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Princess of Glass - Jessica Day George [13]

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with a sigh, he changed into riding clothes.

An hour later he heard the name Ellen again, brought up this time by one of the princesses. George was busy packing for his trip to Spania, so it fell to Christian to supervise the princesses’ daily riding expedition, along with the help of two grooms. He was thinking that his own sisters were not this much trouble as Princess Hermione, age eight, tumbled off her pony into a hedge for the third time.

“Don’t be such an Ellen,” Emmeline said to her little sister with great superiority. She was eleven, but had the mannerisms of a young lady twice her age.

“An Ellen?” Christian raised his eyebrows, puzzled.

Both princesses erupted in laughter.

“She was our maid,” Emmeline explained through her giggles. “And she was so clumsy! Quite, quite ridiculous!”

Christian frowned at them. “You shouldn’t laugh at someone just because she’s clumsy,” he told them. He was supposed to be making friends with the Bretoner royal family, but since Emmeline had announced that she would marry him when she turned twelve, he had done his best to seem old and boring and stern.

“But she really was awful,” Hermione said. “She broke the pillows.”

“How do you break a pillow?”

Emmeline rolled her eyes. “She didn’t really break the pillows, she ripped the cases; there were feathers everywhere. She burned everything she ironed, and she tripped while bringing me hot chocolate and it spilled all over my nightgown four times.”

“She combed my hair once,” Hermione added, “and when she was done there were more tangles in it. I don’t know how she did it, but she did.”

“It was clearly on purpose,” Emmeline said with authority. “Then she cried so that people would feel sorry for her. Fat old Millsy said to give her more time, but Mother said no.”

Christian wondered how the girl had gotten a place at the palace to begin with. “Don’t call Mrs. Mills fat, it’s rude,” he said finally, and led them across the grounds.

His eyes were bothering him. The palace grounds, both lawns and shrubbery, seemed dull and dry even though the Tuckington Palace gardens were renowned throughout Ionia. Yet at the same time he saw green sparkles in the corners of his vision. He rubbed at his eyes, and heard someone laughing.

“What is so amusing?” He turned to frown at Emmeline. She gave him a quizzical look. “Odd,” he muttered under his breath.

“What did you say?” Emmeline had her eyebrows raised, and her expression gave Christian hope that her infatuation with him was cooling.

“Nothing,” he said, and swiped at his eyes again. “Nothing.”

Maid

Ellen Parker sat on the narrow cot in her new room at Sead-own House and closed her eyes for just a moment. Soon the Seadowns’s housekeeper, Mrs. Hanks, would come in to tell her the house rules, to tell her that she should be grateful, to tell her that she was just a maid.

Ellen’s proud heart shrank a little more, and she wished that she had a few tears left to cry. She had sobbed all the way from the Laurences’s manor and didn’t think that there was a single drop of moisture left in her. She took out a thin handkerchief and rubbed at the salt stains on her cheeks.

“Hacks are so filthy, aren’t they?” Mrs. Hanks said as she came in. “The pitcher’s full, if you need to freshen up.”

“Thank you, ma’am,” Ellen said woodenly. Mrs. Hanks looked very much like her sister, and despite Ellen’s fond feelings for Mrs. Mills, she had found little comfort with her.

“Now, Ellen,” Mrs. Hanks began, her voice firm.

“Here comes the lecture,” thought Ellen. “At least she remembered to use my new name.” The former Eleanora Parke-Whittington found it painful to be reminded of her past by being called Eleanora, and so she had altered her name to something more in keeping with her altered status. She had been named after her grandmother, and that leader of fashion had never had to empty her own chamber pot, let alone anyone else’s.

“I know that you were not born to this work, my dear, but then I don’t know of anyone who would have chosen it. I would rather be served than a servant myself!” Mrs.

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