That Inevitable Victorian Thing Read online




  DUTTON BOOKS

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, NY 10014

  Text copyright © 2017 by E. K. Johnston

  Lyrics from The Log Driver’s Waltz by Wade Hemsworth. Copyright © 2018. Reprinted with the permission of Simon and Schuster Canada. All rights reserved.

  Background art on page 150 copyright © 2017 by Melinda Kosztaczky / 123RF.com

  Train art on page 150 copyright © 2017 by vertyr / 123RF.com

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  CIP Data is available

  Ebook ISBN 9781101994573

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Jacket art/photo © 2017 by Elizabeth Traynor

  Jacket design by Elaine Damasco

  Version_1

  To Lesley Claire,

  and to Lesley Jill

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Preamble

  Part I Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Interlude

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Part II Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Interlude

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Interlude

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Preamble

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgements

  The Kensington System was a strict and elaborate set of rules designed by the Duchess of Kent and her attendant, Sir John Conroy, concerning the upbringing of the Duchess’s daughter, the future Queen Victoria I. The system was meant to render the young Princess Victoria powerless and dependent.

  It backfired spectacularly.

  Instead, Queen Victoria I emerged from the shadow of her mother and Sir John fiercely determined to shape her kingdom in her own way. While she agreed to marry Albert she remained very much in charge of her own affairs and pushed Parliament to consider progressive ideas.

  With Albert’s full support, she made her eldest child—not her eldest son—Victoria her heir, and instead of marrying her children into the royal houses of Europe, she looked farther afield. These marriages resulted in a stronger Empire and brought multiple ethnicities into the royal line. Queen Victoria II’s husband was a white British lord, but her grandchildren’s spouses were not, and neither were her siblings’.

  As more and more of Her Majesty’s subjects followed the Queen’s example, crossing borders and continents to combine traditions, religions, and genetics, the British Empire became the strong, cosmopolitan, multiracial mosaic we know today. *

  PREAMBLE

  Helena Marcus had not given much thought to her marriage. She was no princess, whose wedding could change the course of nations, and neither was she a creature of high society, confident that suitors might come knocking on her door, eager to make first impressions with the hope of being remembered as a mutually beneficial option after the Computer did its work at genetic matchmaking. Her parents were neither destitute nor disreputable, but rather quiet citizens of the Empire, and despite their professional accomplishments, they were, by and large, given privacy to continue their work.

  What Helena was, to her very bones, was practical. She gave no thought to her marriage because she knew her parents didn’t think she was ready, even though she would shortly come of age and make her debut in society. Amongst other things, this would earn her the privilege of logging into the –gnet, the Church and Crown–sponsored system—colloquially known as the Computer—that would read and store her genetic code with utmost confidentiality, unless she chose to make it searchable and request a match.

  Helena was under no illusion that her parents would support any match made that way just because the general public now accepted it as right and proper. Her faith in the Church of the Empire and its Computer was as steady as it had ever been, but her mother had argued early and often that no computer, however well programmed, could understand matters of the heart. Gabriel and Anna Marcus loved each other very dearly and had done so for the entirety of their relationship with near-perfect ignorance of and indifference to their genetic suitability. They would accept no lesser circumstance for their only daughter, as long as they had any say in the matter—which, Helena being as loyal as she was practical, they did.

  So, Helena held herself somewhat aloof from the simmering excitement of New London’s impending debut season. The small cohort of the sons and daughters of dons from the University Hospital where her father taught were lively and interesting, and she looked forward to dancing with them at their debut ball, but she had no particular attachment to any of them. None of them had ever made her pulse quicken. She did not save magazine articles about what colour gown complemented her particular white complexion. She did not think of DNA and a church nave decked in flowers. She did not daydream of rumpled sheets and lazy mornings. She did not make plans for a household in New London and how she might run it differently than her parents ran theirs.

  She did, on occasion, let her thoughts linger on August Callaghan, who almost certainly loved her.

  He had not said as much, of course. It had never seemed quite necessary to name aloud what they felt for each other.

  Helena had not seen August in months, not since the previous Thanksgiving, when she and her parents had last been up at their cottage on Lake Muskoka. Helena and August might have had a summer friendship only—as so many cottagers’ children did—but their parents were also friendly, and when August’s father had business in New London, it was with the Marcuses that he stayed, strengthening the bond between the two families.

