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Chapter no 16

Belladonna (Belladonna, 1)

THE PAST WEEKS HAD KEPTย BLYTHE IN ISOLATION,ย HER ONLY

VISITORSย Elijah and the doctor who cared for her. Every day, Signa tried to slip unnoticed into her cousinโ€™s room to check on her, only to be met with a locked door, pulled away by lessons, or scrutinized by Elijahโ€™s watchful eye when he spent his evenings by Blytheโ€™s bedside, ensuring nothing happened to her while she slept.

This particular morning, her plans were thwarted when Marjorie burst into her suite dragging an armful of gownsโ€” tea dresses and traveling dresses meant for daytime use and others with extra ru๏ฌ„es and richer fabrics made for parties. They were far better than the yellow day dress sheโ€™d been forced to wear so often, though she couldnโ€™t help but feel a knot of sadness at their dull, muted hues.

โ€œYouโ€™ll want to ready yourself quickly.โ€ Marjorie handed Signa a soft periwinkle tea dress. โ€œYou have company arriving soon.โ€

This roused Signa at onceโ€”how could she have company when she knew no one?

โ€œIโ€™ve arranged a tea for you, with young ladies your own age,โ€ Marjorie said. โ€œI thought you might like to have friends here after being forced to leave your other ones in such a rush. All of these girls are friendly with Blythe and come from a๏ฌ„uent families. All are unmarried and are perfectly suitable company.โ€

Signa had no doubts that they were, but still she asked, โ€œAnd they have to visit now?โ€

Marjorieโ€™s face was stern. โ€œWhat do you meanย now? I was under the impression that this was what you wanted.โ€

โ€œIt is!โ€ Signa said hastily. Of course it was what she wantedโ€”company and a foothold in high society was all sheโ€™dย everย wantedโ€”though she would have preferred it any other day. โ€œI only meant that Iโ€™d hoped to see Blythe today.โ€ This seemed to appease Marjorie, whose smile was sympathetic. โ€œI see. Unfortunately, the doctor is with Miss Hawthorne. Youโ€™re welcome to visit her later this

afternoon, after your lessons.โ€

Signa wanted to demand that she be allowed to pay her cousin a quick visit, though when Elaine arrived to help Signa hurry and dress, she realized any such effort was futile. Blythe would have to wait a little longer.

The dress slipped over her skin like silk, made from imported fabrics with little expense spared. It was color coordinated to compliment the parlor in which theyโ€™d be having tea, and laced in the back, leaving Signa room to grow into it with a more sufficient diet. For now it was a touch loose, which made it one of the more comfortable things sheโ€™d ever worn, given that one was not expected to wear a corset beneath a tea gown.

By the time Signa finished getting ready, she certainlyย lookedย respectable, but she was contemplating every which way she might possibly sneakย A Ladyโ€™s Guide to Beauty and Etiquetteย into tea with her. It sat upon her writing desk, and she trailed a delicate finger down its immaculate spine. Would her mother be proud to see her like this? Would she have dressed Signa similarly? Pinned her dark tresses the same way Marjorie did, to show off her delicate face and slender neck?

โ€œTheyโ€™ll be here by now,โ€ Marjorie chided. โ€œCome along.โ€ Signa withdrew her hand from the book. She knew its contents by heart, had studied its pages front to back more

times than she could count. Now was the time for execution.

She followed Marjorie down the stairs, walking between fretting maids who dodged her in their hurry, setting up Thorn Grove for another party. Her heart pattered with every step. She wouldnโ€™t allow herself to slip up like she had with Blytheโ€”wouldnโ€™t forget her tongue for even a moment.

Three young women waited for her in the parlor, seated at a circular table that seemed absurdly small and intimate. Marjorie introduced them as Lady Diana Blackwater, a rather plain girl with fair skin, mousy hair, and beady rat- like eyes; Lady Eliza Wakefield, with a long alabaster face and blond ringlets, andโ€ฆ

Signa didnโ€™t trust her own legs to hold her up when she saw the hazel eyes that stared back at her. Charlotte Killinger wore a blue-and-white-striped day dress, her shoulders back and her neck long and delicate. Her old friend was even more beautiful than Signa rememberedโ€” her rich umber skin warm and glowing, cheeks warmed with the tiniest hint of rouge. She was taller and less baby cheeked, but still every bit the girl that Signa had once known. The friend she still thought of to this day, but one whom sheโ€™d not spoken to since the scandal between Signaโ€™s uncle and Charlotteโ€™s mother all those years ago.

Charlotteโ€™s mouth hung ajar, her eyes wide as a doeโ€™s before she bowed her head in a gracious nod. โ€œIt was kind of you to invite us.โ€

โ€œIt certainly was! Weโ€™ve all been so curious about the Hawthornesโ€™ new ward,โ€ Diana chimed in after a cursory dip of her head. Her voice was strident, but Signa paid it little mind for her heart was busy beating a mile a minute. For so long sheโ€™d wished to see Charlotte again. But why did it have to be now of all times? Now, when sheโ€™d finally let herself believe that she could start fresh and where the rumors of the past would not haunt her every move.

Signa stumbled, legs numb, as Marjorie gave her a gentle nudge toward her chair. One of the servants poured steaming tea into their cups while another set out teacakes and pastries. While Charlotte thanked them, the other two girls ignored the help. Their fascination rested solely with Signa, and their eyes glinted with it the moment Marjorie was out the door.

