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think?ā€

Sitting up, Precious smiled, her eyes brightening. ā€œIt is. I picture a whole different person when I hear ā€˜Eva.ā€™ Like a Hollywood star. Eva can be your nicknameā€”like Precious is for me. It can be something else we share. Except Eva is more special since youā€™re giving it to yourself.ā€

ā€œYou think so?ā€

Precious nodded enthusiastically. ā€œAbsolutely. Youā€™re reinventing yourself, so you might as well have a new name.ā€ She sniffled into her tissue, her eyes turning serious. ā€œBut wonā€™t your parents mind? Ethel is the name they gave you.ā€

Ethel had told her friend very little about her background, only that sheā€™d lived in northern England with her mother, who supported them both by taking in laundry from the big houses and working as a seamstress for the well-to-do. Sheā€™d confided in Precious that she sent her mother money from every paycheck, but she hadnā€™t admitted that she never included a letter, because her mother couldnā€™t read or write.

Nor had she mentioned her father or his meaty fists, or how heā€™d been sent to jail for beating a man almost to death in a bar brawl after the man had accused him of cheating at cards. Sheā€™d never told Precious about her motherā€™s smashed face and broken fingers, or how they had moved several times just in case her father ever got out of jail and took it upon himself to find them.

Ethel knew that Precious would understand, would probably hug her to show that she did. Ethel didnā€™t tell her friend because the shame she felt was a hot, living thing that smoldered in her core. In her new life as a model in London, sheā€™d gotten in the habit of ignoring it, the equivalent of placing a small lid over a raging stove fire. It was still there, but as long as she didnā€™t look at it, she could live her life as if Ethel Maltby had never existed at all.

ā€œNo. I donā€™t think theyā€™ll mind,ā€ she said, unpinning her soaking hat. ā€œIā€™ll go put the kettle on and then see about making you chicken soup.ā€ She took off her coat, almost dropping the purse tucked inside. Ethel lifted the manā€™s handkerchief to her nose, the faint scent of sandalwood making her think of freckles and a deep chin cleft. Of eyes that laughed and were the color of the dales surrounding her home.

ā€œI met a gentleman on the high street.ā€ When her friend didnā€™t respond, Ethel turned toward the bed, not surprised to discover Precious had fallen asleep again, her face pressed into the pillow.

Ethel folded the handkerchief carefully and placed it inside her dresser, making sure it was tucked on top, where sheā€™d see it each time she opened her drawer. It would be her talisman to remember the day Ethel Maltby had reinvented herself as an enigmatic woman named Eva. And the man whoā€™d asked for her name and made her believe that her mother might have been wrong, that her world was full of possibilities that she hadnā€™t yet begun to imagine.

CHAPTER 4

LONDON

MAY 2019

I stood by the phone in the small alcove in the front foyer, glittering gems of sunlight filtering through the leaded glass casement windows and dotting the walls and floor, making me think of ghosts. Grief is like a ghost. I imagined years of ghosts trapped in each dust mote and shard of light in the old flat, waiting to be set free. I stared at a gray leaf frozen in the glass of the window, my thoughts making me pause, giving me a new perspective on my assignment.

I was supposed to interview a ninety-nine-year-old former model and write an article about how contemporary fashion had been influenced by the Second World War. The idea had seemed very accessible, and Iā€™d had the time available, so Iā€™d agreed. Arabella planned to run my piece in the magazine in conjunction with an exhibition of 1940s fashion at the Design Museum, many of the clothes provided by Precious. It had all seemed very standard.

Then Iā€™d met Precious Dubose, and Iā€™d realized that the assignment wasnā€™t as clear-cut as Iā€™d assumed.

Grief is like a ghost. Maybe Precious Dubose had been waiting all these years to set some of hers free.

I yawned, feeling completely exhausted. I hadnā€™t been able to sleep past five oā€™clockā€”midnight New York timeā€”and not just because of the time difference. My phone had been binging since five with incoming texts from my sister Knoxie asking me to call her. I had a feeling it was about the small-rodent taxidermy-of-the-month club Iā€™d enrolled her in for her birthday, so I was in no hurry to call her back, even if she just wanted to chat. My family and Walton, Georgia, seemed so very far away, like a movie Iā€™d watched and loved a long time ago that was no longer relevant. It was how I wanted it, and the main reason I now lived in New York.

I bent my head over my phone as I walked toward the kitchen, in desperate need of coffee.

My progress was stopped by a solid chest in a starched white shirt that smelled faintly of soap and dog.

I stepped back quickly and looked up into blue eyes that could have been amused or annoyedā€”it was hard to tell this early in the morning and without coffee. ā€œExcuse me,ā€ I said. ā€œCould you please point me in the direction of a coffeemaker?ā€

ā€œAnd good morning to you, too, Madison. Follow me.ā€ Colin led the way into the kitchen, and I dutifully followed, my phone vibrating with another text. The door to the small bedroom off of the kitchenā€”the former maidā€™s room, Iā€™d been told, but now occupied by Laura and Oscarā€”was slightly open, revealing an empty room and a made bed, making me assume the nurse was already with Precious.

ā€œI have a cafetiĆØre. I hope thatā€™s all right.ā€ Colin motioned for me to sit at the table while he poured coffee

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