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Authors: Camille Di Maio

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BOOK: The Memory of Us: A Novel
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She put her arms around me, rocking me a little and shushing me like a mother to a baby. “There, there. Calm down. I don’t know why he’s here, but it’s no concern of yours. Walk away from this. I’ve already told you that there’s no good end in it.”

“But
why
is he here?”

She sighed, resigning herself to my recklessness, and mustered the words to console me. “Maybe he’s just a horse’s ass.”

“Lucille!” I’d never heard an improper word from her. But my darling friend knew what it would take to make me smile.

“Well, sometimes you have to just say what you’re thinking. There’s another possibility, though.”

“I can’t wait to hear this one.”

“Maybe he plans to bid on you and he’s just practicing.”

I let this one sink in before dismissing it. “Practicing, huh? Not sure I buy that one.”

“Well, dear, you have to believe something, because you’re on shortly. There’s twenty thousand people waiting for you, and you’re a mess!”

Her urgency brought me back to the task at hand. Hastily, we reapplied the cosmetics and brushed my hair until it was shining. She grabbed my hand and led me back to the curtain, gave me a tight squeeze, and disappeared.

“Lady Number Seven is Miss Irene Bath . . .”

I paid no mind to the details, scanning the crowd for Kyle, and found him in the second row. My knees weakened at the sight of him.

“Do I have ten shillings?”

“Ten shillings.” From the back.

“Do I have fourteen shillings?”

“Fourteen shillings!” From the right side.

“Fourteen shillings. Do I have sixteen shillings?”

“Sixteen shillings.” It came from Kyle.

He didn’t bid any higher than that, though, and Irene went for two pounds, five shillings.

Maybe Lucille was right. Maybe he was just preparing to bid on me.

Melody Carlyle came and went for two pounds, seven. Kyle had bid at sixteen shillings again, and no more.

My turn.

Primp. Plump. Straighten. Pucker. Toss. I was ready.

“Lady Number Nine, Miss Helen Westcott.” I stepped through the curtains as he introduced me. “Miss Westcott will be attending a nursing college in London in September. She currently works with her father in Albert Dock. She enjoys reading, the movies, and fashion.”

Before he could get to the bidding, I stepped close to him and whispered in his ear.

“Excuse me, Miss Westcott has informed me that she is usually addressed by her
middle
name, Julianne. So, do I hear ten shillings for Miss
Julianne
Westcott?”

Several bids for ten shillings were shouted out, and the Lord Mayor quickly increased the ante, knocking out a few men at a time. By the time I had reached two pounds, four ardent bidders had walked away.

I turned and turned again, summoning all of the coquettishness I could muster, all the time scanning the crowd for one face. But Kyle had vanished from his seat. When we reached two pounds, six shillings, I finally found him. Or rather, his back. He had left the crowd altogether, and was walking, hands in pocket, past the dance floor until I couldn’t see him anymore.

I was infuriated. I had people in the crowd breaking previous records with their bids, and the
one person
that I had any interest in hadn’t even offered two pence. Well, even if he wasn’t around to see it, I was sure that he would hear how much I had gone for, so I waved and smiled, playing it up in the hopes of driving the bidding to unprecedented heights.

And I did. I garnered an astounding four pounds, six shillings, eliciting rousing cheers for several minutes. Whoops and handshakes came from the left corner of the crowd, and I was able to see that Roger Kline had won. I didn’t know him well, but he was the son of a member of Parliament and was said to have a bright political future ahead of him. I was sure that an outing with him would be interesting, at least. I waved to him and blew him a kiss of thanks before slipping back through the curtain. With the pageantry behind me, my chest began heaving and I gasped for air.

Lucille and Mother and Father were waiting for me near the lodge. Lucille could barely contain herself, even jumping in place. She ran to me first and wrapped me in a giant, joyous hug. “Jul! Four pounds, six shillings! That’s
amazing
! No one has ever gone for that much. And to Roger Kline! He’s so good-looking.”

I shot her dragon eyes, and she recoiled, recalling that I didn’t care if Roger Kline or the Man on the Moon had been victorious. I wasn’t going to play the charade for her, not when she knew the truth of it. But for Mother, who seemed immensely pleased with the prospects of the winning bidder, I bit my lip and smiled. And, of course, my father looked proud.

I excused myself to walk the grounds while the auction progressed, making a wide arc around the walled garden so that no one would find me, especially Roger. I was in no mood for adulation right now and didn’t care to continue the pretense.

