

Her dress was made of pearly ivory satin, caught up under the bodice, and laid over with a shimmering overdress that extended into a train in the back. The sleeves were short, the bodice modest, and Sophie was wearing high satin gloves. When Madame Carême produced the gown Sophie had wailed that she would look a veritable dowager.


Sophie appeared at the recessed columns at the side of the chapel, her hand resting lightly on her father’s sleeve.Įloise had convinced her to wear white, and as Sophie walked quietly into the chapel, her gown gleaming palely in the late afternoon light, she looked innocent, fragile, other-worldly. No one would think that she was a young woman who drew scandalous attention like a magnet to the true north. Even the most vicious imagination must hesitate to speculate why this marriage happened with such speed. Sophie’s hair spilled down her back in a glowing flood, adorned only by creamy rose buds, tucked among the amber curls. She was the snow princess from a Russian folk tale, the guileless fairy queen from an Irish love story. Just then the brief hush and hum that always precedes the entrance of a bride fell on the chapel. Patrick looked imperturbable, standing in front of the church with his twin brother. Unlike Braddon, who was nervously shifting from foot to foot and yanking at his vest, the two Foakes brothers stood like rocks. Could she risk giving the old harridan a sharp set down? No. Instead Eloise turned her head back toward the altar. She had been very pleased to learn that the Earl of Slaslow was standing up for Patrick. That should put a sock in the gossips’ chatter! He looked a bit peevish, the Chatwin boy, but then he was the peevish sort anyway. In fact, the more she’d thought about it, the more it seemed clear that Sophie would be better off with Patrick Foakes.

“Stop peering, Eloise,” Henrietta was saying, with the freedom of a rather crotchety woman on the far side of seventy. “They’re all here, no need to worry. Thinking it’s the love match of the century, no doubt!” She positively cackled.Įloise looked at Henrietta with a pang of extreme dislike. George’s chapel at three o’clock on a Wednesday afternoon. She had rummaged up every single relation she and George had on their side of the family and had, in essence, done the same with Patrick Foakes’s family, given that his entire family consisted of one brother (Alex), an uncle, and an aunt. However few in number, they were all prominently in view. Patrick’s uncle would conduct the ceremony and his aunt, Henrietta Collumber, had been given a place of honor next to the bride’s mother. Eloise York felt a warm glow of satisfaction in the pit of her stomach as she looked discreetly over the mass of gentlefolk occupying St.
