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An Orphan's Secret

Page 30

by Maggie Hope


  ‘Go on, love. It’ll be better if you’re not here, really it will. If Jackie’s not in I’ll go to Auntie Phoebe’s. Uncle Tot is off shift, I know.’ She looked thoughtfully up at him. She had just realised why his grandmother might have paid Sally Hawkins off.

  ‘Jonty, do you mean Sally’s lad, the older one . . .?’

  ‘I do. He’s my half-brother, yes,’ said Jonty, his lips tightening into a straight line.

  Meg shook her head. ‘And the baby is half-brother to Tucker and Kit,’ she commented. ‘Queer world, isn’t it?’

  Gathering up her few personal belongings into a bundle, Meg looked round the house in George Row, checking to see if she had missed anything. The rocking-horse . . . Jackie would have to come over for that. Kit would be heart-broken if it was left. The toy soldiers which Jonty had given Tucker were already gone. Tucker couldn’t bear to be parted from them.

  The house had never been a real home to her, she mused as she locked the front door and trudged home to Pasture Row with the bundle over her arm. She would much rather live in Da’s house. But there was the nagging worry that it would soon be Jackie’s house if her father didn’t come home. The owners had a strict rule that tenants had to work in the pit.

  Her mind wandered back to Jonty, as it always did nowadays. He had been so reluctant to leave her, making her promise faithfully to be at the grassy knoll by the stand of trees at one o’clock sharp tomorrow. She walked up the row, nodding to the women standing in their doorways. They nodded back, faces alive with curiosity. No doubt they knew more about her and Jonty than she knew herself, she thought wryly. But there was no condemnation in their faces. The whole place was aware of the life Meg had led with Wesley. But how would they react if a new baby came?

  Twenty-Seven

  Next morning broke wet and windy. The first cool days of autumn had come at last. Meg walked out of the village on her way to meet Jonty, her thoughts going over the last few months.

  What a summer it had been! All highs and lows. She seemed to have done more living in the short time between May and September than in all the years since she got wed. She remembered the terror of Kit’s near fatal accident, and how it had led to her meeting Jonty. The lovely hours with him, her delight in his every gesture, the feel of his hands on her. She even loved the way he walked with that slight bias to one side, not quite a limp. She smiled dreamily as she left the road and took to the track, going past Old Pit and taking the fork which passed by the grassy knoll. Her pulse quickened as she dwelt on the thought of seeing him again, as it always did.

  Poor lad, when he fell in love with her he hadn’t bargained for the trouble it might bring. He had led a sheltered life, she mused, unaware of how mistaken she was in this surmise. She felt a protective love for him. He couldn’t know anything of the harsh realities of life as lived in a pit village.

  Wesley had come round to Pasture Row the day before, but thankfully Jackie had been off shift and saw to him. Her brother had sent Wesley off all right, flinging the key of the house in George Row at him and swearing that if he ever came near Meg again he would regret the day. But Wesley had been so relieved to get the key to take back to the demanding Sally, he had soon gone off, not prepared to face up to Jackie.

  ‘Don’t you worry, neither,’ he had blustered as he picked the key up from the brick-paved yard, ‘I wouldn’t touch her. Not after—’

  He hadn’t got to finish the sentence for Jackie was on him and Wesley was off like a hare racing for safety. At least Jackie had been able to get the rocking-horse out of the house for Kit before handing the key over.

  Meg sighed. Jackie had said nothing as she haltingly explained why she was giving in to Wesley so easily. He had simply looked at her, a world of disillusionment in his eyes, and Meg had flushed. He had carried on eating his dinner and afterwards lit his pipe at the fire before speaking.

  ‘This is still Da’s house,’ he had said. ‘You know he wouldn’t want a Grizedale to be anywhere near it. Don’t bring him here, Meg, you owe that to Da.’

  ‘Jonty’s not like his father,’ Meg had protested.

  ‘No, mebbe he’s not. An’ I know you and Mam thought the world of him when he was a bairn. I’ve heard you say so often enough. But what sort of a man would cause such trouble for a lass like you?’