I found a tree stump to sit on and watched the gaiety from a distance. My mind was numb, and my legs were tired. I was looking forward to going home and celebrating a job well done tomorrow. Tonight only despondency would be my companion.

At the conclusion of the auction, Lucille found me and tried to pull me toward the dance floor—it seemed that there was no lack of gentlemen asking her for my whereabouts. I asked her to relay that I was feeling ill and told her to tell my parents that I would be walking home. I gave her the keys to the Bentley and hoped that she would find it unharmed.

The light from the moon was brilliant, and it made walking the familiar path easier. The people in the few cars that passed looked bewildered at the sight of the lone girl in the elegant dress, mascara painting trails of woe on her face. One bearing friends of my parents offered me a ride, and while it was tempting to give my aching feet a break, I stayed the course. Stubborn, like my brother.

A mile from home, the heel of my left shoe broke and I stumbled to the ground. Blood ran down my leg, and I felt shards of gravel piercing my skin. The throbbing was so intense that I could have sworn it was audible. I sat down and hugged my knees to my chest.
Great,
I thought.
It can’t get any worse than this.

Then thunder cracked through the sky, and I felt the first of what would surely be many raindrops.

Chapter Five

I looked around in what was quickly becoming a torrential downpour, and I saw in the distance a barn. I’d walked past it often and thought it was a blight on the landscape, with its peeling red paint and sagging doors. It was out of place in a city, one of those occasional plots where the family had owned it for centuries and had not given in to the development surging against its borders. But it was a welcome sanctuary at this moment. I pulled myself up and started to hobble toward it, unbalanced on my shoes.

“Here, let me help you!” a voice from behind me called out. A man stepped forward and wrapped his arm around my waist, helping me walk in the direction of the barn. I shuddered at the realization that I was alone in the dark with a stranger, but I did not have a choice unless I wanted to continue on in the storm. I couldn’t see him because my eyes were closed against the heavy droplets, and I whispered a desperate prayer to a God I seldom spoke to.

Letting go of me, he opened the door with both hands. It made a piercingly shrill scream, and appeared to be off its tracks. He waved me inside, where the malodor of farm animals made my nose prickle, and their neighs and baas and groans were unnerving. I shivered in my dress and was once again aware of the pain in my leg. I waved my hands out in the pitch-blackness, utterly disoriented. He told me to wait, closed the barn door with a heave, and fumbled until he found a lantern along the wall. He stood in silhouette as he lit it before approaching me to put his jacket around my shoulders. I tugged the coat tight around me. It smelled good—like earth and cologne.

I wiped my hands across my hair and face as he took my hand and led me over a hay-scattered floor. My breath caught as I looked up. It was Kyle. What a way for him to see me, dripping with rain and tears. At least I had the rain to blame, disguising the tears. Or they could be attributed to my pain. The visible one on my leg. The deeper one was unseen.

I tightened my lips to prevent myself from saying the things that I
really
wanted to say, and let a meek “Thank you” escape instead.

He didn’t answer but found a pail and overturned it so that I could sit. He rubbed his hands up and down my arms, shoulder to elbow, trying to warm me up. A month ago this gesture would have sent chills—
good
chills—through me, but right now I was only distracted by imagining how disheveled I must have looked to him.

In the dim light, he was as attractive as I had remembered, and my resentment softened against my better judgment.

He smiled at me briefly, and then moved his hands along his arms, back and forth, until he was warmer. They looked strong and masculine. I wondered what it would be like to hold them.

Foolish girl. There you go again.
Was it Lucille’s voice in my head or my own?

My teeth no longer chattering, I expressed my gratitude with more sincerity. He had made a habit of earning my goodwill. Kyle found a rickety milking stool, and scooted it next to me. He sat with elbows on his knees and hands together.

“My pleasure,” he said. “We can’t have young ladies wandering alone in the dark and rain by themselves.”

“I was on my way home, and I didn’t have much further to go.”

“I know, but then you might have contracted pneumonia, and if your parents knew that I could have prevented it, they might just call up the Bootle Home and have me dismissed.”

A grin had spread across his face, and just that quickly we were back bantering in the kitchen of Bootle Home. “Maybe I should tell them that you held me hostage in a desolate barn and see what they do then!”

“Oh, but at least you wouldn’t be dying from the elements. I think I could talk them into pardoning me.”

“It’s my word against yours.”

“Well, then I’ll have to treat you like the lady that you are, and hope for the best.”

I didn’t have a response for that, so I asked him how he’d found me.

