My Dear Miss Dupré, page 1

© 2021 by Grace Hitchcock
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2021
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-3000-0
Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by Koechel Peterson & Associates, Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota / Jon Godfredson
Cover photography by Ron Ravensborg
Author is represented by The Steve Laube Agency.
For Dakota,
My Heartbeat
Contents
Cover
Half Title Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Epigraph
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Ads
Back Cover
And he hath put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God: many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in the LORD.
Psalm 40:3
One
New York City
New Year’s Eve, 1882
Willow Dupré twirled on the ice, spreading her arms and guiding her body around the other skaters on the frozen lake of Central Park. The crisp morning air nipped at her cheeks and brought life to her limbs that ached from the long hours working behind her father’s desk, which was something she was unused to doing. Since Father’s illness, the ice was the one place she could truly release the pressures of assuming the throne of her family’s sugar empire, for there was no risk of gliding by one of her paunchy board members. Willow arched her arms above her head despite the seams of her sleeves digging into her shoulders, keeping her hands in her fur muff, and spun, loving the whirl of her short, fur-trimmed crimson cape about her, not minding the hairpins pulling loose from her stern bun, releasing her chestnut locks to tumble to her slender waist while her winter cap miraculously stayed firmly in place.
“My dear Miss Dupré!”
She started, nearly losing her footing along with her thoughts. She flung out her arms to balance herself and turned to find a handsome gentleman she dimly recalled from a past season, stumbling across the frozen pond toward her in gleaming skates with leather straps over his boots that were far too loose to do much good. She allowed him to take her hand in his, scrambling to recall his name. Kind eyes and impossibly deep voice. “Mr. Friedrich Blythe.” She dipped her head in the place of a curtsy. “I did not know you skated.”
He chuckled and stroked the tip of his thick ginger mustache into a point and sent her a wink. “It’s hard to believe, for as you can see, I’m such a natural on the ice. But I haven’t skated since I was a boy. I heard that you enjoyed the sport, so I came in hope of seeing you.”
“Oh?” She gave him a tentative smile, unsure as to why Mr. Blythe would seek her out when he had not done so in the year since they had met. A giggling pair of children wove around her and brushed passed Friedrich, the light touch sending his arms to flapping wildly as he attempted to regain his footing. Willow strode forward and seized his coat sleeve, steadying him lest he knock himself to the ground with his floundering. “Hold on, Mr. Blythe! You won’t perish today.”
Laughing, Mr. Blythe slowly released his hold on her arms, his cheeks reddening. “Thank you. Well, uh, as I was saying, you cannot imagine my pleasure when I received one of your coveted invitations last night.”
Willow blinked, truly confused. Mother was hosting their annual New Year’s Eve party tonight, but those invitations would have been issued two weeks ago. “Invitation?”
“Yes. I happen to have mine with me, if you would like to see it?” Mr. Blythe withdrew a golden scroll secured with a lush, burgundy satin ribbon from his greatcoat and handed it to her, bobbing from the motion.
She slid the ribbon off and unfurled the scroll to read the engraved summons,
To Mr. Friedrich Blythe, you have been selected to attend a competition, along with twenty-nine gentlemen, beginning the thirty-first of December to win the hand of our daughter and heiress to our empire, Willow Dupré. Should you accept, you will court Miss Dupré alongside the other suitors in an attempt to win her heart and marry within six months.
What on earth? Willow crumpled the invitation in her fist without reading the rest and shoved it into her muff, shivering. “I apologize for the confusion. This has to be a jest. My parents would never think of something so outlandish, so—” Degrading.
He chuckled, removing his stiff hat and running his fingers through his thick locks before setting his hat firmly in place once more. “Come now, Miss Dupré. You do not have to be coy with me. The city is already humming with the news.”
“But I am not playing the coquette, Mr. Blythe. I truly think there has been some sort of misunderstandi—”
He grasped her hand and lightly tugged, sending her skates into a gentle glide toward him. “Now, I know it is breaking the rules of the game to contact you before the ball tonight, so it is with the deepest remorse that I must bid you farewell, my lady, but not before I bestow upon you the first of many tokens of my affection.” Mr. Blythe wobbled into a bow and kissed her gloved hand and straightened, giving her a smile filled with hope as he withdrew a nosegay of withering white flowers with tiny golden hearts. “From my mother’s conservatory. My apologies for their state, which is due to my lack of foresight, but the sentiment of the white jasmine is what I hope to convey.”
“Extreme amiability?” she interpreted, remembering its meaning from Mother’s required hours of studying the secret language of flowers, including the ever-popular floral dictionaries. Sliding the small bouquet into her muff, she shook her head to wake herself from the haze of his charm. “So, this is not a hoax?”
