Wildflower Hill
4/5
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About this ebook
Emma is a prima ballerina in London and at a crossroads after an injured knee ruins her career. When she learns of her grandmother Beattie’s death, and her own strange inheritance—an isolated sheep station in rural Australia—Emma is certain she has been saddled with an irritating burden. But when she returns to Australia, forced to rest her body and confront her life, she realizes that she had been using fame as a substitute for love and fulfillment.
Beattie also found herself at a crossroads as a young woman, but she was pregnant and unwed. She eventually found success—but only after following an unconventional path that was often dangerous and heartbreaking. Beattie knew the lessons she learned in life would be important to Emma one day, and she wanted to make sure Emma’s heart remained open to love, no matter what life brought. She knew the magic of the Australian wilderness would show Emma the way.
Wildflower Hill is a compelling, atmospheric, and romantic novel about taking risks, starting again, and believing in yourself. It’s about finding out what you really want and discovering that the answer might be not at all what you’d expect.
Kimberley Freeman
Kimberley Freeman was born in London and grew up in Brisbane, Australia. She is the bestselling author of Wildflower Hill and Lighthouse Bay and teaches critical and creative writing at the University of Queensland. She lives in Brisbane with an assortment of children and pets. Visit her website at KimberleyFreeman.com.
Read more from Kimberley Freeman
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Reviews for Wildflower Hill
174 ratings21 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I loved that the book is told from two different perspectives, years and worlds apart and yet still similar after all. I really enjoyed it (especially Beattie's parts) and wanted it to keep going :)
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I read this because:
it was recommended to me by Goodreads based on my "favourites" shelf
it has a high rating
I loved the title
This book was extremely boring. I liked the first little bit of the book as told from Beattie's point of view. The chapters were long and filled with nothing.
This story goes back and forth between Beattie and her granddaughter, Emma. It starts off with Beattie as a young woman in the 1920's and follows her to Wildflower Hill. After her grandmother's death, and her career-ending injury, Emma has found she has inherited Wildflower Hill. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Awesome! So good I could not put it down!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Wildflower Hill is a gorgeous novel that I read two years ago now and absolutely fell in love with. It's so beautifully written and leaves you guessing the entire novel. I wish there was more to it, because I loved the characters (asdfgkl CHARLIE <3) and I don't think I could ever get enough of them.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I thought this story was absolutely excellent! At first, I thought I'd be irritated with the switching back and forth between generations, but I wasn't at all. Like the cover states, it reminds me very much of Kate Morton's writing---but cleaner. That's not to say it's totally clean...but I wasn't super uncomfortable reading it. For a couple weeks before, and all during the time I read this, I'd been frustrated with my 2-year-old, Kynthia, for waking me up early every.single.morning. to "be with me". Oh how I treasure those times now after reading this heartbreakingly wonderful story!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In life when does following your dreams get in the way of what is really important in life? Wildflower Hill by Kimberley Freeman is a beautiful literary fiction book of two woman, 2 different woman in a family, a grandmother (Beatie) and granddaughter (Emma) who both have plans for their lives at young ages, but have two different bumps in the road. Beatie is 18 years old dreaming of a life of comfort with her fashion designs, but then finds herself pregnant with a married man's child. While Emma at 31 hurts her knee so that her dreams of dancing come to a crashing point. When Emma is returns home to her mom across the world from England she is sent to clean up her grandmother's old sheep farm, Wildflower Hill. During her stay Emma is packing up packages and finding out that there are mysteries in her family that her grandmother hid very well...
Not going to lie I never heard of this book and a close friend of mine went on and on about so I picked it up. At first I was interested by the fact there was romances and that the cover was well, shiny. Once I started to read I got so involved with the characters and how Ms Freeman wrote the book. I would get so dedicated to one character's side only to have the narrative switch. The writing is beautiful, the characters are heart wrenching, and the readers will keep wanting more. I really liked this book and will probably reading some literary fiction for a little bit because of the mood this book left me in :) - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This novel is a great read for a quiet weekend filled with hot tea and an empty agenda. It has an almost dreamy quality at times, especially when we are carried back into the past with Beattie.
The story will mean different things for different people and I think it will depend on generation and life experiences. I identified strongly with Beattie and loved her as a character almost from the very beginning. I had a harder time embracing Emma.
Emma to me is a typical example of the millinial generation. She is very confident and goal driven. She is traveling on a one way road that is her idea of success and fulfillment, until the she takes a mistep and has to reroute her life.
Beattie is almost the complete opposite. Although she had youthful dreams of fashion design she was more heavily influenced by all the people and events in her life. She made room for people on her journey. She did attain success and fulfillment but it was a winding road filled with painful challenges, roadblocks and detours. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a real saga of a book (over 500 pages) telling the story of Beattie Blaxland. Her tale is a bit of a rags to riches one and the major part of this book focuses on the rags bit and how she came to have a farm called Wildflower Hill in Tasmania. In amongst this is the story of her granddaughter, Emma, a prima ballerina. As Emma deals with a big blow in her life, she ends up finding out more about her grandmother's early life.
I liked this book and found it to be a really easy read, although I didn't like it quite as much as Kimberley Freeman's second book, Lighthouse Bay. Beattie's parts of the story were much more engaging than Emma's but that may have been because those bits formed the majority of the book. Beattie herself was a strong heroine and I liked her a lot and rooted for her all the way through. A very enjoyable tale. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I have a huge heart space for books with a little of everything: present day to past, family, historical, romance, mystery, drama, a laugh or two. I'm just happily lost.
Kimberley Freeman's Wildflower Hill is just such a book. I've seen comparisons to Susanna Kearsley and Kate Morton and I would definitely agree. Freeman's writing is detailed without becoming tedious, expertly leaving details along the way for the reader to scoop up, "ooh" and "ahhh" with each revelation to piece together a story: How we can make things happen even in the worst of circumstance.
This quote below flew off the page at me when I first read it. I didn't realize it would also become a key point in the book.
"There are two types of women in the world, Beattie, those who do things and those who have things done to them. Try to be the first type."
In the 1930's, Beattie was a slip of a girl armed with enough courage to push past her fear through the best and worst of times, who took control of the things done to her, and made things happen. I think her strength surprised even her own self, faced with seemingly huge obstacles. Frying pan to fire. Love and tragedy. A new beginning. A new country. Heartbreak. Hard work and determination. Her inherent strength, passion, and drive are subtle like I find most of my own friends. They don't realize how strong they are until they get through it and in hindsight can say, "I'm a badass!"
It's not overpowering, simply blossoming as her life is carved out by her own blood, sweat, and tears. You see her regrets. We all have a few or ten... but also the bittersweet, the loveliness of spirit even until Beattie's death in her old age. She's a woman you'd love to sit down with and have a glass of lemonade, just to hear her sage observations on life.
In the present day, Beattie's granddaughter, Emma has an inner drive, a first love that seems to afford her a sole focus to the detriment of others and even more so, to herself. It's not a man. It's her love of dance. Dance is her own emotional outlet - and occasionally used as a weapon to punish herself or push others away.