Eliza smiled at her from across the table. โ€œWell, arenโ€™t you a tiny thing.โ€ Whether it was a compliment or an insult was impossible to tell. Eliza leaned forward, her long curls brushing the tablecloth. โ€œHow are you enjoying your time with the Hawthornes? They truly are the most interesting family.โ€

โ€œInteresting?โ€ Signa echoed, her throat so painfully dry. โ€œHow so?โ€

โ€œThe parties, for one.โ€ Eliza laughed, as though the question was ridiculous. โ€œNot to mention the wealth, the rumors, the mystery. I suppose you wouldnโ€™t know considering youโ€™ve only just arrived, but the family youโ€™re staying with is the talk of the town.โ€

Signa dared to look sideways at Charlotte, who sat erect in her chair, wordlessly sipping her tea. She hadnโ€™t said one word and busied herself by staring up at a landscape of a beautiful spring garden.

A Ladyโ€™s Guide to Beauty and Etiquetteย was very clear about gossip:ย Do not speak idly. Signa agreed, not caring to gossip about those who had shown her such grace. But Elizaโ€™s eyes were lit with mirth and her tongue was ready to seep poison, and so to get the information she sought, Signa took the bait. She reached for a blueberry scone and leaned forward with a quiet intake of breath.

โ€œRumors?โ€ she asked in a tone that conveyed sheโ€™d never once imagined such a heinous thing to be possible. โ€œSurely, youโ€™re mistaken? What sort of rumors are they?โ€

โ€œAll sorts,โ€ Diana chimed in. โ€œThat ghosts haunt Thorn Grove. That perhaps Missus Hawthorneโ€”poor thingโ€”took

it upon herself to end her life after discovering her husband had had a series of torrid affairs and too many illegitimate children to care for. They even say the help is in cahoots to rally against the family.โ€

The allegations seemed to be all hearsay, though Signa tucked the information away as more puzzle pieces to be sifted through at another time. โ€œThe Hawthornes are curious people,โ€ Signa said, choosing her words with care; she had no assurance that whatever she said wouldnโ€™t leave this table or that she wouldnโ€™t be branded a gossip. โ€œBut theyโ€™re also very generous to welcome me into their home when theyโ€™ve suffered such a great loss.โ€

Diana made a noise in the back of her throat. โ€œIโ€™m sure your fortune helped with that.โ€ She leaned back in her seat and examined her frilly white gloves. โ€œMy father says Mr. Hawthorneโ€™s business is failing and that youโ€™re to inherit a fortune grander than even theirs.โ€

Signa wasnโ€™t shy about the butter she spread upon her scone, heartbeat so fierce that even her neck was beginning to perspire. When sheโ€™d imagined this conversation, itโ€™d been much more informative and relaxed. Charlotte peered up then. โ€œShe only just arrived, Diana,โ€

she said in a smooth voice between sips of tea. โ€œI doubt she knows much about the Hawthornes at all.โ€

Elizaโ€™s lips tightened, and Signa took hold of another scone. She figured if she didnโ€™t know what to say, thenโ€”so long as her mouth was fullโ€”she could bide her time and let the others speak.

But that was before a flood of cold air washed into the room.

โ€œIs there a window open?โ€ Eliza shivered. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t have thought Iโ€™d require a coat at tea.โ€

Signa knew too well what that draft meant and choked mid-bite. She tried to be discreet as she turned her head around to see Death was there beside her, sitting in a chair of shadows next to Diana. He folded one shadowy leg over

the other, and in his hand, more shadows had formed an imaginary cup of tea, which he raised to her in greeting.ย Apologies, I forgot to bring my dress and gloves.

The words were not spoken aloud but seemed to reverberate in her head.

Heย was in her head.

She clenched her skirts and paced her breaths.ย No. No no no no.ย None of this was going according to plan.

First Charlotte, and nowโ€ฆ no. Signa had eaten no belladonna; sheโ€™d not journeyed to the place between the living and the dead to access him. All her life, sheโ€™d been able to see Death only when there was reason for itโ€”when someone near her was dying. Sheโ€™d sooner try to kill Death again than let him take one of these girls, and she tried to convey every bit of that in the glare she shot at him. He seemed to enjoy it, a low laugh rattling in her head and filling her chest.

Relax, Little Bird. I only came for some rousing gossip.

Diana took a delicate bite of scone, unaware of the monster pretending to sip steaming shadow tea beside her. One touch, just a graze of his shadows, and these girls would be dead. Signaโ€™s throat was too tight to swallow the hunk of scone that had lodged in her throat. She choked on it, grabbing for her tea and sucking down half the cup in one go.

Although Charlotte made a point of not staring, Diana laughed. โ€œGood God, donโ€™t tell me youโ€™re not fed here? You eat as though youโ€™ve not seen food all week. And those collarbones of yoursโ€ฆ So very sharp.โ€

Signaโ€™s shoulders wilted. She knew better, certainly. Knew to take her time, to take small bites, to pretend she didnโ€™t find the food delicious and that she felt no desperate call to devour it all, and instead pretend she was delicate and barely knew the meaning of food.

Beside her, Death set down his tea.ย How do you feel about this woman? I could infect her with a light plague,

perhaps. Or we could give her the pox? Blemished skin may do her vanity some good.

