CHAPTER 4
Ophelia ran down the forest path, her satin gown sweeping over the mossy ground with a soft whisper. She stopped for a moment to catch her breath, and looking up she saw the familiar turrets of Elsinore rising above the treetops. The light was dying, and she started again, anxious to reach the castle gates.
The fog that slid between the trees played tricks, forming into ghosts and turning twisted branches into castle gates. She reached out her hand, but the mist shifted to reveal that the castle was still far ahead.
A single purpose drove her steps: She must find her noble prince. Some whispered that he was mad, but she paid them no mind. For if he was mad, then so too was she, for giving herself to a madman.
At last she reached the gates and heard his voice, more clearly now, calling to her: “Ophelia, Ophelia!”
The words sent a shiver of pleasure through her, and her hands, prickly with cold, felt the warm sun upon them.
“Ophelia!” She heard the voice call again, and it was suddenly oddâfamiliar, but not quite right.
She glanced around, perplexed, and in her confusion she lost the path and slipped. The ground disappeared beneath her, and her crown of flowers slipped from her head, leaving a trail of columbine and rue in her wake. She cried out, afraid that she was slipping into oblivion.
But just as the shadow threatened to engulf her, a hand reached out and pulled her to safety.
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Through the haze of sleep, she heard a voice: “Lizzie! Lizzie! Wake up!”
She opened her eyes and, still half dreaming, looked around. She blinked, surprised to see a cozy bedroom where she expected a dark wood. The shutters of her room were thrown open, and her younger sister, Lydia, stood over her, laughing and shaking her by the shoulder.
“What nonsense you were talking! Come on now, get up! You'll be late to sit for your artist!”
Lizzie sat straight up in bed, sending an open book in her lap clattering to the floor. The excitement of sitting for Walter Deverell had made it impossible to sleep, and so she'd spent the better part of the night burning down candles and leafing through an old volume of Shakespeare, trying to guess which of his heroines she was to sit for the next day. Now she scrambled out of bed, clutching her nightgown around her. The room was cold and the floor beneath her feet was colder. They couldn't afford to set fires in the bedrooms, unless someone was ill.
Lydia picked up the book that Lizzie had dropped. It was a heavy volume, with a faded cloth cover and only a suggestion of the gold embossing that had once graced its spine. Lydia barely glanced at it and threw it back onto the bed. “Were you up all night reading your fairy tales again?”
“They're not fairy tales. They're the works of the great playwright. . . oh, never mind.” Lizzie could see that Lydia couldn't care less.
Lydia hadn't inherited the Siddal family's taste for literature. And it was just as well, Lizzie thought, since they had so few books to begin with, and she had no wish to share them with anyone else. Lydia preferred to spend her free time at cards or embroidery, and she only laughed when Lizzie asked her how she could bring herself to take up a needle for pleasure after sewing all day at her position at a dressmaker's. “It's no harder on my hands than reading would be on my eyes,” Lydia said, ever practical.
Though she was two years younger than Lizzie, Lydia often assumed the role of an older sister: She was sensible when Lizzie was dreamy, quick to help their mother with the housekeeping while Lizzie was off daydreaming, and, though Lizzie was tall for a girl, Lydia was an inch taller, and had a fuller figure. She liked to joke that she would have to go to the country and become a farmer's wife, where a strong back was valued over a pretty face. But the whole family knew that she was really sweet on Robert Crane, the grocer's son from down the street, and that he must find her pretty enough, as he always asked for her when he was making a delivery. Lizzie had no doubt that as soon as he took over the business from his father, he would ask for Lydia's hand, and Lydia would move a few doors down, exchanging a small house above a cutlery for a small house above a grocery, and that she would be as happy with that as with anything. Well, that was fine for Lydia, but Lizzie wanted something different. And today, she hoped, might be her chance to see what a different life was like.
Lizzie sat down in front of her mirror, staring hard at her features and trying to see what it was that had made the artist notice her. She pinched her cheeks and bit her lip, calling forth an angry rose tint beneath her white skin. But the added color did nothing to quiet her fear that her nose was too long and her eyelids too heavy. Mrs. Tozer was probably rightâJeannie Evans would have made a more fitting model for a painting.
