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Beloved and Unseemly




  Beloved and Unseemly

  Book 5 of the Concordia Wells Mysteries

  K. B. Owen

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Epilogue

  Afterword

  Also by K.B. Owen

  Acknowledgments

  For my husband Paul,

  always beloved.

  Chapter 1

  Hartford Women's College September 1898

  Some might find it possible to sleep through twelve alarm clocks going off in succession in the middle of the night, but Professor Concordia Wells was not one of those fortunate few. She had no sooner pulled the covers over her head after the clamor of the first three clocks had stopped when two more went off.

  Glancing at her own clock, perched on the washstand—two in the morning!—she groped for her robe and spectacles. There were bound to be more going off. Willow Cottage was uncomfortably close to Sycamore House, home to the male administrators. The sneering and cantankerous dean, Randolph Maynard, would not take kindly to his sleep being disturbed. Willow Cottage was already infamous for the number of disciplinary restrictions it had incurred last year.

  Amidst the tinny bells came the sounds of shuffling feet and distraught freshmen voices directly over her faculty quarters. The hunt was on.

  Mercy, what pranks would the sophomores dream up next?

  Better not ask.

  In the dimly lit hall she all but collided with the resident matron, Ruby Hitchcock, also hurrying toward the source of the commotion.

  “Oh! Beg pardon, miss.” As if girding for battle, Ruby tied her threadbare sacque more securely around her short, squat waist and dug her feet into her homely felt slippers. “Barely back to school, and them girls start their carryings-on. We’re in for a wild semester at this rate—” A fresh chorus of bells drowned out her next words.

  Concordia took the stairs two at a time, no small feat for a lady of her short stature. She found Charlotte Crandall, bless her, already knocking on bedroom doors and rousting the sophomores. Miss Crandall was all too familiar with school hijinks, having graduated from Hartford Women’s College only two years before. How her sophomore class managed to suspend two-dozen freshmen gloves from the rafters of Memorial Chapel was still a mystery to most.

  Though radiating the composure bred from the rigid dictates of Miss Crandall’s blueblood upbringing, the stubborn set of her jaw and narrowed brown eyes made clear her annoyance. As Concordia well knew, being a teacher charged with keeping pranksters in line is not nearly as fun as pulling the stunt.

  The extra help was certainly welcome. Every female professor—except for a few senior faculty members—was obliged to live with the students in her charge, acting as surrogate mother and chaperone. The male teachers had no such responsibility.

  “Why do we have to get up?” one sophomore complained, as she and her roommate shrugged on their wraps. “The freshies are the ones making all the noise.” They exchanged a smirk.

  Concordia folded her arms and glared as yet another bell went off. “I suppose you would prefer a cottage-wide restriction imposed by Mr. Maynard? That would undoubtedly make you popular among your fellow cottage-mates.”

  One of the girls made a face. “Can’t have May-Not getting involved,” she muttered to her friend. They hurried down the hall.

  Concordia shook her head. The students had gleefully adopted the impertinent nickname coined by Miss Kimble, the school’s new bursar. It was spreading quickly. Admittedly, it suited the dean. Many a may not had fallen from those lips.

  At last, all fifteen clocks were retrieved. Most had been concealed in the four freshmen rooms, though Concordia and Ruby found one in the kitchen dustbin and another under the chaise cushion in the parlor.

  Ruby shook her head as she switched off the last of them. “Right mischievous, these girls. At least Mr. Maynard didn’ come stormin’ down the hill.”

  Concordia twitched the parlor curtain aside. Sycamore House was dark. “We escaped notice this time.”

  Wait a minute. Was that movement?

  A window in Sycamore House opened, and a man stuck his head out. Concordia squinted for a better look.

  “Who is it?” Ruby leaned closer.

  Concordia blew out a breath. “Never mind. It’s Mr. Guryev, thank goodness. Not the dean.”

  “Whew!” Ruby said. “Well, g’night miss.”

  Concordia stayed by the window, curious. Guryev wasn’t staring in the direction of Willow Cottage, but directly down, into the Sycamore House gardens. She watched him for several minutes as he peered into the dark. Finally, he withdrew and shut the window.

  She went back to bed, too tired to remove her dressing gown. As she drifted off to sleep, she wondered how they were going to get up for chapel on time, since they had switched off all of the alarm clocks.

  Chapter 2

  Week 2, Instructor Calendar September 1898

  “Notebooks out, ladies,” Concordia said, swiveling the blackboard toward the light from the long, leaded-glass windows. She could have turned on the electric lights retrofitted to the forty-year-old classroom building, but they had recently taken to emitting a high-pitched buzzing sound. Her head already ached from too little sleep. She smothered a yawn as she wrote out the writing theme due Monday:

  Describe the three sources of persuasion

  in Baker’s Principles of Argumentation.

  With a swish of skirts and the creaking of leather, the girls extracted their copybooks. Concordia frowned as she took a quick head count. Two juniors were missing. She checked the clock. Ten minutes into the class period. Both were Willow Cottage residents, and she knew they weren’t ill. Sleepy, certainly. The entire cottage barely made it to chapel this morning.

