Maid to Be Mine: A Regency Cinderella Story
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MAID TO BE MINE
A Regency Cinderella Story
K.L. O'Keefe
Chapter One
“Deuce take it! I think I might be dying this time!”
All the doctors agreed: Lord Montforth was in his twilight hours, but his daughter refused to believe it. “No, Papa! Please don't say that! You can fight it!” She was sitting beside him on the bed, where she took his hand and cradled his clammy fingers against her cheek.
“Ever the optimist, Cynthia,” Lord Montforth said. As soon as she released his hand, he gave his daughter a reassuring pat on the arm. “I hope you never lose that optimism, even in the face of great opposition.” As he spoke, he slid a glance in the direction of his wife, Lady Montforth.
“You're strong, Papa!” Cynthia kept trying to cheer him on, even as his voice grew weak, and his face became wan. “You can fight this fever. I know you can!”
“I feel my consciousness slipping, and yet... I have much to say.” Lord Montforth's steely gaze drifted around the room, over the faces of the four women who surrounded his bedside. There were an overwhelming number of women in his life, for which he felt varying levels of affection. “Edith?”
A mousy spinster stepped forward and bobbed a curtsy. “Yes, Lord Montforth?”
“Edith...” When Lord Montforth reached for her, she ran forward and took his hand. “Our time together was short, too short, but you are near and dear to my heart. Before I leave this world, I want you to know... you were truly my second daughter.”
“And I could not ask for a better father,” Edith said. She cast a somber glance at Cynthia, whose tears overflowed her ivory cheeks. The poor girl. While Edith would certainly miss Lord Montforth, her sympathy for Cynthia was her dominant emotion. They were as close as a father and daughter could possibly be, like two peas in a perfectly peerless pod.
“Watch over my Cynthia,” Lord Montforth weakly requested. “Take care of her. She will need your companionship more than ever.”
“Of course.” Edith kept her eyes on Cynthia, who was attempting to dry her tears with a handkerchief, but the handkerchief was already sopping wet. “Cynthia is my friend, and we will always be close. Your memory will live on in us, Father.”
When he heard her call him Father, Lord Montforth's pale lips were drawn into a smile. Edith released his hand, and he turned his attention to his other stepdaughter, Georgiana. When he realized he had nothing to say to the girl, his smile was replaced with a frown. There wasn't much to like about Georgiana, who was cold, self-centered and spiteful. She was truly her mother's daughter, in every way. “Georgiana?” he finally spoke.
“Yes, m'lord?” As she studied her stepfather on his deathbed, Georgiana twirled a tendril of dark hair around her finger.
“Why don't you take your father's hand, my dear?” suggested her mother, Lady Montforth.
“Um... no.” When Georgiana shook her head, her adorable ringlets whirled in every direction. “He is not really my father, Mama. And I do not want to get too close, for fear that I might catch my own death!”
Lord Montforth started wheezing, so Cynthia took his hand instead. As she held his knuckles against her lips, Cynthia glared at her insensitive stepsister.
“Georgiana...” Lord Montforth repeated again. He had no warm sentiments to leave with the girl, so he simply said, “Take care.”
“Certainly, my lord,” Georgiana said. “And I hope your death will be a swift one.” When she saw the censure in her mother's eyes, she added, “you know... because... I would not want you to suffer very long.”
“Jemima?” Lord Montforth addressed his wife, but she did not come forward to take his hand. Her daughter's words about catching death must have gotten to her.
“Yes, dear? Is there nothing I can do for you? Nothing to ease your pain?” The sympathy in the countess' voice was saccharine and feigned.
“I am afraid not. However, I have a final request to make. I suppose you could call it my dying wish.”
“And what is that, my lord?”
“Be kind to my daughter,” Lord Montforth said. “Treat her as your own.”
“Oh...” The countess' lips tightened as she forced herself to smile. When she made eye contact with Cynthia, she had to summon an inordinate amount of willpower to hide the disgust on her face. Lady Montforth made no secret of her overwhelming jealousy of the girl. “I... I suppose, I...” It was an impossible promise to make. Though she had no intention of keeping the promise, the act of uttering the words was difficult enough.