Mr. Blythe’s grin faltered. “You mean to tell me that you truly did not know of the invitation to court you?”
“Absolutely not. I knew, of course, about a party tonight, but do you think I would have allowed these invitations to have been sent if I had known? Please excuse me, as I need to sort through this mess.” She dipped her head in a dismissive nod before gliding to the opposite side of the pond, weaving around the throngs of skaters going and coming from the three-storied skaters’ tent with concessions in hand, her focus on her things atop the park bench at the edge of the landing. Lifting her plain navy skirt, she tromped through a snowdrift, not minding the snow seeping through her stockings at the tops of her boots, and perched on the freezing bench to unfasten the buckles of the leather straps securing her skates. She tugged her feet out of her skating boots and slipped on her walking shoes. Gripping the skate straps in one hand, she marched down the park’s freshly shoveled path toward the Inventor’s Gate, leading to her home on Fifth Avenue. She would get to the bottom of this nonsense at once.
“But, as it is true, you will not be stopping the competition, even if it is a bit untoward, will you, Miss Dupré?” Mr. Blythe called, disappointment edging his tone as he trotted up behind her, his skates nowhere in sight.
She took a second glance at him, surprise fluttering to life in her stomach. He is genuinely excited about the invitation to court me. Willow drew in a breath and gave the handsome fellow her prettiest smile, adding a modicum of kindness to her reply. “I am certain the annual New Year’s Eve party will continue as planned and I will be happy to receive you. As for a competition, I can say with confidence that it will not occur. Now if you will excuse me, Mr. Blythe, I need to be on my way,” she finished and darted off, disregarding etiquette for once. Her neck burned with the shame of the rumor as she skirted around couples, street vendors, and children with their nannies pushing prams at tremendous speeds, taking chase after them.
“Willow! Willow Dupré!”
She caught sight of her dearest friend waving frantically to her from down the avenue, and at the darkness in Flora’s expression, Willow’s heart plummeted. Father. She raced to Flora’s side, hopping over and around patches of blackened ice. “Is something wrong?” Willow panted, pressing her glove
“Yes! Why did you not tell me about this competition?” Flora crossed her arms, the golden curls framing her face atremble. “I had to find out from Marcy Mae Lovett, who knew all about it because her brother, Archibald, received his invitation last night, delivered by one of your own servants.”
“Is that all?” She released a nervous laugh, which turned into a groan that even Flora had heard of the fraudulent invitation. Willow motioned for Flora to continue walking with her. “I only just found out myself and am about to put an end to this rumor.”
Flora’s expression clouded before her eyes widened and she dodged a flying snowball, sending the three mischiefs responsible a glare that could melt the snow, and brushed off her immaculate sapphire cloak. “End? B-but think of the men vying for your hand. I am fairly green from envy that my parents did not think of such a thing for me. And as for it being a rumor, haven’t you noticed the murmurs about the city of those who have not been invited to your annual party?”
Willow slowed, the whispers of the past weeks of socialites not receiving invitations now making sense.
“Aren’t you at all excited at the prospect of having your pick from society’s elite gentlemen?”
Willow resumed her frantic pace. Her parents had some explaining to do. “I would have been when I was a debutante nearly six years ago, but I’m twenty-four now and having all those men seeking me out for marriage is exactly why I must put an end to it, and the means of said courtship is mortifying. Now everyone will think I need my parents to make a favorable match when the fact is that I am simply too busy to take the time to find a husband worth the taking.”
“After years of lessons at the university and working at your father’s side for the past few years, you need to take time for yourself. How else are you going to find a husband?”
“I don’t have time for a husband. This is the second Saturday I have had off from work since Father’s heart attack this summer. Monday was the first time the doctors allowed Father to set foot in the Dupré Sucré office, and even then it was only for an hour or so. I have a family and a business to support and I do not have time for this sort of thing.” She pulled the offending invitation from her muff and waved it in the air.
Flora snatched it away at once, clutching it to her chest. “Take care or you will lose it and have some random gentleman showing up at your ball.” She stuffed it back into Willow’s muff. “Take a breath and relax. The sugar refinery will be fine without you at the helm for the duration of this competition. Besides, your parents wouldn’t have issued invitations for a courtship if Mr. Dupré wasn’t recovering. It is time you cease thinking only about running the empire and turn your attention to having someone at your side besides your father,” she replied as Willow climbed the steps to the Duprés’ gray stone mansion at the corner of Sixty-Eighth, pausing to knock the snow from her boots against the doorframe. “It has been years since you have even looked at a man for anything other than a business deal, Willow. You have been labeled as New York’s wealthiest spinster.”
