Author’s Note: Well, I sat down to do a Sunday Scribbling for this story, too, as part of the pick-a-serial, and it got kind of… long.

I suppose there are parts where it could be broken up, but I like it all together, so here it is. I won’t apologize for it. 😛

Yes, I’m trying to be funny since the prompt was the apology. And, of course, I go to title it and can’t escape from hearing Nirvana’s “All Apologies.” Oops?


All Apologies

“I am sorry,” Violet said as she tried to settle on the bench, disconcerted by having him arrange the cushions for her. He’d taken all the ones from the other chairs and attempted to prop up her back and her feet, and she did not know how to react to his fussing.

Would it have been like this for her if her “husband” had been true and was at her side now? Would he do such things for her and care for her through the trials of this pregnancy, or would he have ignored it all and joined the others in the opinion that she should not rise from bed at all?

“Sorry?”

“Yes. I have to apologize for the behavior of my aunt and even my mother. I told you—I am not your responsibility, the child is not yours, and the burden does not belong to you. I would not ask you to… You do not have to marry me, no matter what they said, and do not think that we are alone here so that we may… court. That may be what my mother is trying to arrange, but it is not what I expect.”

He gave her a smile, adjusting a pillow for her back. “I know. You were quite clear, and I think it is more incumbent upon me to apologize, not you.”

“Why?”

He sat down in the chair across from her, rubbing at his left arm. “It was extremely foolish of me to come here thinking that I could ‘fix’ everything, to assume that I could find the man who had stolen my name and right every wrong, and then not think that everyone would expect that fix in my marriage to you. I went on and on about the situation that you were in without once thinking of what everyone would assume the obvious solution to be. Then when it was discussed, I did not behave as a gentleman should—more like a startled jackrabbit with extremely poor manners. I must have insulted you with my refusal, and that was not my intent.”

She shook her head. “Oh, no, I am not offended. A part of me is quite relieved.”

“And the other part of you?”

“Is terrified and thinks I should marry you just to save myself,” she admitted, and her hand flew to her mouth. Horrified, she felt her cheeks burn with shame, not sure why she’d been so foolish as to give voice to all that. It was not proper, and she had not wanted to tell him it.

“I cannot blame you for thinking that, though I doubt I qualify as any kind of salvation.” He looked down at his arm, and she shook her head.

“I think that you are allowing your injury to poison your mind towards yourself. You are not crippled, not as badly as some, and even with your difficulties, you are not useless. Do not think of yourself that way.”

He looked up at her. “You are so strong. How did he ever betray you like this?”

She lowered her head. “I don’t know.”

“I’m sorry,” he said, shaking his head. “I did not mean to make you feel ashamed. It was not meant as any kind of censure toward you. I find you quite admirable.”

“I’m not.”

“You are. Not so long ago, they would have condemned me as a coward,” he said, his hand on his arm. “The things I saw, the things I did… They… I am far more useless than you think.”

She sat up, putting her feet on the ground. “Shell-shock. You have shell-shock?”

“If you want to call it that. I think cowardice fits it better. Even my dreams terrify me.”

“I do not think that we are meant to go to war, to see and do the things that you have done. Why should it be such a thing that you are expected to be courageous about? We are told not to kill, are we not? So then why should we push for war? Why should we say that the people we send to fight in such conflicts should feel nothing when they are forced to take a life? That is the most illogical thing I have ever heard. Fighting for one’s country does not mean that one immediately becomes able to accept the death all around them as… nothing. Even if the enemy is trying to kill you, a part of you must be aware that they are a person. The men dying around you are human whether they are comrades or the aggressors. How is not feeling something for those lives lost right?”

“I think I am starting to understand why he would have taken this ruse with you as far as he did.”

She blinked. “What?”

“The man you thought you married, the one who stole my name, I do believe I see what he must have seen in you.”

She flushed. “Why—No. You are not attracted to me, not as he must have been to push for marriage even with the sort of deception that he was employing, and when I think of what he did… No, you are not like him. It is… You do not treat me like a flower.”

“A flower?”

She nodded, gesturing to the garden. “It may surprise you because of my current condition, but this is my work. This is where he met me, and he used to say my name suited me because I was so close to the flowers, always planting and pruning… There were times when I thought he saw me as some kind of… sprite or something.”

“Then I was wrong. He did not see you at all. Your name suggests something delicate, but you are are stronger than that, no flower to be crushed by the elements or by him. Your words express a greater comprehension of the world and things that no one else has even tried to speak of with me than I would have thought, and that is more valuable than he could have known.”

“I do not think it wise for you to flatter me.”

Mr. Winston frowned. “Forgive me. I did not mean to flirt or seem insincere.”

That, she thought, was the dangerous part. He was altogether too sincere, and after her poor choices before, she was afraid of what that might mean for her. “It—I am sorry. You had questions about him, and we have not spoken of it at all. That is my fault, having taken the conversation in the wrong direction. Please, ask me what you will about him and I will attempt to answer.”

Mr. Winston rose. “I think that I should go. I came in uninvited, and I have overstayed my welcome. Please excuse me.”

She thought of asking him to stay, but after all that had happened since he arrived this morning, she did not think it wise. “I am sorry. I should not have assumed—you are not unwelcome, though has been quite awkward since my aunt voiced her opinion, and that will hang over us for some time, I think.”

He nodded. “Yes, I imagine that there will be no avoiding the knowledge that nearly everyone expects to marry. Perhaps we should continue our discussions through correspondence from now on.”

“You are leaving?”

“I do not know. It might be best.”

“For you. You can leave and be free of all entanglements and gossip, and you are not pregnant and abandoned, and if you never find the man who stole your name, your life will be little altered, but mine will never be what it was. I should have more sympathy for you after the things we spoke of, because of the war, but this—this is cowardice on your part, and I will not apologize for thinking that.”

He met her gaze, and she rather thought she understood some of the horrors of shell-shock in the darkness that he betrayed in the look. “You are very bold.”

