Spindle

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Spindle Page 1

by Shonna Slayton




  BY

  SHONNA SLAYTON

  Also by

  Shonna Slayton

  Cinderella’s Dress

  Cinderella’s Shoes

  Liz and Nellie

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  More from Shonna Slayton

  More from Entangled Teen

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2016 by Shonna Slayton. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

  Entangled Publishing, LLC

  2614 South Timberline Road

  Suite 109

  Fort Collins, CO 80525

  Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

  Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

  Edited by Stacy Abrams and Lydia Sharp

  Cover design by Louisa Maggio

  Interior design by Toni Kerr

  ISBN: 9781633754935

  Ebook ISBN: 9781633754928

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition October 2016

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For Mike,

  who will always be my prince.

  Prologue

  Two servants filled the largest fireplace in the castle with wood while a small gathering anxiously watched on. Small bits of kindling and cotton on the bottom and larger pieces of dry hickory on top. It would be a fire that lit fast and burned hot. One of the servants bent down, striking the flint and setting the kindling aflame.

  Aurora’s face immediately warmed with the heat, and she allowed herself to hope. Her nightmare would soon be over.

  “Thank you. Leave us, please,” she said.

  The servants exited, closing the solid wooden door behind them with an ominous thud.

  Aurora reached for her fiancé’s hand and gave it a squeeze. He kissed her forehead in response. Such a courageous, patient man. She turned to the fairies gathered in the shadows. They nodded encouragingly. They, too, had been waiting for this to end.

  Careful not to prick her finger, Aurora took one last look at the item that had cursed her. Such an ordinary object, aside from the pretty scrollwork carved in the wood. No one would suspect the power it wielded—and that was the danger.

  One of the fairies coughed, reminding her to continue.

  “The end,” Aurora said with finality, and tossed the spindle into the fire. No one else would ever go through the horrors she had. Still, she held her breath, fearful of what might happen. Were they standing too close? Would there be an explosion of magic? They waited.

  Nothing.

  Not a crackle, a sizzle, or a hiss.

  Aurora bent down and peered into the flames. What she saw made her heart pound with fear. She’d thought her ordeal was over. Her hundred years of turmoil had ended, and she had found love with a prince who was eager to show her what she had missed while she was sleeping.

  “Why doesn’t it burn?” she demanded.

  The good fairies gathered around. “I was afeared of this,” said one. “The curse still lives. You will not be able to destroy it until it fulfills its intended purpose.”

  “Isodora will be furious,” said another. “Her powers are wrapped up in this unfulfilled curse. We must hide it in a place where no young girl can ever find it again. For if a girl before her seventeenth birthday pricks her finger…”

  “We cannot help her,” said the third fairy. “She will die.”

  Chapter One

  Briar walked the length of her spinning frames, keeping a close eye on the whirling threads. She’d been shut down more often than not today and tried to keep her mind off of her lost wages. It was Saturday, so they’d be ending early, giving her time to go home to the country and spend the night with her young siblings and their nanny.

  All she did at the cotton mill, she did for those children.

  Out of the corner of her eye, she saw several threads break on frame number four. Her heart sank. “Drat.”

  Quickly, she pulled the shipper handle on four and waited for the spinning to stop. With her other frames, she could easily fix a few threads that had turned thin while the machine was running, but not this frame. It had a mind of its own and would likely pinch her fingers if she tried.

  She looked around for Henry. He worked in the machine shop and had a knack for fixing this persnickety frame. His boss allowed him to come up to the spinning room and doff for her, tweaking the frame each time to keep it running. Most doffers were children, their small hands the right size for slipping through the frames and removing the full bobbins and putting on new ones. Henry, despite being seventeen, didn’t seem to mind helping her even though the other boys his age gave him a ribbing. He had been her first friend when she moved to town with her family, and a loyal one at that, so she was thankful for his help.

  Briar set to work tying threads and straightening out bobbins.

  “Can’t leave you alone for a minute,” called a voice close to her ear.

  Henry. He had to yell above the roaring noise of a roomful of spinning frames. He reached out and pulled off a bobbin, then pointed. “This here is your problem. Something’s wrong with this spindle and it sets the others off.” He took out his tools and straightened the metal spindle.

  Briar finished tying the last broken thread. “Can’t you replace it?” she yelled back.

  Henry shook his head. “Already have. Every one I put in here goes crooked.” He grinned. “Besides, if I fix it for good, I won’t get to see you every day.”

  Briar rolled her eyes, which only seemed to encourage him further.

