In the Land of the Long White Cloud

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Authors: Sarah Lark

Tags: #Romance, #Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Historical, #General

BOOK: In the Land of the Long White Cloud
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The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Text copyright © 2007 by Verlagsgruppe Lübbe GmbH & Co. KG, Bergisch Gladbach

English translation copyright © 2012 by D. W. Lovett

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

In the Land of the Long White Cloud
was first published in 2007 by Verlagsgruppe Lübbe GmbH & Co. KG as
Im Land der weißen Wolke
. Translated from German by D.W. Lovett. Published in English by AmazonCrossing in 2012.

Published by AmazonCrossing
P.O. Box 400818
Las Vegas, NV 89140

ISBN-13: 9781612184265
ISBN-10: 161218426X

Library of Congress Control Number: 2012940831

Contents

P
ART
O
NE
Setting Out:
London, Powys, Christchurch, 1852

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

P
ART
T
WO
Something Like Love:
Canterbury Plains—West Coast, 1852–1854

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

P
ART
T
HREE
Something Like Hate:
Canterbury Plains—West Coast, 1858–1860

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

P
ART
F
OUR
Arrival:
Canterbury Plains—Otago, 1870–1877

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

Acknowledgments

About the Author

About the Translator

Setting Out

L
ONDON
, P
OWYS
, C
HRISTCHURCH
1852

1

The Anglican Church in Christchurch, New Zealand, is seeking decent young women, well versed in housekeeping and child rearing, interested in entering into a Christian marriage with highly esteemed, well-situated members of our congregation
.

H
elen’s gaze fixed briefly on the unobtrusive advertisement on the last page of the church leaflet. The teacher had browsed through the booklet while her students worked silently on a grammar exercise. Helen would have preferred to read a book, but William’s constant questions broke her concentration. Even now, the eleven-year-old lifted his brown mop top from his work.

“In the third paragraph, Miss Davenport, is it supposed to be
which
or
that
?”

Helen pushed her reading aside with a sigh and explained to the boy, for the umpteenth time that week, the difference between definite and indefinite relative clauses. William, the youngest son of her employer, Robert Greenwood, was a handsome boy, but not exactly gifted with a brilliant intellect. He needed help with every assignment and forgot Helen’s explanations faster than she could give them; he knew only how to gaze with touching helplessness at grown-ups, roping them in with his sweet boyhood soprano. Lucinda, William’s mother, fell for it every time. Whenever the boy snuggled up to her and suggested they do some little project together, Lucinda scrapped the after-school tutoring that Helen had arranged. For that reason, William still could not read fluently, and even the easiest spelling exercises were hopelessly over his head. Attending a university like Cambridge or Oxford, as his father dreamed, was unthinkable.

Sixteen-year-old George, William’s older brother, could not even be bothered to feign patience for his younger brother. He just rolled his eyes and pointed to the spot in the textbook where the exact sentence that William had been puzzling over for half an hour was given as an example. George, a lanky, gangling boy, had already completed his Latin translation assignment. He always worked quickly, although not always flawlessly; the classics bored him. George simply could not wait to join his father’s import-export business. He dreamed of travel to faraway lands and expeditions to the new markets in the colonies that were opening rapidly under the rule of Queen Victoria. George was without a doubt a born merchant. He already demonstrated a talent for negotiation and knew how to use his charms to considerable effect. Now and then he even succeeded in tricking Helen into shortening the school day. He made an attempt that day, after William finally understood what he was supposed to do—or at least, where he could copy the answer. When Helen reached for George’s notebook to check his work, the boy pushed it aside provocatively.

“Oh, Miss Davenport, do you really want to bother with all that right now? The weather’s far too lovely for school. Let’s play a round of croquet instead…you need to work on your technique. Otherwise, you’ll just have to stand around at the next garden party, and none of the young chaps will notice you. Then you’ll never get lucky and marry a lord, and you’ll have to teach hopeless cases like Willy for the rest of your days.”

