her. She gives up the battle of wiping away tears. “I feel almost ridiculous saying it but I love her so much it aches. To see her across a room and not kiss her, not hold her so tightly we can’t breathe… it feels like the greatest sin I could possibly commit.

“Speaking of which,” she mutters, chuckling to herself in disbelief. “Maybe you wouldn’t have approved of my ascension to nobility, but would you have blessed my entrance into cloistered life?” 

Samantha laughs a little more, letting herself fall onto her back and lay on the ground. She stares at the sky, bemused and baffled that this was the decision tearing through her defenses, setting her heart beating like there was monument to even the consideration of the idea. To be with Esther, to love her and hold her and kiss her, that made sense to Samantha. It was natural to her mind. The offer Sister Pullwater made her was alien. 

A few moments later she finds herself sitting up again, reading the chiseled stone over and over again. “You were always so happy,” she muses. “I never understood how. Even with all the money and status and influence I could acquire I felt empty.” She shakes her head again, shrugging only to drop her shoulders back down. “But, being with Esther, being around the children… Jesus, it’s almost embarrassing to admit it all makes me happy.

“I feel maternal,” she grumbles. “Christ, I thought I killed that wretched instinct ages ago. Maternal,” she chews on the word, spitting it out like it was an insult to be wielded. “Esther is exciting and sincere and beautiful. I understand why she makes me happy. The kids?” 

Samantha thinks of the orphanage this morning, excited to see her bring breakfast out to each one of them. She’d sung a little jingle as she did it, and not even one that her mother had repeated so often it lodged itself forever in her mind; she’d made one up on the spot. And then she joined them to eat, laughing and talking and asking Wendy if she ever thought she’d travel and telling Judith the secrets of how to act poised and… 

“It feels an embarrassingly trivial answer, ‘Just have kids, that will give your life purpose,'” she mocks, baffled by all the women around her who insisted on having children if only to occupy their empty, vapid days. None of the noblewomen even raised their kids, they outsourced that work to their collars. “I cried with relief when I learned I was barren. Best news I ever received.” She looks away, once more spitting out, “Maternal.” 

She sighs. “It’s just the way it makes me feel like you,” she tells the stone, hoping the sentiment made sense. “Your husband was a piece of shit who left you; you were happy. You sold yourself into servitude just to feed the daughter I never knew if you planned on having; you sang to me constantly anyway. You were poor as can be, far from your birth home, estranged from your family… your life meant nothing in the grand scheme of society. Revier’s friends… and my friends, we all would have mocked you endlessly.”

Her legs grow stiff from being tucked underneath her and she stretches them out, muttering, “And you were content. All of that against you, all the reasons I’m supposed to think less of you for…. But the more I act like how I remember you did, the better I feel.” 

She sits forward and drops her head into her hands, massaging her palms across her temples. “Christ, do I actually want this? I’d hate the robes, I’d hate the rules, I’d probably even hate most of the rituals… but…” She allows her sentence, and her brief confidence in the idea, to fade away. “No. No, it’s foolish,” she decides. 

Taking a final comforting look at the gravestone, Samantha rises to her feet, resolving to see what the rest of her day had in store for her. She gazes up at the sky, looking past the clouds and the patches of blue, and declares, “If that doesn’t count as a prayer I don’t know what does.” 

— — — 

Samantha takes the long walk home, arriving back at 167th Mill Street just in time for the noon bells to toll out across the city. It’s grown into a proper spring day, warm and light and fragrant, and there is an optimism in the air that she finds infectious, if only to indulge for nothing more than a simple moment. She’s even more delighted to find Esther, in her white robes, and Judith, in a lovely blue skirt, sitting Maltepe travestileri upon the stoop of her front porch. 

“If there were ever two guests I was more excited to see, I never knew it,” Samantha chimes, placing a warm smile upon her face as she steps through the small wrought iron gate in front of the home.

Judith rises with great purpose to her motions, placing herself into a carefully constructed curtsy. “Miss Deveroux,” she squeaks. 

“Excellent form, Miss Velore,” Samantha returns the gesture, beaming as she looks over at the nun beside her. “And good afternoon to you, Sister Levy.” 