Emma's drive to dance and through a series of events, Emma finds her life taking an abrupt and difficult downturn. And this just after her grandmother passes. Now we see Emma deal with a different crutch. It's not pretty but it is clear Emma doesn't even know what she wants, let alone what she has become.
I liked that Emma was imperfect and not infallible. To the point where, when Emma did start to question her own self, she became introspective and honestly objective. We see Emma slowly mature. To see clearly what this new path in life was giving her. Learning of her grandmother's life through family memories, photos, and flashbacks, we see Emma discover a personal strength mirroring her grandmother. We see an emergent fortitude to determine what, where, and who was important to Emma.
There is a swoony, sweet man in the present and you don't even realize you are rooting for him until you are white-knuckling the book and saying, "NO! WHA...YOU CANT...WHAT. ARE. YOU. DOING?" (maybe just me, then?)
I had a few details I would have loved to have seen completely fleshed out. The book is certainly a stand alone, however I could easily see another book to this story. Overall, I very much enjoyed this gem. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Audible Book - Picked this little treasure up on a 1 day sale with audible and I am SO glad that I did.
The story interweaves the present life of Emma, a Prima Ballerina living in London and past life of her grandmother Beattie. The story moves smoothly back to the early 1930's when Beattie was a young woman in Scotland who gets pregnant by her boyfriend (whose married to someone else) together they flee to Tasmania to live as a married couple. Emma's career ending injury begins her journey of unraveling the secrets of her beloved grandmother and finds purpose for her life to move forward. Excellent, Excellent Excellent! - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5* My 2011 Favorite Book of the Year *
Wildflower Hill is a poignant tale of two women living in different decades but whose lives are strongly intertwined. I dearly loved this book! The story of Beattie and her granddaughter Emma was completely absorbing. Beattie was a Scottish immigrant who moved to Tasmania, Australia, at the start of the Great Depression. Someone had told her once that "there are two types of women in the world...those who do things, and those who have things done to them." As a poor, unwed mother, she kept that thought in the forefront of her mind as she struggled against poverty and prejudice. Against insurmountable odds, she became the owner of a prosperous sheep farm in rural Tasmania, though it was not without great hardship and heartache.
Set in 2009, Emma's story is effortlessly woven in with Beattie's. Emma is a prima ballerina in London. Proud of her success as a dancer, she didn't realize how it had totally consumed her life until a knee injury put an end to her career. Left with no other options, she returns home to Sydney. Emma is told that she has inherited a farm in Tasmania that her grandmother ran in the 1930s. Beattie had not been there for many years and used the place for storage, so Emma decides to head south to clean out the place in order to sell it. Upon arrival Emma finds boxes and boxes full of Beattie's old possessions, including letters, photos and business records. As Emma sorts through everything, she slowly uncovers family secrets buried for decades.
I have not been moved by a book quite so much in a very long time. I really enjoyed the author's writing style, including the rich descriptions of the settings. It was easy to picture myself there too. Wildflower Hill stirred up many emotions for me - heartache, joy, anger, and frustration. Ultimately it is a very inspirational story about the power of perseverance and realizing what is truly important in life. Both Beattie and Emma were strong female characters written in a way that I felt like I was sharing their experiences with them. I loved how important parts of the story were told through old-fashioned letters. The last letter written by Beattie that Emma finds had me sobbing. The ending was bittersweet and very satisfying. I would highly recommend Wildflower Hill to fans of women's fiction. It is a story that will stay with me for a long time.
Review copy courtesy of the publisher. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I dearly loved this book! The women, Beattie and Emma, have such amazing lives. I could relate better with Beattie's story. She endured hardship but came out on top even though she lost the most precious thing in her life. Emma has struggles of her own, having lost the most important thing in her life as well. Instead of dwelling on it she went on to help another young girl achieve her dream and in the process learned a valuable lesson and found out that what she had loved was not that important after all.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5At first, I wasn't sure whether or not I would like this book, but after the first several chapters, I began to realize how similar this is to Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance, and I was hooked. I loved both Emma's and Beattie's stories, but I was definitely more drawn to Beattie's tale, because she most closely resembles Emma in A Woman of Substance. Beattie made some rather poor choices in her life, but continued to persevere to raise her illegitimate daughter the best way that she could. Eventually, she found a great love and enormous success and wealth, but not without experiencing two tremendously crushing blows. Emma's story was very interesting as well. I have a son with Down's Syndrome, and I thought that the author did a wonderful job of both including a character with Down's, and describing her in a realistic and sweet way. Overall, this book was fabulous!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A fun, light read that kept me involved . A family saga, following the lives of 2 woman from 2 different eras.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I really enjoyed this book, it's a light fun read and now I want to go to Tasmania! Recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A light entertaining romantic novel set mostly in Tasmania on a sheep farm. It spans three generations but is the story of two women who share a legacy of secrets and is a read that is light and one I recommend for a change from violence and horror you read in the newspaper every day.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved it! I read the entire book in one day, I could not put it down. If you love family sagas and historical fiction pick this book up now. I see this author compared to Kate Morton a lot whom I love but I wouldn't really say this was of the Gothic genre that she does so well. I recently read A Good American by Alex George and it was much more similar to that author's work. Both books are sweeping family dramas spanning 3 generations that begin when the family founders leave their respective countries unexpectedly pregnant, in shame, and penniless. They are forced leave for a fresh start when their families disown them. Both books feature a strong matriarch who builds a business from nothing through hard work and sheer determination. Both books have a dark skinned character who shows up just in the nick of time to save the business and who end up facing prejudice and paying for their dedication with their lives at the hands of thugs. The main difference between Wildflower Hill and Good American is that the heroine of Wildflower Hill has to deal with a lot of custody issues because she is separated from the father of her child and he is still alive. The end scene of Wild flower Hill where the granddaughter Emma tries to right her grandmothers pain was so moving to me. I highly recommend this book.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Definitely full of juicy family secrets, this story moves back and forth from Beattie Blaxland's view (and story from the 20's-30's) to her granddaughter Emma's present day tale. Beattie's hardscrabble life story was very engaging, she emerged as a very strong woman who could certainly keep a secret. Emma's character, a prima ballerina with a career ending knee injury was more to type. It was nice to see the book come full circle, as Emma attempted to delve into these family secrets while cleaning out the house at Wildflower Hill.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Beattie Blaxton is shaken and distraught when she finds herself with child in 1930’s Ireland, being neither married nor even engaged to the child’s father. After an unsuccessful attempt to part from her lover and give her unborn child up for adoption, her lover Henry comes to the rescue and spirits her away to Australia. But life for Beattie is still not easy, as Henry, having absconded from his legal wife, is quite a drinker and spendthrift who also has a problem with gambling. Soon Beattie decides to take her chances alone with her young daughter in a town where an unmarried mother is not looked upon kindly. When Beattie secures a job as a maid at a struggling sheep farm called Wildflower Hill, her future begins a slow revolution that will take her from the bottom rungs of society to the upper echelons of wealth and power. But along the way, there is much she will have to sacrifice. Two generations later, Beattie’s granddaughter Emma is having her own struggles. As a premiere ballerina who is just hitting the upper age range for a successful career, Emma has just had a career-ending injury. After weeks of wallowing following her accident and an untimely break-up, Emma is called into her grandmother’s lawyer’s office to take receipt of the last piece of her inheritance. But it’s not wealth that has been imparted to her, and when she discovers just what Beattie meant her to do, she embarks on a trip to Tasmania and Wildflower Hill, where she will discover the truth about herself and about her grandmother’s past that was kept hidden for many dark years. Blending the lingering past with the intoxicating present, Kimberly Freeman gives us the lives of two women cut from the same cloth, yet so very, very different.
