Read The Madman’s Daughter Online
Authors: Megan Shepherd
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical, #General
“Quite right. Professor von Stein. Now that was a man who knew his way around a bottle of brandy. Brandy and a cigar at the Café du Lac, overlooking London Bridge. It didn’t come much better.”
I didn’t tell him that Professor von Stein had been the one who’d found me employment at King’s College after his banishment. Nor that the professor, like all of Father’s previous colleagues, had renounced his friendship and slandered him as a monster to any who would listen.
“If you liked it so much, why trade it for such an uncivilized place?” Edward asked.
I only half listened to them. I wanted to hear Father’s answer, but on the second shelf down I found a framed photograph that consumed my attention. A woman holding a baby in a christening gown. I picked up the frame.
“Curious, are you, Prince? Well, it wasn’t totally
uncivilized. There were some Anglican missionaries who came on the ship with us. It was from them that I heard of the island’s existence. Thought they’d make a paradise of it.” He stared into the bottom of his empty cup. “But they are long gone.”
“And you’ve never returned to England?”
“Montgomery makes the voyage if there’s need. Most of our supplies can be acquired from traders passing to Australia or Fiji, though by and by there comes an errand that requires a longer voyage.”
Their conversation was like rustling leaves in the background. I stared at the picture, transfixed. The woman was my mother. Her young face was so beautiful, so smooth. In her final weeks, she’d looked as worn as Death.
Puck came through the doorway, quiet as a murmur. He whispered something in Father’s ear. Father glanced at the ticking clock on the mantel.
“I’ll have to miss lunch and supper,” Father announced. “I started on a new project last night that requires my immediate and prolonged attention.” He stood and kissed me briefly on the temple, like I was still just a child. Like I hadn’t traveled so far and risked so much to find him.
I shouldn’t have expected him to change. He’d disappear into his laboratory for days, and I’d be lucky to glimpse him at mealtimes. Just like it used to be.
Edward drummed his fingers on the arms of the leather chair, watching. His jaw twitched slightly.
I got the sense he understood my feelings. He’d left
England to get away from his own father, after all, though he’d been evasive about the details. He’d done something, something that seemed to have haunted him long before the
Viola
sank. Anyway, he had to know a thing or two about domineering fathers.
But this time, Father didn’t instantly disappear into the laboratory. His black eyes glanced at the frame in my hands and then searched my face. “Let me make this up to you. Tomorrow we’ll take a picnic to a point where you can see all the island. I am curious to know what kind of person my daughter’s become.”
My lungs expanded, filling with fresh air and childlike happiness. I glanced at Edward, beaming. But he’d gotten up, arms folded tight, his back to me as he looked out the window.
And then Father said the one thing I’d most hoped to hear. “I’m glad you came, Juliet.”
T
HE NEXT DAY WE
were to leave in the early morning, before the afternoon heat made travel through the jungle a miserable affair. I waited with anticipation, but Montgomery came at dawn, already sweating and smelling of horse, and told me there’d been a problem. An accident on the far side of the island. Some natives injured—one even killed. The picnic would be delayed a day. That day passed, and then another, and another, and Montgomery stopped bothering to tell me. Father was in charge of the island, so naturally he had duties and responsibilities more pressing than a picnic. But that didn’t begin to fill the hollow pit of my disappointment.
I spent those first few days exploring the compound, putting my cleaning skills to use when I could. It was a simple place, a farmstead, and the order and logic behind it was pleasing. Everyone had a job, even the little boy Cymbeline, who picked peas from the garden and fed the chickens. There was nothing of London’s chaos and filth and crowds and mechanization. After a few days, I got used to
the rhythm of island life.
I could have a future here
, I thought. The idea made my head spin.
Alice stayed mostly in the kitchen, half hidden by woodsmoke and her own shyness. Edward kept to himself as well, brooding as if the island’s desolation made him anxious, though I managed to get one game of backgammon from him.
One morning, as I was brushing my hair with the silver comb, I heard a soft rap at the door.
“Yes?” I asked, turning the knob. Alice stepped back shyly, keeping her scarred face turned away. Her fair hair looked shockingly white in the early daylight, and her eyes locked on the silver comb in my hand.
“The expedition will be leaving shortly, miss. The doctor asked me to see if you were ready.”
