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Evangeline straightened the blanket across her lap and tried to ignore the carriage window's mocking reflection. Her borrowed dress was now wrinkled beyond all hope. Her stubborn hair refused to stay clasped to her head, choosing instead to cling to her neck and cheeks in damp curls. Grooves from the window frame left uncomfortable lines down her face.
"Thank you again for the invitation," she murmured, hoping to coax at least the pretense of a pleasant atmosphere into the chilly confines of the carriage. "This is my first time to London."
Lady Stanton turned her upturned nose to the carriage window, apparently preferring the lengthening shadows to conversation. Her thin fingers worked a delicately painted fan near her perfumed neck, filling the carriage with the cloying stench of unwanted and unwatered roses left to wilt in a forgotten room.
Wait. Shadows? "How long was I asleep?"
Susan nudged her spectacles with the back of a gloved hand. "Hours."
"Hours?" Evangeline repeated, staring out the window in confusion. It had taken hours and hours to flee from her home in the Chiltern Hills all the way to London, but how could it possibly take hours to go from Stanton House to a local soiree? "Where are we?"
Susan glanced at her mother, who was still pointedly focused on the setting sun disappearing behind the skeletal gray arms of leafless trees stretching their knobby limbs toward the heavy sky. Perhaps Lady Stanton worried the impending storm would delay their travel. But their travel where?
"Braintree," Susan said at last. "We're almost there."
The view from the window dimmed with the setting of the sun, tinting the thick forest surrounding them from pink to purple to gray, until the only light came from the exterior carriage lamps.
Evangeline's flesh began to prickle. "I thought the house party was in Town."
"I believe I said 'outside London,'" Lady Stanton corrected.
From ten to twilight meant more than a little "outside" London but, having thrown herself on the Stantons' mercy, Evangeline wasn't sure she could complain and still expect shelter from her stepfather. A single day's drive was far preferable to the living hell awaiting her at home. If he let her live once he caught her. At this moment, he was either whipping his servants for allowing her to escape the attic or well on his way to find her.
"This is where your fiancé lives?" she asked, seeking a more pleasant topic.
"Actually," Lady Stanton answered, "he's not her fiancé."
"Actually," Susan echoed without making eye contact, "he's never met me."
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