A Winter’s Tale

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A Winter’s Tale Page 8

by Trisha Ashley


  ‘But you were an ungodly child,’ she said severely, ‘born of sin.’

  I didn’t think I had been particularly wayward, just mischievous, but I let it go. ‘Have you seen any of the ghosts?’

  ‘I thought I saw a Saxon in the garden once, at dusk, looking for the hoard he had hidden before a battle. But it was probably just one of the gardeners.’

  The windows of Lady Anne’s parlour looked out over the terraces at the back of the house and were curtained in a predominantly coral-coloured William Morris fabric. The walls above the inevitable dark wainscoting had been painted the same shade, and coral tones softly echoed in the faded, but still beautiful, carpet.

  I felt as though the room was casting an aura of welcome around me and I could see myself sitting there in the evening, piecing together my crazy cushions. ‘Aunt Hebe, would you mind if I used this room? It’s lovely, and I’ll need somewhere to make my patchwork.’

  ‘I can’t say I ever much cared for sitting in here,’ she said, looking slightly surprised, ‘and though Mother was a skilled needlewoman and used to embroider beautifully, she did it in the drawing room after dinner. The firescreen in the study is her work.’

  ‘I’ll look out for it. Where do you like to sit in the evening, Aunt Hebe?’

  ‘Sometimes one place, sometimes another…’ she said vaguely, like an elderly Titania—which indeed, she resembled. ‘Though I often work in the stillroom until late, or go out—I am on several village committees. There is a TV in the library, but I also have one in my room, for William and I tended to live very separate lives.’

  ‘We didn’t have a TV in the commune and I’ve never really felt the need for one since, but we always had a radio when I worked at Lady Betty’s. I like to listen to Radio 4 when I’m sewing. You can’t really watch something and sew properly, can you?’

  ‘I don’t know, I’ve never tried.’ She looked at her watch and then shooed me out along a tapestry-hung passage and up some spiral stairs. The door at the top opened between my bedroom and the arch leading to the upper level of the tower, which was a complete surprise—I’d noticed it, but thought it was another cupboard.

  ‘I don’t remember these stairs at all!’

  ‘That is because you were not allowed to use them. William insisted you were confined to the nursery and the kitchens, though we were forever finding you sliding down the Great Hall banisters. There are the stairs to the attic nursery floor over there, which you will recall, so we won’t bother going up—the rest of the roof space is now entirely given up to storage. I keep the door to that side locked, otherwise Grace sneaks off up there and smokes.’

  She turned on her white, wellington-booted heel and sped off, appearing to be losing interest in the tour fast. ‘You know this bedroom floor already,’ she tossed over her shoulder. ‘There are six bedrooms—eight if you include the nursery suite—but the Rose Room is never used.’

  I fell down some ill-lit steps and bumped into her round the corner as she came to an abrupt stop.

  ‘Turn left and you enter the Long Room again, at the end of which is the door to the East Wing where there are further bedchambers, the Larks’ living quarters, and the backstairs to the kitchens. This one takes us onto the landing, of course, commonly called the minstrels’ gallery, and, since it projects over the hall, I expect they did sometimes have musicians there when they were entertaining. When Ottie and I were girls we had parties with dancing in the Great Hall, and the band sat up here and played.’

  That must have been quite a sight—the tall, slim, blue-eyed Miss Winters, their red-gold hair floating as they danced the night away with their dinner-jacketed partners…

  ‘What sort of music did you dance to?’ I asked curiously, and would have loved to have known if she had a favourite partner too, had she been in the mood for reminiscence, but the past clearly held no fascination for Aunt Hebe. Ignoring my question as though I had never asked it, she carried on with her tour. ‘The Great Hall and the solar are much older than the rest of the house, but the Winters were forever knocking bits down and rebuilding them. You can see from the blocked fireplace halfway up the wall that the hall was once single storey with rooms over it, and then the height was increased and the ceiling plastered, leaving only the minstrels’ gallery.’

  She clomped off and I could feel the gallery floorboards bouncing under my feet. ‘Most of the lesser family portraits are hung here, and on open days the visitors can come up. We lock the door at the end, but the family can still reach either wing of the house by way of the Long Room if they wish, without meeting a member of the public.’

