I let my shoulder relax and the muscles in my neck go limp during the drive from the asylum to Aurickâs estate.
Weâve been staying at his cottage in the North Saphrine forest, away from the city, away from the people, away from any responsibilities. But now, itâs time for me to learn the customs of living the way the women here do. And thankfully, Aurickâs friendship has extended to letting me stay in his estate.
I lean against the window and take in my new surroundings.
We pass the Dellilian Castle first. It has over three hundred rooms, numerous towers, spires, and peaks the color of coffee grounds. It would be the cover of a childâs storybook if it werenât for the worn-down stone, as if it were stained by dark oil, lined with dead vines, and surrounded by bare oak trees. Even still, it dominates the area. It bullies the other estates into a smaller, less significant purpose.
The road changes from dirt to shiny gray cobblestone. There are gas streetlights at every corner, followed by shops with windows full of extravagant items, like bottles of wine, jewelry, long gowns, and tuxedos. And there are so many people outside. My focus gravitates toward a cluster of women leaving a boutique. They have winter wool coats like mine, with fur muffs and umbrellas hovering over their heads. I avoid their faces at first, like the stories Iâve heard make them fictional characters ready to disappear in a glamorous gust of wind if I stare too hard.
But they arenât fictional.
Theyâre real and blindingly elegant from their soft, white complexions like porcelain dolls to their silky pinned-up curls and narrow, willowy figures. Their swaying hips flow at a steady rhythm like theyâre being guided by the gentle rocking of a boat. My chest tightens with insecurity as the women smile with glistening white teeth like theyâre constantly performing for a crowd.
Must I become this version of a woman?
Before we turn the street corner, my eyes flick to a woman sleeping on a chaise lounge in the middle of the sidewalk, her hand outstretched to the cobblestone. Then another on the sidewalk across the street. I open my mouth to question it, to ask whatâ
âTheyâre called fainting sofas,â the driver mutters over his shoulder.
I wait for him to clarify, but he doesnât. Then it hits meâthe lady-doll regimen. The starvation. It must cause frequent fainting after long hours of shopping. I shudder at the clear memory of the womanâs parted mouth, appearing to sleep peacefully.
Our buggy sweeps the catalog of enchanting civilians and slows to our desired destination.
Thin flakes of snow begin to fall from the sky. A brisk wind lifts my hair from my shoulders as I step out of the buggy and onto Aurickâs eleven acres of land. There is a freshly cut lawn, an asphalt driveway wrapping around a granite courtyard fountain, and a three-story bluestone mansion. Its sides are covered in ivy, just barely reaching the bottom side of the roof.
The ruby-red front door glides open and Aurick smiles at me wearing a white dress shirt with a double-breasted vest. He steps out of his home with the easy grace of a dancer. A tall and lean frame, with the face of a young professor, and the eyes of a dreamer. His irises swirl with the color of the frozen pond by his northern cottage.
He looks recharged, like the luxury of his estate breathed sophistication back into his body. He runs one hand through his raven-black hair, and his long fingers wave me to come in.
The snow melts on my cheeks as I shuffle up the porch steps to greet him. Aurickâs hands theatrically extend to the mansionâpresenting it as if for an applauding audience.
I nod with raised eyebrows. âNot bad at all.â Wow. I mean, wow.
He smiles. âCome in, please.â
Iâm guided through the front door, allowing a rush of warm air to hit my skin. Aurickâ
I stand there, looking at every detail, consciously holding my mouth closed. The manor matches his demeanor perfectly. Itâs beautiful and lonely, cuddled together under a cashmere blanket.
âIt smells nice in here,â I comment. âLike potpourri and cigars.â
Aurick helps me out of my coat and holds his arm out to keep me balanced while I remove the heels from my sore feet. Iâm not accustomed to wearing nice things. Iâm accustomed to running barefoot in the mud and swimming in dirty creek water.
âWelcome home,â he announces with arms outstretched to the mansion. Home. The word itself holds warmth, but this atmosphere does not match. The cold floor underneath my bare feet, the shadows pouring out of every corner and crevice, the dim flickering lights of the gaslit chandeliers and wall lamps. It reflects the same haunted sadness that Emerald Lake Asylum cast on to me earlier today.
âWould you like to dine first or after the tour?â He opens a closet to his left, hanging my coat and setting down my shoes.
âIâm famished.â I havenât eaten all day. While I was observing the patients, Suseas offered me a meal from the grand dining hall. I refused, claiming I was still utterly full from breakfast. She gave me an approving nod. I learned some time ago that women are praised for refusing meals. Itâs a sign theyâre keeping up with their lady-doll regimenâto uphold a thin and fragile womanly frame. Little did she know that was far from my reasoning. I refused the meal because I feared the extra food in my stomach would give me away, sell me out as an empathetic fraud. I would merely have to think of Chekiss being drowned over and over again, and the contents of said meal would pressurize in my mouth and come spewing out between my fingers.
Aurick nods knowingly. He escorts me to the feast. After only a few steps in that direction, Iâm hit with the rich aroma of hot melted butter, freshly baked bread, and roasted turkey.
Aurick seats me at the end of the table, where he pours a large glass of white wine. His focus jumps to the empty glass in front of me.
âWater or wine?â He raises an eyebrow.
âIâve never had wine.â I shrug, glancing over to his glass. âBut after the day Iâve hadâ¦â
He chuckles, nodding his approval as he fills my glass half full.
