I suppose I had better disclaimer this because we'll lift quotations directly from the movie and, obviously, the songs. So, there's not meant to be any infringement. It's just a bit of AU madness.
Let’s start at the very beginning. As you may have heard, it’s a very good place to start. This story begins in tandem with the gentle warming of spring and the dawning of a fresh morning. It begins in the dormitory of the Nonnberg Abbey some time prior to the Anschluss. Furthermore, it begins with the waking of three young women from their nightly dreams as the bell tolls ring out seven o’clock.
The eyes of the young woman, abed closest to the windows letting in the bright tendrils of sunlight, fluttered open and a soft, contented sigh lifted her chest. A half smile tickled at her lips as she brought her hand to her forehead. As she pushed back some of her hair from her face she felt the hum of a song rise, vibrating against her lips. Today would be a good day. She was almost certain of it.
Tossing back the covers, she lifted her legs out from the warmth and pressed her stocking bereft feet against the chilly stone floor. She didn’t let the ice detract from the brightness she felt welling within her, though, and she pushed to standing, immediately flitting over to the window. Lifting her hand, she pushed at the latch and let in the warm breeze that was drifting down from the mountains and as she closed her eyes, inhaling the smell of the edelweiss, she was sure she could hear the mountain song.
“The gates are open,” she observed wistfully, her fingers coming to her chin thoughtfully.
“None of that today,” Alice’s lyrical voice waxed over from where she was stood at the wash basins. “Come and get ready, Millie.”
“Oh, but Allie … can’t you just smell summer coming?” Millie asked, turning away from the window to join her friend at the basins.
“It’s neither here nor there whether I do,” Alice replied tartly, though Millie could see the sparkle in her eyes as she ran her flannel down her neck.
Millie tried to supress her smile and she picked up her flannel, wetting it in the basin before her.
“Are you going to go?” Mairen whispered, coming to stand on the other side of the mousy-haired young woman. “If you went now, you could be back before breakfast.”
“Don’t encourage her!” Alice despaired, throwing down her flannel which landed with a squelch on the table top.
“I was only saying!” The redhead protested, turning to pout at their friend who had swept away to the trunk at the foot of her bed where her tunics and were kept. They all had three pairs, two to alternate on a weekly basis and the third for special occasions in the calendar.
“Just an hour, Allie, please!” Millie flew to her friend’s side, her damp hands curling around her nightdress clad arm.
The blonde pursed her lips and frowned at the younger girl. Millie’s eyes shone with hope and she watched as the resolve in Alice’s gaze crumble. She gave a dramatic sight and pulled her arm out from Millie’s grasp to wag her finger at her warningly.
“If you are late again the Reverend Mother will have my head, Melissa!”
“Mine first, I promise you,” Millie all but squealed, launching forward to press a kiss to her friend’s cheek. “But I’ll be back, I swear it!” She threw over her shoulder, already hurrying to her trunk to pull some clothes from its depths.
“You will be doing all of my duties if you’re not,” Alice warned in a half-hearted attempt to be firm with her friend. She cast a glance in Mairen’s direction and the girls smiled at each other, knowing that any hope of making sure their whimsical friend would be back before her absence was noticed was already a lost cause.
“I will be back in time!” Millie insisted, wriggling into her dress, her nightgown already laying forgotten on top of her bed. “I promise, Alice!” She added, combing her fingers through the knots in her hair, wincing as she caught a particularly tight one.
“Yes, yes,” Alice shook her head, waving the younger girl away. “Go on, go!”
Grinning, Millie pushed her feet into her shoes and hurried out of the dormitory, whispering her thanks to the girls as she left.
“Reverend Mother will find out,” Mairen pointed out, a smirk playing at her lips.
“Find out about what?” Adrienne’s voice cut in slightly, her head poking around their dormitory door.
“Oh, um…” The girls exchanged a worried glance.
Blessedly, Melissa was already long gone. She hurried stealthily across the courtyard but once she breached the gates and the warm glow of the sun alighted on her lithe frame, she broke into a clattering run which carried her through Salzburg until the ground underfoot changed from cobble to lush grass and until the buildings changed from masonry to the bark of trees.