Lizzie turned to her sister. “What if this Mr. Deverell has made a mistake? What if, when he sees me again, he decides that I am not really what he needs after all? I would be too humiliated.”
“Nonsense,” Lydia said. “Here, let me. I'll brush your hair one hundred times for good luck.” She took the brush from Lizzie's hand and began to brush her hair in long, regular strokes. Their faces in the mirror were variations on a theme; they had the same wide-set eyes, but Lydia's were a warm brown to Lizzie's pale gray, and she had dimpled pink cheeks instead of Lizzie's dramatic cheekbones. Lydia hummed while she worked, as if she were soothing a child. When she was finished, Lizzie's hair glowed like burnished copper. “There. You're as pretty as a picture now.”
Their toilet complete, the two girls clambered down the stairs and into the kitchen. Lizzie stood before the hearth to warm her fingers and toes. “Any tea?” She glanced at the pot on the sideboard.
Lydia lifted the lid and looked in. “No,” she said, wrinkling her nose. “Just the dregs. Father must have drunk it all and not refilled the pot. As usual.”
They looked over at the table, where indeed their father had left an empty teacup and a pile of paperwork, some of it covered in rings where he had carelessly placed the cup on the papers, and none of it in too great of a condition to begin with. Lizzie could see that her father had been up early to look over the papers for his lawsuit.
“That can't be a good sign, can it?” Lydia asked.
“No. He only drags out that old pile of evidence when business isn't going well. What could be the problem now?”
Lydia sighed. Then, trying to make light: “Well, just think. If we lived at Hope Hall, we'd have our own fires lit every morning, and a maid to bring us our tea in bed!”
“And jam for our bread, and sugar for our tea,” Lizzie responded with a smile. “But until that happens, I'm afraid that we must hurry to work.”
On the stairs they met their father, who was coming up from the shop.
“As fresh as daisies, you two are!” he exclaimed, pinching their cheeks and leaving a smudge. He had an infectious smile, which had long ago charmed his young wife, and convinced her that he was a man with prospects. And it was that same smile that had later helped to smooth over some of her disappointment, when none of his plans had come to anything.
He'd been at work grinding knives, and a light metallic dust covered his shirtsleeves and blue work apron. In a misguided nod to the style of his clientele, he wore a shabby top hat, perched at a ridiculous angle. It was no wonder that the neighbors were always asking him how he was getting on with his lawsuit, and then laughing at him behind his back, calling him the Country Squire. “You'd better be off,” he said, glancing at his watch, “or you'll be late.”
“Yes, I know,” Lydia said, annoyed. “It's Lizzie. She was up all night reading again and couldn't wake herself this morning. Apparently the works of the
great playwright
âyes, Lizzie, I was listening, I'm not quite so ignorant as you thinkâwere more important than rousing ourselves for work.”
“Up all night reading, were you?” Mr. Siddal's eyes twinkled. “Like father, like daughter, I see.”
“I should hope not,” muttered Lydia. Louder, she said, “If Lizzie is up every night thinking of poetry, she will lose her place. She needs her sleep.”
“My Lizzie has more brains and beauty than any of Shakespeare's heroines. I expect she'll be fine. Let her be, Lydia.”
Lizzie could not be angry with her father for long, but his flattery solved nothing. Beauty and brains were quite all right when you were a fine lady in a play, but they hadn't proved of much use when you were a shopgirl from Southwark. She was tempted, for a moment, to tell him that she was going to sit for a portrait of one of Shakespeare's heroines, but then decided against it. Any pride that he would take in the thought would be far outweighed by his dismay that she was going to be a model.
“Goodbye, Father,” she said. “I'll be late again tonight. Tell Mother not to wait up.”
With that, the two girls brushed past their father and went down the stairs. They put on their cloaks and went out into the street. Before they parted, Lydia turned to Lizzie with some last advice. “Do be careful, Lizzie. And mind that there is always another lady present.”
“As always, Lyddie, you're completely practical. If only I had a bit of your good sense.”