“I have already fallen about as far as I can. My reputation is gone. I cannot get it back, so why should I stick to things that decorum demands? I shall be talked about whether I am good or I am bad, and though I made a poor choice, I thought I had done the right thing. I should be married now. That’s what I thought I was until your letter. Now I am not. I am pregnant, and it has been a difficult pregnancy by anyone’s standards. You say I am strong when all of these things terrify me, and I am not because I want to hate you for suggesting that you go and leave me alone again.”

He came over and sat down next to her. “No one has given you a chance to express your true feelings over any of this, have they? All the fear and anger… You have it all inside you still.”

She lowered her head. “I couldn’t cry when they expected me to weep—when he left—and I am not sure I want to cry now, but I never know what I feel anymore. Between the baby and this whole disaster, I have become completely lost.”

He drew her close to him, letting her rest against his shoulder, and despite the impropriety of the moment, she did not pull away from him. She couldn’t.

“I’m sorry. I do not envy you that at all. I felt that way all through the war, and even now that it is over… There seems to be no place for us veterans—none for cowards or cripples, not even in our own homes. Why would anyone steal my name when my life is not hardly worth living?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know why he did this to either of us.”

Robbie—the inappropriate name fit the inappropriate situation—took her hand, covering it with his bad one. “I swear I will not make you feel alone again.”


Author’s Note: The whole pick-a-serial deal will continue until at least Tuesday, which is when I’d like to have the new look to the site complete, but we’ll see how that goes. It may take longer.

Meanwhile, there’s more of each story again today.


A Friendlier Sort of Meddling

Violet was relieved to have their conversation come to some sort of an end before her aunt returned. She was not as hungry as she had said she was, but she did not think that she or Mr. Winston—Robbie—could stand Beatrice’s presence for a moment longer. She had not wanted to discuss the idea of marriage around anyone else—it was not the sort of thing that should be discussed in public until it had been settled between the couple, and she did not think that either of them was ready for that conversation when her aunt had forced it upon them. Violet had said what she must, thought there was a part deep within her that was frightened by her own words, wanting to say she had been wrong, repent of all of them and beg him to marry her and restore all she’d lost when her “husband” proved false.

She turned her hand in circles over her stomach. She did not need to be rescued. She did not deserve to be rescued. She had made a poor choice, and like dozens of other women who’d made similar ones, she had to accept the consequences, not expect some random stranger to fix them all for her. Marriage was not the solution that everyone would claim it to be. He had referenced his own finances more than once, and each time, he had spoken of his uncomfortable position—having no real income of his own. He was not in a state to provide for a family. That alone should caution anyone against the idea of them marrying.

“Well, it would seem we are once more the subjects of the most obnoxious and in some cases, rather vile, gossip,” her mother said, walking into the room. She removed her hat and crossed to the other chair. “I do think I should avoid the marketplace again. I cannot be anything but glad that Beatrice was not with me. She would be livid and yet… I do not know if she would disagree with the sentiment that some of the nicer ones expressed.”

Violet sighed. She knew what her mother was trying not to say, but she didn’t need to avoid it. Aunt Beatrice had already made things awkward. “If you refer to her idea that we should marry, she has already been quite vocal about it. It was rather humiliating. I know my reputation will never be the same, but it is not right for anyone to try and force that on either of us.”

“Of course not,” her mother said. “I do apologize—we can hardly assume that you would be willing or even able to marry Violet and accept the child as yours. No, no, my sister presumes too much, and I would hate to do the same.”

“Thank you, Mother.”

Mr. Winston nodded to her. “Yes, I do appreciate your forbearance. I had not considered that when I came, though it was foolish of me not to. I did not—I know it must seem a simple solution to everyone else, but for us, it is not.”

Violet smiled at him. She did like his manners and way of speaking. They were not the same as the man she’d married, though that was for the best. If he were charming, she’d be a fool all over again. She did not want or need that. “No, it is not.”

“I do think that we could find some way to make such an arrangement work, if it were necessary,” he said, coughing as he did, not looking at her. “Still, if we were to marry, I would hope that it was not because of any pressure brought to bear on us, but rather because of… mutual affection. I would hope that any marriage I entered into would have that, and unfortunately, we are strangers.”

“You could change that.”

“Mother!”

Robbie—for when he smiled, the name did suit him—laughed. “I expect there is no way to avoid such a change, since we will learn more of each other as we try to resolve this situation for the best and to the benefit of all of us. I need to ask you more about the man you married—when you feel up to it, of course.”

“Perhaps, if the weather holds, you might go out to the garden. There is a bench where Violet can sit, and another chair as well.”

“Mother—”

“I assume you wish to go over those details in private, and the garden is the best compromise, as you well know. That way your aunt can see you from the window and know you are not being inappropriate, but she does not have to hear, as you would no doubt prefer it.”

“Yes,” Violet said, letting out a breath. She did not want to discuss anything to do with her “husband,” but if she had to, she’d rather do it where she did not have to see her aunt scowling at her with every word she spoke. Perhaps if she did speak of things in front of Beatrice, she’d know what she missed, what she should have seen in Winston’s actions, but she did not want to know. She would only torment herself with every little moment where she should have chosen differently, and that she did not need. She would not do that to herself.

“Won’t your aunt be mad that you did not eat the food you sent her for?”

“My sister should have known that was a ruse,” Violet’s mother said, laughing as she rose. “I’ll let you see Violet to the garden, Mr. Winston.”

“Thank you, Mrs. Carpenter.”

She stopped in the doorway, giving him a rather pointed smile, and Violet tried not to grimace. “I should hope that soon we will be thanking you.”


Author’s Note: I find this one a bit of an interesting conundrum. That makes it kind of fun, if rather awkward for everyone concerned.

It makes for an interesting debate over which serial should stay on the site, too.


Conflicting Opinions

“I expect that he will send for an expert, and they must look for this man as a forger. Perhaps he is already known for that crime,” Violet said, rubbing at her back and wishing that her child was not as disagreeable as its father. She should like to have a few moments of peace. She did not need to be plagued constantly with this sort of pain. She had made a horrible mistake, and she had paid for it. This seemed excessive, despite what she’d told the true Mr. Winston yesterday.

“An expert? To contest the license and shame you in front of everyone. Oh, yes, girl, that is a fine idea indeed,” Beatrice said, and Violet sighed.