With a twirl as she reached the peak of the hill, she let out a breathless laugh, closing her eyes to listen to the music humming about the mountains. Dancing to a stop, she inhaled the cool air and her grin only widened. Turning a bit on the spot to make sure she was alone, she took a deep breath before giving voice to the song she’d had stuck in her mind since waking that morning.
The birds were her orchestra, filling the hills with the instrumental to her vocals. Her voice echoed amidst the mountains, leaping down into the valley and into the town, heard almost as far as the abbey itself. As Alice and Mairen made their way past an open window, trailing sullenly behind Adrienne, they shared a look, sure that they had heard Melissa. Grins lit up their faces momentarily but the looks were dashed under the other girl’s glare.
It was easy to lose track of time. Collapsing into the grass, flush with exertion, Millie laid back in the sunshine, letting her eyes shut for a few moments as she gathered her breath and attempted to calm her heart. She brought her hand to her face and laughed breathily before dropping it back down on the grass by her side.
The tolls of the clock tower rang over the horizon and Millie felt her heart sink guiltily in her chest. She tore her eyes open and launched herself to her feet. Alice will kill me.
Taking off as quickly as her legs would carry her, Millie hurried back down the hill. She was nearly at the bottom when she remembered her wimple, laying beside a growth of daisies. Swearing under her breath and immediately sparing a furtive glance above her after doing so, she turned on her heel and hurried off after it, cursing herself and her bad luck.
Alice and Mairen were not eagerly awaiting the inevitable confrontation of sorts between the Reverend Mother and Melissa as it seemed Adrienne was. They cast worried looks at each other as they walked behind the rest of the nuns. Alice was chewing on her bottom lip, a habit she had been scolded for in the past, her fingers working quickly over the rosary that hung from her belt.
“He won’t help us now!” Mairen hissed, folding her arms more resolutely behind her billowing sleeves. Had it been another moment, Alice might have laughed.
“Reverend Mother?” Athena approached the group, worry colouring her prim features.
“Sister Athena?” Came the gentle reply and an indulgent smile.
“I simply cannot find her!” She declared, throwing her hands into the air despairingly.
The abbess’s features filled with a knowing look. “Melissa.” A statement, not a question. Alice cringed, ducking her head.
“She’s missing from the abbey again,” Athena groused, letting her hands settle into the pockets of her robes.
“We should put a cowbell around her neck!” Adrienne declared, pushing to the front of their little group.
“Have you tried the barn?” Mairen suggested and Alice’s head shot up, an exasperated look colouring her features.
“Mil—Melissa loves the animals, you know how much she adores the animals, Reverend Mother,” Alice joined in, trying in vain to wipe the guilt off of her face.
“I’ve looked everywhere!” Athena huffed. “In all of her usual places – she’s no where to be found!”
“Sister Athena,” the abbess soothed, her smile returning, “considering it is Melissa whom you seek, might I suggest you look somewhere unusual?”
Athena nodded and Alice felt her gut unclench when the sister slipped away, determined, seemingly, to source their errant friend. She glanced at Mai who, despite the slight tinge of anxiety, looked perfectly serene and she straightened herself, determined to mirror her friend and follow her example.
“Oh, listen to her go on,” Mairen whispered, rolling her eyes as Adrienne petitioned the Reverend Mother to see what she felt was reason.
Neither of the other girls felt that either of them could really stay at the abbey without Mille. Both listened more intently as the discussion was banded back and forth.
“The wool of the black sheep is just as warm,” Alice pointed out, coming forward to stand beside Adrienne.
“We’re not talking about sheep, black or white!” Adrienne retorted archly before turning back to the abbess. “For goodness sake—she climbed a tree last week, scraped her knee, and now one of her dresses has a tear!”
Mairen snickered and Alice elbowed her, earning a soft yelp from the redhead which only resulted in a withering look from the irate brunette.
“Sister Maude,” the abbess stepped over to the group of young women stood on the steps, chatting contentedly amongst themselves. They fell silent when Maude was addressed and the girl offered a smile to the abbess.
“Yes, Reverend Mother?” She inquired demurely.
“What do you think of Millie?”
Maude’s smile dropped into a slight grimace. “She’s a wonderful girl,” she enthused, adding, “…some of the time.”
“Sister Katherine?”
The blonde blinked in surprise. “Well, she’s very easy to like…except when it’s, uh, difficult.”
“Sister Livia?”