“Miss Deveroux,” Esther responds quietly. She remains seated with her knees pulled up close and her arms resting across them. There’s a tiredness and failure written along her face, and she looks as though she has either cried recently, or was holding back tears. “Judith and I were trying to talk through some difficult feelings she was having, and she decided you would be the best person to speak with,” she explains. “Are you able to spare some time?” 

Samantha wraps an arm around Judith’s shoulder. “For the two of you? Anything.” She tilts her face towards the young girl. “What is the matter, my dear?” 

Judith wears a look of uncertainty, and her eyes flick back towards Esther as though asking for help. The Sister smiles weakly, with a sadness tucked behind her gaze. “She was hoping to speak with you alone.” 

Nodding, Samantha allows herself to gaze back out at the nearby world. Passively worried about Esther’s somber disposition, she replies, “Well, I suppose it is still a lovely day for a promenade. Why don’t you take my arm, Miss Velore?” 

Judith grins and accepts it, wrapping her reaching hand up through the crook of Samantha’s elbow and tugging along it enthusiastically. The former noblewoman glances back at Esther, who mouths a “Thank you,” just as Samantha blows a kiss back to her. 

She takes Judith out onto the street, strolling along the crisp cobblestones and enjoying the ways the good weather brought people out onto the town. It was like ants emerging with the sudden good weather, and she’d always enjoyed how lively it would become with the season. She guides them towards one of the nicer neighborhoods nearby, where a small park was tucked away between the larger homes, and waits for Judith to speak, which takes some time. 

“Whenever you are ready,” Samantha assures her, “I am eager to listen.” 

And Judith nods, but keeps her silence for a few minutes. Her tiny lips open and close a few times, breath sucking in with an attempt to speak, but it isn’t until they’re in the park proper that the girl finally states, “Sister Minnerva is leaving because of me.” 

“Is that so?” Samantha feigns surprise. 

Judith looks down. “She doesn’t like the twice-born.” 

“Well,” she squeezes the girl’s arm, “She’ll just have to accept that’s what you are.”

“But I’m making her leave,” Judith insists, as though guilty of a crime. 

“Esther is twice-born, too.” 

“She didn’t like that, either,” she confirms, building her case. 

Recognizing Judith’s worry, Samantha decides to interrupt the line of thinking, replying instead, “Might I let you in on a secret?” Judith nods. “I never liked Sister Minnerva. I think she’s a mean, cranky woman.” 

Judith battles the mischievous and pleased smile flashing onto her face. She hushes her voice low, delightedly warning, “You’re not supposed to say things like that.” 

“It’s simply the truth,” Samantha shrugs. “I didn’t think you liked her, either. Why are you so concerned she’s leaving?” 

“Because it’s my fault.” 

“It isn’t your fault that she hates-,” Samantha begins, then stops herself. “Ah,” she hums. “You know the rest of us adore you, don’t you?” 

Judith halts their walk, kicking her small button shoe into the gravel path. “But she hates me.” 

Samantha inhales a long breath, watching the ways the young girl’s face scrunches up into a frown. She’s so young to wear fraught wrinkles across her forehead, to be feeling such concern for the distaste of adults around her. Summoning forth an idea, she steers Judith out of the park, directing their path down a row of the wealthier houses in this area. It feels a little unnerving to return to this street, once her social grounds, but she marches forth until they reach a large and yellow gated home. 

“See that house?” Samantha points at it from across the street. She watches Judith take it in, observing the primroses, the fanciful decorations, the way it insisted upon its place. “My former friend Lady Gallway lives there. I used to attend her summer brunches on the weekly. They were admittedly miserably awkward, but her taste in decor was unmatched and everyone was jealous of her husband’s fortune.” She squeezes Judith’s arm. “Do you know what she told me when I was leaving the gentry?” 

“What?” 

Samantha sighs. “That I was not nearly as travesti Maltepe pretty as everyone professed me to be. Friends for years, and that was all she could say to me.” She shakes her head, guiding them a half block down and pointing at a large copper colored estate. “And there, the Fendleton home. Each year, all the members of their family put on a concert, and they played some of the worst live music I’ve ever heard. The Lord of the house, David, well, he fancies himself the best composer in the country. Nevermind the fact he’s tone deaf and none of them can read music notation.” 

“That’s silly,” Judith giggles.