Though Beattie and Emma were very similar characters, there were some substantial ways in which they differed. While I would have to say that Beattie was the more courageous and motivated, Emma sometimes appeared a little more cold and less emotionally evolved than her grandmother. Part of this may have been that Beattie got a lot more page space and her conundrums were a lot more interesting and heartrending than Emma’s refusal to let her dancing career go. While I did like both women, I think I felt more at home in the historical sections, because for some reason that story had a little more gravity and drama to it. Emma’s story was by far lighter and more redolent of romance than the hardship of Beattie’s story, though the narrative devices that tied these two stories together was strong and did have me very curious.
The historical parts of the story had a lot of different and pressing issues taking place within its structure. Not only was the difficulty of being a single mother explored, but also the dubious position that Beattie got herself in when she agreed to let Henry share custody of Lucy, her daughter. It was heartrending to read about the problems that faced a woman on her own in Australia, from the town’s prejudice and intolerance of Beattie and her hired hands, to the way that religion was used as a weapon to subdue and control those who were felt to be out of line. Beattie maintains a strength and fortitude throughout her trials, but even the most casual reader can see that all this wears on her and slowly breaks her spirit. By the end of her tale, Beattie is a shadow of her former self and her dreams and hopes have been subtly replaced by secrets and longing. It was interesting to see this morphing of such a strong character into a woman who was beset with regrets, and one can argue that although Beattie was wildly successful in some venues, she had to sacrifice so many things for that success that it must have been a bittersweet victory.
Emma too was discovering that some of her life was going to have to be sacrificed, and one of the problems that arose from this situation was that Emma had no idea of who she was outside of her dancing. From childhood, Emma was able to indulge this creative side of herself to the detriment of forming real relationships and attachments. Though she did have a relationship with a very successful man, it turns out that most of that relationship was a facade as well. As Emma begins to see that there is more to life than the pursuit of her dancing career, she discovers a side of herself that she didn’t know existed; and in her search for the clues to Beattie’s past, Emma comes to find that her new life is ripe with possibilities and opportunities. I liked that Emma was able to pull away from the character traits that were subsuming her real intellect and grace, and that she was eventually open to starting a new chapter in her life that was slated to go in a very different direction. Her romantic entanglements were refreshing as well, and I was very pleased at her final choice of paramour.
Throughout this story a lot of very sensitive issues were brought up. From the prejudices that the aboriginal peoples have faced, to the problems that arose during a mixed-race relationship during the 50’s, to the sticky issue of parental rights, there were a lot of thoughtful and emotional landmines in this tale. And while some of these issues were never fully resolved, there was a great striving for enlightenment and understanding from the principals in the story. At its heart, there were vast currents of prejudice and dishonor and hatred that had to be dealt with, and in dealing with these very uncomfortable topics, there was a lot of character growth. I admit that it wasn’t always empowering and comfortable growth, but I really admire Freeman for sticking to her guns and including so many serious topics in a book that really could have been just about the fluff. In the end so many questions are raised and explored that it was easy to categorize this book as a thoughtful and intelligent read.
Though I preferred the historical sections to the contemporary ones, both were done rather well, and each half of the story seemed to blend into a satisfying whole that I came to appreciate and enjoy. It’s not only a book about relationships, but about ideas that challenged the times they were captured in. Also, as the book ends in a bit of an ambiguous fashion, I’m wondering if there might ever be plans for a sequel. If so, I would definitely be in line to read it. A very thoughtful and entertaining read. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Kimberley Freeman has written an excellent presentation of life styles from 1929 to the present time. An interesting and historic journey through three generations of a "family" resettled in Australia from Scotland after the matriarch, as a young pregnant girl, runs away with her married sweetheart and father of her child.
The novel begins in Glasgow, 1929. Innocent Beattie, trying to help support the family as a teen, has been working in a dress-shop and is an excellent seamstress, able to make expensive-looking clothing out of unused, and sometimes used, materials. She also works in a restaurant, or rather she did, until the sons of the owner introduced her to the not-quite-legal gambling club and bar upstairs. Her innocence taken advantage of by the married friend of the brothers, it is not long before Beattie finds herself pregnant by Henry, and not at all sure what she can do about it. Once she is no longer able to hide it, she loses her job at the dress-shop. To this point, she has not even told Henry. When she finally gets up her courage to tell him, he asks her to give him time and to stay away from the club in the meantime. Shortly afterward, her mother disowns her and forbids her to see her father before kicking her out of house and home with nothing but her empty purse and the clothes on her back. Desperate, she seeks out her friend from the club, who tells her of a place in the north where she can go until her baby is born. Thus, the secrets of Beattie's life begin. It is in this home that Henry finds Beattie and they run away together to Tasmania, where a friend of Henry's has promised him a job.
The book is basically told in three parts, but interspersed. When Beattie is a grandmother, she encourages her granddaughter to be what she wants to be, which happens to be a ballet dancer. Through the many years between, so much happens in Beattie's poverty-stricken life. She is ostracized when first it is discovered in Tasmania that she and Henry are not married, yet have a little girl. Henry is unable to provide for the family, and eventually returns to England and his wife, but takes their daughter Lucy with him. In dire straits, and traumatized by her loss, she gets work on a sheep ranch. Many more of the secrets of Beattie come as a result of this move. She has lost her child, her next generation.
Skipping across to her granddaughter, who has a close relationship with her grandmother, but not with her mother, we meet Emma. Emma has followed her heart and become a prima ballerina, but misfortune follows even this famous dancer. A fall marks the end of a fabulous career and Emma feels utterly devastated. She eventually goes home to Sydney, Australia. When her grandmother passes away, she learns that she has inherited a ranch in Tasmania she has never heard of. The stipulation is that she has to live there for a period of time. Beattie knew that there would come a day when Emma would need this.