  With a wink, he pushed the bobbin cart ahead and began swapping out the full bobbins for empties. While he did that, Briar started up number four again, staying long enough to make sure all the threads caught and were spinning evenly before
moving on to check her neglected frames.

  When Henry finished doffing, he waved to catch her attention, signaling he was done. She lifted her chin and smiled her thanks. Then he tapped the edge of number four—the same spot every time—and was off.

  The only person completely dependable in my life is Henry Prince.

  Sure, Nanny was always available for the children, but that was only temporary. Stiff and unyielding as the spinning frames, Nanny had only agreed to help out for a year, ending at Briar’s seventeenth birthday. After that, if Briar hadn’t come up with a more permanent solution for the children, they’d be turned over to the orphan asylum in town that would put them on the orphan train sure as anything. No one would take three children all at once. They’d be split up and would never see one another again.

  Until last week, Briar thought she’d found a permanent solution. But now, instead of planning for a summer wedding, she was scrambling for ways to earn more money to bring the children back into town with her and was finding it nigh impossible. No matter how hard she worked at the mill or how much extra piecework she took on, it would never be enough on her own. Wheeler—her former sweetheart—had spoiled everything when he changed his mind.

  Finally, the overseer shut off the power to the frames and the day was over.

  Briar raced out the door and down the outside stairs to the mill courtyard, getting jostled by the constant stream of operatives leaving the buildings.

  There was her room-mate Mim coming down from the weaving room. Briar waved.

  “Let’s go, then,” said Mim, straightening her new Sunday bonnet that she had saved up several weeks for.

  Mim was a few years older than Briar, the fashion expert of their boardinghouse and the only blonde in the mix. She was a gem with a needle and had been teaching Briar how to smock little girls’ dresses, adding pleats with colorful patterns to the bodice and sleeves.

  Briar had also worn her best hat to work. Not a new hat. It belonged to her mam, so it was dated but decent. She’d also risked wearing her best cotton dress, worried all day the hem would come away soaked in the grease that was liberally applied to the machines and often dripped onto the floors. They didn’t have time to go back to the boardinghouse and change, if Briar were to make it home to the children before dark.

  It was important she look presentable for where Mim was taking her: across town to where the wives of the mill executives lived and had their babies.

  “You sure you want to do this?” Mim asked.

  “Do what?” said Henry. He sidled up between them, his hands in his pockets.

  “I’m looking for piecework,” Briar said quietly.

  He raised his eyebrows in surprise. “Don’t you think you work hard enough at the mill?”

  “You know why I have to take on more.” It had been a long week and Briar was tired, more weary of soul than of body. She could push herself to work a little harder and, if nothing else, try to mask the hurt left in her heart.

  “Let me—”

  “No.” Briar stopped him. Henry was the kind of guy who would give you the shirt off his back. “I can’t. You can’t. Your family needs what you bring in.”

  “Then let me walk with you.”

  Mim stopped. “You’ll do no such thing.” She looked him up and down as if to emphasize her point. He was covered in grease, wearing an old, torn pair of work trousers, and his shirt opened one button too many, on account of a button falling off and not being replaced.

  Mim did have a point. It would be hard enough to impress these ladies that she could do the job neatly and cleanly without Henry hanging around in the background.

  “Then I’ll wait for you by the road to see you home. You are still going to the cottage tonight?” His forehead wrinkled in concern.

  Briar nodded. She couldn’t stay in town without telling the children first. They looked forward to her weekend visits. “Thanks, but you don’t have to. Your mam will be worried.”

  “No, she won’t. She’ll know I’m with you.” He turned and sauntered back toward the mill.

  Mim snorted. “He doesn’t know his mother, does he?”

  Briar frowned, thinking of what she’d shared with her room-mates.

  Henry had invited her to his house one day, not long after the children had moved in with Nanny. He was showing off, having never brought her there before. Their entire property was fenced off with ominous KEEP OUT signs posted everywhere, making Briar nervous from the start, even though she had already met his parents.

  They had fed the chickens, petted the goats, and he was about to invite her into the house when his mother stood arms akimbo in the doorway. Her usual smile was gone, replaced by stern, set lips.

  “Henry, may I speak with you inside, please?” she’d asked in a way that let Briar know she wasn’t to follow. Trouble was, the window was open and Briar could hear everything.

  “How could you bring her out here? What were you thinking?”

  The white lace curtain in the window fluttered in the breeze. Briar stared at it, straining to hear more. As if of their own accord, her legs started forward, taking her closer.

  “I’m sorry, Mama.” His voice came out whisper-quiet.