  ‘He didn’t! He—’

  ‘Leave it be, Meg,’ Alice had advised. She had been sitting quietly on the settle listening to them. Alice could see both her brother’s and her sister’s point of view, but knew they could not agree on this. So she had let it be, too emotionally strung out to argue further anyway.

  Meg walked down the track till she reached the place where she had spent her happiest times that summer. The grass was brown and wet and slippery with the rain. The leaves from the ash trees were already beginning to turn brown and fall. She sheltered under the largest tree, achieving only limited protection from the rain which was coming down harder now.

  She remembered how the nightmare had returned last night. The awful nightmare which had plagued her since her childhood. The one about the candyman. She had woken up panting and sweating hard, as though she had in reality been running up the black road of the old permanent way. Her reactions were physical as well as psychological. The sense of foreboding which always followed the nightmare was still lingering in her thoughts.

  It must be past one, she thought, shivering slightly and hugging her arms together under her shawl. Where was Jonty? He was not usually late. Where was he now? Surely the weather hadn’t put him off? Meg smiled at the absurdity of the thought as she huddled under the tree. Jonty loved her, didn’t he? Nothing so trivial as bad weather would put him off. She lost herself in dreams of him: how it felt when he touched her or gazed at her with that intimate, dark-eyed look of love.

  Jonty was just leaving the Hall. When he had risen that morning, he had been disturbed by the dry, hacking cough coming from his grandmother’s bedroom. He had found her lying in bed, flushed with fever, her thin body wracked with coughing. His morning had been taken up in fetching the doctor from Shildon to her and arranging for Emma Teasdale, Farmer Teasdale’s daughter, to sit with her and keep the fire up and the room warm. Thankfully Ralph was absent. He had not been near his home since he’d received his ten pounds last week. Otherwise, Farmer Teasdale might have objected to his daughter’s going to the Hall.

  ‘A feverish chill, nothing worse,’ the doctor had pronounced. ‘Keep her warm in bed and give her hot nourishing drinks. I’ll be back tomorrow.’ He had looked from Jonty to his grandmother and back again before drawing Jonty out of the room. ‘Of course, you know this can only have an adverse effect on the old lady’s general health, with her rheumatism and considering her age. The winter ahead of us, too.’

  The rain was coming down steadily as Jonty rode off to his meeting with Meg. He glanced at his watch anxiously. She must have been waiting some time now, she would be soaked to the skin. He urged his horse into a brisk canter as he crossed the field to the track.

  ‘Meg! Are you all right?’

  Jonty jumped to the ground and threw the reins over the saddle as she stepped out from behind the tree. He took her in his arms, feeling her shiver through the sodden wool of her shawl.

  ‘Oh, my love, you shouldn’t have come, you’ll catch your death,’ he said, full of concern. ‘I would have understood. I’d have ridden down to Winton.’

  ‘That’s just it,’ she said, ‘you can’t, not any more. Jackie doesn’t want you to come.’

  Jonty looked quickly at her. He had to get her out of the rain, find out what this was all about. There was only one thing to do.

  ‘We’ll go back to the Hall,’ he said, and anticipating her objections, ‘Surely Alice is at home? She will see to your boys just this once. We have to have a proper talk, Meg, we can’t go on the way we are.’ He gestured at the rain. ‘The winter is drawing on, snow will soon be coming. Come on, Meg, back with me.’

  She was still hesita
ting, thinking of Ralph Grizedale, that menacing though shadowy figure, her own private bogeyman.

  ‘Your father?’ she asked anxiously.

  ‘Oh, he’s not there, Meg. He’s away in Darlington or somewhere with his cronies. I don’t expect to see him for another day at least.’ About the time when his money usually runs out, he thought silently.

  Meg allowed him to take her up before him on his horse and they rode off to Grizedale Hall, even though her sense of foreboding had intensified.

  When they at last came out of the field and crossed to the drive leading up to the Hall, she stared at it, awed by the size and stone-built solidity of its walls, the large imposing windows. It was somehow familiar to her. She felt she would know what the back of the house would be like as they cantered up the drive and turned to go round to the stables. Sheep were grazing on the lawns and the flowerbeds were unkempt and devoid of flowers but for a few forlorn Michaelmas daisies, much afflicted with mould and bent away from the walls by the wind and rain.