“Oh, I love her dearly,” Livia’s voice was full of fondness. “But … she does seem to always be in trouble.”
“See!” Adrienne insisted.
“She waltzes on her way to mass and whistles on the stairs,” Livia laughed, glancing around at the other girls.
“Underneath her wimple, she has curlers in her hair!” Adrienne persisted.
“I’ve even heard her singing in the abbey!” Katherine declared brightly.
“She’s always late for chapel,” Livia conceded reluctantly.
Mairen piped up before Alice could stop her, “But her penitence is real!”
“She’s always late for everything,” Adrienne corrected, glaring from girl to girl.
“Except for every meal,” Maude laughed.
“I hate to have to say it,” Alice didn’t think Adrienne hated one word. “But I very firmly feel – Melissa’s not an asset to the abbey.”
“I’d actually—” Alice stepped forward, holding up her hand, her gaze focused on the Reverend Mother. “I’d … I’d like to say a word on her behalf.”
“Then say it, dear.”
“Millie … makes me …” a grin curled her lips upwards and she couldn’t help but giggle. “Laugh!”
“She’s unpredictable as weather!” Adrienne nudged Alice out of the way.
“Flighty as a feather,” Maude agreed. “Like a flibbitijibbit!”
Katherine shook her head. “A will-o’-the-wisp!”
“A clown!” Adrienne despaired.
“Well then how do you solve a problem like Melissa?” Livia asked, hands on her hips.
“How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?” Athena laughed, rejoining the girls.
“Look,” Adrienne cut over them, turning to face the abbess. “There’s many a thing I’d like to be able to tell her and make her understand but how on earth do you make her stay, and listen to all you say? She’s a demon!”
“She’s a darling! A riddle but a child!”
“She’s a headache!”
“She might be wild but she’s gentle!” Alice protested.
“She’s a girl,” came the Reverend Mother’s solemn pronunciation, her eyebrows rising pointedly between the quarrelling girls. “And so are you. So, my children, enough.”
A bang sounded in the courtyard and they turned, unsurprised to see Melissa hurrying from the south entrance, her habit balled in her hand. She paused, grounding stock-still as she clapped eyes on them. In many decades’ time, there would be a term for it – busted.
She ducked her head, passing a furtive look in Alice and Mairen’s direction before hurrying through the nearest door that, up a sweeping staircase, would lead her back to the dormitory where her day had begun.
“Go to your friend,” the abbess turned to the two girls. “Tell her I wish to see her in an hour but remind her I do not fault her. Nor do I fault either of you for keeping her secret.” A knowing smile lit her face and the girls nodded, hurrying across the courtyard after the blonde.
“Was it wonderful up there?” Mairen asked excitedly, bursting into the dormitory not a moment after Melissa had collapsed down onto her bed. She all but flew to the blonde’s side, leaving Alice to shut the door behind them. “Tell me all about it, Millie, please.”
“I would rather not think about it, Mai,” Millie sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose. “If Adrienne gets her way, I will have to pack my bags sooner rather than later.”
“Sister Adrienne,” Alice corrected gently, sitting down on Millie’s trunk. “And I don’t think that will happen. The Reverend Mother would like to see you, though.”
“And you don’t think it will happen?” Millie lifted her arm off of her eyes to send an incredulous look in Alice’s direction. “I will have to travel to Vienna and play music on the street!”
“It won’t come to that,” Mairen and Alice declared in unison, passing each other wry grins. Millie shook her head.
“Well, what do you think will happen, then?”
“Melissa – it seems to be the will of God that you leave us.”
Millie felt as though her entire world had been ripped out beneath her. She fell to her knees before the abbess and stole up her hand, fervent cries of desperation flailing from her lips.
“While you may have longed to be one of us, Melissa, that didn’t necessarily prepare you for the way we lived here, did it? If it had gotten dark today, you could have gotten lost in the hills.”
“No, Reverend Mother, please!” Millie lifted her head. “I know … I know that I say what I feel and I … I know I cannot stop singing wherever I go and … I … I … I don’t know how to do anything else. Ever since I was a child … I grew up in the mountains but I wanted to be here. With you. Hearing the sisters singe on their way to vespers … this is where I wanted to be. Please don’t send me away.”