“What expedition?”
“Well, the picnic, miss.”
I blinked. I’d pushed the picnic out of my head with all the rest of my father’s unfulfilled promises, and it took me a moment to dredge it back into daylight. “Yes,” I stuttered. “Yes, I’m ready. Five minutes.”
She didn’t take her eyes from the comb. There was something so delicate about her, so vulnerable, and yet mature beyond her years. I’d seen it in the other lodging-house girls, especially the younger ones. I guessed she was an orphan. I knew what that awful loneliness felt like, though for me there’d been a happy ending—a long-lost father. For Alice, I doubted such luck.
I held out the comb. “Take it, if you like.” Her eyes
widened. She didn’t move. I reached for her hand and pressed the comb into her palm.
“No, miss, I couldn’t.”
“I don’t need it.” I motioned to the matching silver brush from the dressing table. “See? I certainly don’t need both.”
A brief smile flickered on her face as she slipped the comb into her apron pocket. But then she covered her scarred mouth and, with a timid nod, slipped back to the kitchen.
She wasn’t one of the islanders, that was certain. How had such a young girl come to the island and found herself in my father’s employment?
I braided my hair and tried on Mother’s floppy sunbonnet in the mirror. The fashion was out of style, yet it made me look glamorous and bold. Someone to be proud of, I hoped. I found the wagon outside in the courtyard, loaded with a wicker basket and blankets from the salon. Edward leaned against the side of the wagon in crisp, clean clothes. He was recovering fast, and the bruises on his face were almost gone. I couldn’t help but notice that if it hadn’t been for the faint scar down his face, he’d have been almost painfully handsome.
Montgomery hitched the harness to the horse, Duke, struggling with a stiff leather strap.
“Ah, Juliet,” Father said. A bouquet of bright yellow wildflowers rested next to him on the wagon bed. “Ready to go?”
The flowers, the food, the effort on my behalf. I
nodded, afraid of speaking. Words might make it all go away. Not in a million years would I have expected my pragmatic father to have picked flowers for his daughter.
“What beautiful flowers,” I said at last.
He looked at them blankly. “Oh yes. Montgomery thought they’d add a touch of elegance you might be homesick for. He arranged for this, the food and all. You know I’ve little skill for that sort of thing. Where did you find them, Montgomery?”
Edward stood a little straighter, picking a little too hard at a splinter in the wagon gate.
Montgomery strained against the leather cinch. At last the buckle clicked into place. “North side of the island,” he said gruffly.
I could feel blood rushing to my cheeks. Montgomery had gotten the flowers. Sometime yesterday he’d picked wildflowers like he used to when we’d visit cousins in the country. Mother would put them in a glass jar on the servants’ kitchen table, saying the grand dining table was only for proper arrangements.
Edward wiped his brow, eyes lingering on the flowers. And then they slid to Montgomery, who was looking at him with equal hardness. I swallowed. Were they
jealous
? Of each other?
“Are you coming with us?” I asked Edward.
He started to speak, but Father cut in.
“Family only,” Father said. I briefly wondered if he counted Montgomery in that or if Montgomery was coming
along merely to drive the wagon. “I’ve given Prince a project anyway. Cataloging the pantry supplies. Well-educated boy like you can manage that, can’t you, Prince?”
Edward turned away, a little too abruptly. “Enjoy your flowers,” he muttered to me before sauntering off toward the salon. I took a deep breath. Lucy had never said how complicated boys could be.
Father offered me a hand. “Let’s go before the sun melts us.”
I climbed into the back. Montgomery tied off the last straps and took the reins in the driver’s seat. Puck and one of the hunchbacked servants opened the gate for us, and we were off.
T
HE DAY WAS BEAUTIFUL
. A blue sky stretched as far as the ocean, which we glimpsed between breaks in the trees. I’d traded a bitter English winter for the lush tropical sun and beautiful calls of faraway birds.
As we rode, Father described the unusual vegetation and wildlife that I’d only read about in books. I listened, though my thoughts kept sliding between Edward and Montgomery. If I’d been in London, and still wealthy, this coming spring would be my Season. Lucy and I would have talked endlessly about the boys—the
men
—at the dances, the galas, the summer picnics in the park.