  Strengthened into what, Helena was not exactly sure, but August seemed to know, and she was willing to wait until he spoke before she clarified her own feelings. She was very fond of him, and the futures she allowed herself to imagine as his wife were always good ones. She thought that if she were patient, her parents might see that as a sign of maturity and be less likely to quash any proposal, simply because it was the first she received. She would be careful and deliberate with her debut season, avoid the glamour and giddiness as much as she could, and then, when it was all over, and she was legally an adult by the standards of the Empire, she would talk to her parents about August, and to August a
bout the future.

  MARGARET MISSED her sisters but, aside from that, had no regrets about her decision. She was sure that Anne and Katherine were still moping, but she had promised to write to them and recount every detail of her summer, and that had given her some peace. Well, also their father had planned an extended trip to Scotland for the girls to distract them from the fact that their parents and oldest sister had left them behind. Margaret expected they would have more fun there in any case, as both of them were too young to really enjoy the sort of parties, dinners, teas, and galas her own summer was sure to consist of. It was the right sort of freedom for an eighteen-year-old, but not at all for those at twelve and ten.

  She ran her fingers through her hair, or tried to, anyway. They got stuck in the curly dark mass almost immediately, but that was a sort of freedom, too. At home, her hair was usually straightened and then twisted neatly behind her head. If she had an appearance to make, her hair was tucked away entirely, so that she could wear the traditional wig.

  “We are not ashamed of it,” her mother would say, her own wig so much a feature on her head that Margaret was hard pressed to recall what her mother’s hair actually looked like. Mother and daughter were similar in appearance—brown skin, epicanthal fold, freckles that could not be concealed without an unseemly amount of foundation—and so their hair was probably similar, too. “It is only important that we look neat and contained.”

  Her father, who felt his straight hair and white face precluded him from such discussions, never said anything, though Margaret could guess that he didn’t like that his wife and daughters still felt they had to conceal their appearance. It had been with his encouragement that Margaret wore her natural hair on this excursion. She had suggested it a bit hesitantly, unsure of the reaction, but her mother had quickly warmed to the idea as well. No one, her mother pointed out, had ever seen her like this. There were no photographs, no records anywhere. Generations of tradition—and the unrelenting attendance of the Windsor Guard—effectively kept photographers at bay where royal privacy was concerned. It was hoped that anyone who thought her face looked slightly familiar would see the halo of her hair and understated dress and dismiss their suspicions, cleverly turning misconception to personal advantage. Margaret’s security detail was not happy, but there wasn’t anything they could do besides make their preparations.

  Margaret’s own preparations had been no less intense. She had studied the families of the Toronto social scene as well as those from Cornwall, which was where she was pretending to be from, constructing an identity to go along with her disguise. She had also toyed with the idea of modifying the way she spoke, but realized that would be a great deal of effort considering that most Canadians couldn’t geographically source British accents the way she could.

  And, of course, there was the corset.

  “Your posture is better, if nothing else,” the Archbishop had said as he sipped the tea that Margaret poured for him. He had made no attempt at all to conceal his amusement as he watched her practice.

  “I can feel my kidneys blending,” she had replied, still holding the pose—though, to be perfectly honest, it wasn’t that bad.

  Modern corsets were designed to have all the style of antiquity, but fewer of the medical shortcomings; and Margaret’s was as high-tech as they came. The programmable threads used to stitch the seams would loosen her laces if she became short of breath, and the flexible material allowed her to sit with only minor discomfort. She couldn’t run a marathon in it, but she could eat and dance and sit for tea without any problems.

  That said, she was happy not to be wearing one now. The train was comfortable enough, but she was stiff from sitting, and a corset would only make that worse. There would be plenty of time for all of that sort of thing when she arrived in Toronto and the debut festivities began.

  Outside her window, the Canadian landscape sped by: green and beautiful and, someday, hers.

  AUGUST LOOKED at the column of numbers and sighed. He was going to get caught. It was only a matter of time. And his family—one of the most prominent Irish–Hong Kong Chinese lineages in Canada—would be put at risk. Still, he could use what little manoeuvrability he had to cover for the family and company, even if there was no way he could see to save himself. Ever since he had come of age and his father entrusted to his oversight the shipping portions of the family enterprise, he had been determined to prove worthy of his father’s confidence. Now August was in over his head and he had no idea who he could turn to.