Willow gritted her teeth, suppressing her scathing riposte. “You know I prefer the term bachelorette.”
“Bachelor girl sounds utterly nonsensical, even in French, and it will never become vogue to be an old maid. You are a spinster, dear, and I am but six months from being considered one myself,” she added with a shudder. “Yet what am I to do now when all the good ones will be snatched up in your competition?”
Willow rolled her eyes. “Fine. This spinster needs to get to the bottom of this ridiculousness, so if you’ll excuse me—”
“But I wanted to hear what your parents have to say,” Flora protested, kicking a hardened lump of snow from the top step, sending it toppling down to the sidewalk.
“You and I both know I’ll tell you all later,” Willow reassured her friend before slipping inside. After handing her skates, hat, and wrap to the footman, she followed the echoes of voices.
Willow found her parents seated in the drawing room, heads bowed together and deep in thought, while her twin sisters half her age, Philomena and Sybil, kept their gazes fixed on the chessboard in front of them.
“Do you know anything about this?” Willow asked as she crossed the room and dropped the crumpled gilded invitation onto her mother’s lap and planted her fists at her trim waist.
Father nodded to Mother. “You best tell her, Christine.”
Setting aside the abused invitation, Mother rose, clasped her hands before her pristine blush skirt, and sent Willow an apologetic smile. “Let us speak privately in the adjoining room. I would rather the girls not hear our reasoning, William,” she replied in a low voice, wrapping her arms around Father’s waist, assisting him up from the settee and handing him his cane.
So, there is truth to the rumor. Willow groaned and followed them into her mother’s private sitting room, waiting until Mother drew the French doors closed before asking, “Why would you do this to me? Do you know how humiliating it was to be told of this scheme by last season’s most eligible bachelor, Friedrich Blythe? He has grown a rather large mustache since we met, so I almost didn’t recall his name until it was too late. And what about our annual party? I have been reassuring our usual guests that their invitations must have gotten lost! And now I find out you have had an entirely different list in mind?”
“I do feel rather bad on that score. However, I sent round a note to our usual guests this morning, explaining things.” Mother took her by the arm, shushing her with an admonishing tilt of her brow, silently reminding Willow to choose her next words carefully so as not to upset Father. “Have a seat, dear, and we will explain everything.”
Willow rubbed her temples and stared at the fresco on the ceiling, attempting to gather her emotions. If she had not spent every waking moment buried in office ledgers, she might have noticed—she might have stopped this nonsense. “You both know I have no wish to marry at the moment, especially with having the company to run while you recover, Father. Why, then, do you two feel the need to marry me off in such a rush?”
Father rubbed his thumb over the intricate carved ivory head of his cane. “I know it seems sudden, but we received word from the doctors this past week and it was not what I had hoped to hear.”
Any anger she harbored faded at the mention of her father’s illness. Willow looked to the stooped man before her, amazed at how an illness could transform a person. Father seemed so much better than he had only last month, but of course he had seemed fine before the heart attack. What aren’t you telling me? “You will recover, won’t you?”
“The doctors say that I will recover, but not to the extent we had hoped. They have given me six months of working half days to retire or they fear I will suffer a second attack from the strain.”
Mother pulled a handkerchief from her sleeve and balled it in her fist, blinking away her tears.
Willow sank down beside him on the mauve velvet, swallowing the lump in her throat. He would not wish to hear of her disappointment, her fear over his condition. He would only want for her to be level-headed. “Then I will take over, of course, but this does not explain the need for me to secure a husband by June.”
“The shareholders do not approve of your taking over the business without me at your side to guide you, and with the doctors’ new orders . . . I am afraid that I cannot be the partner with you as we had hoped for all these years.” He stroked her cheek with the back of his hand as the fireplace crackled. “Which means, if the shareholders do not approve of your leadership, they may sell their portions to our biggest competitor, Wellington Sugar, who, as you well know, is always trying to lure them into selling him their shares in an attempt to gain a foothold in our family’s legacy and eventually take control. So far I have managed to keep the shareholders through their sense of loyalty and promises of wealth, but if Wellington manages to secure those shares, along with that last bit from your rather unpredictable cousin . . .” He sighed. “We stand to lose a great deal, as Wellington will gain majority if your cousin Osborne sells.”
Willow’s lungs became heavy, her breath catching with the weight of the threat. She reached out for Father’s hand, her first concern for his health and the second, closely after, of the sugar refinery her grandfather and father had spent their lives building. She thought of her little sisters and looked to her mother and father. She could not be the reason for the Dupré empire to fall. “I know I could do the job well. I have studied by your side for the past few years and taken classes at Cornell. I have journals upon journals of ideas on how to improve the company while bringing in even more profits. Surely the board will see—”