Recognizing the levity in his voice, she fixed him with a brief, angry look, to which he sighed.ย Fine, ruin my fun.

Between Charlotte sitting on one side of her and Death on the other, it was a fruitless endeavor to attempt to focus. Diana and Eliza dominated the conversation, and when they noticed Signa had gone some time without even a murmured response to any gossip, Eliza turned her flat brown eyes to her to pry: โ€œHave you a suitor already, Miss Farrow?โ€

Death stood and loomed over Eliza, so close that Signaโ€™s throat grew tight.ย Donโ€™t mind me, he said.ย Go ahead and answer. Is there someone youโ€™ve got your eye on, Little Bird?

Her fists clenched. She wanted with everything in her to demand that he leave, but she had no way to convey that with the others scrutinizing her. Noticing her struggle, Death said,ย You should be able to respond to me, you know. If you hear me, Iโ€™d wager you can respond.

She tried, eager to tell him to leave her alone long enough for her to glean information about the Hawthornes, or at the very least to find a way to speak to Charlotte in private. Yet as hard as she strained to send those words to him, he didnโ€™t react as though he could hear her.

โ€œDo you intend to make your debut here, Miss Farrow?โ€ Charlotte asked, a wary edge to her voice.

Signa held her porcelain teacup in both hands as she stared at her friend. Despite the nerves, despite what Charlotte knew and could do to undermine herโ€ฆ she was still relieved that Charlotte was present. That sheโ€™d finally found her old friend again and could see firsthand that she was safe and healthy and beautiful. โ€œIโ€™m hoping to join this season, yes,โ€ Signa told her, liking the way the announcement felt when she spoke it aloud.

Eliza clapped her hands. โ€œOh, you must have a party to

celebrate! Invite us, and weโ€™ll ensure you know everything about every man in townโ€”โ€ She clutched her throat, losing her breath for a moment when Death stepped around her.

Will I be invited to your party? I do love a good dance.

He would be invited to nothing, and though Signa wished she could tell him as much, she kept her smile and asked Eliza, โ€œWhat men are thought to be joining this season?โ€

The commotion at the table was immediate. Eliza leaned in, brandishing her fork as she spoke. โ€œI believe youโ€™ll want to keep your eye on my cousin Lord Everett Wakefield.โ€

Charlotte perked up at the name, her eyes brightening. โ€œHeโ€™s arrived?โ€ she asked, to which Eliza nodded.

โ€œJust three days ago. Heโ€™ll be joining us through the summer to see if he might find a suitable wife. I do wonder, too, whoย yourย cousin Percy might seek out, Miss Farrow. Heโ€™s set to inherit the family business, and its fortune, you know.โ€

Eliza was correct, assuming Elijah didnโ€™t ruin his prospects. Signa thought back to two nights prior, when sheโ€™d watched Elijah shove a cake into his sonโ€™s mouth. She couldnโ€™t imagine Percyโ€™s embarrassment, couldnโ€™t imagine how it must feel to have a father lose himself so fully in his mourning.

The Hawthornes were fraying at the seams. One needed only to tug, and they would split entirely.

When Signa reached for another scone, Diana drew the plate away with a thin smile that sharpened Signaโ€™s spine. She straightened, drawing her hand away in doubt.

Just eat it. Deathโ€™s words were cold.ย If youโ€™re hungry, eat the scone.

But Death had no hold in society, no knowledge or stake in its politics.

Donโ€™t drink or eat too much, or too little. Only the right amount. Those were the lessons that her etiquette book taught. Signa just hadnโ€™t known what qualified asย too

much.ย Now she knew it was three scones. So despite Deathโ€™s push, she didnโ€™t take another, even when Diana began prying again into the business of the Hawthornes, hunting for gossip she would undoubtedly spread. There was no room to relax in this conversation. She was more on her guard than ever, judging every inch of her bodyโ€”from where she rested her pinkie to how quick her breathing was. Did she sip too quickly? Was the amount of sugar she added to her tea appropriate?

Exhaustion weighted her shoulders; socializing was going to take more getting used to than sheโ€™d anticipated.

For so long Signa had waited for this day; waited for the time when she would sit and chat with her friends as part of high society. For the time when others would show interest in her, and she might finally have the company sheโ€™d spent so long yearning for. Yet when Marjorie returned to the parlor, it felt as though an eternity had passed, and all Signa wanted was freedom and a good nap.

Charlotte was the last of the ladies to depart, and much to Signaโ€™s surprise, she refused to linger. Her eyes skimmed over Signa as a quick โ€œIโ€™m glad to see that youโ€™re doing wellโ€ passed her lips before she grasped her skirts and followed Marjorie out the door.

Tears burned Signaโ€™s eyes. Charlotte had recognized her. Sheโ€™d recognized her, and yetโ€ฆ It meant nothing. Perhaps all that time togetherโ€”all that friendshipโ€”had meant more to Signa than it had to Charlotte.

