Not Of The Land (A Pair of Mail Order Bride Romances)
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Beatrice the Maid & Farmer Flint (A Mail Order Bride Romance) - An English woman, first a scullery maid then an indentured servant in New York, escapes to become a mail ordered bride thanks to the assistance of a young nun. Her husband is eager to get married, but only after they become acquainted. A crisis as they head into town one day gets the ball rolling.
Bugged Out In Nebraska (A Mail Order Bride Romance) - A garment factory worker, not a fan of insects, heads out to a farmer in Nebraska, where the area appears to be under an imminent threat of attack by locusts, at least if the couple are to believe a crazy beekeeping old man who dresses up in a giant locust costume, and who keeps on yelling “They’re Coming”, every chance he gets.
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Not Of The Land (A Pair of Mail Order Bride Romances) - Doreen Milstead
Not Of The Land
(A Pair of Mail Order Bride Romances)
By
Doreen Milstead
Copyright 2016 The Sweet Romance Network Presents…
Beatrice the Maid & Farmer Flint (A Mail Order Bride Romance)
Bugged Out In Nebraska (A Mail Order Bride Romance)
Beatrice the Maid & Farmer Flint (A Mail Order Bride Romance)
Synopsis: Beatrice the Maid & Farmer Flint (A Mail Order Bride Romance) - An English woman, first a scullery maid then an indentured servant in New York, escapes to become a mail ordered bride thanks to the assistance of a young nun. Her husband is eager to get married, but only after they become acquainted. A crisis as they head into town one day gets the ball rolling.
The fog was thick. That wasn’t unusual. What was unusual, or rather what seemed unusual, was the fact that it was too warm for fog on this day, 26 June 1895. However, this was England and the Brits had long ago learned to accept the unexpected. The fog would burn off, it was true, but the blasted heat that carried the high humidity into every corner of the manse would guarantee that demands would be extreme, tempers would flare and the unreasonable expectations of the Chief Cook, Mrs. Crum, would be far more horrendous than usual.
There was no satisfying the rotund Mrs. Crum, who was merely the latest supercilious supervisor of the culinary escapades that had held Beatrice’s employ. The Chief Cook’s staff was an assortment of a dozen or so servants, both scullions -- manservants and skivvies -- scullery maids, plus the supervision of other minions of the home’s service.
Beatrice didn’t work directly for Mrs. Crum. Instead, she had been hired to be subordinate to a kitchen maid and in that position daily faced the intense drudgery of repairing the detritus of the family of Sir Harold Nottingsworth, his wife Araminta, and one child, a spoiled-rotten urchin, Geoffers, age four.
It wasn’t that the kitchen maid was particularly difficult to satisfy. Her role was simply to manage the skivvies,
the lowest on the heap of household servants. Absolute power had been given to Mrs. Crum alone. Should the master of the house, his wife, or the horrible Geoffers be dissatisfied with the services offered by Beatrice, Mrs. Crum would be certain to scold the young servant properly, loudly, and within the hearing of every other servant if only for the benefit of the object lesson therein contained.
Master Nottingsworth was a reasonable man, at least as Beatrice Bevins perceived him. He was a man slow of anger, logical in judgment and patient to the point of being a saint. Araminta, his wife, was a counterpoint in excess, conveying to Mrs. Crum even the slightest dissatisfaction of her observations—or the tantrums of the infrequently satisfied Geoffers.
From the beginning, however, it seemed obvious to Beatrice that the master’s interest in her extended as much to her physical attributes as to any competence she may employ in her position.
Beatrice—she of the auburn hair, rosy cheeks, and inviting body—had found her way to the Nottingsworth household in somewhat of a roundabout way. The story wasn’t complex. Beatrice, known to her family as Bea,
was the youngest child of indigent parents. Her mother, Penelope, had died of consumption and her father, Arthur, had been imprisoned for shoplifting. She had no idea where her older brother was, his having been impressed for sea duty two years before.
Suddenly, at age seventeen, Beatrice Bevins was homeless. Only through the graces of the Sisters of St. Michael’s Church had she been able to locate her initial position of servitude, that of a scullery maid to a family of low estate. That family was ultimately unable to afford the extra mouth to feed, much less her wage and support requirements, so she was let go—with suitable references, of course, to another employment.
Sadly, that situation had occurred now three times, owing largely to the replacement of tasks by machines and a famine. Finally, she had located what appeared to be a more stable position at the Nottingsworth manse.
The master, Sir Harold Nottingsworth, was an academic and Dean at Victoria College, a position whereby his wife, Araminta, was able to take on airs and to function as if butter would not melt in her mouth. Thus, the professor’s wife professed to her heart’s content among the faculty wives, carrying with her the assumed credentials and political leverages of her husband while delegating the upbringing of the horrible Geoffers to a governess with the reputation of a lion tamer.
Unfortunately, to Beatrice, Geoffers was very much unlike the fog. He didn’t go away. Ever.
Bea’s duties were not complex—merely exhausting. They were highly labor intensive and time consuming. It was not that the care of three family members was difficult. It was not. No, what made the position such a drudge were not only the three family members, but also the dozen staff members, including a kitchen staff of seven, a supervisory staff of two, a butler, a chauffeur who doubled as a gentleman’s gentleman,
and a gardener.
Of course, the not-so-beloved Althea Crum, who ruled the staff with an iron fist saw herself as second in importance only to Queen Victoria her very self.
Bea’s instructions had been simple. Her day would commence by 6 a.m. As the lowest person in the heap, it would be her duty to clean the grate, scrape the hearth of overnight ashes and kindle a range fire. The first order of business in this, as in every English house of status would be morning tea and it was Bea’s responsibility to prepare tea for all the staff. Mrs. Crum was clear that her tea to be both strong and sweet.
Once tea service had been completed, Bea was to clean the brass at the front door and to sweep—and if necessary, scrub—the steps therefore allowing the home to be presentable to the public.
Once the house’s external face had been prepared, it would now be time to clean the hallways and scrub the kitchen floor. When that was done, Bea must now prepare breakfast for the other servants to eat at 8 a.m. When the staff had eaten, it would be Bea’s job to assist Mrs. Crum in the preparation of the family’s breakfast.
Then there was lunch to prepare, vegetables to pare and chop, interminable pots and dishes to clean—plates, bowls, saucepans, jugs, and cutlery, much of which was smeared with greasy gravy and congealed fat. Each pot had to be scrubbed with soft soap until it shone like new.
Her life revolved around cleaning everything, everywhere, every day. Her days stretched to fifteen hours of repetitive and backbreaking tasks until exhausted, she’d climb into bed after 9 p.m. or later, only to do it once again on the following day. On Saturdays, she was required to clean the quarters of the other servants, scrubbing their rooms from top to bottom. She scrubbed and polished the passageway and kitchen floors until they shone. Only on Sunday was there a respite, as she attended Mass at St. Michaels, where she was assured that her lowly station was something she must endure.
Nevertheless, there was something she would not endure—something she must not endure at all costs. That something was the advances of the master of the house, made in the darkness of her room in the middle of the night.
"Is somebody