“It will soon be known everywhere that my marriage was not legitimate. I did not know any better, and I do regret how this has happened, but please do not act as though I shall be stoned the moment that it is known to all. I did not—I believed I was married and acted in good faith.”

“Your niece is the victim here, and I do not think she should be made to feel as though she was the one who did wrong. She did not know that he was not who he said he was, did not know that he was marrying her under a false name and therefore invalidating the marriage, so she is not at fault in any way. If you wish to censure her for trusting the wrong person, I suppose that is your prerogative, but I think it is unjust and unwise. She is suffering enough already.”

Violet forced a smile. “You have, I fear, missed my aunt’s point entirely, sir. I do believe she thinks that you should do the ‘honorable’ thing and marry me because of this whole misunderstanding. That way the child and I are not exposed to the harsh realities of an unwed mother and fatherless child.”

Winston stilled. He blinked, and she had to sit up before he had some kind of fit. “Please understand that I do not expect you to do any such thing. It was not you who seduced me, and it is I who must face the consequences of my actions. True, the child will be punished, and I cannot like it, but it is not to be covered over by some hasty decision made by your sense of obligation or anyone’s opinion. I did believe the man I met was single and honorable. I married him too soon, and it may well be my ruin, but I did have every reason to believe the marriage was valid at the time when I entered into it. That is what I must cling to whatever else may come.”

He swallowed. “It is an admirable sentiment, but I do not know that I—”

“If you asked me now, I would refuse you. Your conscience may be quite clear on the matter.”

“Violet!”

She shook her head. “I am sorry, Aunt Beatrice, but having married once disastrously, I cannot think of doing so again. Mr. Winston is a stranger to me, more so than the last one, and while all may assume it is his duty to pick up the pieces of my honor, it is not. I cannot go through with a second marriage, even if the first was never real.”

“Think of the child.”

“I am not dismissing the effect it will have on my child, but I cannot think that it is somehow better to force both of us into a marriage that should sour and is made only of obligation. Forcing Mr. Winston to accept a child that was sired by a man who stole his name is not any more right than what some ignorant fools would say about the baby. If the imposter was to be found, it would be his duty to marry me properly and claim his child as his own, but I confess, I do not want that, either. I would rather be unmarried and bearing a child than have such a man back in my life as I can see only more hurt down that path. There are decent men who can overlook a woman having had a child previously, and perhaps one of them might come into our lives later. You do not know that it will not happen, and I think that we should not discuss the matter further. I have stated my opinion, and you will not change it. I cannot agree to marry Mr. Winston even if he should ask, and he has not asked.”

He rose, rubbing a hand over his left arm, shaking his head. “I admit that I did not give much consideration to the idea of… presenting myself in the stead of the man who had betrayed you. I have little more than a name to offer, and it is not a good one, not now.”

Beatrice snorted. “A name. It would seem all this nonsense is about a name anyway.”

“I think it is a great deal more than that,” he said, turning around to face her. “It is a reputation and honor and far more than that. I consider what he did to your niece a crime even if no one else does. True, they will only put him in prison if he managed to steal something they consider valuable with his forgery, but in my opinion, he stole a great deal without ever touching any money. I can see why your niece would not want me for a husband, and there are more reasons for that than the ones that she voiced. To be honest, I do believe my father would forbid the match, and I am a cripple with no independent means. Would you prefer that for her?”

Violet looked at his arm, frowning. She’d seen him use it, though he had told her it was next to useless. She did not remember him calling himself a cripple at any time previous, though. Perhaps it hurt his pride too much to admit the extent of his weakness or to accept that word as applying to him.

Beatrice grunted, sitting down. “What good would it do to prove the license a forgery? You get your reputation back at the cost of hers, and whatever you might be, that is not just, either.”

“I do not know. I had intended to ask if he had created debts in my name that must be repaid, and if so, I needed to deal with them. I had not expected the innkeeper to confront me with that signature that is so like my own. I know I was not the one who did it, but it is possible that no one else will see it that way. That paper might be, in some way, binding if it is not proved a forgery.”

Violet frowned. “How can that be? You were over fighting in the war at the time, weren’t you?”

He shook his head. “I’d been invalided out by the date on this paper. I didn’t think that it was the case, but I must have been in that hospital for longer than I thought. It may be possible to prove I was there or in the private clinic my father had me moved to, but I do not know yet.”

Beatrice’s mouth set in a grim line. “In that case, I say you marry her anyway.”


Author’s Note: After yesterday’s day off from posting new bits to the possible serials, (I was feeling rather down and fighting writer’s block on all my projects. It was snowing, and it felt like a day to do… nothing. That’s not what I ended up doing, of course,) I used Three Word Wednesday‘s prompts to get me back on track with both of them.

Today there’s little trace of the blizzard except the lingering snow, but there’s fic, so I suppose that’s an improvement.

Detailed information on the whole pick a serial idea here. Three words for today: bask, grief, and raise.


A Matter of Signature

“Ah, there you are, Mr. Winston. I was hoping to catch you before you left, since I had a few things to ask before you departed for the day.”

Robert turned away from the wall, guilty at having been caught staring at the small shrine dedicated to a son that must have died in the same war he’d survived. He did not know how to address the innkeeper, not now. He should say something, but words failed him where the war was concerned. He could not talk of its horrors or the rare bright moments with his comrades. He thought they were all dead now, him having escaped that fate because of his arm and being shipped home early.

He did not deserve to be standing here, and there was nothing he could say in the face of this family’s obvious grief.

“Oh. I—I must be mistaken. You can’t be Mr. Winston.”

“I am, actually,” Robert said. He studied the innkeeper, wondering if the name alone had caused the man to think he was the one who had come before, the one who’d impersonated him. He’d seen the photograph. They did share a bit of a likeness. “I’m sure that must be confusing.”

“More than a little, sir,” the innkeeper said. He swallowed, his hand going to his cuffs, fiddling with them as he grew more nervous. “You see, I had been on the verge of asking the impertinent question of why you were not staying with your wife and her family now that you’d returned, but I am confused. You are Robert Winston? The third? And yet… you can’t be. I met the fellow, and you are not him. Close, perhaps, but not close enough.”