Helen rolled her eyes and cast a glance out the window, wrinkling her brow at the dark clouds.

“Lovely notion, George, but the rain clouds are rolling in. By the time we’ve tidied up here and made it to the garden, they’ll be emptying themselves out over our heads, and that won’t make me any more attractive to the young nobles. How could you even think such a thing?”

Helen attempted to assume an emphatically neutral demeanor. She was quite good at it: when one worked as a governess to high-society Londoners, the first thing one learned was to master one’s
facial expressions. Helen’s role was neither that of a family member nor of a common employee. She took part in the communal meals and often in the family’s leisure activities but took care not to offer any unsolicited opinions or to otherwise draw attention to herself. In any case, she would never have found herself casually mixing with the younger guests at a garden party. Instead, she generally stood off to the side, chatting politely with the ladies while surreptitiously keeping an eye on her charges. Of course, her gaze occasionally alighted on the younger male guests, and then she would sometimes indulge in a brief romantic daydream, in which she strolled with a good-looking viscount or baronet through his manor house’s park. But there was no way George could have noticed that.

George shrugged. “Well, miss, you’re always reading marriage adverts,” he said cheekily, indicating the church leaflet with a conciliatory grin. Helen berated herself for leaving it lying open next to her lectern. Naturally, a bored George would steal a glance at it while she was helping William put his thoughts in order.

“And you’re very pretty, miss,” George tried sweet-talking her. “Why shouldn’t you marry a baronet?”

Helen rolled her eyes. She knew that she should chide George, but she couldn’t help but be amused. If the boy kept it up, he’d go far; at least with the ladies, and in the business world people would appreciate his talent for flattery too. But would it help him at Cambridge? Besides, Helen believed herself immune to such silly compliments. She knew she wasn’t beautiful in the classical sense. Though her features were symmetrical, they were rather ordinary; her mouth was a bit too thin, her nose too pointy, and her calm, gray eyes gazed too critically on the world to arouse the interest of a rich, young bon vivant. Helen’s most attractive feature was her long, straight, silky brown hair, tinged with red, which fell to her waist. Perhaps she could have turned heads with it if she had let it blow freely in the breeze, as some girls did at the picnics and garden parties that Helen attended with the Greenwoods. The more brazen among the young ladies might declare all of a sudden while strolling with their admirers that it was too hot and remove their hats. Or they pretended that the wind blew
their little hats away while a young man was rowing them across the pond in Hyde Park. Then they would shake down their hair, freeing it as though by accident from the constraints of bands and barrettes and letting the men marvel at their luxurious tresses.

Helen could never bring herself to do that. As the daughter of a pastor, she had been raised strictly and worn her hair braided and pinned up since she was a little girl. She had had to grow up early, as her mother had died when she was twelve and her father had placed Helen in charge of keeping house and raising her three younger siblings. Reverend Davenport had not concerned himself with problems in the kitchen and the nursery. Instead, he had immersed himself in his parish work and the translation and interpretation of religious texts. He had paid attention to Helen only when she kept him company while he worked—only by fleeing into her father’s attic study could she escape the chaotic tumult of the family’s apartment. Which was why Helen could already read the Bible in Greek when her brothers were still sloughing their way through their first reading primers. In her beautiful, needle-sharp handwriting, she transcribed her father’s sermons and copied his article submissions for the diocese of Liverpool’s newsletter. There was little time for diversions. While Susan, Helen’s younger sister, took advantage of charity bazaars and church picnics to get to know the parish’s young notables, Helen helped with the selling of goods, baked cakes, and poured tea. Unsurprisingly, Susan married a well-known doctor’s son as soon as she turned seventeen, while Helen had been forced to take a position as a household tutor after her father died. Furthermore, with her earnings she supported her two brothers’ law and medical studies. Their inheritance from their father had not been sufficient to finance a proper education for the boys—nor were they making much effort to complete their studies in a timely manner. With a flash of anger, Helen recalled how her brother had barely scraped through yet another exam just last week.

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