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The Missing Sister of Buntingford
By
Darryl Martel
In May 1864, in the quiet Hertfordshire market town of Buntingford, the Foster family enjoys comfort, reputation, and security. Mr. Foster is a respected attorney; Mrs. Foster devotes herself to the parish, her daughters, and the endless work of arranging their futures.
Cora, twenty, is beautiful, educated, and reserved, harboring secret hopes for a match with Edward Hamilton, the charming son of a wealthy local landowner. Alice, eighteen, is spirited and adventurous, with a hunger for life beyond Buntingford's narrow lanes.
When Edward Hamilton visits, the sisters giggle in anticipation—but their hopes are shattered. It is not the son who courts Cora, but Edward Hamilton senior, a widower twenty years her elder. Bound by duty, family pressure, and the promise of security, Cora accepts his proposal.
On the eve of her wedding preparations, tragedy strikes. Alice vanishes after a carriage accident. Her shawl is found abandoned in a ditch, and grief falls over the household. While Cora marries and follows her new husband to Derbyshire, Alice awakens in chains. She has been abducted by Andrew Blake, a ruthless trafficker, and sold into a London brothel.
In the shadows of the city, Alice endures brutality and despair. Attempts to escape are met with violence, yet her spirit refuses to break. When she discovers she is pregnant, her resolve sharpens: she will fight for her child's life, no matter the cost. A daring escape aided by another girl carries her out of the city and, step by step, back toward home.
Years later, worn, impoverished, and with her son in her arms, Alice is reunited with her family. Cora—now mistress of a grand house—welcomes her back, and the Foster family must confront the painful silence around Alice's ordeal. While society urges discretion, Alice chooses courage. She speaks publicly of what happened, exposing Blake's network and standing as a voice for countless other silenced women.
Her testimony shakes both polite society and the criminal underworld. But Alice does not stop there. With her sister's support and the protection of her new brother-in-law, she establishes Rosehaven, a refuge for women escaping lives of exploitation.
From the safety of Rosehaven, Alice forges a new legacy. She is no longer merely "the missing sister" but a survivor, a mother, and a builder of hope. Her journey becomes one of reclamation, resilience, and the enduring bond between sisters—proving that even in the darkest of times, love and determination can light the way home.