“Please,” the dying earl entreated her. “Please, dear.”
“Very well.” Lady Montforth did not dare to look at Cynthia as she said it. “I will treat her as if she were my own daughter. I will. I promise.”
“Good.” Some of the tension in the dying man's body seemed to melt away, as if his prayers had been answered. “It means so much to me, Jemima, to know that Cynthia will be in good hands.”
“Papa...” Cynthia whispered. She pulled her father's hand to her face and used it to wipe her tears. “Papa, please. Please stop talking as if your death is a certainty! I cannot bear it!”
“Get me a parchment and quill,” he requested of Edith, who ran to the nearest desk to retrieve the supplies.
“What are you writing, Father?” Cynthia asked.
“I'm writing something for you, child,” he said. Edith slipped the quill into his shaking hand and helped him dip it into the inkwell. “It is something you must never forget.” A bit of ink splattered on his bedsheets as he brought the quill to the parchment.
“What are you writing?” Cynthia asked again, her curiosity getting the best of her. She tried to sneak of peek of the parchment, but Edith was holding it, and it was beyond her realm of sight.
“It will be my famous last words,” Lord Montforth said. “Nothing particularly dramatic, but necessary nonetheless.”
Lord Montforth spent every last ounce of his strength on writing the message for his daughter. As soon as he finished scribbling, his eyelids closed, the quill slipped from his hand, and his head sunk deeper into his pillow. Cynthia thought her father had died right then and there, but when she saw his chest rise, she breathed a sigh of relief. For the moment, the earl was still clinging to life.
Edith collected the quill and inkwell, then handed the parchment to her stepsister. When Cynthia read what he wrote, she was overcome with a fresh wave of tears.
The message simply said:
I LOVE YOU
“Mama?” It was Georgiana who spoke.
“Yes, dear?”
“Are we done?” Georgiana asked. “Is he dead?”
Cynthia's infuriated, tear-soaked eyes landed on Georgiana. “No, he's not dead! How could you be so insensitive? Do you have any heart at all, Georgiana?!”
“Of course I have a heart!” Georgiana defended herself. “It's just that... my feet are going numb from standing around so long, and this is dashed boring! What are we accomplishing by standing around and watching an old man die?!”
“It is late, dear,” her mother agreed. “I think it would be permissible if we excused ourselves now.”
“Thank goodness!” Georgiana exclaimed. Her mother laid a hand on Georgiana's back and escorted her from the room. “This is too depressing, anyway. Why should I subject myself to so much depression?”
When Georgiana's voice disappeared down the hallway, Cynthia and Edith exchanged glances.
“I am sorry for my sister's behavior,” Edith said.
“Really, Edith, you need not apologize on her behalf. You and Georgiana are very different people!”
“True... nevertheless, she sha
mes me.” Edith shook her head in disgust, then she watched Lord Montforth's face, which had gone from pained to peaceful. He was seconds away from death. That fact was obvious to her, but she could not bring herself to quash Cynthia's hope.
“Are you staying?” Cynthia asked.
“Of course.” Edith took Lord Montforth's other hand. “I will stay with you until the end, Cynthia.”
“The end,” Cynthia repeated with a sigh. “He's really going to die, isn't he?”
“I--”
“I know it is true.” When Cynthia looked down at her I LOVE YOU note, a lump formed in her throat. “And I'm... afraid. I'm afraid of a life without him.”
“I'm here for you,” Edith assured her. “Whenever you need me, I'll be here for you.”
The girls stayed at Lord Montforth's side for the remainder of the night, until midnight had come and gone, and the earliest hours of the morning were upon them. When he finally breathed his last, Cynthia knew it right away. She buried her face in her handkerchief and let out a wail of despair.
Lord Montforth was dead.
She would never hear her father's voice again. His hugs were officially a thing of the past.