This book brings so much within its pages. Love, loss, tragedy, poverty and riches. It brings to life the inner strength of women, the strength that comes when required. A rich history of mores, life, changing times, and obstacles overcome. I really enjoyed this book, if enjoy is the word for such tragedy and poverty, but it is so well-written, so historic, so meaningful. Emma's search for the true story of her grandmother's life fills in the rest of the book and opens a new world of wonder to her own life. A strong story, well centred in its various time periods, and very descriptive. A fascinating and powerful read. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5What a beautiful story, I really did not like to put this one down, though it did seem a little rushed towards the end and I would have loved to have found out what Lucy's thoughts were on meeting Emma.
The story is told by Beattie Blaxland and her grand-daughter Emma Blaxland-Hunter.
It starts in Glasglow in 1920, Beattie is 19 and has a married lover Henry who she falls pregnant to. After she is kicked out of home Henry takes her to Hobart, Tasmania where their daughter Lucy is born. Life is not easy nor happy, it turns out that Henry is a drunk and a gambler. There is not much money left at the end of the week. Beattie leaves Henry and goes to another town and eventually takes a job at "Wildflower Hill" - she even wins "Wildflower Hill" when she challenges the owner Raphael to a poker game - he gets her, she gets the farm - Beattie won.
Henry gets back with his wife Molly and eventually finds Beattie and Lucy and comes for custody - they share for awhile until Beattie decides she wants Lucy full time again - when challenged Henry and Molly take Lucy back to Glasgow. While Beattie is trying to get a ship London to follow them, war breaks out and tradegy strkes the love of her life Charlie.
Now a wealthy woman Bettie decides to move to Sydney and start her clothing empire and meets a politicial Ray and they have 2 children, Mike and Louise. Louise is Emma's mother.
Emma is a prima ballerina who does not want to give up the life she loves even to settle down with her boyfriend Josh. Emma is quite selfish actually. It was once too many - can't stops for Josh so he calls their relationship off. In her sadness Emma trains too hard and has a fall that injures he knee so badly that she can't peform anymore.
She decides to go back home to Sydney where she finds out that her beloved grandmother Beattie has left her "Wildflower Hill" in Tasmania. No-one has lived there for over 30 years but Beattie has beens sending boxes of goods down there for storage over the years. When Emma gets there she has the mammonth task of cleaning up the place for sale, she only plans to stay for 3 weeks but then she starts going through Beattie's boxes and finds out that Beattie had another family that her present family knows nothing about she wanted to know it all. When she discovered a cross with the name Charlie on it, she wanted to know who he was and who is the man and girl in the photo with grandma?
Throw into it a blossoming friendship between Patrick and Emma - it was a just a really good story.
It was interesting the way the story came together and was quite sad in some areas.
Highly recommended.
Book preview
Wildflower Hill - Kimberley Freeman
PROLOGUE
Sydney, 1989
The girl danced.
Right leg, pas de chat. Right leg, petit jeté.
Emma, your grandmother asked you a question.
Hm?
Left leg, pas de chat. Left leg, petit jeté. On and on across the parquetry floor, from one sunbeam to the next. She loved Grandma’s house, especially the music room, where the sun patterned through the gauzy curtains, and there was enough space to dance and dance.
Emma, I said—
Leave her be, dear,
Grandma replied in her quiet, musical voice. I’m enjoying watching her dance.
Right leg, pas de chat . . .
If she practiced her manners as regularly as she practiced her dancing, she wouldn’t have been booted out of two schools already.
Right leg, petit jeté . . .
Grandma chuckled. She’s only eleven. Plenty of time to learn manners when she’s older. And you do insist on putting her in those uppity schools.
Left leg, pas de chat . . . No, no, no!
Emma stamped her foot. Deep breath. Start again. Left leg, pas de chat. Left leg, petit jeté . . . She became aware of the silence in the room and glanced up, expecting to find herself alone. But Grandma was still there, on a deep couch beside the grand piano, watching her. Emma shook herself, pulled her spine very upright, and gazed back. Above Grandma’s head hung a large painting of a gum tree at sunset: Grandma’s favorite painting. Emma didn’t really understand how anyone could be so interested in a tree, but she liked it because Grandma liked it.
I thought you’d gone,
Emma said at last.
No, I’ve been watching you. Your mother left ten minutes ago. I think she’s with Granddad in the garden.
Grandma smiled. You certainly love your dancing, don’t you?
Emma could only nod. She hadn’t learned a word yet to describe how she felt about dancing. It wasn’t love, it was something much bigger and much weightier.
Grandma patted the couch next to her. Sit for a wee minute. Even a prima ballerina needs to rest.
Emma had to admit that her calves were aching, but she didn’t mind. She longed for aching muscles and bleeding toes. They told her she was getting better. Still, Grandma had been very kind to watch all this time, so she crossed the room and sat. Somewhere deep in the house, music played: an old big-band song that Grandpa liked. Emma preferred Grandma to Grandpa infinitely. Grandpa went on and on, especially about his garden. Emma knew her grandma and grandpa were important people with a lot of money, though she cared very little about what it was they did or had done. Grandma was fun and Grandpa was a bore, and that was that.
Tell me about your dancing,
Grandma said, taking Emma’s slight hand in her soft fingers. You’re going to be a ballerina?
Emma nodded. Mum says hardly anyone is a ballerina, and I should do something else just in case. But then there wouldn’t be enough time to dance.
Well, I’ve known your mother all her life.
Here Grandma smiled, crinkling the corners of her blue eyes. And she’s not always right.
Emma laughed, feeling deliciously naughty.
You must work hard, though,
Grandma said.
Emma grew serious, lifting her chin. I already do.
Yes, yes, by all accounts you work so hard on your dancing that you haven’t time for anything else. Including making friends.
A look crossed Grandma’s forehead, one that Emma couldn’t decipher. Was it worry? Or something else? They sat in silence a few moments. Outside, the autumn sun slanted on rattling branches. But inside it was very still and warm.
You know,
Grandma said, shifting in her seat and squeezing Emma’s hand before dropping it, I’d like to make you a promise.
What is it?
It’s a little incentive.
Emma waited, unsure what the word meant.
If you do become a ballerina, I will give you a present. A very precious one.
Emma didn’t want to seem rude, but she couldn’t fake excitement. She smiled sweetly and said, Thank you,
as her mother would want her to.
This made Grandma burst into laughter. Oh, dearie, that doesn’t thrill you at all, does it?
Emma shook her head. You see, Grandma, if I become a ballerina, then I will already have everything I want.
Grandma nodded. A dream come true.
Yes.
Nevertheless, I will keep my promise,
Grandma said. Because you’ll need something for after. Ballerinas can’t dance forever.
But Emma was already off again. Thinking of making her dream come true had lit up all her nerves and muscles with desperate energy: she had to move. Pas de chat. Petit jeté.
Emma,
Grandma said softly, do try to remember that success isn’t everything.
She sounded sad, so Emma didn’t look around.
She just kept dancing.
ONE
Beattie: Glasgow, 1929
Beattie Blaxland had dreams. Big dreams.