Sheโ€™d forgotten that Death stood behind her until he grumbled, โ€œTwo of those girls behave as though theyโ€™ve just been let off their leading strings.โ€

Swiping her eyes, Signa pivoted to him. โ€œWhat are you still doing here?โ€

Again the shadows around him shifted, forming a table for him to kick his feet onto. โ€œGood day to you, too. I came to see how you were settling in.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d rather you didnโ€™t.โ€ Signa turned and paced the

length of the parlor, not wanting him to see her so shaken. โ€œHow are you even here?โ€

He considered this, tipping back in his shadow chair. โ€œYouโ€™ve spared Blythe for now, but that doesnโ€™t mean sheโ€™s cured.โ€ The chair straightened, and he looked to her. โ€œIโ€™m here because sheโ€™s still teetering on the bridge between the living and the dead. Because of that, when we are both near enough to her, it seems you can see me. I wasnโ€™t sure until today if that would be the case.โ€

Blast this unfortunate connection of theirs. What she wouldnโ€™t give to cover the veil into the afterlife and never look upon it again. โ€œAnd why is it I can hear your voice in my head?โ€

โ€œSame reason you can hear my voice when I speak aloud, I suppose.โ€

Were he corporeal, Signa would have shaken him. As it was, she spun on her heel and stepped toward him with a wrath that fueled her entire body. โ€œCouldnโ€™t you see that I was busy?โ€ she snarled. โ€œThis wasย importantย to me.โ€

Death turned as though he could see the girls through the walls. โ€œWhy? Iโ€™d think such creatures only important to their mothers. Didnโ€™t you find it odd how two of them asked solely about your fortune and your family? They asked little aboutย you.โ€

True as it was, the last thing she wanted was to agree with him. And so she said stubbornly, โ€œTheyโ€™re to be my friends.โ€

โ€œYour friends?โ€ He stood, the table and chair heโ€™d formed slipping back into the shadows. โ€œWhy? Iโ€™ve never seen you soโ€ฆโ€

โ€œSo talkative?โ€ Signa pressed. โ€œNever seen me with company?โ€

They were nearly chest to metaphorical chest now. This near to him, Signaโ€™s skin buzzed not with fear but power. Determination. He was Death, and because of that she had no need to filter herself. No need to impress him.

Death bent so that his shadowed face hovered before hers, only a breath between them. โ€œIโ€™ve never seen you so demure, and so sickeningly stifled.โ€ A scone flew at her then, landing hard on her chest. She barely caught it before it hit the floor. โ€œYou wanted this, didnโ€™t you? Why would you let one personโ€™s opinion prevent you from having it?โ€

She curled her fingers into the flaky crust of the scone. โ€œI was being polite. There are rules about these thingsโ€”โ€

โ€œWhat you were being was hungry. And if youโ€™re hungry, you should eat. Damn your rules.โ€ There was something dark about his tone. A sour disappointment that, to her frustration, gnawed at her.

โ€œAnd what does it matter to you?โ€

The question ignited a burning rage in his eyes. An inferno that had him before her again, sucking the air from the room. โ€œIt matters because youโ€™re better than that. You were not made to be meek or wanting. If you embraced who you are, imagine the power you might wield. Imagine the things you could do.โ€

โ€œYou mean the lives I could take?โ€ Signa stepped closer. โ€œImagine the spirits I could speak to? The bidding I could do for the dead? I donโ€™t need to imagine it; I live it. That life consumes me, and itโ€™s not one I want.โ€

โ€œHow do you know?โ€ he demanded. โ€œWhen all you do is run, how do you know what it is that you want? Would you rather spend your life pretending to be whatever it is you were with those girls?โ€

She threw the scone back at him, and to her surprise, it didnโ€™t slip through him as the knife had when sheโ€™d stabbed him. He caught it.

โ€œLeave,โ€ she said once sheโ€™d managed to stifle her surprise. โ€œYou donโ€™t know me, and you never will. Itโ€™s as you once said, weโ€™re both very busy people, and youโ€™re nothing but a distraction.โ€

He scoffed, the sound so human. So male. โ€œI came to offer my assistance. A murder would be significantly

simpler to solve, I imagine, if you knew how to use your abilities.โ€

โ€œThat wonโ€™t be necessary,โ€ she said, not caring to consider the offer. โ€œI can already speak with spiritsโ€”โ€

โ€œSo you see no value in an ability to walk through walls?โ€ he demanded. โ€œTo alter your body so that others cannot see you? To become the very night itself, and submerge into the shadows? Imagine the spying you might do.โ€

Those would be useful powers, yes, but accepting that meant accepting his help, and she had no desire to entertain him and his ego for any longer than necessary.

โ€œAll my life, I have wanted nothing more than to be rid of you.โ€ She squared her shoulders before the shadows that loomed over her. โ€œI begged, night after night, death after death, for you to leave me alone. And now you want to offer me help?โ€ There were not enough words. Not enough savageness within her to tell him the extent of what she thought of that. โ€œI hate you, and I hate everything youโ€™ve done to me. I will solve this, and I will do so without you.โ€

All around them, the day winked out. The darkness was all-consuming as Death grew larger, his anger so palpable that it suffocated the room. Above them, the chandelier shook, its lights flickering like an approaching storm. The sunlight filtering in from the windows snuffed out like a candle.

โ€œYou no longer have a choice in this.โ€ Deathโ€™s voice shook the walls, knocking two porcelain teacups to the floor. โ€œI tire of these games. I know you better than you think, just as I know that you will never rid yourself of me, Little Bird. As I will never rid myself of you.โ€

The shaking ceased, and daylight streamed back into the parlor as Death retreated to his shadows. โ€œOur lessons begin at midnight. Iโ€™ll see you then.โ€

She was about to yell that he shouldnโ€™t bother. But the moment she opened her mouth to speak, a scone flew from

the table and into her mouth, choking off the protest Death refused to hear.