  Most of the students had finished copying and looked up expectantly.

  “Has anyone seen Miss Lovelace and Miss Gage? No? Very well, we will proceed without them. Miss Smedley, come up with your theme from yesterday and read aloud to the class. Your clearest diction, please.”

  Alison Smedley, dressed smartly in a ruffled white shirtwaist and soft camel hair skirt, made her way to the instructor’s podium.

  As Concordia listened, she marveled at the young lady’s progress since last semester, when her sulky lack of effort had nearly caused her dismissal. Charlotte Crandall had taken the young lady in hand, and Miss Smedley was applying herself at last. A change in room assignments had helped as well. Last year, Miss Smedley and Miss Lovelace had had the misfortune to be roommates. They were as opposite as two girls could be: Miss Smedley the product of an illustrio
us family, interested in literature, the arts, and the society pages; Miss Lovelace the daughter of a tradesman, here on scholarship, single-mindedly occupied in tinkering with all things mechanical. Each derided the pursuits of the other.

  Concordia peeked at her watch again. Twenty minutes into the period. Where were they?

  She saw the door open a crack as Miss Lovelace applied an eye to the opening. Concordia held up a hand for her to wait for Alison Smedley to finish.

  “Nicely done, Miss Smedley,” Concordia said, finally waving in the two girls. “I was particularly impressed by your explanation of Hibben’s universality of consciousness as the primary postulate for inductive logic.” Miss Smedley flushed a becoming pink.

  Concordia watched as Maisie Lovelace pawed through her bag for a pencil and settled her skirts. “Do not get too comfortable, Miss Lovelace—”

  “Oh, Miss Wells, we did not mean to be late,” Maisie Lovelace interrupted. “Mr. Guryev was demonstrating Archimedes’ screw, and we were building our—”

  “Now is not the time for explanations, young lady,” Concordia said sternly. “Pull out your theme and come to the front. And put your gloves back on, if you please.” It was unsuitable for a young lady to give a class presentation barehanded, no matter how close to the new century they might be.

  “Umm,” Miss Lovelace said, her voice subdued as she tugged her gloves over smudged fingers, “I forgot...the theme was due today.” A blush crept up her throat.

  Miss Smedley smirked and several students tittered. Maisie turned a deeper red.

  “I see,” Concordia said. She turned to another student. “Miss Andrews, your turn.”

  The young lady stood and smoothed her skirts.

  The rest of the period passed without incident, as successive students read their essays aloud. Concordia could not help but notice Miss Lovelace’s distracted air.

  Concordia had expected the girl to be ecstatic over the new engineering program at Hartford Women’s College. Last year, she and her fellow mechanical enthusiasts had gone to great lengths to coax the college to start such a program, including disassembling and reassembling President Langdon’s buggy in then-Bursar Isley’s office.

  It had seemed a lost cause. Finally, through a grant from the original foundress of the school back in its seminary days, the old gymnasium was refurbished, equipment brought in, and Mr. Sanbourne and his assistant, Ivan Guryev, were hired. Tonight’s reception at Sycamore House would celebrate the new program.

  Peter Sanbourne, the renowned inventor and engineer, was considered quite a catch. Concordia had not yet met the gentleman and only knew his assistant by sight. Sanbourne remained a recluse in his laboratory these first few weeks.

  The appeal of Sanbourne’s assistant was much easier to grasp. The girls chattered on about the fine form and dark good looks of Ivan Guryev. Concordia imagined his classes were well attended.

  She glanced again at the pencil-fiddling Maisie Lovelace. Perhaps the girl was lovesick.

  The dismissal bell interrupted her thoughts.

  “Very promising so far,” she said, with a nod to the student upon the platform. “You may finish tomorrow.”

  Concordia adjusted her spectacles and collected her books. She was not eager to meet with the lady principal, but their talk was overdue.

  As the others filed out, Miss Lovelace and Miss Gage hurried up to her desk.

  “We’re so sorry, Miss Wells,” Miss Gage said. “Cleaning up the laboratory took longer than we realized.” She gestured to Miss Lovelace. “Maisie still hasn’t gotten all the grease off her hands.”

  “Yes, I noticed,” Concordia said. “Your laboratory sessions obviously need to be longer. I will speak to the dean about adjusting the schedule.”

  Maisie Lovelace’s features softened in relief. “I am sorry about forgetting the assignment. This certificate program is more demanding than I thought.”

  Concordia slid her book bag strap over her shoulder. “I believe you are equal to the challenge. But I must have your essay by the weekend.”

  Miss Lovelace smiled. “I promise.”

  “Is there anything else you want us to do, to make up for our tardiness?” Miss Gage asked.

  Concordia hesitated, her hand on the door. “Can anything be done about the electric lights? They make a terrible buzzing noise.”