Not the confused patchwork dreams that invade sleep. No, these were the dreams with which she comforted herself before sleep, in her trundle bed rolled out on the floor of her parents’ finger-chilling tenement flat. Vivid, yearning dreams. A life of fashion and fabrics; and fortune, of course. A life where the dismal truth about her dismal family would fade and shrink and disappear. One thing she had never dreamed was that she would find herself pregnant to her married lover just before her nineteenth birthday.
All through February, she obsessively counted the weeks and counted them again, bending her mind backward, trying to make sense of the dates. Her stomach flipped at the smell of food, her breasts grew tender, and by the first of March, Beattie had finally come to understand that a child—Henry MacConnell’s child—was growing inside her.
That night she arrived at the club as though nothing were wrong. Laughed at Teddy Wilder’s jokes, leaned in to the warm pressure of Henry’s hand in the small of her back, all the while fighting the urge to retch from the smell of cigar smoke. Her first sip of the gin cocktail was harsh and sour on her tongue. Still, she kept smiling. She was well used to navigating that gulf between how she felt and how she behaved.
Teddy clapped his hands firmly twice, and the smoke rose and moved with the men and their brandy snifters to the round card table that dominated the room. Teddy and his brother, Billy, ran this not quite legal gambling room above their father’s perfectly legal restaurant on Dalhousie Lane. It was at the restaurant that Beattie had first met them. She’d been working as a waitress; that’s what her parents still believed she did. Teddy and Billy introduced her to Henry, and soon after, they’d introduced her to the club, too: to the darkly glittering underbelly of Glasgow, where nobody cared who she was so long as she looked pretty. She worked half the night serving drinks and half the night keeping Teddy’s girl, Cora, company.
Cora patted the chaise to invite Beattie to sit down. The other women gathered near the fireplace; Cora, her short curls flattened over her ears with a pink satin headband, was the acknowledged queen of the room. Though none of the others liked the idea, they were careful enough not to stand too close for fear of unfair comparisons. Beattie probably would have done the same if Cora hadn’t decided that they should be bosom friends.
Cora grabbed Beattie’s hand in her own and squeezed it: her usual greeting. Beattie was both in sacred awe of Cora and excruciatingly jealous of her heavily made-up dark eyes and her platinum hair, her easy charm and her endless budget for tasseled dresses in muslin or crepe de chine. Beattie tried, she really tried, to keep up. She bought her own fabric and sewed her own clothes, and nobody could tell they weren’t designed and made in Paris. She wore her dark hair fashionably short but felt that her open face and large blue eyes ruined any chance of her seeming mysterious and alluring. Of course, Cora was born to her confident glamour; Beattie would always struggle for it.
Cora blew a long stream of cigarette smoke into the air and then said, So, how far along are you?
Beattie’s heart spiked, and she looked at Cora sharply. Her friend looked straight ahead, her red lips closed around the end of her cigarette holder. For a moment Beattie even believed that she’d imagined the question: surely her shameful secret couldn’t make its way from the dark inside to the brightly lit club.
But then Cora turned, fine curved eyebrows raised above her sloe eyes, and smiled. Beattie, you’re practically green from the smoke, and you’ve not touched your wine. Last week I thought you might be sick, but this week . . . I’m right, aren’t I?
Henry doesn’t know.
The words tripped out, desperate.
Cora softened, patting her hand. Nor a chance of me saying a word. I promise. Catch your breath, dearie. You look terrified.
Beattie did as Cora said, forcing her limbs to relax into the languid softness expected of her. She accepted a cigarette from Cora, even though it made her stomach clench. She couldn’t have another soul noticing or asking questions. Billy Wilder, for example, with his florid cheeks and cruel laugh: oh, he would find it great sport. She knew, though, that she couldn’t hide it forever.
You didn’t answer my question. How far along?
Cora said in a tone so casual she may as well have asked Beattie what she’d eaten on her lunch break that day.
I’ve not had a period in seven or eight weeks,
Beattie mumbled. She felt unbearably vulnerable, as though her skin had been peeled off. She didn’t want to speak of it or think of it another moment. She was not ready to be a mother: the thought made her heart cold.
Still early, then.
Cora pulled her powder compact from her bag and flipped it open. Loud laughter rose from the card table. Still a chance it won’t stick.
For a breath or two, the oppressive dread lifted. Is that right? I know nothing. I know I’m a fool, but I . . .
She’d believed Henry’s promise that if he withdrew from her body at precisely the right moment, this could never happen. He’d refused to take any other measures. French letters are for the French,
he’d said. I know what I’m doing.
He was thirty, he’d fought in a war; Beattie trusted him.
Listen, now,
Cora said, her voice dropping low. There’re things you can do, dearie. Have a hot bath every day, take cod liver oil, run about and wear yourself out.
She snapped her compact shut, her voice returning to its usual casual tone. It’s early days. My cousin’s friend was three months along when the bairn just bled away. She caught the wee thing in her hands, no bigger than a mouse. She was devastated, though. Longed for a baby. Married, of course.
Married. Beattie wasn’t married, though Henry was. To Molly—the Irish wolfhound, as he liked to call her. Henry assured Beattie it was a loveless marriage made between two people who thought they knew each other well but had slowly become strangers. Nonetheless, Molly was still his wife. And Beattie was not.
She puffed her way inelegantly through half of the cigarette, then excused herself to start work. As she brought round the drinks tray, she considered Henry’s square jaw and his red-gold hair, longing to touch him but careful not to break his concentration. She dared not tell him yet about the child: if Cora was right and there was a chance Beattie could miscarry, then why create problems? Nothing may come of it. It might all be over tomorrow or next week. All over. A few long, hot baths; certainly, it was hard to spend too long in the shared bathroom on their floor of the tenement block, but if she went down early enough in the morning . . .
Henry glanced up from his cards and saw her looking. He gave her a nod: that was Henry, no grand gestures, no foolish winking or waving. Just his steady gray eyes on hers. She had to look away. He returned his attention to his cards as she returned her tray to the little bar in the corner of the room and lined up the bottles of gin and brandy along the mirrored shelves. She loved Henry’s pale eyes; strangely pale. She could understand him through them when he didn’t speak, and he spoke rarely. Once, right at the start of their relationship, she’d been watching him play poker and noticed how stark the contrast was of his pupils against his irises. In fact, she could read his hand in his eyes: if he picked up a good card, his pupils would grow, while a bad card made them shrink. Almost imperceptibly, noticeable only by the woman who gazed at those eyes endlessly.
This led her to watch the other men at the table and try to predict their hands. Not always easy, especially with Billy Wilder, whose eyes were practically black. But in instances of high stakes, when the men were trying hardest to keep their faces neutral, she could nearly always tell if they were bluffing. Henry thought it a load of rot. She’d tried to show him what she meant, but he’d tipped her off his lap and sent her away from the card table. He’d lost the game for not following her advice and had been in a devil of a mood for days. So now she stayed away. It wasn’t so important.
Cora signaled for her to return; she had gossip to share. Can you believe what Daisy O’Hara is wearing?