Robert grimaced. “I am, in fact, the man who was born Robert Winston the third. It would seem that someone else has taken my name and made a mockery of it and Mrs. Winston in the process. I am here to do what I can about that situation.”

“Dear heaven,” the innkeeper said, shaking his head. “Oh, that poor girl. Never had no father, and now you say her husband’s done her wrong? And her with child, too. Such a terrible thing. Who could do something like that?”

“I’ve no idea, but I hope to find him.”

The innkeeper nodded. “Of course, of course. You must, if what you’re saying is true.”

“I know that you met the other Winston first and might be inclined to assume that I am the liar, but I can assure you that it has always been my name, and if you do not believe me, perhaps I should have my commanding officer speak to it, since I was overseas fighting while this blackguard stole my name and betrayed you all.”

“That’s not all he stole, sir.”

Robert frowned, thinking the man spoke of Mrs. Winston’s condition, but the innkeeper moved to the desk, lifting out his registry. “You had better see this. I was not present when you came in, but when my clerk told me someone had checked in, I looked and made the assumption I did.”

“I did use my full name, yes, and that would lead to some confusion—”

The innkeeper raised the book to where it was almost right in Robert’s face. “This is your signature last night. Here, though, is the one from before.”

Robert found himself staring at the page. That signature was the same as his. An exact copy. He didn’t understand. He would have sworn he’d never met the man, but how could that bastard have known the precise way he signed his name? It only looked that way when he used the whole thing, included “the third,” so how did the man know? How had he known that when he came here? Even his letters to Mrs. Winston had not included that. He did not sign that way unless he had to, and he’d thought that this stay was one such occasion, given that his imposter had likely not used the whole name. He was wrong.

That looked like he had signed it.

“Are they all like this? Did he sign it like this every time he checked in or out?”

“Yes, sir.”

Robert shook his head. “I don’t understand. It would seem he’s an expert forger, too, but how did he get hold of my signature to forge? I don’t write my name like that often. Hardly at all, in fact.”

“I cannot tell you, sir.”

“I have to go. Please excuse me,” Robert said, turning away from the accusing mark on the line and heading toward the door. He pushed it open with his good arm, needing to see Mrs. Winston as soon as he could. This was an alarming prospect at best. He’d need to wire back to his father and have a handwriting expert check, but those signatures looked so alike that he thought he’d have a hard time proving that they weren’t his.

He turned at the corner, going down the block toward the quiet house he’d visited the day before. This town was small, rather picturesque, all things considered, and the day was fine, the sort of spring that made one want to bask in the fine weather and surroundings, but he could ill-afford that just now. He had a terrible suspicion about what he’d see when he asked Mrs. Winston for a certain document, and it was going to complicate their situation a great deal.

He hurried up the steps, knocking on the door, impatience getting the better of him. The maid opened it, and he almost shoved her out of the way, as agitated as he was.

“You are here rather early, Mr. Winston. I fear we are not quite in a state to receive guests,” Mrs. Winston said, her hand on the rail as another woman assisted her down the stairs. “You do not look well, either. Please, sit down in the parlor. I will be along shortly.”

“Before I do—Were you the one to retain your marriage license? Do you have it?”

“I do, yes. Winston—that is to say, the man I knew as Winston—left it behind when he left. Why is the matter so urgent that it causes you this kind of distress?”

He ran a hand through his hair. “Do you have pen and paper that I might use?”

“Of course, but you are confusing me a great deal at the moment,” she said, her hand on her back as she crossed toward him. “Will you not explain what you mean by all this? You’re going to make my aunt so cross she’ll bar you from the house.”

“Violet, kindly do not speak for me. That is not your place.”

Robert took the younger woman’s arm, helping her the rest of the way into the parlor, to the couch she had used the day before. She gave him a slight smile as she sat, trying to make herself comfortable. He imagined that was rather difficult for her these days, as large as her stomach had grown. “Thank you. The license is—Oh. Aunt Beatrice has got your paper.”

He accepted the items, aware that the older woman was frowning at him. He set them upon the table and scrawled his name to the page. Done, he passed it to Mrs. Winston. “Does that look familiar?”

“That is—I fear you must get the license, Aunt Beatrice—but that looks like the way Winston signed everything, including the few notes we exchanged during our courtship. He did tell me he preferred Winston as the name he wanted me to call him, but that was the way all his letters looked before. I had thought perhaps your way of signing it was intentional, a means of furthering the lie I thought it was at first.”

Robert shook his head. “In most of my correspondence, I sign my letters the way I did the ones I wrote to you. For bank drafts and other more important documents, I sign with my full name, as you see it there.”

Her aunt gave him the paper, and he sighed as he saw it. “Damn.”

“Mr. Winston!”

“I beg your pardon,” he said, taking the paper back from Mrs. Winston and holding both of them out to her aunt. “Still, I fear you must agree that it looks very much like I signed that license.”

“So it does,” the older woman agreed. “What are you going to do about it, then?”


Author’s Note: I am trying Carry on Tuesday‘s prompt this time, for both possible serials again. I would have had a hard time resisting a line from a favorite movie of mine, especially with the decorations we have to go with it, so I didn’t resist.

The prompt was “After all, tomorrow is another day” from Gone with the Wind.

I know I’m repeating myself a bit, but this is one of the possible serials that I’m considering keeping on site. People can pick one or both, and if they want more information, they can look here.


Continuing On

The bright light outside her window told Violet that today had at last become tomorrow, and she had lived to see another day. She tried to smile at that, but she struggled to manage it, not wanting to think about the things that had kept her from sleep for most of the night. She could feel her body protesting already, and the idea of getting out of her bed made those protests even louder. She did not want to move, but she knew that she could not remain in bed all day, either.

The door opened, and she frowned as the maid entered, carrying a tray loaded up with more food than she’d been able to eat in months. Her stomach rolled at the sight—or perhaps the smell—of it. She shook her head, but the maid did not stop.

“Your mother said you needed to eat all of this,” Harriet said, putting it down in front of her. Violet grimaced, trying not to bump it with the mound that her stomach had become. That was unfair. They’d started doing that to her two months ago, and she almost hated them for it. She should be able to decide when she got up, not having that taken out of her hands unless she ate her entire meal.