  “We’ll start on that right away,” Miss Lovelace said enthusiastically, rummaging in her satchel for the pouch of tools Concordia knew she always carried.

  Concordia smiled. “After the essay, Miss Lovelace. After.”

  Chapter 3

  Week 2, Instructor Calendar September 1898

  David Bradley leaned against a pillar outside Moss Hall. The sight of his compact, muscular form beneath the rumpled houndstooth jacket and his lingering gaze made her heart pound in a disconcerting manner.

  “Hello, Con-Miss Wells,” he said, straightening.

  Misses Lovelace and Gage giggled as they passed by. Concordia rolled her eyes at their retreating backs.

  He drew her into the shadow of the deep doorway. After a quick glance to make sure no one was in sight, he placed a kiss on her inner wrist, just below the glove.

  She shivered with both delight and alarm. “David! This is not the time or place, no matter how soon we are to be married.”

  He grinned. “Your satchel is slipping.”

  She made a grab for it, but he adjusted it on her shoulder, his hand lingering just a shade longer than necessary.

  “You are not helping my composure in the least,” she chided, stepping out of the shadows.

  “That was my objective.” His tone was teasing, but her expression sobered him. “Still anxious about your talk with the lady principal?”

  They walked towards Founder’s Hall, known simply as “The Hall” to everyone at the college. The library occupied the entire ground floor of the building, with the staff offices on the two upper floors. The solid gray stonework, set against the cloudless blue sky of this warm, early fall day, held the promise of permanence, of revered traditions. She sighed. She would miss it so.

  “I should have told her when I returned in August. I put it off much too long.”

  “It is difficult to leave the job one loves.”

  She gave him a grateful glance. It was to his credit that he had come to understand her difficulty in giving up the teaching she loved in order to marry him. Although the twentieth century was nearly upon them, many refused to entertain the notion that a woman could derive her happiness from a vocation other than wife and mother.

  However, her decision had been made, and the teaching had to go. She clasped her bag more firmly.

  His brow furrowed in concern. “Do you want me to accompany you?”

  “I’ll be fine.”

  “Yes, of course.”

  The silence stretched between them as they approached the door to the Hall.

  “Don’t forget,” he said finally, “we are dining at my parents’ house tomorrow evening. Seven o’clock. You have yet to meet my Aunt Drusilla.”

  Her heart sank. Mercy, another relation. One gained an entire family, for good or ill, when one acquired a husband. She had not fully appreciated that fact before.

  David pulled a slim book from a stack under his arm. “When she heard about our engagement, she asked me to give you this.”

  Concordia opened the book. Manners & Social Usages, by Mrs. John Sherwood. She frowned. “Your aunt believes I need etiquette instruction?”

  He shrugged. “I am simply the book-deliverer. I am sure she means well.”

  She tucked it away. “Anything I should know about your aunt, besides her apparent fondness for self-help books?”

  David hesitated. “I shouldn’t keep you. Shall I call for you tomorrow at six-forty? We can talk on the way.”

  She was tempted to inquire further. Better not. One problem at a time. “See you then,” she said, opening the door.

  Lady Principal Pomeroy’s office wa
s next to Mr. Maynard’s. Concordia heard voices through his partly open door. Perhaps when she finished with the lady principal, she could speak with him about adjusting the engineering students’ schedule.

  She smoothed a few unruly strands of red hair in her topknot, adjusted her lenses, and tapped on the door.

  “Enter!” a high-pitched voice called.

  When one first laid eyes upon Gertrude Pomeroy, it was difficult to envision the lady as an accomplished French literature translator and scholar. Her diminutive stature, fluffy gray-brown hair coming out of its pins, chubby cheeks, and bright blue eyes behind gold-rimmed glasses called to mind an aging china doll, albeit ink-stained and bespectacled.

  Miss Pomeroy glanced at the clock as she gestured toward a chair. “Oh my, three o’clock already? Have a…a seat.”

  Easier said than done. Concordia gazed doubtfully around the room at the stacks of books and papers that rested on both furniture and floor. It was a wonder the woman managed to lay her hands on anything. She selected the chair with the smallest pile and held it in her lap.

  Miss Pomeroy peered at her over glasses perilously balanced on the end of her nose. Her impatient attempt to push them back into place left them more crooked than before. “What did you wish to see me about?”

  Resisting the impulse to straighten the spectacles herself, Concordia brought her attention back to the matter at hand. “I have come to give...notice.” She choked out the words. “I will be leaving at the end of the semester.”

  Miss Pomeroy frowned briefly before her brow cleared. “Ah, so you have decided to marry that young man...what’s his name?”

  “Mr. Bradley. Yes. We are to be married in January.”

  “Well, then, I suppose congratulations are in order. We will miss you, dear.”

  Concordia gave a wan smile. “I thought Miss Crandall would be a suitable replacement. She already lives at the cottage, and her substitute post will be finished by then.” She swallowed a lump in her throat. For a brief, selfish moment, she wished her absence would be felt more keenly.