  It had begun simply enough, as he suspected these things always did. Callaghan lumber ships in the Great Lakes had fallen prey to pirates, though the fleet did not stray from Canadian territorial waters, and August had no idea how to protect them. And protecting them was his job, a job his father had given to him in a moment of pride and confidence it now pained August to recall.

  Nearing his wit’s end at a meeting in Toronto, he had encountered a woman who promised him she could guarantee his ships’ protection, for a fee. That was when his stupidity overcame him. He paid her, gladly. The woman was a pirate herself, of course, sailing under the familiar banner of a band of privateers that called Port Cleaveland home. And she did protect his ships, using her corsairs to harry anyone who might have thought him a good target. Only after it was too late did he realize that she had probably been attacking him herself before he started paying her, and if he stopped, she would certainly resume.

  It was a neat trap, and he was stuck in it. The payments were still manageable, at least. He had set it up so that a portion of his own wage went into a “discretionary fund.” The last thing he wanted to do was implicate the entire family in his descent. If anyone noticed, they would think he was only establishing his own investments, a clever move for a young man who had inherited everything, if he wanted to prove himself.

  But August knew. He was ashamed of it and he had no idea how he would extricate himself from the situation. And extricate himself he must—not simply to preserve family honour and his father’s good opinion, but because this was the summer that Helena Marcus would come of age, and the summer when, at last, they could talk seriously about their intent to marry. He couldn’t bring her into this. He wouldn’t. It wasn’t safe, for starters, and it was also illegal.

  He deleted the spreadsheet file from his data pad and put it down on his desk, harder than was necessary. He wanted to put his head in his hands and moan, but that would attract the attention of his sister or his valet, and he wasn’t sure which of the two would be worse. He had to go and pack. He was already behind schedule, and if anyone asked him why, he wouldn’t be able to give an answer. He took several deep breaths, the way his mother had done before she scolded him when he was a child, and forced his anxiety to the side. He had to be under control, and he would be. Too many people relied on him for it to be otherwise.

  For all of his twenty years, August Callaghan had been told that he had everything, and now, just when his bright future should be dawning, he stood to lose it.

  VICTORIA-ELIZABETH, QUEEN of England and ruler of an Empire on which the sun never set, made sure her wig was properly anchored, took her husband’s proffered arm, and made her exit from the train.

  PART I

  All things bright and beautiful,

  All creatures great and small.

  All things wise and wonderful,

  The Lord God made them all.

  —CECIL F. ALEXANDER, 1848

  Welcome, HENRY CALLAGHAN.

  Your DNA has been uploaded and will be kept in strictest confidence by the Church of the Empire. Your profile has been auto-filled and is ready for your addenda, as necessary. You may also edit your geographical matrix to ensure your matches are local. In the meantime, the features have been preset to encompass the entire Empire.

  DO YOU WISH TO ENTER CHAT?

  YES

  NO

  CHAPTER
/>
  1

  Helena was not precisely waiting for the mail –bot when it arrived, but she did happen to be standing closest to the kitchen door when it did, and thus it was that she was able to rescue the fine white envelope with its pretty hand-set calligraphy before the housekeeper managed to see it. That it was an invitation was clear enough, and it was addressed to her rather than to her mother or father, so Helena knew it must be somehow related to her debut. She had received no invitations yet and was not terribly upset at the fact. If she received no invitations, then she would not be obliged to attend any of the parties aside from her debut ball at the University where she would simply fade into the background as the other New London debuts took centre stage. Or so she hoped.

  “Miss Helena, either stir that pot or get out of my way,” said Beth, who cooked in addition to managing the house. Most families of Helena’s wealth employed a cook as well as a housekeeper, but Helena’s mother was far too frugal to require both, and Beth took great pride in complete control of the household. This often extended to minding Helena, who liked making messes in the kitchen, and didn’t consider herself above dusting if it was required of her.

  “Sorry, Beth,” Helena said, relinquishing the spoon. She slid the letter into the pocket of her trousers. “I’ll take the mail to Mother, if you don’t mind.”

  “I’ve only the onions left, and we both know what that will do to your eyes. Go on, then,” Beth said fondly. She flourished the spoon to drive Helena away from the kitchen, and, laughing like a little girl, Helena went.

  In the safety of the hall, Helena paused to consider her options. She could hear Fanny, the upstairs maid, at work above her head, which meant she couldn’t go to the quiet of her own room. Her father would be home at any moment, which ruled out his study. That left only the parlour, where her mother already sat at her own correspondence. Helena would just have to pray her poker face held out.