“I followed you,” he said with candor. “I was on my way home after the festival when I saw you walking away. You looked upset, and I worried about you making it back safely. I kept my distance so that I didn’t bother you, and I would have left as soon as you got in.”

I couldn’t let him know the true cause of my distress.

My knee ached and I looked down. The blood had seeped through the satin of my gown, as if it weren’t already ruined from the fall. I gingerly lifted the dress away from the wound and, disregarding modesty, lifted the hem high above my knee and held it there while I went to work on the silk stocking. I rolled it down a bit at a time, wincing with every movement until it was finally off, and my bare skin felt the sting of the cold air.

When I looked up, I found Kyle’s gaze fixed upon my leg. His eyes were slightly glazed and his jaw tense. I peeked down again and realized that the hem of my garter was showing. I stifled a smile, remembering the drama with which I had pronounced to Lucille that no one would, in fact, see my garter. I rolled the dress back down and smoothed out the wrinkles in vain.

His gaze met my eyes and he leaned in before abruptly sitting straight up. We stumbled out words at the same time.

“So, whose idea—” he started.

“What were you doing—”

“You first.”

I nodded. “What were you doing at the festival? Aren’t you a Catholic?”
Aren’t you going to be a priest?
was what I really wanted to say, though I already knew the answer.

“Catholics can’t raise money for good causes?”

“What about the cathedral? It’s Anglican.”

“Are you Anglican?”

“Well, no. My family’s not very religious. I mean, we go to church once in a while.”

“There you go, then. It’s going to be a beautiful monument to God. I am happy to help make that happen.”

He had me there. Damn him, I could never get in the last word.

We settled into awkward silence. When I shivered again, he got up to readjust his coat on me, then sat awkwardly again on the little stool.

“I wonder how long the storm is going to last.” Weather was a neutral topic, and I wanted to keep talking. I feared that the rapid beat of my heart would give me away in the silence. Besides, I loved the sound of his deep and gentle voice.

“I don’t know, but I’ll walk you home when it’s all over. If we get hungry, I can slaughter that cow over there and have a meal. Do you have a cleaver in that handbag?”

“Very funny.” I smiled. “Lucille and I ate so much at the festival, though, I don’t think that I could eat even a bird right now, much less a cow.”

“All right,
Helen
.” I could see his grin even in the dim light.

“Oh, you heard that?”

“Yes. So, what’s the story?”

I stretched my legs a bit and removed the pail so that I could sit on the floor. Kyle did the same, and we sat side by side, leaning against the slats of a horse stall. All but touching.

“Well, my grandmother’s name was Helen, and my father felt obligated to name his only daughter after his mother. But he allowed my mother to choose Julianne as my middle name, and to call me by that. I’m very glad that she did. My grandmother died when I was little, but I remember her and I didn’t like her at all. She was old and crabby. I read once that
Helen
means ‘torch.’ But to me, it means ‘old and crabby.’”

Kyle chuckled. “Well, that would explain how quickly you corrected the Lord Mayor. But it’s ironic, you know. Your fictitious meaning for your name.”

“How so?”

“Because I think
Julianne
comes from the Latin word for ‘youthful.’”

I barely heard what he said, as my ears were ringing from the beautiful sound of my name on his lips. I wanted to hear it again. “I’m sorry, what did you say?”

“Your name—
Julianne
. It means ‘youthful.’”

I loved it and wanted more. But I supposed that cajoling him into saying it a third time would have been too flagrant of me. I settled for saying, “Well, how about that?”

“Are you happy to have all that work behind you?” he asked.

“Yes and no. It’s kept me very busy, especially in the last few weeks. But I enjoy it, and it’s almost a competition with myself to see how much we can raise for a good cause.”


Two
good causes,” he reminded me. “Whose idea was it to split the proceeds this year?”

“My father’s. He suggested the cathedral, because it’s a popular project in town right now. I’m sure it has a good business angle to it. But the Ladies’ Society still wanted to have a charity attached to it, so we added the orphanage.”

“Speaking of which, how much did you go for at auction? I hope the winner checked your teeth and made sure that you were a good buy.”

This was exactly the topic I wanted to avoid. I could still see his back as he walked away rather than bid for me. Smoothing back my hair and clutching my pride, I said, “I did
very
well, thank you. I brought in four pounds, six shillings, the highest amount ever garnered at the auction.”

“Well, good for you! I’m not surprised. Who is the lucky man?”

Well,
he
certainly wasn’t, and didn’t even try to be.

