7th of Glade
Brenner Dornkirk. A hero.
Yes, Ursula had said, oh yes, smiling like she meant it. These were the sorts of things most girls dreamed of, heroes.
Her mother fussed over her outfit as she explained. A second son, new money. Her father hadn’t been excited about the meeting, initially. He’d hoped to see Ursula paired with a first son, if she was married to a new family. He’d worried that she’d end up with less.
And then, things had changed.
Brenner Dornkirk, who was only a second son, became Brenner Dornkirk, the First Minister of State. A man who risked everything to protect against, if the rumors were to be believed, assassins sent after Kalzasi’s princeling. A wedding massacre, she’d whispered, her eyes wide with disbelief, when she’d heard the tale. Her eyes grew wider still when her maid locked her in a corset and tied tight enough that her sight blurred.
Oh, what we do for beauty, she thought, not realizing she’d lost her smile trying to breathe.
Darling, you look unhappy, her mother said, watching from the couch. A woman can feel uncomfortable, but a lady wouldn’t show it. Ursula smiled. Yes, mother. Ursula smiled, and she made sure the smile reached her eyes. Another maid painted her face, according to current trends, of course. Nothing overdone. The goal was to look perfect, but not obviously so. A kiss of blush on her cheeks. A blush of rouge on her lips.
Pearls, a simple green dress, black shoes. A maid pressed her hair. Perfect, her mother said, perfect. She watched her mother see the dress, the shows, the face, the hair, but not her.
I would rather so many things than to marry, Ursula thought.
Your father hopes you impress him, her mother said, her arm slipping through the crook of Ursula’s. A hero! He risked it all, her mother said, slipping one white glove on one hand, and then another on the other. Silk, Ursula thought, the ones she bought me last season.
Silk, Ursula thought, for Brenner Dornkirk. Pearls, for Brenner Dornkirk. The dress, the shoes, the hair, for Brenner Dornkirk.
“Olivia?” Ursula turned, even if it wasn’t her name. Her father, sometimes. The Admiral, now. He was in uniform. The uniform, for Brenner Dornkirk.
The Fletcher’s were an old family. A moneyed family. Few compared to them. People impressed them, her father once said, not the other way around. “He’s arrived. The Dornkirk boy,” he said, straightening out his jacket.
And yet, Ursula thought, for Brenner Dornkirk, the hero, the statesman, we do impress. Or, at least, her parents hoped she would.