She didn’t care how much she was supposed to be feeding the child. She could not eat, not with this constant nausea.

“Please, Harriet, I do not have—”

“If you don’t, I’m not supposed to let Mr. Winston in, and since you are determined to see him…”

“This is insufferable. I should demand that he marry me just so that this nonsense stops. I should be able to say how much I eat and when I eat,” Violet said. “I am pregnant, not a child, and while this child is very disagreeable, that does not mean that I should be treated like one.”

Harriet lowered her head. “It’s not my place to argue with any of you.”

“Then take the tray away and help me dress,” Violet told her. She did not like putting the maid in an untenable position, but she had little patience for what her family had started doing to her. She did not want to fight with them, but she was not able to tolerate this behavior, either.

“Do not ask her to go against your mother’s wishes or mine,” her aunt advised, walking into the room. She waved Harriet out with her hand, and the maid bobbed before taking her leave. Her aunt shook her head, coming closer to the bed. “It is not fair to her, nor is it wise for you. You seem unwilling to give your health or your child what it needs.”

Violet studied her aunt. Beatrice was the one they all feared, the disciplinarian, the queen of this house. Violet’s friends had told her that was because she was a spinster, a bitter woman that no man wanted, that had twisted Beatrice into a cold shrew.

Violet had been wanted. She didn’t know that it was any better. She was rather bitter now, wasn’t she? She didn’t know that her mood had been close to happy since the day her disbelief faded—a day far too close to when he left—and she knew that he was never coming back.

“What would you do? If it was you? If you were the one lied to and abandoned and pregnant?”

“Your mother managed well without your father. It can be done, though most would advise you to find another and marry quickly.”

“I didn’t ask that. I know what is expected of me. I asked you what you would do. You won’t tell me because you would be just as stubborn and willful as I have been.”

Her aunt sighed, sitting down on the side of the bed. “It is true that you are more like me than you should be. Where a proper, dutiful girl should have been, you were not.”

Violet frowned. “I am not so irredeemable as that. You make me sound a terror or someone who defied all social convention. I did not. I stayed home, I got married—I thought I did, at least—and now I am to be a mother. What is so wrong about that? Well, other than the fact that the man I married used a false name and is nowhere to be found?”

“Is that not enough?”

“I know you never liked him,” Violet said, trying to shift the tray off her stomach, “but he was not… he never mistreated me before he left. He gave me no reason to think that he was lying or unfaithful. I had no idea that he had stolen another man’s name and was… a criminal.”

“I do not think most would call what he did criminal. Wrong, but not criminal.”

Violet sighed. That was the unfortunate thing about her situation. Not many people would care what that man had done to her or think that he could be punished at all. She did not think it was right, but there was little she could do about it.

Her aunt lifted the tray, setting it to the side. “The true answer to your question, my dear, is that I would carry on. I have before, and I would now. Day by day, that is what we do. We continue on.”

Violet nodded. “Help me downstairs, please. I have much to do today.”


Author’s Note: I was dwelling a bit on the word for Sunday Scribblings, sharp, thinking I could use it for both of my possible serials. I thought it fit rather well with each of them, but perhaps more so with the fantasy than this historical fiction. It still works, though.

Since the website’s remodel is not yet complete, there’s still time for people to pick one or both of these serials as a permanent one on the site. There’s more information here.


Troubled Consciences

Robert kept the woman braced against him, wishing that he had been able to make their first meeting easier, if only for her sake. He had seen some of what he admired so much about her letters—a frankness and forthrightness as well as a strength that surprised him under her present circumstances. She should be in bed, that seemed undeniable, but she had been able to meet him and had spoken with him with candor, not shying away from the unpleasant or awkwardness of their conversation. She had been all sorts of things that he thought should serve her well and see her through her current crisis. If he had thought he needed to come in as some sort of hero in a novel, rescuing a damsel in distress, he would have no one to rescue.

True, her circumstances were far from ideal, but she seemed to have all of that under control at present, and that control was considerable from someone so small—well, that stomach of hers was far from small—but overall she was rather petite. Her scent matched her name, like a gentle summer breeze carrying the hint of a garden, of violets and more, and he wondered if she’d done that on purpose.

“I know I asked you before, but do you need a doctor?”

She grimaced. “Please do not say that so loudly. My mother would take you up upon it in an instant, and I do not want to be fussed over further. It is true that I feel poorly, but I have ever since my condition presented itself. It is as if it cannot stand acting as though it were not my conscience, stabbing me over with many sharp pains.”

He looked at her. “I don’t understand. The man did present himself as single and honorable, and he did marry you. What have you done that is so terrible?”

“I was a fool, wasn’t I?” She asked, opening her door. She pushed it open and hesitated in the doorway. “Thank you very much for your assistance. I do believe I shall make it to my bed alone, and I would—that is—I do not feel comfortable letting you into my bedroom, even if I cannot possibly be… Well, I am not appealing in this state, nor would I think that you—oh, heaven. Listen to me being so ridiculous.”

“I do not know that you can consider it ridiculous. You know very little of me, and I do believe I may have misspoken when I said that you are… That is, he did use my name, and there might be others who would think that… entitled them to something from you.”

She nodded, reaching to place a hand on her back. “I do hope you maintain that opinion. I do not want to create any difficulties between us—and I rather hope there is something that can be done if you do find Winston. I did not want to hear of him doing this to any other woman. Imagine if he went about ‘marrying’ all of them with a false name. That is… horrible.”

“He should be the one getting the sharp pains.”

“I doubt his conscience troubles him any.”

Robert nodded. Any man that could steal another’s name and use it to defraud everyone, including one woman to the point of marriage, to impregnating her and abandoning her, that sort of man could not have a conscience. If he had, he would never have done any of it. “You are right.”

“I wish I had not been so… blind. That I had seen what he was and not fallen for his charm. He seemed so sweet—not cunning or cruel—but how can he not have been all those things?”

“I do not know,” Robert told her. He did not think that he could explain it as anything other than a malicious act. “There is some possibility that this Winston of yours was genuinely in love with you, that he did not intend to leave you, but that seems unlikely.”