“In order to truly see if you are ready to be here, Millie, you must taste something of the world,” the abbess touched her fingertips to the girl’s cheek. “Stand, my dear.”
“If it is God’s will,” Millie conceded, getting back to her feet. She inhaled resolutely. “Then I will go for a time.”
The abbess looked satisfied and moved to her desk, picking up a letter she had received some days before.
“There is a family near Salzburg in need of a governess until September.”
“September?” Millie gaped, sinking into the chair opposite the desk.
“Yes – to take care of eight children.”
“Eight children? Are you playing a joke on me?”
The Reverend Mother lifted her eyes from the page. “Do you like children, Melissa?”
“Well, yes, I suppose so! As much as anyone – but eight, Reverend Mother?”
She smiled, satisfied. “I will tell Captain Hayes to expect you tomorrow. I hope that will give you enough time to say goodbye to your friends.”
Millie nodded. “But, um… Captain, Reverend Mother?”
“Yes,” the abbess took her seat. “A retired officer of the Imperial Navy. A fine man – and a brave one, too. His wife died several years ago, leaving him alone with the children—”
Having so many was probably the cause, Millie thought ruefully, crossing her legs.
The woman across from her gave her a knowing look, “—Now, I understand he’s been having trouble keeping a governess there. A most difficult time. I trust you will be different, Melissa.”
“Pardon me but … why trouble?”
The Reverend Mother chuckled. “The Lord will show you, my dear.”
“LEAVING?”
“Could you be any louder?” Mai scolded, turning away from the mirror to glare at Alice.
“Are you deaf? Did you hear her? She’s leaving!”
Millie smirked, folding up a jumper that Sister Maude had been kind enough to give her. She set it down in her bag and lifted her gaze as Alice began to pace, wringing her hands together as she stalked the width of the room. Mairen shook her head and rolled her eyes, continuing to pin her her hair up in the curlers Millie had given her.
“When are you coming back?” Alice asked.
“September, I’ve told you twice already!” Millie’s voice ached with complaint and she pouted at her friend.
“That’s so long from now, though!” Alice threw herself down onto her bed.
“Well, perhaps you might visit?” Millie suggested gently, pressing the clasps of her bag together.
“We could do that?” Mai asked, brightening at the prospect.
“I don’t see why not,” Millie shrugged her shoulders.
“Take these,” Alice pulled open her trunk, producing a pair of nylon stockings that drew the girls’ attention immediately.
“Where in the name of Christ did you get those?” Millie asked before she could help herself.
“That’s blasphemy, Melissa! Watch your mouth!” She scowled, holding the nylons close to her chest as though tempted not to share.
“I’m sorry!”
“It’s not me you should be apologising to!” Alice reminded her, pointing to the ceiling. “And anyway, it doesn’t matter where I got them from but I want you to take them. You’ll get a chance to enjoy them.”
“Really?” Millie softened as Alice set the stockings in her hands.
“Really,” the elder girl nodded. “The Captain might throw a party, you never know!”
“Oh, take this then!” Mairen exclaimed, digging through her trunk. She produced a worn sock without its brother but it was what she pulled from inside that caught their eye. “It was my mother’s. I hid it so I didn’t have to turn it over to the abbey.” she turned the emerald hair clip over in her hand. “You should wear it, Millie. I want you to have it.”
The blonde felt tears well in her eyes as Mai placed the clip in her palm and she closed her fingers around it protectively.
“I’m really going to miss you!” She sniffed, throwing herself into their arms.
“Just think,” Alice murmured, “September’s not that long from now.”
“And if we really can visit, we’ll see you sooner than you think!” Mai added.
“God…” She mumbled.
“Yes?” Alice replied with a smirk.
“No, wait,” Millie lifted her head from their shoulders. “They’re going to give me my father’s guitar, aren’t they?”
Sure enough, the guitar was waiting, in the same case it arrived at the abbey in, for her the following morning. Alice and Mairen rose with her in order to see Millie off and even the Reverend Mother made a brief appearance. The other girls passed through on their way to an early mass, all wishing her good luck.
“Have confidence,” Mairen rubbed at Millie’s back as the lights of the bus appeared at the end of the road.
Alice handed her over the guitar case and her bag. “A captain with eight children – what’s so fearsome about that?”
“Everything,” the girls laughed together.