  There should be rose beds there, she thought suddenly, with daffodils round them in the spring and sweet william in the summer. But the only rose bush she saw was withered and brown back to the ground.

  ‘What happened to the gardens?’ she asked.

  ‘No money for a gardener,’ said Jonty. ‘I haven’t time to do it all. Sheep keep the grass down though.’

  He dismounted and lifted her down, drawing her into the warmth of the stable before bringing in his horse.

  ‘Take off that wet shawl,’ he advised. ‘I won’t be long attending to my horse, then we can go inside and I’ll make a fire. You’ll have to dry out before you can go back.’ He paused and looked curiously at her.

  ‘You remember the gardens?’

  ‘Not very well,’ she admitted. ‘But I remember the flowers. I loved the flowers.’

  The inside of the Hall she didn’t remember at all. There was an air of neglect about the place, she saw. Dust lay on the furniture and the carpets were shabby and threadbare. But it was still opulent enough to awe Meg: the rich dark wood of the stairs and wainscoting round the entrance hall, the lofty embossed ceilings and high windows, though the velvet drapes at these were faded and dirty.

  Even though Jonty had assured her that his father was not in the house, she looked round fearfully, praying he had not returned and was waiting to pounce on her. Daft fool, she told herself crossly. She wasn’t a little girl now, she could well take care of herself. Besides, she had Jonty. He would never let the candyman hurt her. She was acting like a bit of a bairn. She shivered nevertheless, whether from cold or nervousness she didn’t know. But Jonty was concerned and, as ever, conscious of her fears.

  ‘Come away up to my room,’ he said, keeping his voice low. ‘You’ll be out of the way there should my father return and I can light the fire for you to dry yourself.’

  He took her hand and led her up the stairs and along the passage to a door at the end, letting her in and closing the door firmly behind them. Meg breathed easier. He lit the fire and she watched his strong capable hands setting the sticks and piling coal carefully on top. It was the first time she had ever seen a man light a fire, for to a pitman that was woman’s work.

  ‘Take your dress off, it will dry quicker by the fire,’ he murmured quietly. And noticing her hesitation, he added, ‘I’ll find something of Grandmother’s for you.’

  Of course the dress he brought back was far too small for a sturdy girl such as Meg. In the end he took the worn eiderdown from the bed and wrapped it round her.

  ‘Sit quietly, my love,’ he said, kissing her on the cheek. ‘I have to see to Grandmother first and then I’ll bring some tea and we can talk.’

  Meg sank to the hearth rug before the fire. Worn though it was, it was still soft and infinitely superior to a proddy mat made from old clothes. The eiderdown too, its satin cover faded and threadbare, was luxuriously warm and cosy, so that with its warmth and the heat from the fire, a heavenly relaxing feeling was spreading through her body. She leaned back against the arm of a leather armchair and took off her boots, stretching her bare feet to the blaze. By, she thought dreamily, it’s grand. Her eyelids drooped and gradually closed. She felt warm and cosseted all over. Her toes tingled from the heat and she drew them back and under her, and in a minute she was asleep as her exhausted mind and body took a break from the strains and stresses of recent events.

  ‘Is everything all right, Emma?’ asked Jonty as he entered his grandmother’s bedroom. Emma Teasdale was sitting by the bed feeding the old lady from a dish of chicken broth. She put the tray down on the bedside table and smiled at him.

  ‘She’s a little better, I think,’ she said. ‘She’s had a little broth and earlier I made her a dish of boily.’ Boily was a concoction of bread and warmed milk often given to invalids, Jonty knew.

  ‘Hello, Grandmother,’ he said as he approached the bed. ‘How are you?’

  The old lady smiled at him and he saw that she did indeed look somewhat improved, her breathing easier and her face a better colour.

  ‘I’m fine, Jonty,’ she replied. ‘Emma has been looking after me very well.’

  ‘You can get off home now, Emma, before it gets dark,’ he said to the girl. ‘I know you usually help out with the milking. Thank you so much for coming at such short notice.’