“Indeed,” Samantha continues, directing her towards a final home with white marble columns. “And there. The Lord and Lady of that home, Marian and Juliet Heathrow, they never once addressed me by my proper name. Instead, they’d call me the ‘peasant’s gold,’ or ‘Lady Dirt-reax.'” She snorts, closing her eyes and recalling how wretched it all was. “It wasn’t very clever, but it irked me to no end. I only learned later that Lord Heathrow had gambled away all their money and his insecurity was leading him to vitriol.” 

She exhales, once again taking in the world which she had cared so deeply for, the one which cast her aside as nothing more than a ruined woman and delicious scandal. When she speaks again, she’s surprised by how deeply it weighs in her own chest as well. “Never accept injury from someone who will never see past their own failings,” she tells Judith. 

They resume their stroll, and Judith seems tucked away into her own thoughts. It’s unclear what consumes her ruminations, but after some time she simply summarizes, “So… you’re not upset that Sister Minnerva is leaving.” 

“Good riddance,” Samantha confirms. “You deserve to be around those who recognize how wondrous you are.” 

“Like you,” Judith pips happily.

“Like me,” she responds, moved by how confidently it was asserted. “And like Sister Levy.” 

Judith releases a sigh of relief, content in the knowledge that someone indeed cared for her. It’s touching to witness her comfort in the idea, and for a moment Samantha can hardly feel anything but adoring concern for the young girl, willing to do anything to protect her heart and steward her joy. 

“Do you ever think I would be adopted?” 

Samantha beams. “With your charm and poise? Undoubtedly.” 

“Miss Baker never was,” Judith rebuts. 

“Well, she’s a rowdy sort, prone to seeking out trouble” Samantha says fondly, wondering how Annette and Cordelia were getting along in Kereland. Knee-deep in trouble, assuredly. “And if you aren’t,” she says carefully, “you’ll still have Esther and I, and Sister Pullwater, and the rest of the Sisters.”

“You won’t leave?” 

Samantha pauses, realizing that she truly wished to stay. “Not if I can help it, no.” 

Content, Judith’s feet patter along happily. “I wish you’d be one of the Sisters,” she remarks like it was nothing, “It’d be so much fun.” 

Pursing her lips, Samantha grins. “Well, I’ll be sure to give it some thought.” 

— — — 

Esther remains on her porch, her veil hiding her hair while her hands hide her face, buried between her palms. She rouses at Samantha’s approach, looking up as her eyes semi-frantically dart around. “Where’s Judith?” 

“Back in time for Sister Mabel’s afternoon lesson,” Samantha says calmly, lowering herself down onto the step beside the nun. She watches out onto the street, separated from them by a dozen feet and a small gate. 

“Oh, good,” Esther nods, dropping her face back into her hands. 

“What’s wrong?” 

Esther swallows dryly, and Samantha notices her fingers trembling. The nun sighs, “I should have been there for her, but I wasn’t.” 

“You walked her over here-,”

“Because it didn’t know what to do!” She raises her hands into the air, clenching her shoulders. She shakes her head, looking around like things were in tatters in every direction. “Sister Minnerva made the announcement this morning, and while she didn’t say it’s because she doesn’t support rebirth, she implied it. And Judith took it personally.” Esther drops her hands down between her thighs, clamping them between the folds of her habit in an effort to steady herself. Samantha lifts her own palm to Esther’s knee, only for the nun to harshly shoo her away. “Not here, sorry.” 

“It’s quite alright.” 

“It isn’t-!” Esther interrupts herself with a loud exhale. “I understand what she’s going through better than anyone else can. If-if…” She pauses. “She was upset and I froze and I didn’t know what to say. Judith had more sense than me and asked to speak with you, so I brought her here and then you were away… and then I just spent the entire time thinking about you and was distracted and couldn’t figure out what to say or…” She groans, plopping her face back into her hands. 

“It’s entirely okay, Esther,” Samantha coos. “She’s much happier after we talked, and she’ll be right-as-rain. There is no need to be so hard on yourself.” 

“I’m still burning,” Esther replies gravely. As she lifts her head to gaze at Samantha, there is a fright blossoming in her eyes. “I can’t stop thinking about you. I can’t stop thinking about us…” She looks away, hanging her head. 

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