THE PAST WEEKS HAD KEPTย BLYTHE IN ISOLATION,ย HER ONLY

VISITORSย Elijah and the doctor who cared for her. Every day, Signa tried to slip unnoticed into her cousinโ€™s room to check on her, only to be met with a locked door, pulled away by lessons, or scrutinized by Elijahโ€™s watchful eye when he spent his evenings by Blytheโ€™s bedside, ensuring nothing happened to her while she slept.

This particular morning, her plans were thwarted when Marjorie burst into her suite dragging an armful of gownsโ€” tea dresses and traveling dresses meant for daytime use and others with extra ru๏ฌ„es and richer fabrics made for parties. They were far better than the yellow day dress sheโ€™d been forced to wear so often, though she couldnโ€™t help but feel a knot of sadness at their dull, muted hues.

โ€œYouโ€™ll want to ready yourself quickly.โ€ Marjorie handed Signa a soft periwinkle tea dress. โ€œYou have company arriving soon.โ€

This roused Signa at onceโ€”how could she have company when she knew no one?

โ€œIโ€™ve arranged a tea for you, with young ladies your own age,โ€ Marjorie said. โ€œI thought you might like to have friends here after being forced to leave your other ones in such a rush. All of these girls are friendly with Blythe and come from a๏ฌ„uent families. All are unmarried and are perfectly suitable company.โ€

Signa had no doubts that they were, but still she asked, โ€œAnd they have to visit now?โ€

Marjorieโ€™s face was stern. โ€œWhat do you meanย now? I was under the impression that this was what you wanted.โ€

โ€œIt is!โ€ Signa said hastily. Of course it was what she wantedโ€”company and a foothold in high society was all sheโ€™dย everย wantedโ€”though she would have preferred it any other day. โ€œI only meant that Iโ€™d hoped to see Blythe today.โ€ This seemed to appease Marjorie, whose smile was sympathetic. โ€œI see. Unfortunately, the doctor is with Miss Hawthorne. Youโ€™re welcome to visit her later this

afternoon, after your lessons.โ€

Signa wanted to demand that she be allowed to pay her cousin a quick visit, though when Elaine arrived to help Signa hurry and dress, she realized any such effort was futile. Blythe would have to wait a little longer.

The dress slipped over her skin like silk, made from imported fabrics with little expense spared. It was color coordinated to compliment the parlor in which theyโ€™d be having tea, and laced in the back, leaving Signa room to grow into it with a more sufficient diet. For now it was a touch loose, which made it one of the more comfortable things sheโ€™d ever worn, given that one was not expected to wear a corset beneath a tea gown.

By the time Signa finished getting ready, she certainlyย lookedย respectable, but she was contemplating every which way she might possibly sneakย A Ladyโ€™s Guide to Beauty and Etiquetteย into tea with her. It sat upon her writing desk, and she trailed a delicate finger down its immaculate spine. Would her mother be proud to see her like this? Would she have dressed Signa similarly? Pinned her dark tresses the same way Marjorie did, to show off her delicate face and slender neck?

โ€œTheyโ€™ll be here by now,โ€ Marjorie chided. โ€œCome along.โ€ Signa withdrew her hand from the book. She knew its contents by heart, had studied its pages front to back more

times than she could count. Now was the time for execution.

She followed Marjorie down the stairs, walking between fretting maids who dodged her in their hurry, setting up Thorn Grove for another party. Her heart pattered with every step. She wouldnโ€™t allow herself to slip up like she had with Blytheโ€”wouldnโ€™t forget her tongue for even a moment.

Three young women waited for her in the parlor, seated at a circular table that seemed absurdly small and intimate. Marjorie introduced them as Lady Diana Blackwater, a rather plain girl with fair skin, mousy hair, and beady rat- like eyes; Lady Eliza Wakefield, with a long alabaster face and blond ringlets, andโ€ฆ

Signa didnโ€™t trust her own legs to hold her up when she saw the hazel eyes that stared back at her. Charlotte Killinger wore a blue-and-white-striped day dress, her shoulders back and her neck long and delicate. Her old friend was even more beautiful than Signa rememberedโ€” her rich umber skin warm and glowing, cheeks warmed with the tiniest hint of rouge. She was taller and less baby cheeked, but still every bit the girl that Signa had once known. The friend she still thought of to this day, but one whom sheโ€™d not spoken to since the scandal between Signaโ€™s uncle and Charlotteโ€™s mother all those years ago.

Charlotteโ€™s mouth hung ajar, her eyes wide as a doeโ€™s before she bowed her head in a gracious nod. โ€œIt was kind of you to invite us.โ€

โ€œIt certainly was! Weโ€™ve all been so curious about the Hawthornesโ€™ new ward,โ€ Diana chimed in after a cursory dip of her head. Her voice was strident, but Signa paid it little mind for her heart was busy beating a mile a minute. For so long sheโ€™d wished to see Charlotte again. But why did it have to be now of all times? Now, when sheโ€™d finally let herself believe that she could start fresh and where the rumors of the past would not haunt her every move.

Signa stumbled, legs numb, as Marjorie gave her a gentle nudge toward her chair. One of the servants poured steaming tea into their cups while another set out teacakes and pastries. While Charlotte thanked them, the other two girls ignored the help. Their fascination rested solely with Signa, and their eyes glinted with it the moment Marjorie was out the door.