  ‘A pleasure,’ smiled Emma, blushing a little. She was just seventeen and a plain girl, though capable-looking with the strong hands and arms of a milkmaid. She was very much attracted to Jonty, though he was unaware of it. But it was obvious to Mrs Grizedale and she smiled kindly at her and added her thanks to Jonty’s.

  ‘She likes you, Jonty,’ said Mrs Grizedale as the door closed behind Emma. ‘She’s a nice girl, too, you could do worse.’

  ‘Grandmother! You’re talking nonsense,’ he replied. ‘I’m sure she doesn’t even think of me once she’s out of the house.’

  The old lady sank down on her pillows, still smiling. ‘It’s been nice having her here,’ she said softly. ‘I miss having a girl in the house. Oh, not necessarily a maid, though I miss having one of those too, but another woman, so to speak.’

  Jonty gave her a troubled look. She should have a maid, he was well aware of it. She needed a maid. But there had been so many disastrous experiences with young girls in the house, his father was not to be trusted at all. Goodness knows, he thought, a girl costs very little, a few pounds a year and her keep, and one would make life so much easier for him too. The time was coming when he would have to look for someone who was willing to come and look after the old lady fulltime. Maybe an older woman, a widow? Someone who wouldn’t attract the amorous attentions of his father.

  He thought of Meg and was furious with himself. He couldn’t possibly bring her into the house on such a basis, it would be a dishonourable thing to do. In any case, Meg was so beautiful she would never be safe with his father.

  His grandmother fell asleep and Jonty watched her fondly. She was so little and delicate, yet there must be something tough about her. She had had so much to put up with these last few years from his father. His jaw hardened at the thought of what she had had to endure from her own son. Even if it took all he had left, he decided, he would find a woman to look after her. He would go searching in Shildon tomorrow.

  He built up the fire and placed a guard around it, then drew the curtains though it was not yet dark. Sleep was the best thing for her, he thought, and crept out of the bedroom, closing the door quietly behind him.

  Before going back to Meg, Jonty went down to the kitchen and made some tea. He was quite a while about it, having to use bellows on the dying fire for there to be enough heat to boil the kettle.

  The clock in the hall chimed five and it startled him. He hadn’t realised it was so late. If he wanted that talk with Meg he would have to hurry up. She would have to get back to her boys soon.

  He was crossing the hall towards the stairs, tea tray in hand, when the front door burst open and Ralph tu
mbled rather than walked in, shouting and cursing as he tripped over a piece of worn carpet and almost measured his length on the floor. When he recovered he looked up at his son who was standing on the bottom stair.

  ‘What the hell are you looking at?’ he demanded, frowning, ‘Anyone would think I hadn’t a right to come into my own house.’ His words were slurred and he lurched into his study without waiting for Jonty to reply.

  His heart sank. How was he going to get Meg out of the house now? Before she was seen by his father and had to face the undoubted insults he would throw at her.

  Meg woke as Jonty came into the room and put the tea tray down. She felt deliciously warm and happy, permitting herself to dream about what it would be like if she was married to him and they shared this bedroom. She smiled lazily at him and stretched out her bare feet to the fire, toasting her toes.

  Jonty poured her tea and handed it to her before sitting down in the armchair against which she was leaning and putting a hand down to stroke her hair. He considered telling her that his father had returned then decided against it. In the drunken state Ralph was in, he had probably fallen into a stupor in his study and would be asleep for hours.

  ‘We have to talk, Meg,’ he said quietly. Here at this end of the house it was unlikely that his grandmother or father would hear them, but it was best to be careful.

  ‘Aye.’

  Meg leaned her head back against his hand. Somehow her fears for the future had all gone, dispelled by the feeling of security and peace which being with him brought. She didn’t really want to talk about anything at all, she just wanted to stay there, away from the world with Jonty.

  ‘Why has your brother said I cannot come to see you, Meg?’

  She sighed. It was such a difficult story to tell him. Her thoughts ranged back over the years since she had been old enough to understand how her parents had suffered because of Jonty’s father.

 

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