Part 3
"The Dwarf and The Dress"
That fateful morning, Jacintha Farfalle
and her daughter sat in the sunroom of their villa, deeply engaged in
reading. Agatha turned a page in her periodical and released a noisy,
wistful sigh.
“What’s wrong, dear?” Jacintha
asked absently, frowning at a particularly salacious account from her
Dear Friend (and the neighborhood watchdog) Deirdre, concerning the
social travesties of one Libeth Montgoverny, who had appeared at a
garden party unannounced. Such an affront to the hostess (none other
than Steffani Drakistos, second cousin of Lord Sigmund, herself!)
warranted a full recounting of her many infractions by Deirdre, and a
warning to all eligible women against associating with her until she
submitted a formal apology in the presence of sufficient witnesses.
The community of Kadros was tight-knit, with very clear lines and
expectations of the levels of social hierarchy, and brooked no threat
to said stratification. So engrossed was Lady Jacintha that she
barely heard Agatha’s dreamy reply.
“I just wish I could find a dashing,
daring young man like Lord Harold Courtland!”
Jacintha set aside her letter and
picked up an envelope with the Drakistos Family seal set upon it. Two
missives from the governing family, in as many days? What could it
mean?
Agatha sighed again, and Jacintha’s
thin tolerance snapped. “Will you stop that? You sound like a fish
that’s just been taken out of the water.”
“I’m just so—“ Agatha began,
but Jacintha cut her off.
“I don’t care what you think you
feel, what you are is lazy and discontented, and what you need
is motivation to go out and get those things you enjoy. You are a
Farfalle, and you deserve to get everything you want, as much as any
Drakistos!” With that, she returned to deciphering the stately
calligraphy. It seemed to be an invitation of some sort—and she
couldn’t remember receiving an invitation from the Drakistos family
since Giorgio was alive.
Jacintha gasped sharply, and Agatha
cast aside her periodical. “What is it, mother?”
The woman didn’t answer right away.
She rose from her seat, invitation clutched in her hands, and began
pacing the tile floor.
“This is it, Agatha! This is the
moment we’ve been waiting for! Oh, merciful heavens, all of our
waiting and planning has finally paid off!”
Agatha pursed her lips in a frown. “Our
planning? Mother, what’s gotten into you?”
Jacintha ignored her daughter’s
skepticism. She pushed the invitation in front her daughter’s face.
“Look! The Drakistos family is sponsoring a festival, and everyone
in Kadros is invited!”
Agatha squinted at the flourishing
script. “Dragon Festival?” she read aloud in a dubious tone,
“We’ve never had—“
“Oh, never mind that!” Jacintha
waved her hand petulantly. “Do you see where it says that it will
be hosted in the Grand Piazza? And that anyone connected to the
Drakistos name, anyone under their protection or otherwise living in
Kadros, is allowed to attend?”
The plump, dark-haired beauty rolled
her eyes. “What’s the use of all that, though?” Agatha whined.
“We both know there are simply no more eligible young men to be
found in all of Kadros—“
“And,” Jacintha finished,
pointing to a small flurry of words at the bottom. “doesn’t it
say Lord Sigmund’s son and heir, The Honorable Don Henrik, will be
in attendance, seeking a bride?”
In the shocked silence that followed,
the door softly opened and the maid, Stella, entered to remove the
breakfast things.
Agatha let the invitation drop as she
joined her mother on her feet. “The son and heir, Henrik?”
she gasped. “Henrik Drakistos?”
“The very same, “ Jacintha
answered. “Now what do you say to that, daughter?”
Agatha clapped her hands and gave a
little dance. “I think I shall go to the festival, after all!”
she declared. “Although…”
“What else could you possibly want?”
Jacintha scoffed. “This is Henrik Drakistos we are talking
about!”
“I know,” Agatha sighed, “but I
can’t help thinking—if everybody in Kadros is going to be
there, then how much of a chance do you really think I have of
winning his attention?”
“Nonsense, dearest!” Jacintha put
one hand on Agatha’s shoulder, and stroked her hair with the other.
“We can always dress you in a gown so gorgeous, you will catch the
eye of even the blindest of men!”
Agatha grinned smugly at the idea.
Jacintha turned her gaze and narrowed her eyes.
“Why are you still standing there?”
she snarled at Stella.
The scrawny, scar-faced maid looked up
guiltily from the discarded invitation. “Lady Jacintha,” she
murmured, “might it be possible… I mean, if it’s all right; if
I complete my duties for the evening… Might I go to the Festival as
well?”
Jacintha snatched the invitation from
her grabby little hands. “To the Festival? Are you daft?”
Stella stepped back, giving ground to
Her Ladyship. “I only ask because it did say, regardless of
class or station—“
“Since when did you know how to read,
lizard-face?” Agatha sneered.