Chapter Two
Cynthia Lockhart was wearing her mourning clothes: a somber black gown and shawl. Her honey blonde hair had been scraped into a severe bun, and her face was sickly pale. Three days had passed since her father's death, and for three terrible nights, she had gotten very little sleep. All she could do was lie awake and think about her father's white lips, and his body growing cold in the ground. She had lost her best friend in the world, and she questioned her heart's ability to recover.
It didn't help that her stepmother was making her life miserable. Jemima, Georgiana and Edith were halfway through breakfast when Cynthia wandered into the dining room with her plate. Edith was wearing black, but Jemima and Georgiana had already moved on. Her stepmother was wearing an emerald green gown that would have been more appropriate for a ball, and her neck was dripping with diamonds. Georgiana was wearing a bright pink frock, and she sneered at Cynthia when she saw her enter the room.
“Mama...” Georgiana tugged on her mother's sleeve. “Mama, what is she doing here?”
“I do not know, Georgiana.” Jemima tilted her nose toward the ceiling as she spoke, as if it was her intention to look as haughty as possible. “By now, she should know she is not welcome!”
Cynthia sunk into a chair at the furthest end of the table, as far from her stepmother and stepsisters as she could. “I'm here to break my fast, if that is quite all right with you? Unless someone tells me otherwise, this is my home too!”
“Then perhaps we should tell you otherwise. Would you like me to have you thrown out?” Jemima retorted.
Across from Jemima, Edith hung her head in shame. She did not approve of their mistreatment of Cynthia, and she would have loved to speak out on her stepsister's behalf, but she did not dare stand against her mother. The widowed Lady Montforth's patience was not to be tested.
“You wouldn't dare throw me out, would you?!” Cynthia gasped.
“I might.”
“You should, Mama,” Georgiana supported her mother's suggestion. “This place would be much more peaceful without her!”
Cynthia grabbed her fork and slammed it against the table. It was hardly lady-like behavior, but the outburst seemed necessary. “Father would not want you to treat me like this!”
“Well, that is too bad, isn't it?” Jemima snickered as she sawed off a piece of her sausage. “He's not around.”
“And what would I do if you tossed me out? Where would I go?!”
“That is something you would have to figure out, Cynthia,” Jemima said. “But let us not be overdramatic. It is not as if I actually intend to banish you, dear. I am not a heartless woman.”
“You seem heartless to me...” Cynthia murmured under her breath.
“And I am merciful,” Jemima went on. “All that I ask is that you allow us to enjoy a peaceful breakfast... without the plague of your presence. As far as I am concerned, you are no longer a part of this family.”
“Mama!” shrieked Edith, who could not longer hold her tongue. “This is the height of rudeness!”
Cynthia rose from the table and collected her plate. “Edith, don't trouble yourself over me. I will not stay where I am not wanted.”
Georgiana and Jemima exchanged satisfied glances, then the mother said, “Good. I think we finally understand each other.”
With her plate in her hands, Cynthia stomped off. Her feet hammered against the ground, leaving no room to doubt her rage. How dare they treat her in such a way? Her stepmother's behavior would have her poor father rolling in his grave. If only he knew!
Cynthia did not cease her stomping until she arrived in the garden, which had become her place of solace and salvation. The flowers, the birds, and even the bees—it was a beautiful place of respite. Cynthia sat on a bench and started nibbling her food, and as she chewed, she watched the rose petals sway in the breeze. “I should take my meals out here from now on,” Cynthia said aloud. After all, a backdrop of lovely flowers was much more agreeable than Georgiana's sneering face.
“Cynthia?”
When she looked over her shoulder and saw Edith, Cynthia breathed a sigh of relief. At the moment, Edith's company was the only company she could tolerate. “Yes?”
“Do you mind if I join you?”
“Not at all.” Cynthia scooted down the bench so her stepsister could sit with her. “Thank goodness I have not lost you!”
