Poppy stood up in the middle of her bed, just to make sure she didn’t fall back asleep and continue her wretched, wretched nightmare. Why she had to endlessly visit the Palace Under Stone she didn’t know, but she hoped the dreams would stop soon.
She crouched down and reached under her pillow to make sure the little white sachet was still there. It was. She plucked it out and held it to her nose. Still fragrant with herbs after all these years, the muslin bag had been a gift from Walter Vogel. He had given sachets to Poppy and all her sisters some ten years ago, to ward off bad dreams. Hers didn’t seem to be working anymore, though it still smelled as fresh as always.
Something else to write to Galen about. Poppy wished she could ask Walter, but his work in Westfalin was done, though Poppy and her sisters still missed the strange old man. She wondered if there was some way to summon him, for surely his knowledge of magic was needed here in Breton now.
She got up and wrote a note to Galen and Rose, including the strange dream, the questions about her sachet, and the possibility of reaching Walter Vogel. She sealed and addressed it so that it could go out with the first post, but even so it would reach Galen and Rose far too late to help. Marianne’s birthday ball was only two days away, and Poppy was sure that “Lady Ella” would be in attendance, causing even more mayhem than before.
Christian and Lady Margaret could talk of little else, and Marianne burst into tears whenever anyone mentioned either Ella or the royal gala. Dickon had needed two more doses of the potion, which seemed to wear off after a day, and Roger was frantically trying to brew more of the malodorous stuff, but was having trouble locating one of the ingredients. And the Thwaite’s stillroom maid had turned off the spirit lamp under Poppy’s pot of boiling wool, and now she would have to start all over again with the herbs and rainwater.
Roger had come to the house twice specifically to call on Ellen and try to winkle out her plans for the upcoming ball, but both times the girl conveniently vanished.
But when Poppy saw the dress that Lady Margaret had had made for her to wear to Marianne’s ball, she resolved that she would confront Ellen in front of all the guests if “Lady Ella” wore a copy of it.
It was of deep violet satin with an overskirt of smoky gray tissue that softened the color underneath and made Poppy look and feel like a fairy princess. There was silver embroidery around the neckline, and matching satin shoes. She already had a violet silk choker she wore to enliven a white gown she had inherited from Lily.
“And look at mine,” Marianne burbled, her thoughts taken away from Lady Ella for the first time all day. “Just look!”
Poppy looked, and applauded. Marianne would outshine everyone in such a gown, and Poppy felt some of the tension in her shoulders unknot. Marianne’s gown was rose-colored satin with a faint tracery of gold embroidery around the sleeves and hem. Lady Margaret was going to let Marianne wear the pearl tiara and necklace—each with a single pink diamond as a centerpiece—that had been her wedding gift from Lord Richard.
Poppy twirled Marianne around. “You’ll be gorgeous!”
“Yes, gorgeous, Lady Marianne,” echoed a voice from the doorway. Ellen stood there with a tea tray in her hands and a funny little smile on her face.
Poppy took the tray before Ellen contrived to spill the tea on either gown. Although Ellen had been remarkably graceful of late, Poppy was taking no chances.
“Don’t even think about it,” Poppy warned as Ellen’s blue eyes lit on the silver and violet gown.
“I won’t,” Ellen retorted, curtsied, and sidled out.
“There’s no need to be harsh,” Lady Margaret said gently.
Knowing that Lady Margaret still wouldn’t believe her, and not wanting to weather the floods of tears from Marianne that a mention of Lady Ella would bring, Poppy apologized. Then she turned her attention back to the ball gowns, admiring the fine stitching and dramatic layers of skirts.
But Lady Margaret was still staring at the closed door with an expression of concern on her face. “I just don’t know what to do about that girl,” she murmured. “She wanted to attend the royal gala so badly; but now she appears perfectly satisfied in not having gone.”
“Her maid skills seem to be improving,” Marianne said, fingering the pink rosettes on the bodice of her new gown. “Maybe she’s finally become resigned to being in service.”
“I really don’t think that’s it,” Poppy said, but declined to discuss it any further.
Christian would return to the Danelaw the week after the royal masked ball, and Lady Ella clearly had set her cap for the prince, which meant that something was likely to happen at that masked ball or soon after. But they had no idea what, and if Ellen wouldn’t talk to them, there was nothing they could do to prevent it.
Nothing but wait, and watch, and hope the foolish girl came to her senses and confided the secret of her enchantment to them, and soon.
“Who does she think she is?” Marianne was livid with rage. The flush made her look even prettier, but Poppy doubted that her friend would appreciate a compliment right now.
Lady Ella had indeed come to Marianne’s birthday ball, arriving late and in grand style in a large golden carriage pulled by a dozen gleaming white horses and attended by half a dozen handsome but mute servants. She had swept into the ballroom and gone immediately to Christian, who had dropped Marianne’s hand like a hot brick and instead squired Lady Ella during the opening dance.
The entire room, the entire manor, was silent with shock through most of that first dance. Then the babbling had broken out: the questions, the speculation, the compliments and insults. The gentlemen were even more enamored of Ellen than before, Poppy noticed, while the ladies were more vicious. But Poppy couldn’t blame them: not only was she stealing the limelight from Marianne, but she was dressed, purposely, to outshine her.
Rather than copying Poppy’s gown, this time Ella had copied Marianne’s.
“I don’t care how fond you are of her,” Poppy said to Roger as they stood to one side of the dance floor. Marianne whirled past them, partnered by her father now, her face red and eyes shining with unshed tears. “I might have to kill her.”
Lady Ella and Christian were leading the figures of the dance, a whirl of black suit and rose-satin gown. As Ella’s skirts swirled, tantalizing glimpses of her gleaming shoes were revealed. They were rose and gold, and once more looked like nothing so much as exquisitely blown glass. Her necklace and tiara were more opulent versions of Lady Seadown’s, worn by Marianne with such pride.
“This is not like her,” Roger said uneasily.
“No, this is not like your memory of her,” Poppy corrected him.
“I still can’t believe she would do something so deliberately cruel,” Roger said, shaking his head.
“People change,” Poppy said under her breath. “Let’s go have a look at her carriage. As soon as this dance ends, I want you to ask her to dance. Insist, if you must. And try to get some answers.”
Swallowing, Roger nodded and followed Poppy out into the night air to look at the carriage of gold with its silent coachmen and its even more eerily silent horses. As the cold air cooled Poppy’s hot cheeks, she tried to tell herself she was only upset on Marianne’s behalf, and not because Christian was making such a fool of himself.