Eliza smiled at her from across the table. โ€œWell, arenโ€™t you a tiny thing.โ€ Whether it was a compliment or an insult was impossible to tell. Eliza leaned forward, her long curls brushing the tablecloth. โ€œHow are you enjoying your time with the Hawthornes? They truly are the most interesting family.โ€

โ€œInteresting?โ€ Signa echoed, her throat so painfully dry. โ€œHow so?โ€

โ€œThe parties, for one.โ€ Eliza laughed, as though the question was ridiculous. โ€œNot to mention the wealth, the rumors, the mystery. I suppose you wouldnโ€™t know considering youโ€™ve only just arrived, but the family youโ€™re staying with is the talk of the town.โ€

Signa dared to look sideways at Charlotte, who sat erect in her chair, wordlessly sipping her tea. She hadnโ€™t said one word and busied herself by staring up at a landscape of a beautiful spring garden.

A Ladyโ€™s Guide to Beauty and Etiquetteย was very clear about gossip:ย Do not speak idly. Signa agreed, not caring to gossip about those who had shown her such grace. But Elizaโ€™s eyes were lit with mirth and her tongue was ready to seep poison, and so to get the information she sought, Signa took the bait. She reached for a blueberry scone and leaned forward with a quiet intake of breath.

โ€œRumors?โ€ she asked in a tone that conveyed sheโ€™d never once imagined such a heinous thing to be possible. โ€œSurely, youโ€™re mistaken? What sort of rumors are they?โ€

โ€œAll sorts,โ€ Diana chimed in. โ€œThat ghosts haunt Thorn Grove. That perhaps Missus Hawthorneโ€”poor thingโ€”took

it upon herself to end her life after discovering her husband had had a series of torrid affairs and too many illegitimate children to care for. They even say the help is in cahoots to rally against the family.โ€

The allegations seemed to be all hearsay, though Signa tucked the information away as more puzzle pieces to be sifted through at another time. โ€œThe Hawthornes are curious people,โ€ Signa said, choosing her words with care; she had no assurance that whatever she said wouldnโ€™t leave this table or that she wouldnโ€™t be branded a gossip. โ€œBut theyโ€™re also very generous to welcome me into their home when theyโ€™ve suffered such a great loss.โ€

Diana made a noise in the back of her throat. โ€œIโ€™m sure your fortune helped with that.โ€ She leaned back in her seat and examined her frilly white gloves. โ€œMy father says Mr. Hawthorneโ€™s business is failing and that youโ€™re to inherit a fortune grander than even theirs.โ€

Signa wasnโ€™t shy about the butter she spread upon her scone, heartbeat so fierce that even her neck was beginning to perspire. When sheโ€™d imagined this conversation, itโ€™d been much more informative and relaxed. Charlotte peered up then. โ€œShe only just arrived, Diana,โ€

she said in a smooth voice between sips of tea. โ€œI doubt she knows much about the Hawthornes at all.โ€

Elizaโ€™s lips tightened, and Signa took hold of another scone. She figured if she didnโ€™t know what to say, thenโ€”so long as her mouth was fullโ€”she could bide her time and let the others speak.

But that was before a flood of cold air washed into the room.

โ€œIs there a window open?โ€ Eliza shivered. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t have thought Iโ€™d require a coat at tea.โ€

Signa knew too well what that draft meant and choked mid-bite. She tried to be discreet as she turned her head around to see Death was there beside her, sitting in a chair of shadows next to Diana. He folded one shadowy leg over

the other, and in his hand, more shadows had formed an imaginary cup of tea, which he raised to her in greeting.ย Apologies, I forgot to bring my dress and gloves.

The words were not spoken aloud but seemed to reverberate in her head.

Heย was in her head.

She clenched her skirts and paced her breaths.ย No. No no no no.ย None of this was going according to plan.

First Charlotte, and nowโ€ฆ no. Signa had eaten no belladonna; sheโ€™d not journeyed to the place between the living and the dead to access him. All her life, sheโ€™d been able to see Death only when there was reason for itโ€”when someone near her was dying. Sheโ€™d sooner try to kill Death again than let him take one of these girls, and she tried to convey every bit of that in the glare she shot at him. He seemed to enjoy it, a low laugh rattling in her head and filling her chest.

Relax, Little Bird. I only came for some rousing gossip.

Diana took a delicate bite of scone, unaware of the monster pretending to sip steaming shadow tea beside her. One touch, just a graze of his shadows, and these girls would be dead. Signaโ€™s throat was too tight to swallow the hunk of scone that had lodged in her throat. She choked on it, grabbing for her tea and sucking down half the cup in one go.

Although Charlotte made a point of not staring, Diana laughed. โ€œGood God, donโ€™t tell me youโ€™re not fed here? You eat as though youโ€™ve not seen food all week. And those collarbones of yoursโ€ฆ So very sharp.โ€

Signaโ€™s shoulders wilted. She knew better, certainly. Knew to take her time, to take small bites, to pretend she didnโ€™t find the food delicious and that she felt no desperate call to devour it all, and instead pretend she was delicate and barely knew the meaning of food.

Beside her, Death set down his tea.ย How do you feel about this woman? I could infect her with a light plague,

perhaps. Or we could give her the pox? Blemished skin may do her vanity some good.

Recognizing the levity in his voice, she fixed him with a brief, angry look, to which he sighed.ย Fine, ruin my fun.

