This is a Fanfiction to the series of novels.
The names are important, they provide a clue.
For the style of writing, that's a joke too.
If you know your folklore, and Urban Legends,
you'll be able to guess how my story ends.
“Death is a debt to nature due,
which I have paid, and so must you.”
1. The Failed Endeavor of Charles W. Elliott, Rakehell.
The sodden and sullen Elspeth trod the cold country road back to Bonston and the Lawson-Peabody School on Beacon Hill that cold and foggy night. Her white empire dress dragged damply from the mist that enshrouded her, she having left her cloak back at the sizable farm owned by the Elliott family. The Elliott family, of course, being away “on some business”, leaving Charles, the scion of the family, as her sole host. She had tried to play the part of the gracious, albeit unchaperoned guest for the better part of the evening, and now that it was the worse part, she could only muse why she'd tarried in departing.
For sure, it was no comfort for a young lady to walk the miles home in a ghostly fog in the middle of the night. As unseemly an act as it was, she was not about to trust Mr. Charles W. Elliott with the task of accompanying her home; as his deceits in bringing her to his progenitors manse left her with little reason to trust him alone with her in the carriage by which she'd arrived.
A lifetime ago, she'd have ignored the furtive glances of the Elliott family's staff; the silent admonitions of their young master would have gone unnoticed. She'd have trusted Charles' weak excuses that his parents were sure to be back later that evening, or at the latest, tomorrow morning, at face value. And she'd have allowed the wine she was offered to go undiluted; as it happened, she took coffee with cream and sugar with her dinner, intent to be alert as possible that night.
But her brief tenure as a guest of the slave ship Bloodhound had cured her of the naïve trust and magnanimous lack of apprehension that a young girl might otherwise offer such a rake. And before her harrowing journey across the seas, and rescue at the hands of the stalwart, if eccentric, femme buccaneer Jacky Faber, Elspeth would have never had the audacity to leave a house via a second story window; shimmying down a fine oak tree and sprinting away to the post road in the shadows.
Of course... her narrow escape had left her clad in garments only suited for the warm indoors; the closer to a roaring fire, the better. Had she the steel to confront Charles directly, rather than slipping away from his attention via pale politeness and easy excuse, she might have stormed from his house through the cloak room, and at least retrieved her outermost garment.
But she still heel her chin aloft as any topsail, even if her tresses clung to her face from the damp. And the squelching road permeated her thin embroidered shoes. And the misty gloom left her chemise and petticoats clinging to her pale skin. And she was sure the kohl she'd borrowed from her sweet swashbuckling friend to make her eyes appear larger, more attentive at night must now be smearing in the heavy, penetrating near-rain.
She massaged her pale limbs for warmth, stamped the discomfort out of her soles, and shuddered. Rubbed her palms into her eyes to dry them, her ears and visage to steady them, slapping her cheeks lightly in the effort to The chill fall night sending her teeth chattering as she let out a low sigh. It was then she hear the soft and steady pace of a team of horses.
She turned to the echoing approach of the trolley, its humble make far removed to the fine barouche that had carried her to the home and machinations of Charles W. Elliott earlier that evening. Far from a fancy familial conveyance, it instead appeared built to honest labor, though still containing the comfort of a calash-covered headboard.