  ‘It’s very dark; you can hardly make the portraits out. Does anyone actually want to come up here?’

  ‘Oh, yes, for Shakespeare is rumoured to have visited Winter’s End, and if so presumably would have stood on this very spot—if he came at all. But show me an old manor house in this part of Lancashire where he isn’t supposed to have been!’

  ‘Really?’ I said, interested. ‘I didn’t know that.’

  She shrugged bony shoulders impatiently. ‘There is a theory that he spent the Lost Years here in Lancashire, in the employment of various local families, especially the Hoghtons—and he is supposed to have a particular connection with Rufford Old Hall, near Ormskirk, which is now, of course, a National Trust property. There is a book about it in the library, I believe.’

  ‘Really? I’ll look for it later, along with that hidden treasures one.’

  It was beginning to look as if I would have plenty of bedtime reading for the foreseeable future!

  Aunt Hebe was losing interest in Shakespeare. ‘One of the volunteer stewards, the Friends of Winter’s End, stands at either end of the gallery, and they have a fund of anecdotes concerning his apocryphal visit and stories about Alys Blezzard. That portrait in the middle is supposed to be her, but it is some dreadful affair painted by a jobbing artist, from the look of it, more used to depicting prize bulls and sheep.’

  ‘Hard to tell,’ I agreed, peering at it. ‘It looks as if it has been dipped in Brown Windsor soup. In fact, most of the paintings I’ve seen seem in want of a cleaning.’

  ‘Only a few in the Long Room were cleaned when your grandfather was searching for something to pay the death duties with. But once they found the Stubbs, that sufficed.’

  She started to descend the stairs, but I paused and ran my hand over the curved banister, remembering the small Sophy who used to climb up onto it, clinging on for dear life as she swooshed down…

  The Great Hall looked dark and yawningly empty below me, but not half as big as I recalled—nothing was. The house, which had seemed so huge in my childhood memories, had in reality shrunk to quite modest proportions, though it would still be a worryingly monumental task to restore it to its former glory.

  ‘Do you ever light the fire now?’ I asked, joining her at the bottom of the stairs.

  ‘The fire?’ She turned to look at it, as if, by magic, flames would appear. ‘We always used to—but I suppose no one has given the orders since William died.’

  She pointed at a stack of screens against one wall. ‘On open days all these are set out into a display of the history of the house, the supposed Shakespeare connection—and Alys Blezzard’s story, of course. You know the legend is she was distantly related through her mother to the Nutters, who were known witches?’

  ‘Yes, Mum told me all about that. She said Alys really was a witch.’

  ‘Yes…Susan was always a fanciful child,’ Aunt Hebe said dismissively. ‘A knowledge of simple herbs and their curative effects does not mean one is versed in the black arts and in league with the devil.’ She pulled out the corner of a screen: ‘This one is the history of Winter’s End and the Winter family. Then there is the story of how the original Elizabethan plans for the terrace were discovered and the restoration begun—and about the missing part for the lower terrace.’

  ‘Missing?’

  ‘Yes, torn off and not anywhere to be fou
nd. William and Seth were still arguing about what might have been on the lower terrace right up until the end. Indeed, the arguments kept William’s spirits up amazingly.’

  ‘Seth?’

  ‘The head gardener—so called.’

  ‘Oh, yes, I’d forgotten, though his name’s pretty apt for a gardener, isn’t it? Sort of Cold Comfort Farm. I only hope there isn’t something nasty in the woodshed.’

  ‘Only wood,’ she said seriously, ‘and spiders—did you mean spiders? I am not fond of them myself, but freshly gathered cobwebs make an excellent poultice for wounds.’

  The tour ended in the kitchen, where Mrs Lark was sitting in a rocking chair in front of the Aga knitting, with the radio on. Charlie lay in a position of blissful abandon on a rag rug at her feet. His stomach, as round as if he’d swallowed a small football, rose and fell to his stertorous breathing.

  Aunt Hebe again consulted the watch attached to her flat bosom by a bow-shaped golden brooch. ‘Time to go—but before I do, I will be happy to pass you these.’

  And she literally did pass me the most enormous bunch of keys, some of them museum pieces in their own right. ‘But Aunt Hebe, I can’t take these from you!’ I protested.

