Behind A Mask: or, A Woman's Power
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About this ebook
From the prolific author of Little Women, this crime fiction novella highlights the breadth of Louisa May Alcott’s talent.
First published in 1866, Behind a Mask takes place in Victorian England and follows a sly, master manipulator, Jean Muir. Working as the governess for the Coventry family, Jean is a deceptive and scheming woman determined to set right the many ways in which she believes she has been wronged. After successfully causing a stir amongst the men and women of high society, Jean decides to aim high and attempt to trick the Coventries into giving her their family fortune. But with many secrets hidden behind her innocent facade, Jean only has a narrow window of time to successfully carry out her plan. Delve into Alcott’s early classic to discover the truth behind Jean’s mask.
Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888) is the author of the beloved Little Women, which was based on her own experiences growing up in New England with her parents and three sisters. More than a century after her death, Louisa May Alcott's stories continue to delight readers of all ages.
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Reviews for Behind A Mask
87 ratings7 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The stories were so well written and very suspenseful. I'd forgotten what a great author she is. This genre was quite unexpected but very satisfying.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5As her father, Amos Bronson Alcott, didn't earn enough, Louisa May helped her family by going "out to service" but returns after 7 weeks, furious at being tricked, overworked and cheated of her pay. She taught and sewed. She briefly served as a nurse during the Civil War but became ill. Becomes companion of woman who travels to Europe and learns much of the different personalities she meets. She writes between other jobs. Her horror stories sell well but she was embarrassed with this subject and continued only because it helped the family. Jean Muir, the first story in this collection, dramatically describes a sly, determined actress who bests an upper-class family. I enjoyed it because I can't abide snobs, and because it was obvious that Jean did have heart and soul. I didn't care for Pauline's Passion because it was full of vengeance and anger. Much too ridiculously dramatic. I did like the Mysterious Key because the characters were mostly kind, though it was definitely over the top. The last selection The Abbot's Ghost is the best. So much going on and hard to figure out how it would all end. The are definitely not modern stories but do entertain and show Louisa May Alcott as strong, smart, creative and perhaps even a feminist.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Louisa May Alcott is mostly known for her 'Little Women' novel, but not for her short novellas. These will please literary fans and feminists, academics and students of English alike. Highly recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5These Louisa May Alcott original thrillers might just be the sort of writing she hints at in Little Women, but, while not great literature, they're not bad reading. Alcott's writing is excellent, and even though these stories weren't my sort of thing, I very much enjoyed reading them (with the exception of "Polly's Passion and Punishment" and "The Abbot's Ghost"). They were as much about the psychology of the people involved as the events of the stories.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Some of the stories here are more engaging than others, but they're all well-written and interesting. As different from the Alcott writing you're familiar with as possible, and a worthwhile read regardless.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Not quite as thrilling as the title would have led me to believe. The first story was fairly good, a little longer than it needed to be, but the second story was just terrible which turned me off reading the 3rd one.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Quite different from the Little Woman series of books and 8 cousins and the books that were part of that series.This book is about a woman looking for security in a society that discriminates against them. When a woman with no family had limited options and was held to a much higher standard of conduct then others. Miss Alcott writes with much attention to detail that is not overbearing or too wordy, and with a keen understanding of what it is like to be powerless in one sense and use one’s strengths to ones advantage.
Book preview
Behind A Mask - Louisa May Alcott
BEHIND A MASK
OR A WOMAN’S POWER
By
LOUISA MAY ALCOTT
First published in 1866
under the pseudonym
A.M. BARNARD
This edition published by Read Books Ltd.
Copyright © 2019 Read Books Ltd.