Beattie switched her attention to Daisy, who wore a sequined tube of beaded net over a silk slip, a silk flower at her neck, and a pair of high Louis heels. The shimmering dress was cut too tight for her wide hips: modern fashion was so unforgiving of hips. It wasn’t Daisy’s fault. A good dressmaker could drape those fabrics so she looked divine, tall, a goddess.
Lordy,
Cora said, she looks like a cow.
It’s the dress.
Cora rolled her eyes. But tonight Beattie hadn’t the heart for Cora’s razor-sharp analysis of every other woman’s failings. She listened disconsolately for a while, then returned to the bar.
The evening wore on—clinking glass and men’s laughter, loud jazz music on the gramophone and the ever present smoke—and she began to feel bone-weary and to long for bed. She could hardly say that, though. Teddy Wilder liked to call her break-of-dawn Beattie
; many was the time she’d turned up for work at Camille’s dress shop after only an hour or two of sleep. Tonight Beattie felt removed from the noise and merriment. In her own little bubble of miserable anxiety.
At length, Henry rose from the table and scraped up an untidy pile of five-pound notes. He’d had a good evening, and unlike the others, he knew when to stop. Half-joking recriminations followed him across the room. He stopped in front of the bar, seemingly oblivious to what his friends were saying. Without smiling, he stretched out his hand for Beattie. Henry exuded a taciturn authority that nobody resisted. Beattie loved him for it; other men seemed such noisy fools by contrast. And just one glance at his hand, at his strong wrist and his clean square fingernails, reminded her why she was in this predicament in the first place. Her skin grew warm just looking at him.
He pulled her close against his side with his hand down low on her hip, and she knew what he wanted. The little back room waited, with its soft daybed among the stacks of empty crates and barrels. As always, she shivered as she moved out of the warmth of the firelit club, and Henry laughed softly at her, his breath hot in her ear, assuming her shivers were of desire. But in that instant, Beattie felt the full weight of her lack of wisdom, and it crushed her desire to dust.
If he sensed her reluctance, he gave no indication. The last sliver of light disappeared as he closed the door and gathered her in his arms.
The rough warmth of his clothes, the sound of his breath, the beat of his heart. She fell against him, all her bones softening for love of him. Away from the eyes of his friends, he was so tender.
My dear,
he said against her hair. You know I love you.
I love you, too.
She wanted to say it over and over, in bigger, brighter words.
He laid her gently on the daybed and started pushing up the hem of her skirt. She stiffened; he pressed himself against her more firmly, and she saw how foolish it was to resist. It was already too late. Why shut the gate after the horse had bolted, as her father would say.
Her father. Another wave of shame and guilt.
Beattie?
Henry said, his voice soft, although his hands were now locked like iron around her knees.
Yes, yes,
she whispered. Of course.
Beattie’s skin was pink from the heat of the bath as she dressed in the dank bathroom. A week had passed, and the hot baths were giving her nothing but odd stares from Mrs. Peters, their neighbor. She returned to the flat to find her father at the kitchen table, already at work on his typewriter. A sheen of anxious perspiration lay across his nose, despite the chill air. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d seen Pa relaxed. With every passing day, he drew himself tighter and smaller, like a spider drawing its legs in to die. Laundry hung from the pulley that ran parallel to the kitchen ceiling. Ma was still asleep behind the curtain that divided the living area from the sleeping area.
An early start?
Beattie asked.
He glanced up and smiled a little. I might say the same for you,
he said in his crisp English accent. Ma’s Scots accent was thicker than Glasgow fog, and Beattie’s lay somewhere between the two. You were late home from the restaurant, and here you are up and ready to work again.
Beattie worked at Camille’s boutique on Sauchiehall Street. Or at least she had for the last three weeks. Prior to that, she’d worked in the dress section at the Poly, a department store where the customers were far less demanding but the clothes were far less beautiful. All the latest fashions from the continent came in to Camille’s, and the wealthiest women in Glasgow shopped there: the wives and daughters of the shipping magnates and railway investors. Beattie regularly witnessed them spend fifty pounds or more on a gown without blinking, while she was taking home four shillings a week.
You won’t need to work two jobs much longer,
he said, ducking his head and adjusting his spectacles. I’m sure to be finished soon.
I don’t mind.
Guilt pinched her. Pa would be appalled if he knew she was working at the club, relying on the tips of men who found her pretty, or on Henry to slip her a few pounds if he’d had a good night’s winnings. Pa thought she was a respectable lass with her virginity intact.
He returned to his work. Tap, tap, tap . . . Seeing him, anxiety so apparent on his brow, made Beattie’s chest hurt. It had all been so different just a year ago. Pa had been a professor of natural philosophy at Beckham College in London. They’d not been well off, but they’d been happy enough, living in a tidy flat at the college with sun in its windows in the afternoon. Life in London had been exciting to Beattie after growing up in the little border town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, with their tiny cold garden that Ma tended so carefully. But Pa had been an outspoken atheist—even though Ma had strong Scottish Protestant objections—and the new dean, a Catholic, had quickly developed a dislike for him. Within two months he’d lost his job and the flat with it.
Just as she was about to step through the curtain to roll away her bed and find her shoes, Pa said, Do take care of yourself, Beattie, my dear.
She paused. Her father never showed real affection, and this little morsel—my dear—grabbed her by the heart. She returned to the table, sitting opposite him to watch while he typed. She’d inherited his dark hair and blue eyes but not, small mercies, his distinctive nose and lipless mouth. He seemed to her in that moment as he had always seemed: a stranger right beside her, somebody she knew well but didn’t know at all. Lack of money had driven them from London to Glasgow, where Beattie’s maternal grandmother delighted in taking judicious pity on them. Nobody had yet offered Pa another teaching job, but he refused to look for any other kind. He clung to the idea that his intellect would triumph. So he worked on his book, certain that when it was finished, a publisher would buy it and a university—somewhere in the world—would have him. Granny thought this was rot. If Ma agreed, she didn’t let on.
Pa became aware of her gaze and glanced up, puzzled. Beattie?
Do you love me, Pa?
Where had those words come from? She’d not intended to say them.
Well . . . I . . .
Flustered, he pulled off his spectacles and rubbed the lenses vigorously on his shirt. Yes, Beattie.
Whatever I do? Will you always?
Her heart sped, driven by a primitive fear that he could read her thoughts.
As a father should.
She stood, thought about touching his wrist softly, then changed her mind. I’m not tired,
she lied. I’m just fine.
He didn’t look up. Good girl. I must keep working. This book isn’t going to write itself.
The sound of the typewriter followed her to the bedroom, where she found her shoes and buckled them on. Ma snored softly, and it cheered Beattie a little to see her face looking so peaceful. She hadn’t seen Ma looking anything but tired and anxious for a long time. Pinned to the wall was the pattern for a dress Beattie had been working on. The brown paper sagged against the tacks that held it up: she hadn’t had the heart for it since she’d discovered she was pregnant. Why make a dress that wouldn’t fit for much longer?