  ‘There is no reason why not, for this bunch is mainly symbolic. We hardly ever lock anything away—except the Book, when we had it, and a fat lot of good that did us. Indeed, I have no idea what half of the keys are for, and in any case I was only ever nominal housekeeper, for Mrs Lark does it all. No, my business is the walled garden—which that Seth Greenwood is forbidden to touch! I grow practically all the fruit and vegetables for the house and I have bees and chickens. And of course, the stillroom through there is for my use only. You may look at both,’ she added grandly, ‘but not poke and pry and stick your fingers into what doesn’t concern you!’

  ‘Yes, Aunt Hebe,’ I said meekly, hearing the echo of the same words in the voice of an eight-year-old, curious to know what her witchy ancient relative was cooking up.

  ‘I expect Mrs Lark will show you her apartment herself, though perhaps after your long journey you might wish to put off any further inspections of your realm until another day,’ she said slightly acidly, and departed back through the swinging, baize-lined door to the hall.

  She left a snail trail of silver sequins behind her: she must have caught a loose thread on something.

  Chapter Eight: Sovereign Remedies

  Sir Ralph asked mee whether I was of the Old Religion and I said I was. I swore to it, and he was well pleased. I know them to be Catholics like Father, despite their outward show of compliance to the new faith; they do not know that the old religion I swore to is not the same as theirs…

  From the journal of Alys Blezzard, 1581

  Mrs Lark said, ‘Don’t you worry about her—she never took any interest in the housekeeping, but she’s kept us in fruit and vegetables for years—and honey, chickens and eggs too. Now, do you want me to show you our rooms? Up the backstairs, they are.’

  ‘I would—but not today, if you don’t mind, Mrs Lark. So much needs doing that I think I need to go round in daylight with a notebook and write down a list of priorities,’ I said, though actually, what I really wanted to do was run about the house shrieking, ‘It’s mine, mine—all mine!’ at the top of my lungs, now that Aunt Hebe was no longer there to depress my pretensions.

  ‘The whole house is falling to pieces and that filthy I’m ashamed of it,’ Mrs Lark said forthrightly. ‘I clean my own rooms, but though poor Grace does her best with the rest of it all, it’s too much for her. And I do the cooking and ordering, but further than that I don’t go—not at my time of life.’

  ‘Of course not. You shouldn’t have to do anything else. It isn’t your job.’

  ‘That’s right,’ she agreed, less defensively. ‘My Jonah, he’s butler, valet, handyman—whatever’s wanted—though he started out as groom when Mr William used to hunt. But he’s a man, so he doesn’t notice what wants doing, never has—you have to tell him.’

  That explained the lack of a fire in the Great Hall then: it was merely that no one had thought to give the orders! I mooted the point.

  ‘I’ll tell him when he comes in,’ she said. ‘September to March it’s always kept lit, because it takes the chill off the whole place.’

  ‘What do we usually burn?’

  ‘Logs. The gardeners cut and stack them in the old stables—there’s always plenty. Ecologically sustainable,’ she added conscientiously, ‘from our own woodland.’

  ‘Oh, good,’ I said. ‘How often does Grace come in?’

  ‘Weekday mornings generally, unless there’s a party or visitors. She does the beds and towels Wednesdays and Fridays—they go to the laundry, though there’s a machine out through the back, if you want it. Grace does any other washing as required, and the ironing. Other than that, when she’s vacuumed through and done the kitchen floor and the bathrooms, she’s no time for anything else. In fact, I reckon it’s all getting a bit much for her; she’s not as fast as she used to be.’

  ‘I think it’s amazing she does so much!’

  ‘She’s not as old as she looks. I keep telling her all them cigarettes she smokes make her look like a living mummy and wheeze like a piano accordion. I’ve never smoked and we’re the same age, but I’ve got the complexion and figure I had at thirty to show for it.’

  Leaving Mrs Lark knitting and Charlie sleeping, I took a quick look at the stillroom, Aunt Hebe’s domain, where racks and bunches of anonymous vegetation hung everywhere and the scent of attar of roses and rush matting vied with other, stranger, odours.