She closed her eyes. “That is what cuts the deepest, you know. It is not so much that I am in this condition or that I have been betrayed, but the idea that he came here always intending to do so… That I let myself be a part of that, that I was so stupid and foolish, that I lost all practical sense…”

Robert wished that he had some kind of comfort to give her, but he could summon no words of wisdom, could find nothing to help her. Her pain was raw and visible, all over her face and her posture, and he was more helpless now than he had been when he was dragged to the field hospital. “I think you should lie down now. That was the idea behind getting you up these stairs after all.”

She looked at him. “Yes, of course it was. Thank you again.”

He forced a smile, backing away so that she could take those final steps by herself. “I… I have no right to ask this, but did… did you love him?”

She stopped, leaning against the bedpost. “I thought I did. It is strange how quickly love can sour under the circumstances. Had he stayed, perhaps the illusion would have lasted longer. Since he left me, it has faded into nothing more than another one of my many pains. Time, I think, will continue to dull that one, though I fear I cannot ever be allowed to forget.”

The child would be a living reminder of everything when it came. Robert nodded. “I am sorry.”

“For what? None of this was your doing.”

“I keep thinking there was a reason why he used my name among all of those that he could have chosen, and if that is true, then I must in some way be responsible for it. Even just the use of my name in such a way…”

“You are not him. You proved that when you walked in the door.”

He smiled at her words, but he could not take comfort in them. She had her pains, and he had his. He would not be able to deny the way he felt any more than she did, and he could not escape the feeling that nagged at him, the one that told him that he should have been able to prevent this somehow, that he could have spared her if only he had stopped this man before he got to her. He had tried to explain it, but the more that he thought about it, the more he thought that someone had done this to punish him, not her, and she was caught in the middle of a horrible game that she didn’t even know she was in. He should know, should be able to say who hated him that much, but he did not know.

He would find out, though. That was the only way to satisfy the sharp pangs of his conscience.


Author’s Note: So, this wasn’t quite how I expected this scene to go. It works. It’s just not what I thought it would be.

There’s still time to pick this serial as the one that stays. Get more information here.


First Impressions

“Violet, I do not think this is a good idea at all.”

“He sent a telegram to say he was coming. That means he could be here very soon, and I refuse to see him in my bedchamber or let anyone else do it for me. You know that it is not proper, nor could I trust anyone else to know the man better than I did. At least… that is…”

Violet felt herself flushing, and she could not believe she was doing it. Of course, when she remembered just how intimate her acquaintance with the man was—coupled with the lack of a legal marriage—she could not help but feel ashamed. She knew others had gone for a different morality, that “free love” was the banner call in some places, but she had been raised with all those values in her, and now to have them betrayed… She would have less guilty if she had chosen to do so, perhaps, for she would have reasoned her way past these ideals of her youth, but she had not. She had done it without intending to, and she felt all the more foolish for doing so—she had been tricked, and she did not think she should have been, no matter how many times she tried to convince herself that she could not have known Winston’s intentions.

She could find no evidence of his deceit prior to the moment he left, and even then, she didn’t know if he had meant to leave forever when he departed. Not all of his clothes had gone with him—she’d wondered for a bit if he was a victim of some sort of crime and that was why he had not come back—but her answer had been far from the one she expected when a letter finally came.

“Still, the doctor said you were to remain in bed. This is not in bed.”

“No, it is a fainting couch, but it shall have to do,” she said, not caring if her mother thought it was a poor choice. She’d been in her bed for long enough already, and her constant poor health had kept her from doing much at all during the pregnancy. The idea of staying in bed all the time held no appeal. She could not bear it a moment longer.

“I think you will make yourself sick again, and I do not want you to do it.”

“I will be careful, but I cannot possibly sit in bed all the time. I wish to meet him when he comes. After that, I shall lie down again. That I promise.”

Her mother folded her arms, snorting as she did. When her aunt came back from the market, she’d stand next to her with the same expression, both of them disapproving of Violet’s choice. She would not fight the two of them if it was not this important. “You do not know that he will come today.”

“I do not, that is true, but I will be prepared nonetheless. I will retire early if he does not present himself today.”

“I am worried about you.”

“I know you are.” Violet leaned back against the chair. “I am not unaware of my precarious situation. I have not been able to forget how much this pregnancy has affected me.”

“Then why will you not—”

“A visitor, ma’am.”

Her mother started at the maid’s words, but Violet was relieved. “Show them in, please, Harriet, and thank you.”

She ignored the look her mother sent her way, wondering if she should rise to greet their guest. She would have tried, she thought, if not for the first glimpse of him. Her stomach twisted, and she felt an ache inside her chest that made her still, trying to calm herself with slow, deliberate breaths. The initial shock over, she could see that he was not so much like Winston as she might have thought. This one was taller, thinner, and he moved with an awkwardness that Winston had not had. Everything about that man was smooth, honeyed and silk and so deceptive, but this one was a rather stiff sort of mess from his hair to his loose laces.

“Forgive me. I did not mean to startle you.”

“I… I should not have stared. I was simply lost in trying to find the differences between you and the man who used your name,” she said, putting her hand on her side. Her back had started to ache now, not one to be left out of the complaints. “You do have a resemblance, but your manner is not at all similar to his.”

The true Robert Winston nodded, and she pointed to the other chair, inviting him to sit. They had so many things to discuss, she knew, but she did not know how much longer she could stay here. “I imagine I am rather lackluster in comparison.”

“I think, in what little I have to judge your characters by, you are the better man, but I do not know you very well at all. You were willing to come, and that is more than can be said for him.”

The man across from her grimaced, reaching over to move his arm into his lap. “I would like to find the man who has done this to you—to both of us—and stop him from any further crimes, but I do not even know where to start.”

She shook her head. “I cannot tell you where he is. I only wrote because he left me almost seven months ago, and I discovered that I was… Well… I thought he should know, that it might bring him back or it might… end things between us once and for all, but he did not respond. You did.”

“Have you a good doctor? Is there anything you need at this time? I do not have much in the way of independent means—there is a certain problem with being the heir, one is rather forced to wait for that inheritance to be of much use to anyone—but I would offer all I have.”