“Of course not! We are still friends!” Edith said—and it was true, although they were an unlikely pair. There was an entire decade between them. Cynthia was one and twenty, Edith was one and thirty. Cynthia was beautiful and charming, whilst Edith was shy and plain. Nevertheless, they got along swimmingly, and that fact had always been a comfort to Lord Montforth. “I am so sorry for the way my mother and sister have treated you.”
“Again, you do not have to apologize on their behalf!” Cynthia exclaimed. “Just because you share their blood, that does not mean you share their heart. You're a much better person than they are, Edith.” She shoveled another forkful of meat into her mouth, though she barely had an appetite. Ever since her father's death, eating was just as impossible as sleeping. As blue-deviled as she was, nothing seemed to matter anymore.
“I only wish they would show you the respect you deserve! Lord Montforth would be so disappointed!”
“That was my thought exactly,” Cynthia agreed with a sigh. “If my father was alive... well... I would like to think he would be saddened by their treatment of me.”
“Saddened doesn't even begin to describe it!” Edith exclaimed. “I think he would be horrified and utterly appalled! My mother should be ashamed of herself!”
Cynthia set her breakfast aside, for she no longer had an appetite for it. She stared into a row of flowers, momentarily losing herself in the brilliance of the colors. For a few seconds, she closed her eyes and listened to the wind swishing through the grass.
She was thoroughly enjoying the moment, until Edith said, “I have more bad news.”
“Ohhh,” Cynthia moaned. “I do not know if I can stomach much more. What could it possibly be!?”
“Your cousin is due to arrive today,” Edith reported with a frown. “It was to be expected, I suppose. He wants to see the estate he has inherited.”
“Roland...” Cynthia sighed as she uttered his name. “That is bad news.” When she looked over at Edith, Cynthia had the most pitiful pout on her lips. “In fact, I think it is much worse than you realize.”
* * *
Though Roland Eggert was the new Lord Montforth, he lacked the striking appearance of a lord. His sandy hair hadn't been combed in ages, his cravat was haphazardly tied, and his clothes were severely outmoded. He looked like he belonged in the 18th century; all he lacked was a powdered wig. He was quite portly, and he liked to stroke his stomach as he spoke. He had
a perfectly round face, small, wide-set eyes, and a bulbous nose. He was the sort of man who would never be described as handsome, and though he was only six and twenty, he easily looked a decade older than his age.
As he stood in front of Montforth Hall, he rubbed his palms together and snickered. When he grinned, his fat lips parted, revealing the tremendous gap between his front teeth. “It's mine!” he shouted, for no one's benefit but his own, because no one was around to hear him. “I cannot believe this glorious place is mine!”
He waddled in the direction of the manor. If his gait was a bit peculiar, it was because his breeches were exceptionally tight. When the butler let him into the house and called him, “my lord,” Roland let out a trill of excitement. He could certainly get used to this!
“I would like to speak to the Lady Montforth,” Roland announced. “The old dowager, not my wife. Actually, I don't have a wife! Yuk yuk yuk!” Roland's strange laugh raised the butler's eyebrows; nevertheless, he hurried off to fetch the lady for his new master.
Roland held onto his stomach as he toddled into the sitting room. He settled his considerable girth into a rocking chair, which creaked and popped beneath his weight. “I'm an earl,” Roland whispered to himself. “An earl. Me! Jolly good!”
Because he was alone, Roland decided it was a good time to pick his nose. There was a giant mass clogging one of his nostrils, and it was having an adverse effect on his ability to breathe. Unfortunately, the dowager entered unannounced, and when she first laid eyes on him, he had a finger buried halfway up his nose. Panicked, Roland extracted his finger, wiped it on his breeches, and rose from the chair. “My lady!” he exclaimed. When she entered the room, he saw that she was flanked by two other women, and one of them was extraordinarily beautiful.
“Hello, Lord Montforth,” Jemima greeted him. “You will have to forgive me if I do not offer you my hand.”
“You don't have to call me Lord Montforth, my lady,” Roland said. “That was your husband's name. I imagine it could get dashed confusing. Yuk yuk yuk!”