Lydia laughed. “From what I've heard, good sense is not the quality that painters look for in their models.” Then she became serious. “I've no doubt that they will be charmed by you, Lizzie. But do be careful that you're not too charmed by them. A painter is little more than a conjurer, after all. But you are so much more than a pretty girl in a painting. I don't want to see you sell yourself for a handful of beans.”
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Deverell's studio was situated in Kew, a green and elegant neighborhood west of the city. It was too far to walk, and the cost of a cab was well beyond Lizzie's means, so she boarded a horse-drawn omnibus and wedged herself in among the other passengers.
Anticipation made the trip seem longer than it was, but when she at last reached the house, her nerve almost failed her. It was an impressive redbrick mansion, three stories high, with white pillars at the door and a mansard roof. She checked the address twice before making her way up the path.
She rang the bell, and a maid in a starched cap answered and took her name. The maid went to fetch Mrs. Deverell and Lizzie stood awkwardly on the doorstep, unsure of whether she should have followed the maid into the houseâthe girl hadn't indicated either way.
Before she could make up her mind to enter, Mrs. Deverell appeared at the door. She looked Lizzie up and down, reminding Lizzie of her own mother. “My dear Miss Siddal,” she said, in a voice that managed to be both solicitous and distant. “You are so very kind to sit for my son. I know that he is delighted to have your assistance. Please,” she said, “follow me, and I'll show you to his studio.”
Without ever having invited Lizzie into the house, Mrs. Deverell swept past her and went down the steps and onto the path. Lizzie followed her around the side of the house, her cheeks burning. Was she being shown to the servants' entrance? But to Lizzie's great relief, Mrs. Deverell proceeded past the kitchen door and through the garden to a studio set back from the house. She pushed open the door and gestured for Lizzie to follow her.
The studio was small but comfortable, with good light and a warm fire. The walls were hung with sketches that showed bodies in various poses and states of motion, and intricate studies of faces, hands, flowers, and trees. Deverell was sitting with his back to them, dabbing at a canvas on a large easel. When he heard the door open, he turned and jumped to his feet.
Lizzie recognized him from the shop. She saw that he was handsome, and not much older than she. His face had not yet lost its smooth, boyish aspect, and he had bright, curious eyes. He gave Lizzie a slight bow, and his dark hair fell playfully over his eyes.
Mrs. Deverell made the introductions, and they nodded shyly to each other, their greeting made stiff by Mrs. Deverell's presence.
“And this,” Mrs. Deverell said, “is my daughter, Miss Mary Deverell.”
Lizzie turned to see another girl, about her own age, whom she had not at first noticed. She was petite, with dark hair and eyes like her brother, and a sweet smile.
“Call me Mary,” she said, taking Lizzie's hand. “I hope that we'll be friends. I'm quite grateful, you know, that you're to sit for Walter. That's usually my job, and now I'm free to work at my own poor little sketches instead!”
Lizzie returned the smile. “And you must call me Lizzie. I'm very pleased to meet you.”
Mrs. Deverell returned to the house, and the three young people were left alone. Deverell stared at Lizzie for a full minute, and Lizzie shifted uncomfortably on her feet, unsure of whether she should meet his eye. She took his silence for disappointment, and wondered again if he had made a mistake in asking for her, or if she had somehow failed to prepare herself properly.
Finally he broke the silence. “You will make a perfect Viola,” he declared. “Do you know the play? You are Viola, living and breathing.”
“Viola? Yes, I know the play.” Her cheeks burned.
Twelfth Night
had never been one of her favorites. She liked the tragedies, with their great romantic roles and heartfelt speeches. When Mrs. Tozer told her that she was to sit for one of Shakespeare's heroines, she had pictured herself as Juliet or Ophelia. Not Viola, who spends the better part of the play disguised as a lowly pageboy. It made sense to her now that Mr. Deverell had asked her to model, and she felt foolish for imagining that she was suitable to sit for anything more romantic. Mr. Deverell was still staring at her, so she tried to mask her disappointment. “I'm happy that I can be of some service to you,” she murmured, looking down at her hands.