But after we lost our fortune, I couldn’t afford to think about boys. I was just trying to stay off the streets. And now there were two boys my thoughts drifted between. Yet one
had been a servant, I reminded myself. And the other … well, the other would surely leave the island the first chance he got.
Montgomery stopped the wagon on a windy bluff high above the compound, just below the volcano’s smoking rim. I climbed out and made my way to the bluff’s edge, where the full expanse of the island stretched below us, meeting the sea in a line of sandy beach. The wind pulled at my skirt, blowing loose my hair, and I closed my eyes, enjoying it.
“Not too close,” Montgomery murmured. My eyes snapped open.
“Over here,” Father called. “Out of that confounded wind.”
We made our way back to the wagon. Montgomery started unloading the supplies. He stretched out the blankets in a shady spot away from the cliff.
He’s not a servant anymore
, I reminded myself, watching him unpack the baskets. Even if he still did the work of one.
“You’ll have to forgive our basic fare.” Father uncorked a carafe of water. “We live simply here out of necessity. I’m afraid we’ve only cold vegetable stew with bread. And some fruits from the jungle.”
“I don’t mind.” I settled onto the blanket. Montgomery casually laid the bouquet of flowers near my feet before filling our china bowls. Father and I tucked into the meal.
“Well, Juliet, what skills have you acquired?” Father asked expectantly.
“Skills?” I briefly met Montgomery’s eyes. He knew that the only skills I’d acquired were cleaning mortar and
avoiding the gutter. Not exactly what Father hoped for. “After Mother died, I found employment at the university.”
Father raised an eyebrow. “A
job
? Shouldn’t a relative have taken you in?”
I paused. This wasn’t going to be easy. He disapproved of his daughter working, yet he’d been the one who’d put me in that position.
I took a sip of water, trying not to feel irritated. I suppose he hadn’t had much of a choice. Maybe he thought that by leaving, he was doing the best for us. He hadn’t known Mother would die. Or that the relatives’ kindness didn’t extend very far.
“It wasn’t so bad,” I said. I don’t know why exactly, but I didn’t want to make him feel guilty. Our relationship was so fragile, like one of the trailing vines bursting with soft white flowers along the garden wall. One harsh word and the flowers might shrivel. “I learned to clean. To sew a little.”
“To sew? To clean?” He looked unimpressed. “A professor’s daughter shouldn’t do that sort of work. What about piano? Needlepoint? All those things your mother taught you.”
I swallowed. “I might remember a little piano.”
“I see.”
I looked to Montgomery for help. He rested an arm on his knee, tapping a thin twig against his shin. “Little good needlepoint would do us around here,” he said. “We’re lucky Juliet is so practical. Maybe she could help Alice with the cleaning.”
I gave him a slight, grateful nod, but Father only bristled.
“No daughter of mine is going to scrub anything,” he said. “I hardly think a future husband wants a girl with calluses on her hands.” He waved toward my chipped nails. My face went white.
“Juliet,” Montgomery said softly. “What he means is—”
“Thank you, Montgomery, I’ll speak for myself. Don’t misunderstand my criticism, Juliet,” Father said. “It’s my duty as your father to see you well married. You can’t remain on this island forever, and when you leave, you’ll need to find a husband. Your mother should have seen you prepared to please a man, but alas, she died too soon. I am merely trying to determine what’s to be done with you now.”
What’s to be done with me
. It was like a barb in my side. I clearly wasn’t marriage material, but I was too high-bred to be of use on the island. What did that leave?
“I know something of medicine,” I said in a rush. “I’ve studied the books you left behind. I worked at King’s College in the operating rooms, and I know anatomy and biology. Perhaps I could help you in your work.”
Even Montgomery’s face went white at this. Father gave me a good, hard stare and then laughed. “A girl interested in science. How
modern
of you. I suggest you find more appropriate interests. Montgomery, we’ve an old needlepoint set, haven’t we?”
“But I can help you—”
“That’s admirable, Juliet, but you’d only be in the
way. Science is best left to men. Women have too delicate a constitution.”
I fought against my bubbling urge to argue. I wanted to tell him all the things I’d seen. My God, the things I’d done with my own hands. But I wasn’t ready to trample on the delicate flowers of my new relationship with my father.