This book is copyright and may not be
reproduced or copied in any way without
the express permission of the publisher in writing
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available
from the British Library
Contents
Louisa May Alcott
JEAN MUIR
A GOOD BEGINNING
PASSION AND PIQUE
A DISCOVERY
HOW THE GIRL DID IT
ON THE WATCH
THE LAST CHANCE
SUSPENSE
LADY COVENTRY
Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott was an American Novelist, best known for the classic Little Women (1868) and its sequels Little Men and Jo’s Boys. Alcott was born on 29 November, 1832 in Germantown, Pennsylvania, USA, and was raised by her transcendentalist parents. The family, despite their connections with the American intellectual elite, suffered severe financial hardship and Alcott frequently helped to support the household. In 1840, after several financial setbacks, most notably following the experimental school set up by Louisa May’s father, the family moved to a cottage along the Sudbury River in Massachusetts. In 1843, the family moved again to the Utopian Fruitlands Community, an agrarian commune, dedicated to natural living. They finally settled in a house they named Hillside in 1845. As a result of this peripatetic childhood, Alcott’s schooling was mainly received from her father, who was an incredibly strict disciplinarian, high thinker and advocate of plain living. This instilled a determination and strong work ethic in Alcott, who worked as a teacher, governess, seamstress and writer in her early years. As an adult, Alcott was a strong abolitionist and a feminist advocate, becoming the first woman to register to vote in Concord, in a school board election. During the civil war, Alcott worked as a nurse in the Union Hospital at Georgetown, D.C. She collected all her letters, often dryly humorous, in book entitled Hospital Sketches (1863); a work which brought Alcott critical acclaim. Following on from this success, Alcott wrote several novels under the pen name A. L. Barnard, most notably A Long Fatal Love Chase (1866) and A Modern Mephistopheles (1875). However, Little Women and its sequels were Alcott’s major successes; the first book dealt with the childhood of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy; characters strongly based on Alcott’s childhood accompanied by her own three sisters. The sequel, Good Wives (1869) dealt with their progression into adulthood, whilst Little Men (1871) detailed Jo’s life at the school she founded alongside her husband. Jo’s Boys (1886) completed the ‘Family Saga’. The Character Jo was loosely based on Alcott’s own life, however unlike the heroine, Alcott never married, commenting that ‘I am more than half-persuaded that I am a man's soul put by some freak of nature into a woman's body ... because I have fallen in love with so many pretty girls and never once the least bit with any man.’ Alcott was firmly part of the Gilded Age, along with authors such as Elizabeth Stoddard and Rebecca Harding Davis, she addressed women’s issues in a modern and candid manner. Alcott continued to write until her death on 6 March, 1888. The cause of death is uncertain; she suffered chronic health problems, including vertigo and typhoid, the latter of which was treated with mercury. However recent analysis of her illnesses has suggested an autoimmune disease such as Lupus. She is buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts, on a hillside known as Author’s Ridge.
Chapter I.
JEAN MUIR
Has she come?
No, Mamma, not yet.
I wish it were well over. The thought of it worries and excites me. A cushion for my back, Bella.
And poor, peevish Mrs. Coventry sank into an easy chair with a nervous sigh and the air of a martyr, while her pretty daughter hovered about her with affectionate solicitude.
Who are they talking of, Lucia?
asked the languid young man lounging on a couch near his cousin, who bent over her tapestry work with a happy smile on her usually haughty face.
The new governess, Miss Muir. Shall I tell you about her?
No, thank you. I have an inveterate aversion to the whole tribe. I’ve often thanked heaven that I had but one sister, and she a spoiled child, so that I have escaped the infliction of a governess so long.
How will you bear it now?
asked Lucia.
Leave the house while she is in it.
No, you won’t. You’re too lazy, Gerald,
called out a younger and more energetic man, from the recess where he stood teasing his dogs.
I’ll give her a three days’ trial; if she proves endurable I shall not disturb myself; if, as I am sure, she is a bore, I’m off anywhere, anywhere out of her way.
"I beg you won’t talk in that depressing manner, boys. I dread the coming of a stranger more than you possibly can, but Bella must not be neglected; so I have nerved myself to endure this woman, and Lucia is good enough to say she will attend to her after tonight."
Don’t be troubled, Mamma. She is a nice person, I dare say, and when once we are used to her, I’ve no doubt we shall be glad to have her, it’s so dull here just now. Lady Sydney said she was a quiet, accomplished, amiable girl, who needed a home, and would be a help to poor stupid me, so try to like her for my sake.
I will, dear, but isn’t it getting late? I do hope nothing has happened. Did you tell them to send a carriage to the station for her, Gerald?
I forgot it. But it’s not far, it won’t hurt her to walk
was the languid reply.
It was indolence, not forgetfulness, I know. I’m very sorry; she will think it so rude to leave her to find her way so late. Do go and see to it, Ned.
Too late, Bella, the train was in some time ago. Give your orders to me next time. Mother and I’ll see that they are obeyed,
said Edward.
Ned is just at an age to make a fool of himself for any girl who comes in his way. Have a care of the governess, Lucia, or she will bewitch him.
Gerald spoke in a satirical whisper, but his brother heard him and answered with a good-humored laugh.