She blinked. “Why? You do not know me. You do not have any reason to believe that I am telling the truth. I could have married some other man that abandoned me, one that never claimed to have your name.”

“Is that what you did?”

“No.”

“To most people, then, I suppose I would be considered the man responsible for your troubles. It was my name he used, after all, and I do assume your papers say you are married… to me, as it were. In principle, then, it is my duty.”

“I am not an obligation, nor was I trying to be when I wrote to him—to you. I do not want your money. I want—Oh, hell fire,” Violet cursed as the ache grew sharper. “I think I must lie down again. I swear this child is trying to kill me before it comes out.”

“I hope it does not succeed,” he told her, rising. “I do not dare lift you—my arm can be as good as useless half the time—but I can let you lean against me if you should like assistance. After we have settled you and you are feeling better, you may reach me at the inn. I think we have a great deal more to discuss.”

“Yes, indeed, we do.”


Author’s Note: At this point, I can only say poor Violet.

Well, that and that this, is part of the pick a serial (yes, you can pick both, details here,) so leave a comment in some way if you want more.


In a Delicate Condition

“Violet, Violet, please, open your eyes. Yes, that’s it, dearest. Oh, you had us all so worried,” her mother said, combing back hair from her face. She shook her head, her brow furrowed with all her anxiety. She hadn’t look liked this since Violet was a child—not since the day that she’d taken Violet aside to say that her father would never be coming home, that he was dead.

“I feel terrible. What happened? Did I… Is the baby—”

“You haven’t lost it yet, but the doctor said you came quite close,” her mother told her, her hand on her cheek. “I was so scared I’d lost you both there. You have been feverish for days. Ever since that letter came.”

Violet groaned. She put a hand to her head, wincing as she did. “Oh, Mother. If his words are true, if that photograph was him, then who did I marry? Whose child am I carrying? What kind of a man could I have thought I loved?”

“I do not know.” Her mother sat back, twisting her hands together. “Try not to think about that until you are better. You need to remain calm. I will go send for the doctor again, and we will get his opinion of what must be done now that you are awake.”

Violet closed her eyes. Her mother did not know what she was asking. How could Violet do anything but think? True, she felt as though she were dying, which should have been sufficient distraction, but she could not think about that without considering the reason why she was dying, and that all led back to the man she’d met, the man who’d charmed her and made her feel as though he loved her—the man she had loved until he deserted her and she started down a road of complete bitterness acerbated by her poor health all through the pregnancy. It was, she rather thought, too easy to hate a man who had gotten her in this state and abandoned her.

She turned toward the window, wishing she had the strength to go and look out it. She did not know when she would get it back. She was so tired, and her body refused to cooperate even with the slightest of movements.

“Why, Winston?” She felt tears sting her eyes, and she tried to fight against them. She hadn’t cried when he left her or when she realized her illness was pregnancy, but now she thought she might. She’d given that man everything, and now she learned she knew nothing of him. She didn’t know his name—he could not be Robert John Winston the third—and that cast every detail into doubt. Had he told her the truth even once in the time she’d known him?

She didn’t think that he had. She’d fallen in love with a lie. Everything about him was fabricated, and she’d thrown her heart and perhaps even her life away on someone that did not exist.

What was she going to do?

She didn’t know. She couldn’t be sure she was married, not after what he’d written. If that man had done it under a false name, that meant that it wasn’t legal, didn’t it? So she wasn’t married. That was hard to accept, but she would find a way somehow. She had to, just as she’d continued on after he left and despite the pregnancy. Life did not stop because of unpleasant facts or situations. Plenty of people faced worse than this every day. How many people had died in the great war? How many had died of the ‘flu?

She could survive this.

“Violet? Are you still awake?”

“Yes,” she said, though she’d like to be asleep. She’d like to escape from the questions and the emotions for a few minutes. “Can you bring me some paper? I think I had better write back to him now that I am somewhat recovered. It has been too long already.”

“I do not think you should do that until you are well—”

“No, I do not want to wait.” Violet did not think that she could wait. If her health continued to deteriorate—and it did seem to be—then she needed this matter settled as soon as possible. She knew her mother and aunt would raise the baby if it lived and something happened to her, but there were more things to consider about the future than just that.

She had to get everything put in order as soon as possible.


Author’s Note: More of the historical.

Got all the details about what I’m doing by putting bits of this and the other up here.


The Ladies and the Letter

“Violet? Look at me, daughter. What has come over you?”

“I shall be ill,” she said, sitting down with the letter in her hand, shaking her head in disbelief. She did not understand. Why would he do this to her? True, their courtship had been rather fast, advancing at such a pace as dismayed her mother and worried her aunt. Of course, her aunt assumed everyone was always after the pittance her father had left her as his only child, though only she considered that a sum of money worth squabbling over. She had never thought it so, and she didn’t think that Winston had, either. She did not think that was why he’d done this. He had more money of his own, didn’t he?

“What is it?” her mother asked, taking the letter from her. Her eyes searched the words, shaking her head as she did. “What an impossible cad. How can he pretend that he doesn’t know you? As far as I’m concerned, he knows you far too well.”

Violet put a hand over her stomach, trying to will it to be still. Between the child and the sickness that accompanied it, she had not been able to do much of late, forcing her to renew her efforts to locate her husband. He’d left her over six months ago, and she did not know that she would have cared so much had she not discovered the unpleasantness of her situation a few weeks later. The nausea that had woken her that morning had been a constant companion since, and she could not help feeling that it was to become much worse.

“Mother, please, there is some kind of… misunderstanding here.”

“Misunderstanding? How can you call it that? The man is saying that he doesn’t know you. He didn’t marry you. He is not going to take care of his child. He was only interested in one thing from you, and he got it. Now he’s done.”

Violet closed her eyes. “Why would any man go to such lengths to get such a thing from me when he could have had some other woman, a loose one, or paid for the pleasure? Marrying me seems excessive.”