Stella hung her head. “I just wanted
to ask,” she whimpered.
Jacintha wagged her head. “Now,
Stella, let’s get one thing very clear: we are not, and never will
be, interested one bit in whatever it is you want. You are a
servant in my house, and if I say that you shall not go to the
Festival, then you shall NOT go to the Festival.” She turned
away, giving a little sniff. “As if I would let that
terrible face of yours be seen outside of the house, and in
the company of my daughter? You think I want to be
associated with such ugliness?”
Agatha smirked and slid a narrow-eyed
glance in Stella’s direction. She saw tears. Good; the stupid waif
was finally learning her place. “Be on your way,” she said,
picking up her periodical once more. She tried to read the juicy
passages once again, but the image in her head of the debonair Lord
Courtland no longer held the same allure; instead, Don Henrik
Drakistos ruled supreme. No one in her immediate circle had even seen
him, though plenty would claim the honor. Did he have dark hair like
his father? Or fair hair, like a true Prince Charming should? What
color were his eyes? Did he have a strong, booming voice, like so
many of the other Drakistos family members—at least the ones that
showed their faces in public? Oh, the Festival couldn’t come soon
enough!
In the afternoon, Stella left the villa
on foot and made her way to the marketplace. Jacintha and Agatha had
departed earlier, in the chaise, to place an order at the dress shop
for the gown Agatha would wear to the festival.
The rough weave of the huge satchel
Stella carried scraped on her arm, and she knew, from the look of the
list in her hand, that the weight of everything would only make it
worse. Jacintha had ordered enough food for not only tonight’s
menu, but several large parties after the festival concluded. Hams,
steaks, shellfish, assorted greens, a profound amount of fruit, not
all of which was actually in season—Stella sighed as she scanned
the market booths for the places she would need. She always made sure
to state her requests clearly, without lifting her head until she
went to pay for the merchandise, because as soon as she made eye
contact with the vendor, he or she would flinch, almost threatening
to refuse to touch anything that had come into contact with her…
But in the end, money always won out, and she could be on her way to
the next awkward encounter. As she walked, she frequently had to
dodge out of the way as wagons rumbled down the bustling street,
headed in and out of the Piazza. Stella noticed ribbons and streamers
in bright, glittering colors, a mysterious wagon purportedly
containing live animals of some sort, a caravan or two—but what was
the use of paying any sort of attention, if she wasn’t going
anyway?
Stella adjusted the position of the
basket’s handle to a rough, hardened patch at the crook of her arm.
The weight still dragged on her, making it difficult to walk any
faster than a crawl, but at least she didn’t have to feel it
scraping her with every step.
“Mademoiselle!” cried a
voice.
Stella had never heard that language
before. She glanced with only her eyes, keeping her head bent—only
to discover a strange pair of eyes staring over a bushy beard,
directly at her! He gestured urgently at her. One quick sweep of her
surroundings confirmed that he indeed meant Stella—but why? She
approached the stranger. His shingle proclaimed Objets
Antiques—did the man not know how to spell correctly? Stella
edged closer. The man with dark hair and mottled skin seemed only a
bit more than half her height, up close. It was as if someone had
slapped a beard and thick, wiry muscles on a child. He didn’t seem
the least put off by Stella’s scars—she imagined he probably
dealt with the same looks from people for his height that she did for
her skin.
“Un cadeau pour vous,
mademoiselle,” he murmured, bowing to her.
Stella’s heart leaped into her chest.
Was he addressing her as someone special? Did she have a strange and
wonderful heritage after all? She backed a step away, staying just
outside the threshold of his shop. “I’m sorry,” she murmured
softly, knowing full well that he probably understood about as much
of her language as she did of his. “I don’t think I want any—“
“Mademoiselle! Cette boucle!” He
held something out to her. It glinted in his stained fingers. She
peered at it as he held it out to her. A ring, carved in the likeness
of a silver dragon that seemed to grip a fiery red stone in its
claws.
Stella shook her head. “I can’t
accept that,” she said. “It looks like something a Drakistos
would wear, and I’m not—“
“Oui, Drakistos!” The dwarf
grew even more adamant, though she noticed that he would not leave
the safety of his shop with that ring in his hand. “Il
appartient à vous! Veuillez le prendre!”
Stella could see people beginning to
pause and watch this exchange. From the way their mouths pulled down
at her, she guessed that they assumed she was giving this seller a
bad time. He persisted in calling out to her, so she had no other
choice. She stepped into his shop and put her hand over the ring.
“Hush! All right, I’ll take it, though I cannot pay you.”
The dwarf smiled as she took the ring
in her hand, and when she pointed to her coinpurse, he shook his head
and waved his hand. “Il est un cadeau!” he repeated a
phrase from before. Abruptly, he turned around and seemed to retreat
further into his shop.