I donât wait for him to sit down to begin eating. I bite into the turkey leg first, dripping with a bourbon glaze. The juices spill over my bottom lip and glide down my chin. Iâm overwhelmed with the succulent flavors purging from the tender meat.
I use my fork to stab at a few slices of cheese from the charcuterie board while using my fingers to pluck rosemary roasted potatoes from the other side of my plate. Theyâre all crammed into my mouth simultaneously. The stickiness of the potatoes makes it hard to swallow down my food. I lift the bowl of hot soup to my lips and slowly fill my mouth to gulp the rest down.
âDo you always hum when you eat?â Aurick severs the comatose state I was hypnotized into by all of these savory foods.
I smile shyly, wiping the juices from my neck and chin with the back of my hand.
âOnly when the food is really good.â
âYou would make for an amusing date at one of these political dinners I attend monthly.â He shakes his headâthen stopsâraising his eyebrows at my frozen expression.
Date. Man. Lover. Theyâre only interested in the slickness between your legs.
Scarlett.
He winces, as if reading the thoughts being printed across my forehead.
âWe should address that rather large elephant in the room, shouldnât we?â
Yes. I donât want to. But better now rather than later.
âI should have made my intentions clear when we first met,â he admits, setting his fork and knife back down to the table. âI wonât presume to guess how you feel on the matter, but I recently lost my fiancée in a tragic accident. My heart is no longer openâI only seek friendship from you.â
A tub of warm, sweetly scented relief washes over me.
âGood,â I say, swallowing the rest of my last bite. âBecause I enjoy being friends. Iâm appreciative of everything youâve done for me.â
He smiles and shrugs before he cuts into his first bite. âHow did the interview go? You spent the whole day there.â
âThey offered me the position,â I respond before I take another solid bite of my turkey leg. I chew faster so I can keep talking. âAll thanks to you. I never would have had the opportunity if it werenât for your influence.â I pause, looking back at him. How does he have so much sway at the asylum?
âIâm a Survivah bureaucratâa leading board member,â he answers quickly, as if reading the question blossoming over my face.
Survivah. I only know the term in relation to what weâd call infirmaries, itâs responsible for the funding for the doctors and the asylum. Itâs where I woke up after the beating. My father. The club swinging into the back of my head.
âItâs the brother to Demechnefâs side of the government. Survivah covers health, general nutrition, mental illness, and religious requirements. As opposed to Demechnef that covers the societal cosmetic standards, discipline, order, andâwar.â
I nod, chewing slowly. Thatâs why the staff was trying to impress me. So that Iâd report back to him. Heâs on the board that controls their income.
âDid you see the patients? Their methods?â He takes a sip of wine.
I frown. âI signed an agreement stating that I wouldnât talk about what I saw.â
Another long exhale. âIs that right?â He places a small square of steak carefully between his teeth, pulling his fork out slowly. âDoes that mean youâre not going to tell me anything of what you saw?â
âIf it makes you feel any better, Iâm sparing you the ugliest of details.â
I catch a splash of annoyance in his eyesâfleeting, like a match that refuses to light. He sips his wine and smiles. âFine. Then should we discuss your standards moving forward?â
The word standards has the same upsetting effect as a fork scraping against a plate. I stop eating. Set my fork down. Straighten my shoulders.
âI donât catch your meaning.â
He pats his lips with a napkin. âThere are certain standards of the society to uphold in the city. I can imagine that you havenât grown up accustomed to it, which is perfectly fine, of course, but youâll still need to learn and adapt.â
I know where this is going. The starvation. Long nightly routines. Soaking in rose water. Lathering in oil and avoiding the sun. The lady-doll regimen.
Even Scarlett had to succumb to putting in the effort and upkeep. She may not have soaked in a warm bathtub steeped with dried herbs and essential oils for hours at a time, but she never went to sleep without buttering her skin with the right concoctions sheâd make herself. She stayed out of the sun and kept her skin from darkening. And her meals were small and proportioned.
âIâve already filled your wardrobe and vanity with the proper necessities. But youâll need to get used to weekly measurements, days without supper and, of course, vigorous cleaning and prepping every night.â He spears two berries onto his fork, waiting to eat them as he anticipates my response.
My hands are now clasped in my lap. The urge to indulge in more of this abundant meal has slipped from my grasp, with the new ideas flowing into my head. He set up this feast to farewell my old habits. A last plentiful supper. And now, the thoughts of hungry nights swell up inside my racing mind. The idea of being waxed of stray hairs and holding an umbrella everywhere I go to avoid the soothing touch of the warm sun prickles my skin with sudden loss.
âAnd what if I refuse?â My question climbs out of my throat with caution.
Aurick continues eating. Shrugs. âThen you cannot stay or work in the city. I donât need to remind you what happens if anyone strays from societal standards. Appearance is everything here. You either adjust, or you live freely on the outside.â
Heâs right. I hate that I canât fault him for insisting on this matter. But women who gain a pound outside of what they should weigh are taken into the west wing of the Emerald Lake Asylum as patients. Sometimes theyâre kept there for months. Sometimes they never come back. Women are taken if their face grows unwanted blemishes. Theyâ
Is fulfilling Scarlettâs wish of changing the dynamic of the asylum worth all of this? Iâm already at risk of being taken. Not for my weight, as growing up malnourished and starving has created quite a delicate frame for my body. Iâm at risk for the golden hue of my skin, my long, wavy, golden locks, and the absence of makeup on my face.
But I am the reason Scarlett can no longer complete this goal herself.
I take a swig of my first mouthful of wine, cringing at the bitter dryness.
âIâll do whatever I am asked to do.â