“Forget your doubts and worries, Mill,” Mairen whispered. “Just think – what’s this day going to be like? What’s your future going to bring?”
“We love you, Mills,” Alice whispered, giving her a one-armed hug.
“I love you, too.”
Certainly, in the short term, she did not think it would be a rough and uncomfortable bus journey through the countryside. Millie sat on the bus cuddling the guitar case, peeking through the gap she’d made by opening the clasps a little. She closed her eyes, trying to wish away the thoughts of her father – but his face, and his voice, haunted her just like the guitar.
It made her feel less alone, though. She didn’t just have God on her side – she hoped – but she also had her father, too. He was with her. She was sure he was. She desperately hoped he was, anyway. I need you now, daddy.
She was turned out a little early – her choice. She wanted the walk – the opportunity to get some fresh air before she started her new journey. Walking up the dirt track, free from the abbey … it felt as amazing as it did terrifying and in the end, Millie couldn’t help the run she broke into. Eagerness didn’t begin to explain what she felt. She so desperately wanted this to go well, to prove to the abbess that she could be a nun and follow such orders.
But the house … it was enormous. Beyond all of her sense of reckoning and she had credited her imagination as a fierce one. She drew up a little slower as she fell under its shadow, sensing the slight tinge of sadness that seemed to hang about the place. Millie passed her bag into her other hand and reached up to finger the wooden cross that hung around her neck, wondering if this had been what the Reverend Mother had been talking about. Maybe this was part of the trouble, the difficulty.
Hurrying up the steps, Millie reached out and rang the doorbell before she could change her mind. Half of her wanted to turn and run as fast as she could but she knew she wouldn’t get very far and if she did she couldn’t return to the abbey. She would be disgraced. So she had to face it. She had to face her fears – forget her doubts and worries as Mai had suggested.
The door opened to reveal a relatively … solemn looking chap. Millie didn’t have the sense to think before she spoke. She perked up immediately and opened out her arms with a grin.
“Well, here I am!” She deflated when he merely looked at her, not necessarily unkindly, either. She couldn’t really tell what that expression was. She glanced at her shoes absently before attempting again. “I’m from the convent. I’m the new governess, Captain.”
She could practically hear the smirk in his words. “And I’m the butler, Fraulein.”
Millie lifted her head and exhaled, trying not to let her disappointment show on her face.
“Oh,” she nodded, holding out her hand. “Well, how do you do?”
He glanced down at her hand and Millie bit the inside of her cheek before hastily dropping it, passing her bag back into it to fill her palm and the awkwardness that had suddenly absorbed her.
Pushing the door open a bit further, the butler admitted her into a cavernous hall that chilled her skin and chased the sun’s warmth from it. She pouted, dismayed, somewhat, and peeked up from under the brim of her had – and when she did … she couldn’t believe what she saw.
Her head aloft, she stepped without seeing down onto the main floor and slowly lowered her things. This was more than she had ever seen and as she blinked, trying to absorb the enormity of it all, she felt fear knot in her stomach and worry gnaw at her as she was filled with the sense that she truly did not belong.
“My word,” she whispered, twirling a little in order to get the full scope of the room.
When she lowered her eyes back down, she glanced curiously about, wondering whether she had enough time to explore briefly and see whether or not the grandeur followed into the other rooms.
Picking the one to her right, Millie hurried into the shadow where the lights did not quite reach and where the air was colder still and reached for the brass door handles. She frowned, feeling them rough with dust, and pulled the handle down. She pushed the door open and poked her head through the gap.
A gasp lit past her lips and she pushed the door open further, her feet carrying her through into the room of their own free will. There was gilt everywhere, framing sumptuous pieces of art that she could only wish her father had seen. Her mother would have loved it, too, of that she was certain. But it was a ballroom. It must have been. A tiny one, but a place to dance nonetheless.
Smiling coyly, she turned, imagining that someone had called her attention. She brought a hand to her chest, faux-surprise lighting up her face, and she took up one end of her skirt before sweeping into an elaborate curtsy.
The doors banged open, shocking Millie out of her daydream. She rose, standing ramrod straight once more and jumped back, her eyes fixing on the figure standing in the doorway, a deep sense of what she felt must have been disappointment, already riddling its way into his features.
And yet, her first overwhelming thought was of how handsome he was.
He could have only been one man, too.
The Captain.