further explanation. So he had mourned his beloved younger sister ever since, and without even a grave toward which he could tip his hat.
Other females? Well. He had a cousin. But she was a dull girl who tended to talk too much, and aimlessly, telling long, tedious stories with no point to them.
Then there was Aunt Chloë, who worked as the cook at the castle. But she had whiskers and warts. Rafe knew that beauty was within. But when the without had whiskers and warts, it was hard to venture beyond.
Anyway, none of those, he thought, had anything to do with the love of one's life. It was a concept he would probably never understand. Rafe sighed and stopped thinking about love and what it might mean, realizing that it would probably never come to him. He would love teaching and would love his pupils; perhaps that would be enough. Carefully he stacked his papers on his desk in a tidy pile. He cleaned his fingernails one more time with a small knife that he kept in his pocket. Then he took out his handkerchief and wiped the dust once again from his shoes.
I will do my best to be a good teacher.
He said it to himself two more times.
I will do my best to be a good teacher.
I will do my best to be a good teacher.
Then he looked at the carved cuckoo clock on the classroom wall. (It had been his mother's, but he didn't want to think about that. It made him sad.) The clock told him that it was time. He took a deep breath and went to the doorway to ring the bell that summoned the village children to school.
3. The Chambermaid
"I don't see how you can be bored, miss, when you got so many lovely things."
Princess Patricia Priscilla frowned. "Nothing I want," she said to the chambermaid.
The freckle-faced girl picked up a silver-backed hairbrush. For a moment she looked at her own face reflected in the silver. She grinned at herself, and blushed.
"Not this, miss?" She held up the brush. "It's beautiful. If you like, I can brush your hair for you, a hundred strokes. I can count to one hundred, truly I can. And you can sit at the mirror and watch yourself while I do it."
The princess sighed. "We do that every day. I'm tired of it. I know! What if..." Her face lit up with interest.
"What, miss?"
"What if we turned things around and I brushed your hair a hundred strokes?" Princess Patricia Priscilla reached for the hairbrush.
But the chambermaid hastily returned it to the dressing table and backed away. "Oh, no, miss. That wouldn't do."
"Not allowed?"
"Not allowed at all."
"Punishable by torture?"
"Oh, I dunno. Maybe not torture, not for that. But punishment, for sure!"
The chambermaid paled and looked so genuinely alarmed that the princess sighed and gave up the idea. She picked up the brush and pulled it through her own hair a few times. "There," she said, with a sigh. "Now I should dress, I suppose. Have you chosen a frock for me for today?"
"I thought the blue organdy, miss? It matches your eyes."
Princess Patricia Priscilla groaned. "It scratches," she said, "and causes a rash on my shoulders."
"Then the yellow silk? It falls all smooth and soft."
Princess Patricia Priscilla made a face. "My cat slides off my lap when I wear silk," she pointed out, and then looked affectionately at her pet. "The yellow silk is inauspicious, isn't it, Delicious?" The cat yawned and tidily cleaned her whiskers.
The princess wandered to the window and looked down at the village again. The children were still playing in the path near the schoolhouse. She could hear their laughter.
"What is your name?" she asked suddenly, turning back to the chambermaid.
"Seventeenth chambermaid, miss." The girl curtsied.
"No, no—I mean your real name."
A blush darkened the chambermaid's freckled face. "Tess," she whispered.
"And you're a peasant girl, right? From the village?"
"Yes, miss. Born there."
"Did you play on that path?" The princess pointed through the window.
The chambermaid went to the window and looked down. She nodded. "Yes,
Douglas Stewart, Beatrice Davis