“I applaud you for having the morals to insist on having that ring first, my dear, but it would seem that he was willing to go as far as he needed to ensure he got what he wanted, and now he is going to claim that this never happened.” Her mother gestured first to her stomach and then grabbed the framed portrait that sat on the table. “We must speak to the minister. If he was bribed, if he was not—”

“Mother! That was the man that christened me. Wasn’t he? I don’t know that we’ve been all that regular in our attendance at his services, but he has been here for many years. As far as I know, he is an honorable man who would not have participated in such a thing.”

Her mother sighed. “Someone is lying. That is undeniable. Whether that someone is the man you married, the one who married you, or someone else, I don’t know, but you can’t say that they’re not. Unless, of course, that someone is you.”

Violet put a hand on her back. “If I had perhaps succumbed to his charm without upholding my morality, I might have tried to lie about the wedding, but you were there. The whole town was. He must be lying. I will write back to him and make my feelings on this matter quite clear. I refuse to let him do this to me. If he has acted dishonorably, then I will confront him about it. He can… divorce me if he does not want to have responsibility for me or the child.”

“I cannot believe you said that.”

“I admit, the idea of a divorce is extremely unpleasant. I do not care for what that would make me, but it is not what it once was. I think I could bear it rather than be tied to him forever after he has used me this way. The child does not need a father that would behave in such a way, either.”

“The child needs a father.”

“I was fine without mine. You and Aunt Beatrice have taken care of me all my life, and you managed very well. I shall do the same, assuming I survive getting this child into the world.”

“Do not say that,” her mother said, placing her hands on her cheeks. “We are not losing you. Perhaps you should let me write the letter. You do not need any further upsets.”

Violet lowered her mother’s hands. She pushed herself up from the chair. “No. I need to do this. It is—I am the one he wronged. The message must come from me. We have another of the photographs from the wedding, don’t we? I want to send one. Let him try and deny that.”


Author’s Note: So this has also been in the back of my mind for a bit now. A fellow writer mentioned doing a story all in letters, and I thought the idea was intriguing but not my style. I don’t think that it would work to tell all of this story, but I had the opening bit of the first letter come to me, and I thought I’d try it as well.

Plus it would be a different sort of historical mystery than I usually end up with, and that’s something worth exploring as well.

If you think this should be a serial on the site, let me know (comment, social media, etc.)


Identity Theft

Miss,

I received your letter this morning and confess that I puzzled over it a great deal. You speak with such intimacy, but I cannot help thinking that we are both somehow the victim of a malcontent. You see, I cannot recall your name, your face, or any of the details you included. If a man has, in fact, introduced himself to you purporting to be Robert John Winston the third, then we do have some kind of a dilemma.

Due to my present circumstances, I have not traveled in some time, and I do not think I ever made it to the town from which your letter came. Nor do I recall any lady such as yourself in whose company I spent any length of time.

I would request, then, further information on what this man said, did, and promised, for I fear he has misrepresented me in the worst sort of way. If he did take advantage of you in any way, I will do what I can to set things right. I cannot allow someone to abuse my name and my reputation in this manner.

Respectfully,

Robert Winston

******************************************

Dear sir,

Since your memory seems to have failed you, I have inclosed this photograph to remind you of the particulars. If you are, as you claim, unfamiliar with me or the events with which I spoke of in my letter, then I shall be surprised, but I cannot think that you are.

Considering that your departure came more than six months previous, that you left no word nor made any effort to contact me after the events which I detailed in my letter—one which is hardly the first missive I have sent, I find your conduct not only ungentlemanly but also quite cowardly. If you were not willing to stay with the commitment that you made, you had only to say so. This is not a game that I find at all amusing, nor do I care to play this one with you as well.

I ask that you cease any further attempts to avoid my letters or pretend ignorance of the situation that you left me in. I do not believe we are dealing with any malcontent other than you yourself, and I refuse to acknowledge such a farcical excuse.

Though it will bring my family considerable shame and me all the more so, you may end your dealings with me with what little honor you have left and divorce me. I do not ask for any great sum of money, but if you will not even so much as acknowledge the fact that you are, indeed, my husband, then kindly relinquish those rights legally as well. I have no desire to be attached to a man who has treated me in such a manner, nor do I feel that it is worth arguing with you over this matter.

You need not bother contacting me directly if that is what is so distasteful or impossible for you. Have your family’s lawyer draw up the papers and send them to me. I will sign them. I want no part of man who cannot remain faithful for even one year.

Violet Winston

******************************************

Miss,

Or perhaps Mrs. Winston is a better form of address, for I do think your wedding photograph is rather a compelling image.

Here you have me at quite a loss. I do not understand, as that man beside you bears more than a passing resemblance to me, but I swear to you—I have never met you, nor am I married. These are things that I assure you I would remember. I have been overseas for the past two years, and it is quite impossible that we could have met, for the date on the back is one where I was taken in wounded to the field hospital. If you should wish for my military records, I shall have them soon, as I have already initiated an inquiry there, though when you see me, I should think it would be rather obvious what happened.

Unless this is some kind of cruel jest on your part, we have both been victimized by this man. He has used you far worse than me, but he did so by employing my name and everything that goes with it. I am making arrangements to travel to speak to you in person as soon as I have the records unless you should like to come here instead.

If you did not create this as a farce of your own, I do hope you will be willing to work with me to resolve this matter. I am not certain how that might be done, but I assure you, I am not a coward, nor am I trying to be less than a gentleman. I enclose a picture my mother insisted upon before I left for the front.

You can see, of course, that I have some features in common with the man you knew, but I am not that man.

******************************************

Dear sir,

I fear you must come here in person, nothing less would satisfy, and in addition to it, my current poor health will not allow me to do any traveling.

I left out a detail in my previous letters as I thought it was perhaps what made you act so cowardly, and I do not know if that has changed at all or what has taken place, since it seems you may indeed have been elsewhere. Nevertheless, it is the reason that I am now confined to my bed as the doctor says this ordeal of mine has taken too much of a toll on my body. I am not supposed to move, not after the way your letters affected me. Would that I was not so weak in spirit and will and apparently in body as well. It seems I was not capable of resisting any part of your… charm, and that is the misfortune I now suffer.

That is to say—no, I do not wish to write it. You will see when you come.

There will be no hiding it.

I am pregnant.