Entwined

Azalea pulled sharply away, leaning up against the frosted window, curling her fingers. She still felt Mother’s cold hands on hers. She felt awake in a nightmare.

 

At the end of the hall, the doors burst open in a melee of delighted voices. The girls shaded their eyes against the light and flocked to the window, pressing their hands and noses on the cold pane to watch the blizzard.

 

“I thought you were going to play spillikins?” said Azalea, backing away so the window had more room.

 

“Changed our minds,” said Bramble. “We’re taking Mr. Bradford on a tour of the palace.”

 

“An’ we’re not even charging him a penny!” squeaked Hollyhock.

 

Mr. Bradford, who had Ivy tugging on one hand and Kale tugging on the other, managed a bow.

 

“My ladies are most generous,” he said.

 

His brown eyes caught Azalea’s, and they had a mischievous sparkle in them. Though he was solemn faced, Azalea knew he was grinning inside. The girls sat in the rectangle of light beneath the window, smoothing their skirts and scrutinizing him.

 

“You once said you had studied at the university,” said Eve shyly. “What did you study, please?”

 

Azalea blushed. It was all right for the girls to interrogate normal gentlemen, but this was one she wanted to keep.

 

“Ah,” said Mr. Bradford, coloring as well. “Politics, actually. Some philosophy, and sciences. But…mostly politics, I’m afraid.”

 

“How very appropriate,” said Bramble. Her face was completely blank.

 

Flora raised her forefinger. “Please, sir,” she said. “Did you study dancing?”

 

Mr. Bradford smiled and inclined his head to Flora.

 

“One cannot enter a dance floor in Delchastire,” he said, “save one has a dance master.”

 

The girls let out a unanimous gasp of delight, and the air buzzed with excitement. Ivy actually clapped her hands.

 

“We learned,” said Mr. Bradford, now smiling his crooked smile in full, “how to escort a lady, how to turn her in an under-arm turn without clipping the flowers in her hair. How to bow to a lady at the end of the dance.” Mr. Bradford bowed with one arm at his waist, the other behind his back. “And how to hold a lady’s hand.” He took Goldenrod’s hand and folded his two gloved hands around it. “As gentle as a dove’s wing.”

 

As Flora’s shadow, Goldenrod never harbored much attention, and she blushed pink to her ears. She beamed. The girls begged Mr. Bradford to teach them the fashionable Delchastrian dances. He wavered, glancing at the draped windows.

 

“I’m not very good,” he said.

 

“That’s all right!” squeaked the younger girls. “Oh, please!”

 

“You can dance with Azalea.” Clover smiled a honey-sweet smile. Mr. Bradford’s face lit.

 

“May I?” he said. He bowed to Azalea, his eyes twinkling part hope, part nervousness, and part mischievousness. “If my lady isn’t engaged?”

 

“Take his hand!” cried Hollyhock.

 

Azalea took it. It dwarfed and encased her own hand, and she felt the large knobbliness of knuckles under his gloves. She resisted the impulse to stroke them with her thumb.

 

Her stomach fluttered as he led her to the middle of the hall, away from the glass displays and red velvet ropes. Leaning on his steady arm, she felt a touch dizzy. She caught the faint scent of fresh linen, and her heart began to beat in an Esperaldo jig stomp.

 

Azalea’s skirts swished as he brought her into dance position. He was tall; she straightened into the best form she could, her eyes level to his chin. The girls leaned forward, memorizing each movement as Mr. Bradford placed his hand on her back, just beneath her shoulder, and lifted her other hand, gently. He had excellent form.

 

“It will probably end up with Azalea leading,” said Delphinium, across the hall. “She’s so bossy.”

 

Azalea closed her eyes. Sisters! She could strangle them!

 

“A trois-temps waltz,” said Mr. Bradford, smiling crookedly. With his rumpled hair and uneven cravat, it seemed to make him symmetrical. “If that is agreeable.”

 

Beneath his steady form, Azalea thought she felt his fingers trembling, just a touch.

 

“I love the waltz,” said Azalea. She dimpled.

 

The girls, at the edge of the hall, held their breath as Azalea and Mr. Bradford began.

 

Mr. Bradford was not a perfect dancer. His steps were a bit flat, and he stumbled through the transition steps, but…

 

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