  A small table with a chair each side stood near the side door to the shrubbery: Aunt Hebe’s consulting desk for furtive evening customers?

  Gingerly (and guiltily!) opening a cupboard, I found myself nose to nose with a row of glass-stoppered jars and bottles, all bearing labels written in a spiky black gothic hand: ‘ORRIS ROOT’, ‘HOLY WATER (Lourdes)’, ‘FULLER’S EARTH,’ ‘POWDERED GINGER’, ‘GROUND BARN OWL BONES (Roadkill 1996)’.

  Ground owl bones?

  ‘LIQUORICE EXTRACT’, ‘POWDERED AMBERGRIS’, ‘DRIED BAT WINGS’.

  I shut the door hastily, deciding not to open any more cupboards—then immediately did, thinking it was the way out. This one contained shelf after shelf of much smaller bottles and jars with fancier labels. Pinned to the inside of the door was a hand-written price list. ‘Number 2 Essence: A sovereign remedy for restoring the joys of marriage,’ I read, ‘Two pounds fifty.’

  After all these years without even a word from Rory, it would take more than an essence to restore my marriage! The next remedy was clearly aimed at all those exhausted wives with priapic elderly husbands, pepped up on Viagra: ‘Number 5 Essence: The tired wife’s friend. Two drops in any liquid given to the husband near bedtime will ensure an unbroken night’s rest. (Do not exceed dose.) Three pounds.’

  It looked like Aunt Hebe had gone into production on a large scale.

  I popped my head back through the kitchen door. ‘Mrs Lark, do Aunt Hebe’s remedies actually work?’

  She looked up. ‘Well, no one’s ever asked for their money back to my knowledge.’ She cast on a couple more stitches and added, ‘Or died from them, either.’

  ‘That’s a relief,’ I said, and went back to my tour, though I hesitated before opening any more doors. But luckily the next one merely gave on to a passage with the narrow backstairs going up from it and the cellar entrance. There was a warren of rooms beyond it, many of them unused except for storage (one of them was stacked practically floor to ceiling with what looked like empty florist’s boxes), but this area looked very familiar to me. I had been allowed to play here and to ride my red tricycle up and down the flagged floors. How I’d loved that trike! The chipped skirting boards were probably my doing.

  Feeling nostalgic I wandered on until I came to another passage, across which a fairly new-looking door had been installed. It was unlocked and when I passed through I saw that
it had a sign on the other side saying: ‘PRIVATE! NO ADMITTANCE BEYOND THIS POINT.’

  Here, by removing the door between two rooms and throwing out a little glassed-in conservatory overlooking the top terrace at the back of the house, a tearoom of kinds had been created. There was a counter topped with a glass food display cabinet adorned with dust and dead flies, and a collection of mismatched pine tables and chairs, varnished to the deep orange shade of a cheap instant suntan.

  It all looked terribly half-hearted and uninviting, though perhaps in summer when they opened they gussied the place up a bit with bright tablecloths and flowers.

  The visitors’ loos were off the further room and a brief glance told me were of Victorian servants’ quality, though I suppose at the time it was the height of luxury for the staff to have indoor toilets at all.

  I retraced my steps to the warm kitchen, where Mrs Lark ceased knitting long enough to look up and smile at me. Charlie didn’t appear to have moved an inch since I left.

  ‘Did you remember your way around, lovey? You played out there all the time when the weather was bad, making dens out of old cardboard cartons, or riding that little trike of yours, though in the summer you were always outside. You used to run round and round the maze like a mad thing, with your granddad’s spaniels all chasing after you, barking their heads off.’

  ‘It’s all coming back to me—I remembered my way around this wing perfectly, despite a few changes. What are all those empty boxes in one of the rooms for?’

  ‘Mistletoe. Winter’s End is noted for it. But I don’t suppose you remember the mistletoe harvests before Christmas, when the gardeners gather it and it’s packed off to London?’

  I shook my head.

  ‘Perhaps you were kept away, for the berries are poisonous. The boxes used to be stored in a shed, but the mice got at them.’

  ‘I suppose they would,’ I agreed. ‘The tearoom is a bit rough and ready, isn’t it? And the toilet is inadequate, I should have thought, especially if there’s a coach party.’

 

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