Beattie sat on the edge of the bed and pressed her forearm across her belly. What mysteries unfolded in there? What strange new life was moving and growing? The thought made her dizzy with fear. She drew her eyebrows down tightly, willing her womb to expel its contents. But nothing happened, nothing ever happened.
TWO
Weeks passed, and the stubborn thing clung to her insides. She imagined cramps where there was nothing but twitches of fear. In the meantime, her girdles grew tighter and—because she’d always been slight, almost bony—the first swell of her stomach became visible. She gave thanks for the figure-skimming shift dresses she wore, for her wrap coat, for Henry’s preference to make love in the dark, and for her ability to let seams out invisibly. And soon, surely, the bleeding would start, just as she’d imagined it a hundred times, a thousand times. The nightmare would be over, and life could go on as it was supposed to.
She found it increasingly difficult to get out of bed, and one chilly April morning, she hung on to sleep in the gray dark until her mother gently woke her.
Beattie. Beattie, dear. You’ll be late for work.
Beattie squeezed open her eyes.
I’m sorry,
Ma said. But I’d hate for you to get your boss offside. These aren’t easy times. You canna lose your job.
Thanks, Ma,
she said, pushing off the covers and rubbing her eyes.
Ma stood, coughing loudly. The coughing seemed to go on forever, then finally, she had it under control. Meanwhile, Beattie dressed quickly.
That cough sounds bad,
she said.
Och, I’ll be fine.
It’s been a week. Perhaps you should go to see a doctor.
Ma turned to her with sad eyes. Her eyelids drooped at the outer corners, as if this were where she wore the weight of all her worries. We canna afford a doctor, child, nor a day off. I’ll be well in a day or two.
Beattie watched as she went through to the living area, then ran a comb through her hair and put on her makeup in a dim little mirror propped up on a pile of suitcases. Did Pa not see what Ma was going through? Did he not think once that if he just got himself an honest job . . . Of course he didn’t see it. Ma had married him for his brilliant mind, and now she was shackled to it.
Camille’s boutique, where Beattie worked four days a week, was owned by Antonia Hanway, sister of the famed James Hanway who ran a dress-cutting business on Bath Lane. Beattie’s secret hope was that she would make a good impression on Antonia and one day turn this goodwill into a position with James: as a seamstress, a dress cutter, perhaps even a designer. She kept a few folded sketches in her handbag, just in case he ever came by the boutique. He never did.
She was still yawning when she arrived at work, which drew a stern glance from Antonia. Antonia was a difficult woman, though Beattie didn’t think it was her intention to be so. Clients had to make appointments before coming to shop, and then Beattie and the other assistants had to wait on them as though they were royalty. Sometimes, in fact, they were royalty, and Beattie presumed the constant anxiety was what made Antonia so insufferable to work for. Beattie didn’t mind, because she loved the shop. Racks of dresses waited in straight lines across the checkboard floor, the basement fitting rooms were lit by glittering chandeliers, and a yellow canary in a wrought-iron cage fluttered his wings as he watched the street through the bay window. His name was Rex. Lorna, one of the other assistants, had told her that he was the fourth yellow canary named Rex that Antonia had sat in the window. One dies, and she brings in another the next day,
Lorna said. Doesn’t like her clients to have to think about death, even though it will happen to them all. Uppity cows.
Beattie learned to love some of the clients who came into Camille’s, but others she hated with passion, none more so than Lady Miriam Minchin, a razor-thin woman in her forties who was as tight with her kind words for others as she was easy with her money for herself. It happened that Beattie was serving her that morning when she felt the first shaft of pain, hard in her left side.
At first she thought she could ignore it. She fetched gown after gown from the racks and hurried them downstairs to the fitting room. Her heart picked up its rhythm, hope filtering into it: it was really happening. The hot baths, the cod liver oil, the endless wishing had finally worked. But at the same time, she was terrified. What if it were painful? Messy? How was she to deal with it discreetly at work?
I like the blue on you,
Antonia was saying to Lady Miriam as Beattie tried to appear calm. What do you think, Beattie?
The cut is beautiful,
Beattie said. And the color is so flattering against your skin—
A spasm of pain shooting deep into her groin made her gasp involuntarily and clutch at her belly.
What is it, Beattie?
Antonia asked sharply.
I have . . . a pain . . .
This wasn’t how it was meant to be! She was meant to bleed quietly and quickly at home, with the bathroom close by. Nobody was ever to know.
A moment passed when nothing happened, when the only movement was Lady Miriam’s eyes as they skipped from Beattie’s face to her belly, then back to her face. Beattie shrank. Lady Miriam knew.
I have to go home,
Beattie managed, turning away, running for the stairs.
Wait, lassie!
Antonia said, clearly panicking about the impression Beattie was making on Lady Miriam.
Let her go,
Lady Miriam said.
She escaped. Up the stairs and out of the boutique into the drizzly street.
An instant later, the pain disappeared. She caught her breath.
Home: she had to get home. She was three blocks away before she realized she’d left her coat at the shop. Goose bumps prickled along her arms. The damp gray street unfolded beneath her feet; her breath was louder than the clatter of traffic.
Then another pain. Hard and sharp; it bent her in two. She forced air into her lungs, knowing she couldn’t go home like this. Pa would see her, and besides, she needed a doctor.
She found a dry place under a shop awning and tried to clear her mind sufficiently to think. She had no money for a doctor: Ma had spoken of it only that morning. But she was consumed by selfish panic. Then she remembered the time at the club when Henry and Billy Wilder had been too drunk to wear each other’s jokes any longer, and they’d come to blows. Billy broke a glass on Henry’s head, and the bleeding wouldn’t stop. Henry—a handkerchief pressed against the wound—had made a midnight visit to Dr. Mackenzie on West George Lane, along with a freshly contrite Billy. Dr. Mackenzie had delivered Henry into the world thirty years before and been his family physician ever since. Perhaps if she asked for his help, threw herself on his mercy, told him the child she was losing was Henry’s . . .
But the shame, the trouble, she would bring to Henry.
The pain was too intense; she needed help. She turned and headed back toward West George Lane. The clouds overhead darkened, and the drizzle deepened to rain. Hard, cold rain that sluiced into the gutters and jumped after the wheels of motorcars speeding past. She stayed close to the buildings so she wouldn’t get splashed, but by the time she arrived, her shoes were sodden. Then she stood in those sodden shoes, unable to push the door to Dr. Mackenzie’s surgery open. There were no awnings to shelter under, and the rain fell on her as though she were no more important than one of the rubbish-filled crates that sat outside the door across the narrow lane.
In that moment, she believed that she wasn’t.
Tears welled in her eyes, and for the first time since she’d realized she was pregnant, Beattie allowed herself to cry about it. To cry for the loss of her innocence, her pride, what tatters of self-respect remained after her family’s demotion in life. But also to cry for the child, who did not ask to be conceived and would never have a chance to breathe the damp air of Glasgow, feel its mother’s touch, nor see its father’s storm-gray eyes smile. She wept into her hands as the rain thundered down on her, and then, like magic, the torrent suddenly stopped.
