1886 — A Bookstore
One excellent thing about Dru's position in life was that she never wanted for money. Her father liked to give her a healthy allowance; he could flaunt it as an indulgence to a daughter he loved dearly. A less excellent thing about Dru's position in life was that she sometimes had trouble spending it, since she was usually at home. Things she could order by mail were a godsend, but some of the things she needed weren't the sorts that advertised in the newspaper. Sometimes she sent money to friends so that they could buy for her and send it back — signing Mor's name on the package no matter who sent it, because accepting any parcels from a gentleman was too large a risk even if it wasn't like that. Today, though, she was out for herself. Her stepmother was chaperoning — laughable, since they were of an age, but if it got her out of the house without her father Dru was hardly in a position to complain. Fortunately she had never been close to the new Mrs. Rowle, so the moment they reached the bookstore doors they parted ways, not to be reunited until they departed again. It would have been unbearable if the woman had been the hovering sort — being around her was unbearable enough even in the smallest doses.
Despite the similarities of their positions, Dru was not ready to consider the other woman an ally. Whoever had written the enemy of my enemy is my friend probably had never had real enemies, she suspected. When you were living with a monster you did what you needed to in order to stay out of reach of its claws; she wouldn't have trusted her stepmother not to report back her purchases today if her father asked, no matter how she felt about it personally. So she had first flitted about the bookstore selecting her decoy books, the ones she could layer on the top and bottom of the stack so that her real purchase could disappear in the middle, dismissed as another cheap fantasy novel. She was ready to charm the cover to look alike, too, once she bought it.
She scanned a few aisles, on the lookout for Evangeline Rowle. When she felt confident she was not going to be observed, she ducked into the row she needed: advanced esoteric magics. She had already done the research, already knew exactly which title she needed, knew where it was — except it wasn't on the shelf where it was supposed to be, it was in someone's hands instead.
"Are you planning to buy that?" Dru asked, unable to conceal her annoyance at this interruption. She was meant to be in and out before anyone could notice; the delay was unwelcome.
Despite the similarities of their positions, Dru was not ready to consider the other woman an ally. Whoever had written the enemy of my enemy is my friend probably had never had real enemies, she suspected. When you were living with a monster you did what you needed to in order to stay out of reach of its claws; she wouldn't have trusted her stepmother not to report back her purchases today if her father asked, no matter how she felt about it personally. So she had first flitted about the bookstore selecting her decoy books, the ones she could layer on the top and bottom of the stack so that her real purchase could disappear in the middle, dismissed as another cheap fantasy novel. She was ready to charm the cover to look alike, too, once she bought it.
She scanned a few aisles, on the lookout for Evangeline Rowle. When she felt confident she was not going to be observed, she ducked into the row she needed: advanced esoteric magics. She had already done the research, already knew exactly which title she needed, knew where it was — except it wasn't on the shelf where it was supposed to be, it was in someone's hands instead.
"Are you planning to buy that?" Dru asked, unable to conceal her annoyance at this interruption. She was meant to be in and out before anyone could notice; the delay was unwelcome.

ty MJ <3