Between Charlotte sitting on one side of her and Death on the other, it was a fruitless endeavor to attempt to focus. Diana and Eliza dominated the conversation, and when they noticed Signa had gone some time without even a murmured response to any gossip, Eliza turned her flat brown eyes to her to pry: โ€œHave you a suitor already, Miss Farrow?โ€

Death stood and loomed over Eliza, so close that Signaโ€™s throat grew tight.ย Donโ€™t mind me, he said.ย Go ahead and answer. Is there someone youโ€™ve got your eye on, Little Bird?

Her fists clenched. She wanted with everything in her to demand that he leave, but she had no way to convey that with the others scrutinizing her. Noticing her struggle, Death said,ย You should be able to respond to me, you know. If you hear me, Iโ€™d wager you can respond.

She tried, eager to tell him to leave her alone long enough for her to glean information about the Hawthornes, or at the very least to find a way to speak to Charlotte in private. Yet as hard as she strained to send those words to him, he didnโ€™t react as though he could hear her.

โ€œDo you intend to make your debut here, Miss Farrow?โ€ Charlotte asked, a wary edge to her voice.

Signa held her porcelain teacup in both hands as she stared at her friend. Despite the nerves, despite what Charlotte knew and could do to undermine herโ€ฆ she was still relieved that Charlotte was present. That sheโ€™d finally found her old friend again and could see firsthand that she was safe and healthy and beautiful. โ€œIโ€™m hoping to join this season, yes,โ€ Signa told her, liking the way the announcement felt when she spoke it aloud.

Eliza clapped her hands. โ€œOh, you must have a party to

celebrate! Invite us, and weโ€™ll ensure you know everything about every man in townโ€”โ€ She clutched her throat, losing her breath for a moment when Death stepped around her.

Will I be invited to your party? I do love a good dance.

He would be invited to nothing, and though Signa wished she could tell him as much, she kept her smile and asked Eliza, โ€œWhat men are thought to be joining this season?โ€

The commotion at the table was immediate. Eliza leaned in, brandishing her fork as she spoke. โ€œI believe youโ€™ll want to keep your eye on my cousin Lord Everett Wakefield.โ€

Charlotte perked up at the name, her eyes brightening. โ€œHeโ€™s arrived?โ€ she asked, to which Eliza nodded.

โ€œJust three days ago. Heโ€™ll be joining us through the summer to see if he might find a suitable wife. I do wonder, too, whoย yourย cousin Percy might seek out, Miss Farrow. Heโ€™s set to inherit the family business, and its fortune, you know.โ€

Eliza was correct, assuming Elijah didnโ€™t ruin his prospects. Signa thought back to two nights prior, when sheโ€™d watched Elijah shove a cake into his sonโ€™s mouth. She couldnโ€™t imagine Percyโ€™s embarrassment, couldnโ€™t imagine how it must feel to have a father lose himself so fully in his mourning.

The Hawthornes were fraying at the seams. One needed only to tug, and they would split entirely.

When Signa reached for another scone, Diana drew the plate away with a thin smile that sharpened Signaโ€™s spine. She straightened, drawing her hand away in doubt.

Just eat it. Deathโ€™s words were cold.ย If youโ€™re hungry, eat the scone.

But Death had no hold in society, no knowledge or stake in its politics.

Donโ€™t drink or eat too much, or too little. Only the right amount. Those were the lessons that her etiquette book taught. Signa just hadnโ€™t known what qualified asย too

much.ย Now she knew it was three scones. So despite Deathโ€™s push, she didnโ€™t take another, even when Diana began prying again into the business of the Hawthornes, hunting for gossip she would undoubtedly spread. There was no room to relax in this conversation. She was more on her guard than ever, judging every inch of her bodyโ€”from where she rested her pinkie to how quick her breathing was. Did she sip too quickly? Was the amount of sugar she added to her tea appropriate?

Exhaustion weighted her shoulders; socializing was going to take more getting used to than sheโ€™d anticipated.

For so long Signa had waited for this day; waited for the time when she would sit and chat with her friends as part of high society. For the time when others would show interest in her, and she might finally have the company sheโ€™d spent so long yearning for. Yet when Marjorie returned to the parlor, it felt as though an eternity had passed, and all Signa wanted was freedom and a good nap.

Charlotte was the last of the ladies to depart, and much to Signaโ€™s surprise, she refused to linger. Her eyes skimmed over Signa as a quick โ€œIโ€™m glad to see that youโ€™re doing wellโ€ passed her lips before she grasped her skirts and followed Marjorie out the door.

Tears burned Signaโ€™s eyes. Charlotte had recognized her. Sheโ€™d recognized her, and yetโ€ฆ It meant nothing. Perhaps all that time togetherโ€”all that friendshipโ€”had meant more to Signa than it had to Charlotte.