  “We don’t know what causes a girl to be drawn to the spindle. You need to be careful who you bring here. The farm is not a place for a girl, especially a girl like Briar. Take her home now.”

  Henry had come out with a basket, the first of many that he would bring to the cottage filled with food from Mrs. Prince’s garden. His grin faltered when he saw her so close to the house, but then he smiled wide and led her out of the yard. He never explained anything.

  Nor did he ever invite her back.

  From then on, Briar not only avoided the farm, she avoided Mrs. Prince, who seemed to have something against girls “like her.” She couldn’t figure out if Mrs. Prince was against spinner girls in general or Irish spinner girls in particular.

  Briar wanted to tell Mrs. Prince it wasn’t that she was drawn to the spindle, it was simply the only job she could get. Options were limited, which was why, with Mim’s help, she was hoping these housewives would take the time to judge her by her work.

  Mim rang the doorbell of the first house, a new, two-story brick structure surrounded by a manicured lawn and a dozen purplish-pink azalea bushes. Mrs. Chapman opened the front door. Dressed in a pretty green dress with a lace collar and puffed sleeves, she beamed at Mim.

  “Have you finished already?”

  Mim handed Mrs. Chapman the wrapped package. “Yes, ma’am. And please meet my room-mate, Briar Jenny. I’ve been teaching her, and she is ready to start taking on her own clients. Do you have another dress that needs smocking, or do you know of another mother wanting fancywork done?” Mim pulled out a sampler showcasing Briar’s stitches.

  Meanwhile, Briar stood silently under Mrs. Chapman’s penetrating gaze. She stiffened as the woman’s eyes roamed over Briar’s auburn hair, her freckles.

  Making judgments.

  This wasn’t going to work. Briar sensed it before Mim could.

  There was no physical sign posted in the window, but Briar felt it in her being. She wasn’t welcome here. NINA. No Irish Need Apply.

  Chapter Two

  Oblivious to Mrs. Chapman’s reaction, Mim continued to sell Briar’s work. “Look at how beautifully Briar makes the baby-wave stitch,” she said. “Perfectly even: you’d think she was using a tape measure.”

  Finally, the woman shook her head. “I’m full-up on clothes right present. Thank you, Mim.” With a final glance saying she should have known better, Mrs. Chapman snapped the door closed.

  Briar shut her eyes, feeling the reverberations through her thin soles. And to think she dressed up for this.

  Mim put her hands on her hips. “That’s a surprise. She’s always got work for me.” Mim led Briar down the steps. “Let’s try Mrs. Oxford.”

  Turning back to their side of town, Briar said, “I should be getting on the roa
d.” She had known none of these ladies would hire her. Too many immigrants had descended into Vermont too fast and some people didn’t like it.

  “Just one more?”

  Briar pointed to her hair. Though Mim had done it up for her in a Newport knot, the style didn’t hide the color. “They can spot me a mile away.”

  “Oh, pooh. They’re not all like that.” Mim frowned, and then looped her arm through Briar’s as they walked back to their side of town. “How about I take in the jobs and you can help me with the work? What they don’t know won’t kill ’em.”

  Briar gave a half smile. “Thanks.”

  They were passing a group of town girls, one of whom was wearing the exact same hat as Mim. One of the girls pointed and said in a loud whisper, “That mill girl’s got your hat, Felicity.” The rest began to giggle behind upheld hands.

  The girl, Felicity, said, “I never did like this hat much. Too cheap-looking. I’ve been thinking about putting it in the charity box.”

  Briar felt Mim stiffen, but the two of them raised their chins and walked on like they hadn’t heard.

  “They’re only jealous,” Briar said, “because you can buy your own hats but they have to wait for their fathers to buy theirs for them.”

  “You’re darn right,” said Mim. “Spoiled lot. Wouldn’t last a day on the looms.”

  They parted near the mill. “Give these to the children for me.” Mim handed Briar a small paper bag with three lemon drops inside. “See you tomorrow.”

  “You need to stop sending me home with treats or they’ll expect them every time.”

  Briar waved and started down the road out of town, wondering if Henry had waited or not. She quickened her pace, eager to be with her kin.

  “Hey, wait up!” called Henry from a gathering of boys down the lane. He ran toward her.

  Briar smiled, surprisingly glad for the company after the coldness of the ladies in town. “Thanks for waiting.”

  He grinned back. “I thought you’d be longer, but I saw Mim headed for Miss Olive’s.”

  “Doesn’t take people long to make a decision. Besides, it was time we got on home before the sun sets.” She didn’t want to tell him the reason she was walking empty-handed, no piecework for her. They walked in silence for a while until she felt his gaze.

 

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