Stella hesitated only briefly before
taking her leave. She didn’t like the looks of this place, crowded
with strange and foreign things she couldn’t even begin to
understand. What would Jacintha say if she found the ring Stella now
carried? Why would this dwarf single her out and give it to her?
His growling, bass voice interrupted
her thoughts. “Et… C'est également pour vous,” he
stammered, huffing back into the tiny aisle with a mound of cloth
almost as big as his whole body.
“Mercy!” Stella breathed when she
saw it. The dress was creamy-white, with silver and gold embroidery
all over it. She had only seen a dress like it at Agatha’s social
debut—and never in her life did she dream of wearing one like it,
ever!
This was much easier to refuse. “No,
I cannot,” she pushed back against it as the dwarf tried to give it
to her. “I am a servant! Why would I want a dress?”
“Il est pour vous!” The
dwarf ranted over and over. “Il est pour vous!” His eyes
looked so wild and dangerous that Stella feared he might not let her
leave his shop if she continued to refuse him. In the end, she
silently held out her arms, and the dwarf draped the dress over them.
“If anyone asks,” she told herself
as she emerged back onto the street, “it is for Miss Agatha. She’ll
probably end up taking it from me, anyway.” Just the sight of it
brought tears to her eyes and a lump in her throat—what possessed
the stranger to give such a beautiful garment to one so ugly as
Stella? Even if it did manage to fit her, the rough, uneven scars
would shame the craftsmanship of it!
Upon returning to the Farfalle’s
property, Stella nearly considered hiding the dress in the small
thicket behind the gate, but as she entered the grounds, she noticed
that the chaise had not returned; no one was home, and she was safe.
Stella left the foodstuffs in the larder and headed out to the tiny
garden shed to inspect her new treasures.
First came the ring. Stella studied it
closely. She could see no identifying marks, but the dragon did bear
a striking resemblance to the Drakistos family seal. Had the dwarf
stolen this from them? Did he think that Stella probably worked for
them? It felt heavy in her palm, and her skin tingled where it
touched. Very carefully, Stella slipped her finger into the ring. The
tingling sensation enveloped her whole body, and the young maid
gasped as it felt like all the aches and pains she had carried for so
long vanished all at once. Stella extended her hand to admire the way
the ring looked on her finger—and that’s when she noticed the
change.
The white, flaky ridges on the back of
her palm were gone, replaced by smooth, whole skin. Stella rolled up
her sleeve to examine the length of her arm.
No patches, no scales… anywhere!
Almost quivering, Stella ventured out to the nearest polished
surface, a birdbath by the garden path. Bending over, she peered
closely at her reflection.
Soft, supple hands covered her mouth as
she gasped. An exquisite face stared back at her, and she ran her
fingertips lightly over the smooth roundness of her cheeks, the cool,
sleek forehead. Her mouth broke out into a smile—a real
smile, not the twisted grimace that was all she could manage around
the scars.
So this is what she would look
like without the horrible scales plaguing her! This was
certainly someone worthy to wear the beautiful dress!
Stella heard the creaking of the front
gate, and she whipped the ring off in a guilty frenzy. Immediately,
her skin returned to its normal state. Stella placed the ring in the
deepest pocket she had, and returned to the kitchen to prepare the
evening meal. As she scurried between the fireplace and the table,
she felt tears welling in her eyes. Hastily, she rubbed them away
with her sleeve and composed herself on the way up to the dining
room.
“It’s about time you got here!”
Agatha grumbled. “What have you been doing all day?”
Jacintha kept her eyes averted, busily
spreading her napkin in her lap as she said, “There’s been a
slight change of plans, Stella.”
The maid kept her eyes on the pile of
greens in the bowl she held. “Yes ma’am.”
“You’ll be accompanying Agatha to
the Festival tomorrow. Apparently my lazy, spendthrift daughter is
convinced that not only does she want to buy plenty of trinkets and
baubles from the foreign merchants riding in, but she will need
someone to carry them for her. Naturally, that someone will be you.”
A wave of emotion threatened to crash
over her again, and Stella found it difficult to breathe.
Jacintha continued, “I will insist,
however, that you wear long sleeves, and see that your hands and face
are covered with gloves and a veil, for you are still a sight to
behold, and not fit for the public eye.”
Anything to be able to go, and not have
to spend the day with the Her Irritable Ladyship! “I will, ma’am.”
“You will do everything Agatha tells
you to do.”
“Yes, Your Ladyship.”
“You won’t cause any trouble or do
anything that would embarrass me.”
“No, ma’am, I won’t.”
Jacintha slid her eyes in Stella’s
general direction, not quite looking at her face. “Run along and
get the next course, Stella; those greens are quite cold by now.”
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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