Lady Olivia Chapman-deceased
Avatar: 0livia.Adored
VW: Second Life

Location:
Country: GB
Supporter Badge

White light

user image 2013-07-04
By: RIP Lady Olivia
Posted in:

[Journal Entry - 4 July 1773]

In the early morning hours yesterday, I arose and made my way to the stables to take my mare for the day's ride. I advised my maid that I would be back in time for tea as I had many stops to make that day. She protested, of course, that I had not had anything to eat. She is determined that I take better care of myself.

As the boy fetched and geared Barrow (named after a particularly long-faced Governess I had as a child), I contemplated my life. A rather meaningless occupation for one newly twenty, but my lack of suitable suitors was a constant ghost, haunting me. Mama threw every Earl, Duke and Count my way, but either they had no interest in a silly young girl, or I no interest in dull men. Papa constantly threatened the convent, but as he had not wrapped me in a modest cloak and shipped me off to Coldingham Monastery, I surmised that it was merely his way of keeping me in line.

Atop Barrow, my main concern was getting where I needed to go with as little of nature's decoration as possible. The roads were thick with mud after so much rain. A carriage was quite out of the question. I had to see Mrs. Hill - our blacksmith's wife, who'd taken ill - to ask after her health; to see the Vicar, to make a donation to the fund for newly opened orphanage; and to speak with a number of others on various personal matters. Some may think that a politely written letter would suffice; I disagree. Certain things should be done in person, and personally, to my mind.

I did not make it off the estate when something spooked the horse. She reared. I remember screaming as I lost my grip and flew. A thousand things flooding my mind in the blink of an eye. Then nothing more.

658_blogs.png?width=750 I cannot be sure how long I lay on the road, but as it is part of the estate, no stranger would have found me, and as I was to be gone the entire day, no servant came to look for me.

Barrow was gone. I do not know where to. I merely brushed myself clean as best I could, and had great difficulties in keeping myself upright. My hat hid any marks left by the road and I was able to struggle back to the house without being seen. Katie knocked and I sent her away, saying that I was feeling poorly, and to ask the cook to send up some broth. She would leave it on the table in the sitting room, I knew, so I made my way into my dressing room and fell back onto the chaise.

659_blogs.png?width=750

I took stock of myself. Legs were in working order, though quite weak. I was not bleeding, or at least that I knew of, still dressed in my riding habit. But the one maddening thing was the light. The candle light seemed magnified a hundred... nay... a thousand times. I could not bear to open my eyes, so brilliant and intrusive.

After a long night's rest, it seems to have subsided some, though I still have a residual halo around all things, as if all things were framed in a heavenly aura. I shall have to cleverly use paste and powders to hide some discoloration along my cheekbones but all in all, feel quite fortunate to have sustained only minor injuries.

Duchess Beatrice (aka Blissful)
05 Jul 2013 12:34:14PM @duchess-beatrice-aka-blissful:

How very curious- perhaps Barrow saw the ghost too!


RIP Lady Olivia
05 Jul 2013 01:31:09PM @lady-olivia-chapman-deceased:

I had not thought of that! You may be right!


Lady Aphrodite Macbain
05 Jul 2013 11:17:46PM @lady-aphrodite-macbain:

Oh my dear- I do hope you recover from your terrible fall. You seem to be in a very strange state right now and I worry about your health. Please come to the cafe tomorrow; I will feed you some very delicious cake I have just made-which will do you enormous good I'm sure.