“Roger Kline,” I said. “And I’m
so
glad that he won. He’s
so
handsome, and his father is a secretary at Parliament. I’m sure that he will be just
fascinating
to talk to.” I couldn’t help but follow this Scarlett O’Hara line of patter. The book was fresh in my memory.

“Roger Kline. Huh.”

I wasn’t sure if it was an interested “huh” or a mocking “ha.”

“What do you have against Roger Kline?”

“I don’t have anything against him. I was just remembering that I hit him once when we were younger. I broke his nose. You know, Irish temper.”

I sat up straight. “You beat up Roger Kline? Why?”

“My father worked on his family’s grounds. One time, he ran over and took my lunch. So I let him have it.”

“He took your lunch? He doesn’t seem like the type.”

“Well, we all grow up and change, don’t we?”

“Did you get your father in trouble?”

“Nearly. He and Roger’s father worked it out. I had to be Roger’s slave for about a month to make up for it. I shined his shoes and washed down his horse and helped him with his Latin homework.”

“I wouldn’t have thought that you have a hot temper.”

“I used to, but I think a few weeks of servitude cured me of it. When you go out on your date with Roger, take a good look at his nose and think of me. I believe it is still a little crooked.” He sat back with a smug expression on his face and crossed his arms.

“I will do that.”

He watched me with an intense gaze, looked away, and returned with a more carefree expression in his eyes. “He’s a good chap, though. Really. I hope that you get along well with him.”

It sounded like the rain was stopping, but it only paused and then pounded again. The rafters of the barn seemed to shake, but nothing was leaking. I was beginning to feel a little warmer.

“So tell me about your brother,” he said.

For an awful moment, I didn’t know what he was talking about. The word
brother
was foreign to me on someone else’s tongue, and barely an acquaintance on my own.

“Oh, Charles?”

“Do you have another brother?”

“No, no I don’t. It’s just that, well, I never get to talk about Charles to anyone.”

“Why not? You don’t seem to be ashamed of him. In fact, it’s quite remarkable that you come to see him so often. You know, not many people come out to visit the residents.”

I swallowed the guilt that gripped me, not wanting to admit that the most recent visits had little to do with Charles. “Well, you know how it is at those kinds of places. Even Bootle Home. The family is devastated when they realize that their child is not all that they expected. And they send them off to someplace that will take responsibility for them. It’s like storing them in a cupboard, only to be dusted off when it’s convenient. And sometimes it never is. Like with my family.”

Kyle seemed taken aback. “With your family? I’m sorry. What do you mean?”

“Kyle—” I liked the feel of his name on my lips. The throaty groan that began in the back of my throat, finishing with the delicate sweep of my tongue across my teeth. If he noticed the hesitation in my voice, he didn’t say anything, and I rushed my next words to make up for it. “Kyle—have you ever seen my parents? At Bootle, I mean?”

He paused, trying to remember. “I suppose I haven’t. Maybe they come during the week.”

“No, they don’t. They never come. I don’t know if they’ve ever been there since they dropped him off so many years ago.”

“Wow.” He frowned, the depth of my brother’s isolation sinking in. “How old were you?”

“The same. He’s my twin. One they discarded, and the other they’re trying to hold to an impossible standard of perfection, as if to compensate.”

I surprised myself with my own vehemence. I had not admitted these things to anyone, not even to Lucille. Perhaps not even to myself. Kyle had a way of making me feel as if I could confess anything.

But I wasn’t finished. I was unable to stop now that I had unplugged the hole in the well-guarded dam. “And that’s not all. Father became obsessed with his business, and I’m convinced that it drove Mother to drink. The perfect lady had an imperfect child. And the remaining one has been making up for it ever since.”

I sniffed, holding back tears, and shook my head in determination. I would not cry in front of him. I had already said more than I ever planned to.

“How did you find out about Charles?” he asked.

“I was”—
oh, bollocks: Why not just let it all go?
—“I was in Mother’s dressing room a couple of years ago rummaging through her drawers for some rouge. She said I wasn’t old enough to wear it yet, but I just wanted to try it.”

I knew I was procrastinating. “Anyway. The bottom flap of the drawer was loose, and I thought that she would appreciate it being set straight. But it moved easily and I saw that there were some papers underneath. I found a photograph of two babies, side by side. One was plump and smiling. The other looked somewhat lifeless, with slanted eyes and a blank stare. I turned it over and read, ‘Charles and Julianne—July 1919.’”

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