Page 4 of The Vampire's Guide to Wooing a Scholar

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Sincerely,

Kingsbury

Chapter Two

March 2nd, 1868, Toronto

Winifred Belltree delicatelylifted the corner of a yellowed page in the illuminated manuscript with two fingers and slid her thin, wooden page turner beneath. The hundred-year-old vellum crinkled and popped like her back after spending hours bent over a table in her family’s library.

She gently flattened a vibrant illustration of an erupting Mount Vesuvius. It was no larger than her palm, but the detail was exquisite, from the thin lines of lava sliding down the mountain to the plumes of smoke rising into the sky. Choppy waves lapped the shore as three tiny figures huddled together outside the ruins of the destroyed city. She lifted the book toward her cousin and tilted it back and forth, making the gold leaf reflect the light of the sun shining through the window. “Isn’t it lovely?”

“Beautiful,” Winifred’s cousin Felicity said. Felicity Sorrow, a twenty-year-old London debutante eager to take a break from the marriage market there, lounged on a maroon velvet settee with a copy ofThe Night Side of Natureheld close to her face. Her lace gloves were tucked carelessly in her pocket, several black curls had escaped from her chignon, and one of her slippers was hanging from the toes of her right foot, ready to flop onto the thin carpet.

Winifred adjusted the spectacles perched on her nose and ignored the fact that her cousin hadn’t actually looked up before responding, especially because Felicity had gifted Winifred the rare volume that had become her latest obsession. She still didn’t know how her cousinhad saved up enough of her pin money, or how she’d escaped from under the watchful gaze of the insufferably proper aunt who had accompanied her across the ocean from London for long enough to purchase the book, but she wasn’t about to ask.

When one was fascinated by topics deemed inappropriate for ladies, one became adept at letting such mysteries go unsolved.

“Are you two almost done?” Felicity’s older brother, Vincent, asked as he sauntered out from the rows of shelves with his hands shoved in the pockets of his black trousers, which were at least an inch too short. A casual observer might have mistaken him for Felicity’s twin because of their matching height and raven hair, but there was an intensity to Vincent’s brown eyes and a kind of repressed anger in his voice that made Winifred uneasy.

Or perhaps it was the ash falling from the end of the lit cheroot clenched between his teeth.

“Put that out,” she said sharply.

“Anything you wish, my dear,” Vincent said. He removed the abhorrent object from his lips and stabbed it into a half-empty glass of whiskey, then sprawled his lanky frame in the cushioned wicker chair next to hers.

Her arms erupted in gooseflesh, despite the red, wool shawl draped over her shoulders and the full-sleeved, printed pink cotton day dress beneath it. She scooted away from him, then glared at Felicity, who was still engrossed in her reading. Her cousin could have reprimanded her brother, but she refused to see anything but the best in him.

“I will never understand why you find those macabre tales so fascinating, Fel,” she said, referring to the book in her cousin’s hands. “The stories our parents told us were enough to give me nightmares.”

From the time they’d been old enough to toddle, both girls had been taught how their Sorrow ancestors through Felicity’s father and Winifred’s mother had hunted impossible creatures. Felicity hadembraced the learning, but Winifred refused to believe that there had ever been people who could transform into wolves or live forever by drinking the blood of innocents.

Her cousin flipped a page. “I could say the same for your obsession with natural disasters.”

Winifred huffed. The difference was, the past tragedies she studied were fixed in time. Some interpretation was required, but disagreements could always be settled by returning to the original records. In contrast, Felicity’s folk tales were fluid, evolving as each storyteller imparted their own biases to fit the narrative they wished to tell. A legend told a hundred years ago would bear little resemblance to its modern counterpart.

Winifred’s stomach growled, reminding her it had been hours since breakfast. In fact, judging from the way the square of sunlight on the carpet had moved from one side of her desk to the other, it was nearly time for luncheon. She would have preferred a servant bring the meal to them, but that was foolish, not only because her parents had already warned her they did not approve of her spending so much time with her nose tucked in ancient texts, but also because her books were so fragile that even a single accidental crumb dropped onto a page could cause significant damage.

She returned the illustrated manuscript to the box she’d prepared to protect it from dust and light, then flexed the muscles of her stiff shoulders. “Shall we retire to the dining room?”

“Yes we should,” Vincent said. “If we stay any longer, I’ll start growing roots.”

Felicity pressed her face into her book with a groan.

“I know,” Winifred said. “But if we don’t make occasional appearances, I fear my mother will tell Aunt Ethel to send you home early.”

The two weeks Felicity had spent in Toronto had buoyed Winifred’s spirits after her disastrous summer. Winifred was, admittedly, a little old to be unmarried, at two-and-twenty, butthat didn’t mean her parents needed to foist her upon every gentleman brave or foolish enough to approach them in public. It had become bad enough that she retreated to the library at any opportunity, even if it meant frequent criticisms from her mother about her bookish nature.

At least Felicity’s presence had granted Winifred a brief reprieve. Her parents were so intent on ensuring the young woman enjoyed her stay that they were not paying as much attention to Winifred.

Unfortunately, Felicity could not stay forever. Soon she would return to London, and then Winifred would have to make do with communicating with her cousin through writing.

“A few minutes more,” Felicity said. She put her book on top of a stack and returned to a normal sitting position. “I’ve been a terrible guest, making free use of our family’s collection when I should have been helping.” She put her elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands. “Have you compiled a list of candidates?”

It was Winifred’s turn to groan. She’d come up with the idea of selecting a husband who would suit her needs that summer, after her mother had nearly blackmailed her into marrying a wealthy but foppish silk merchant. Such a match would have delighted most ladies but could not have been worse for Winifred. A young, ambitious husband would require his wife to join him at social events, entertain guests, and produce one or more heirs. Unlike other women who would have been eager to form such a pairing, Winifred despised crowds, had no talent for embroidery or music, and was deeply uncomfortable around children.

Vincent scoffed. “You are wasting your time. The only person Winifred will be marrying is me.”

Felicity grinned. “What do you think, Winnie? We could be like sisters.”