Sheโ€™d forgotten that Death stood behind her until he grumbled, โ€œTwo of those girls behave as though theyโ€™ve just been let off their leading strings.โ€

Swiping her eyes, Signa pivoted to him. โ€œWhat are you still doing here?โ€

Again the shadows around him shifted, forming a table for him to kick his feet onto. โ€œGood day to you, too. I came to see how you were settling in.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d rather you didnโ€™t.โ€ Signa turned and paced the

length of the parlor, not wanting him to see her so shaken. โ€œHow are you even here?โ€

He considered this, tipping back in his shadow chair. โ€œYouโ€™ve spared Blythe for now, but that doesnโ€™t mean sheโ€™s cured.โ€ The chair straightened, and he looked to her. โ€œIโ€™m here because sheโ€™s still teetering on the bridge between the living and the dead. Because of that, when we are both near enough to her, it seems you can see me. I wasnโ€™t sure until today if that would be the case.โ€

Blast this unfortunate connection of theirs. What she wouldnโ€™t give to cover the veil into the afterlife and never look upon it again. โ€œAnd why is it I can hear your voice in my head?โ€

โ€œSame reason you can hear my voice when I speak aloud, I suppose.โ€

Were he corporeal, Signa would have shaken him. As it was, she spun on her heel and stepped toward him with a wrath that fueled her entire body. โ€œCouldnโ€™t you see that I was busy?โ€ she snarled. โ€œThis wasย importantย to me.โ€

Death turned as though he could see the girls through the walls. โ€œWhy? Iโ€™d think such creatures only important to their mothers. Didnโ€™t you find it odd how two of them asked solely about your fortune and your family? They asked little aboutย you.โ€

True as it was, the last thing she wanted was to agree with him. And so she said stubbornly, โ€œTheyโ€™re to be my friends.โ€

โ€œYour friends?โ€ He stood, the table and chair heโ€™d formed slipping back into the shadows. โ€œWhy? Iโ€™ve never seen you soโ€ฆโ€

โ€œSo talkative?โ€ Signa pressed. โ€œNever seen me with company?โ€

They were nearly chest to metaphorical chest now. This near to him, Signaโ€™s skin buzzed not with fear but power. Determination. He was Death, and because of that she had no need to filter herself. No need to impress him.

Death bent so that his shadowed face hovered before hers, only a breath between them. โ€œIโ€™ve never seen you so demure, and so sickeningly stifled.โ€ A scone flew at her then, landing hard on her chest. She barely caught it before it hit the floor. โ€œYou wanted this, didnโ€™t you? Why would you let one personโ€™s opinion prevent you from having it?โ€

She curled her fingers into the flaky crust of the scone. โ€œI was being polite. There are rules about these thingsโ€”โ€

โ€œWhat you were being was hungry. And if youโ€™re hungry, you should eat. Damn your rules.โ€ There was something dark about his tone. A sour disappointment that, to her frustration, gnawed at her.

โ€œAnd what does it matter to you?โ€

The question ignited a burning rage in his eyes. An inferno that had him before her again, sucking the air from the room. โ€œIt matters because youโ€™re better than that. You were not made to be meek or wanting. If you embraced who you are, imagine the power you might wield. Imagine the things you could do.โ€

โ€œYou mean the lives I could take?โ€ Signa stepped closer. โ€œImagine the spirits I could speak to? The bidding I could do for the dead? I donโ€™t need to imagine it; I live it. That life consumes me, and itโ€™s not one I want.โ€

โ€œHow do you know?โ€ he demanded. โ€œWhen all you do is run, how do you know what it is that you want? Would you rather spend your life pretending to be whatever it is you were with those girls?โ€

She threw the scone back at him, and to her surprise, it didnโ€™t slip through him as the knife had when sheโ€™d stabbed him. He caught it.

โ€œLeave,โ€ she said once sheโ€™d managed to stifle her surprise. โ€œYou donโ€™t know me, and you never will. Itโ€™s as you once said, weโ€™re both very busy people, and youโ€™re nothing but a distraction.โ€

He scoffed, the sound so human. So male. โ€œI came to offer my assistance. A murder would be significantly

simpler to solve, I imagine, if you knew how to use your abilities.โ€

โ€œThat wonโ€™t be necessary,โ€ she said, not caring to consider the offer. โ€œI can already speak with spiritsโ€”โ€

โ€œSo you see no value in an ability to walk through walls?โ€ he demanded. โ€œTo alter your body so that others cannot see you? To become the very night itself, and submerge into the shadows? Imagine the spying you might do.โ€

Those would be useful powers, yes, but accepting that meant accepting his help, and she had no desire to entertain him and his ego for any longer than necessary.

โ€œAll my life, I have wanted nothing more than to be rid of you.โ€ She squared her shoulders before the shadows that loomed over her. โ€œI begged, night after night, death after death, for you to leave me alone. And now you want to offer me help?โ€ There were not enough words. Not enough savageness within her to tell him the extent of what she thought of that. โ€œI hate you, and I hate everything youโ€™ve done to me. I will solve this, and I will do so without you.โ€

All around them, the day winked out. The darkness was all-consuming as Death grew larger, his anger so palpable that it suffocated the room. Above them, the chandelier shook, its lights flickering like an approaching storm. The sunlight filtering in from the windows snuffed out like a candle.

โ€œYou no longer have a choice in this.โ€ Deathโ€™s voice shook the walls, knocking two porcelain teacups to the floor. โ€œI tire of these games. I know you better than you think, just as I know that you will never rid yourself of me, Little Bird. As I will never rid myself of you.โ€

The shaking ceased, and daylight streamed back into the parlor as Death retreated to his shadows. โ€œOur lessons begin at midnight. Iโ€™ll see you then.โ€

She was about to yell that he shouldnโ€™t bother. But the moment she opened her mouth to speak, a scone flew from

the table and into her mouth, choking off the protest Death refused to hear.

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