I wish there was any hope of your making a fool of yourself in that way, old fellow. Set me a good example, and I promise to follow it. As for the governess, she is a woman, and should be treated with common civility. I should say a little extra kindness wouldn’t be amiss, either, because she is poor, and a stranger.
That is my dear, good-hearted Ned! We’ll stand by poor little Muir, won’t we?
And running to her brother, Bella stood on tiptoe to offer him a kiss which he could not refuse, for the rosy lips were pursed up invitingly, and the bright eyes full of sisterly affection.
"I do hope she has come, for, when I make an effort to see anyone, I hate to make it in vain. Punctuality is such a virtue, and I know this woman hasn’t got it, for she promised to be here at seven, and now it is long after," began Mrs. Coventry, in an injured tone.
Before she could get breath for another complaint, the clock struck seven and the doorbell rang.
There she is!
cried Bella, and turned toward the door as if to go and meet the newcomer.
But Lucia arrested her, saying authoritatively, Stay here, child. It is her place to come to you, not yours to go to her.
Miss Muir,
announced a servant, and a little black-robed figure stood in the doorway. For an instant no one stirred, and the governess had time to see and be seen before a word was uttered. All looked at her, and she cast on the household group a keen glance that impressed them curiously; then her eyes fell, and bowing slightly she walked in. Edward came forward and received her with the frank cordiality which nothing could daunt or chill.
Mother, this is the lady whom you expected. Miss Muir, allow me to apologize for our apparent neglect in not sending for you. There was a mistake about the carriage, or, rather, the lazy fellow to whom the order was given forgot it. Bella, come here.
Thank you, no apology is needed. I did not expect to be sent for.
And the governess meekly sat down without lifting her eyes.
I am glad to see you. Let me take your things,
said Bella, rather shyly, for Gerald, still lounging, watched the fireside group with languid interest, and Lucia never stirred. Mrs. Coventry took a second survey and began:
You were punctual, Miss Muir, which pleases me. I’m a sad invalid, as Lady Sydney told you, I hope; so that Miss Coventry’s lessons will be directed by my niece, and you will go to her for directions, as she knows what I wish. You will excuse me if I ask you a few questions, for Lady Sydney’s note was very brief, and I left everything to her judgment.
Ask anything you like, madam,
answered the soft, sad voice.
You are Scotch, I believe.
Yes, madam.
Are your parents living?
I have not a relation in the world.
Dear me, how sad! Do you mind telling me your age?
Nineteen.
And a smile passed over Miss Muir’s lips, as she folded her hands with an air of resignation, for the catechism was evidently to be a long one.
So young! Lady Sydney mentioned five-and-twenty, I think, didn’t she, Bella?
No, Mamma, she only said she thought so. Don’t ask such questions. It’s not pleasant before us all,
whispered Bella.
A quick, grateful glance shone on her from the suddenly lifted eyes of Miss Muir, as she said quietly, I wish I was thirty, but, as I am not, I do my best to look and seem old.
Of course, every one looked at her then, and all felt a touch of pity at the sight of the pale-faced girl in her plain black dress, with no ornament but a little silver cross at her throat. Small, thin, and colorless she was, with yellow hair, gray eyes, and sharply cut, irregular, but very expressive features. Poverty seemed to have set its bond stamp upon her, and life to have had for her more frost than sunshine. But something in the lines of the mouth betrayed strength, and the clear, low voice had a curious mixture of command and entreaty in its varying tones. Not an attractive woman, yet not an ordinary one; and, as she sat there with her delicate hands lying in her lap, her head bent, and a bitter look on her thin face, she was more interesting than many a blithe and blooming girl. Bella’s heart warmed to her at once, and she drew her seat nearer, while Edward went back to his dogs that his presence might not embarrass her.
You have been ill, I think,
continued Mrs. Coventry, who considered this fact the most interesting of all she had heard concerning the governess.
Yes, madam, I left the hospital only a week ago.
Are you quite sure it is safe to begin teaching so soon?
I have no time to lose, and shall soon gain strength here in the country, if you care to keep me.
And you are fitted to teach music, French, and drawing?
I shall endeavor to prove that I am.
Be kind enough to go and play an air or two. I can judge by your touch; I used to play finely when a girl.
Miss Muir rose, looked about her for the instrument, and seeing it at the other end of the room went toward it, passing Gerald and Lucia as if she did not see them. Bella followed, and in a moment forgot everything in admiration. Miss Muir played like one who loved music and was perfect mistress of her art.