Are you well, lassie?
She looked up. All around, the rain still bucketed down, but a tall, broad-shouldered gentleman with a huge black umbrella stood next to her, sheltering her.
Beattie palmed away her tears, gathering herself. Thank you, you’re so kind. I . . . I should just go home.
You need to see the doctor?
He indicated the door to the surgery.
She glanced from it to the gentleman and shook her head. I’ve not enough money.
Och, it will be fine. Come in. I canna leave you out on the street in the rain in such distress.
He shook out a set of keys and opened the door to usher her forward, and she realized that the gentleman was Dr. Mackenzie. He placed his umbrella in a stand near the door and asked her to wait in the empty front room, dripping on the wooden floor, while he unbuttoned his coat. The front desk was unattended. From behind it, he fetched her a scratchy white towel.
I usually don’t work on a Thursday afternoon,
he said. You’re lucky you found me.
She toweled her hair. The room smelled strongly of lemon polish and ointment.
Come through,
he said, and led her to an examination room with a narrow bed under a white light hanging on a chain. He sat at his desk, but she didn’t feel comfortable enough to do anything but stand in front of him, like a naughty schoolgirl.
Go on, then, lassie, what’s your trouble?
I’m pregnant and . . .
Her cheeks flushed hot despite her shivering body. I think I’m losing the baby. I’ve got a terrible pain . . .
He didn’t frown or give her any indication of disapproval. Instead, he stood and helped her up onto the bed. Let me see, then,
he said, smoothing her damp dress over her belly and running his hands firmly over it. She watched his face, half a breath held in her lungs. The pores on his nose were large, and his gray whiskers grew up high on his cheeks.
Do you mind?
he said, I’ll have to lift your dress out of the way.
She nodded, closing her eyes. Then his cool hands were on her bare skin, rolling down the top of her girdle, pressing, feeling. Assuredly reaching lower, to places that only Henry had ever touched. But it felt different this time. Not hot and wild. Cold and clinical.
You’re not bleeding at all. Has there been any blood?
No,
she managed.
How old are you?
Twenty-one,
she lied.
The pain, is it similar to the cramps one has during one’s monthly courses?
Beattie squirmed with embarrassment to be talking about such things with a man. No, it’s much lower down, on the left side. In fact . . .
In her shame and fear, she hadn’t noticed. I think it’s going away.
He fumbled with her clothes, and she realized she was dressed again. She opened her eyes and sat up. Dr. Mackenzie was back in his seat, but she remained on the bed.
It’s quite common at this stage of pregnancy to have the kind of pain you’re describing. It’s your body getting ready for birth. The ligaments in your womb are stretching. You’re young, so it hurts a little worse for you. You’ve probably only just stopped growing.
Birth? She hadn’t even contemplated it. Her head swam.
So you needn’t be worried. The baby is perfectly well and safe.
The inescapability of her situation was like a stone dropped on her stomach. No!
she said before she could stop herself. Tears brimmed again, but she held them back.
Dr. Mackenzie’s eyebrows shot up. Oh, I see.
Thank you,
she said, pretending everything was fine, climbing down from the bed. I shan’t take up another moment of your time . . .
But the sobs were bubbling out of her then, and he sat her firmly in a chair next to his desk and handed her his handkerchief.
You’re not married, are you?
No,
she said.
Does the father know?
She thought about Henry, about how Dr. Mackenzie had known him as a wee lad. Not yet.
You need to tell him.
His voice grew soft. You’ve a babe in there, lassie. He or she has been in there about three months. The chance of you miscarrying now is very small. Do you understand what I’m saying to you? There’s no way out now. You need to tell him.
She pushed her toes hard into her shoes. He’s married,
she managed.
He pressed his lips together, creating two deep lines that disappeared into his beard. I see.
Should I still tell him?
Lassie, I don’t see that you’ve got any other option.
Outside, the clouds had lifted and the rain had thinned. Beattie returned to Camille’s, ready to apologize to Antonia, to make excuses, to hang on to her job somehow. This wasn’t a time to be out of work. Everyone was talking about the slump
; even the big shipping companies were wary about putting people on. Beattie knew she would have to beg. So she rang the doorbell and moved to the bay window to peer in. Antonia emerged from the downstairs fitting rooms. When she saw Beattie, her face took on a scowl.
Antonia opened the door a crack. What is it?
I wanted to say sorry, I—
You look like a drowned cat. I don’t want the likes of you in my store, Beattie Blaxland. I’ve a reputation to uphold.
I’ll go home and change and come straight back,
Beattie said, aware that she sounded hopeless, frantic.
Change? You can change your clothes, but you canna change what you are. Lady Miriam pointed out to me what’s been right under my nose. You’re with child. Not even married. And there are rumors that you run with Henry MacConnell. Is the bairn his, then? He has a wife, you know.
Please, Antonia,
Beattie begged, desperate. I can’t manage without my wage. My family is—
"You should have thought of all that before you brought your trouble through my doors. A dozen girls a day beg me for a job, and every one of them not pregnant. I’m not hard up for people to choose from. Why would I choose to keep you?"
Please . . . please!
Lady Miriam has specifically said she won’t be back unless you’re gone. I have to think of my business.
Beattie swallowed hard. She must have looked utterly desolate, because for a moment Antonia softened.
I’m sorry, child.
Her voice was quiet, and she wouldn’t meet Beattie’s eyes. But you’re not to set foot back in my store.
Then she pushed the door closed.
THREE
Breathe in, breathe out.
Beattie stood on the street below the club. Tonight she was going to tell Henry. Her breath made a faint fog in front of her. Her stomach itched with anxiety. She tried to understand why she was afraid of him. He loved her, or so he said. He would stand by her. He wouldn’t be angry . . . would he? She had taken extra time with her makeup, making her eyes dark and soft, her lips red and peaked. If she were pretty enough, he would be kind to her. Take pity on her.
And yet how did she get to this place where she longed for pity? She had always been proud of her big dreams, her loud laugh, her brash casualness. Standing on the street, with the smell of roasting meat and cigarette smoke wafting from the restaurant, she realized horribly that those things were all a show, a childish pretension. After all, it was easier for her to talk about her big plans than do anything about them. It was easy to match Cora’s barbed wit and brazen confidence with a gallon of drink in her. But all she was, really, was the awkwardly thin and poor daughter of a maddeningly weak mother and a foolishly idealistic father. Beattie knew this with such force that she almost turned and ran.
But she didn’t. Because it wasn’t just herself she had to take care of now. The child, whose first soft bumps against the wall of her belly she had felt that morning, needed a father.
The first stair was the hardest. Then she smelled the familiar cigar smoke, heard the familiar laughter—much louder than usual tonight—and rose toward it. Her heart was too big for her chest. She would tell Henry, she would have it out in the open. And then, however the pieces fell, they would