Sundays were always rather dull and relaxing for Farren. She had no tutoring, no meetings, and no agenda to be beholden to. She’d spent almost her whole day out on the estate riding her beloved gelding, Tybalt. It was clear and warm for the Lake District so she’d packed a saddle bag with a blanket, a lunch, and a novel and left after breakfast. In the late afternoon she’d returned and dropped the horse off with the stable boy before retiring to her rooms.
After a long hot bubble bath her maid had dried and styled her long brunette hair in her usual gentle loose curls. Miss Sedley carefully dressed her mistress in the
ivory summer dress Farren had selected after her bath. As Farren applied some simple make up the maid put on her usual diamond stud earrings and set out a simple pair of low high heels. Once fully made up and suited up Farren stood in front of the gilded three way mirror in her room admiring herself as her maid cleaned up the vanity. “Is Grandfather coming to dinner tonight? I thought he was in Scotland all day?” Farren asked absently as she shifted to inspect herself from another angle.
“I’m not sure my Lady,” the maid said glancing up at her nervously, “But you should go down for dinner soon. I know the elves were cooking all afternoon while riding.”
Farren glanced at the small gold clock on her bedside table, almost 6:30PM already, she noted. “Yes, well I suppose I will head down now. I suspect Grandfather is already waiting. If you would go to the library and get the next novel on my list for tonight while we eat,” she instructed as she moved to the vanity and spritzed herself with perfume. The maid excused herself and Farren followed behind her out into the marble hallway heading towards the main stairs on the far end.
Dinner was always served in the
family dinning room at the back of the first floor. It was considerably less pretentious than the formal dinning room and comfortably sat eight or uncomfortably ten, not that they ever needed that many seats. As usual a house elf stood at attention at the door of the room. All the Dalemain elves wore the same uniform, a grey cotton sack with arm holes and a hole for the head, the family crest embroidered in silver on the left breast. “Mistress Farren! Welcome to dinner!” the elf, Beemer, cried out with abnormal excitement. Pausing before the door Farren eyed the elf with suspicion, “Yes…well…open the door then,” she said confused by the elf’s excitement and their forgetfulness at why they were actually stationed here. “Yes! Yes! Yes! Of course!” Beemer chimed as he reached up and opened the door, bowing low as Farren passed him into the dinning room.
As soon as she passed through the door she stopped in her tracks. The room was sparkling with the sunset light through the window and the flicker of candles in the overhead chandelier. On the table was a huge arrangement of purple and white dahlias, her favorite flower. Sitting at the head of the table was perhaps one of the last people she’d expected to see, her cousin, Pyxis. It wasn’t as if someone who had disappeared with hardly a word for seven months frequently showed up for dinner without announcement. It was so odd seeing him there, he looked….abnormally healthy. She assumed as such that the blood curse he’d been plagued by had been broken and the time away on the continent had done him a great deal of good. He looked, well, very handsome sitting there next to the flowers smiling at her.
Behind her the house elf pushed the door shut, the loud click of the latch and bump of the door jolting her slightly. “Pyxis!” she managed still somewhat confused by the surprise. He’d missed her? Whatever did he mean? Miss her like he missed Cordie? Or was he insinuating something else? He immediately then told her she looked beautiful and her confusion rebounded on itself. Beautiful? Missed her? These weren’t things Pyxis said to her. Sure, they’d been spending more and more time together on little projects before he left. Yes, they always had fun together doing so but had it all meant something she didn’t realize?
Then it dawned on her that despite this flattery he had just up and left without saying a proper good bye and in 7 months she’d hardly heard from him apart from no more than four letters. She’d been disappointed in him. He’d abandon her mid project. The weeks after he left she’d felt a gaping loneliness in her daily work. Her brow furrowed as she processed the confusion and confliction. “But what are you doing here?” she asked finally walking to the table to stand beside him. “Did you break the curse? Are you back for good?” She glanced at the flowers then back at him, “Did you plan all of this? Is something else going on?” Perhaps it wasn’t the warm welcome he’d been hoping for but as usual Farren not one for formalities with people in her inner circle. No, if Pyxis was going to suddenly reappear in her life as if everything was peachy he better fully explain himself.