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Heather House: The Witch of Threadneedle Street

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by Carmen Caine




  Edited by

  Violetta Rand

  Cover Art by

  Lind

  Copyright © 2018 Carmen Caine

  Ebook Edition

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and didn’t purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, return it and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.

  Dedication

  To Ajax and Winston, my angels in disguise.

  Table of Contents

  The Coins of Fate

  A Cunning Fox of a Lass

  Haven

  A Feisty Lass

  Attraction Unforeseen

  A Soul of Fire

  A Witch of the Heart

  An Awakening of Need

  A Locket Most Curious

  A Weakening of Resolve

  Safe

  By the King’s Command

  Locked Out

  Greetings from the King

  Found

  Ruin

  Safety

  Horrors of the Past

  The Wheels of Fate

  Freedom

  Heather House

  A Lone Wolf No More

  About the Author

  Carmen’s Other Books

  The Coins of Fate

  Late fall, London, England, 1590

  “A love potion? ‘Tis dangerous, Lucy,” Moll warned as she twisted her curls into a knot. A pox on her hair. ‘Twas always curling like a corkscrew. Leaning over the half-rotten board that served as her makeshift market stall, she jabbed her finger on the wood emphatically and continued, “If potions are brewed from the heart, they can’t be undone.”

  Her red-headed, round-faced friend didn’t mind. “I’ll never love another, Moll. Please. I need this.”

  Lord help her, how could she open Lucy’s eyes? “You’ve only known him three months, Lucy. ‘Tis not long enough to know the way of a man’s heart, and you’re far too young to know its love.”

  “Young?” Lucy rolled her eyes. “You’re not a day older than I, and you’ve been wed to Thomas nigh on a year, already.”

  Moll grimaced. Nigh on a year? It felt like ten. Thomas was old, ill-tempered, and he’d been wed four times afore Moll—what had become of his previous wives he refused to say. The mystery hadn’t stopped her father on agreeing to the match. How she’d begged him to choose a different man—any man, really—but with fourteen mouths to feed, her father had turned a deaf ear to her plight. Moll, you must wed the tailor for the greater good. Listen to your father now. ‘Tis for the greater good. Greater good, be damned. Her father’s ‘greater good’ had been a year of hell, though her father had exited the arrangement richer by a pair of woolen breeches and a felt hat.

  “I’ll never want another man ‘till my dying day, Moll.” The whining pitch of Lucy’s voice intruded on Moll’s thoughts. “From the moment I laid eyes on him, ‘twas love at first sight.”

  “Oh, come now.” Moll snorted. Love belonged in tales, and if love itself was a myth, the first-sight variety was doubly so.

  “Very well, then,” Lucy conceded in lofty tones. “If you won’t sell me the potion, I’ll go to Old Lizzie.” She jerked her thumb over her shoulder at the herbalist across the lane.

  Moll expelled an exasperated breath. As a Witch of the Heart, she’d sworn to heal all heart’s ills that crossed her path, but more than that, she needed the money—desperately.

  Her friend smiled, knowing she’d won.

  “On your head be it, then,” Moll grumbled as she reached for her basket under the table.

  Love potions ranked amongst her bestselling items, but with Thomas for a husband, she struggled to peddle promises of love to dewy-eyed maids. The deed always made her feel the shyster. Still, someone had to put food on the table. Lord knew Thomas couldn’t—or wouldn’t. His fondness for whisky had all but ruined his once thriving tailor shop on Threadneedle Street.

  Not for the first time—nor the last—she rolled her eyes that she, a witch who dabbled in potions of love, knew the least about love herself.

  “Do hurry, Moll,” Lucy urged.

  Moll tossed her a look. What man had struck Lucy’s fancy? The stable hand at the Three Crowns Inn? Perhaps, ‘twas the tinker she’d been flirting with the month before? Whoever he was, Moll could only hope he was truly a decent man. Carefully, she set the basket on the table and slipped her hand beneath the cover. Only three golden-gilled mushrooms remained. She’d have to find more, and soon, if she wished to keep herself fed the winter, but of late, the mushrooms had proven hard to find.

  With a shake of her head, Moll cleared her thoughts and intoned, “With a pure heart, I, Moll, Witch of the Heart, call the fates of destiny and the wings of love to guide Lucy in her quest. Will a golden gill come forth? Will love choose her?” ‘Twas balderdash, all. Such words weren’t required, but she’d learned long ago that theatrics kept her customers happy and coming back for more.

  A small dried stalk slipped between her fingers.

  “Did a mushroom choose me?” Lucy gasped in excitement.

  Of course. I need to eat, Moll wanted to say, but solemnly replied instead, “Yes. Fate has answered your prayers.” With a deep bow, she reverently plucked the mushroom from the basket and dropped the shriveled stalk into Lucy’s outstretched palm.

  “Oh, Moll,” the maid breathed in awe.

  Moll shoved the basket back under the table and straightened. A twinge of pain pinched the base of her spine. Thomas vented his displeasure with a few choice whacks of his belt whenever sales were slow. This week had been particularly bad.

  “I’m so pleased.” Lucy giggled with shining eyes. “Tell me, how should it be brewed?”

  ‘Twas a question Moll answered several times a day, but oddly, this time, she could almost hear her mother’s soft voice whispering in her mind, reciting the words along with her, “Think only of love and the life you wish whilst the water boils, then with your fingers entwined with your love, share the brew from the same cup.”

  Lucy nodded, excited, then a thread of suspicion clouded her brow. “Are you certain ‘twill work?”

  Now was a fine time to wonder. Moll bit back a snort. “I’m my mother’s daughter, am I not?”

  Her mother’s reputation as the most powerful witch in Wales had stood unchallenged until her death in childbed—even after.

  Lucy grinned and dropped a farthing onto the table. “Thank you, Moll.” And with that, she dashed away.

  Moll pocketed the coin and frowned. Her mother had always believed in spells of love. Herself? Not so much, or at least, even if they were true, she wasn’t the witch to sell them—if she even was a witch, at all.

  Almost as if in answer to the thought, her mother’s voice again whispered through her mind, as soft as a summer’s breeze. ‘Tis in the blood, child. You carry the gift to ease pain of the heart.

  Moll rolled her eyes and slammed her palms flat on the market stall board. ‘Twas a curious gift, to be chosen to heal the pain of the heart when her own heart held so much pain.

  A gust of chill wind blew against her face as a well-dressed woman turned down the lane with two rosy-cheeked children in tow.

  Picking up a scrap of material, Moll called out, “Velvet, my lady. Fine velvet scraps and silk, as well.”

  The woman passed her by with nary a look. The children paused long enough to stick out their tongues before hurrying after their mother, giggling a
long the way.

  Moll scowled and rubbed her arms through her thin sleeves. A drop of rain struck her cheek. From the looks of the dark clouds roiling overhead, ‘twould be yet another long, cold night—unless Thomas had finished the mayor’s peasecod-bellied doublet and collected the price. The thought summoned a bitter smile to her lips. The past few months, Thomas rarely touched a needle and instead spent his days lying abed, cradling a bottle of spirits in the crook of his arm.

  The cathedral bells tolled in the distance, and across the street, the Leadenhall merchants roused themselves to close their stalls.

  ‘Twas time to go home. Moll knotted her brows in yet another frown. She’d sold only three silk scraps the entire day. ‘Twas only enough for bread. Again, she would have nothing left to pay the moneylender, but what could she do? Tell the man the truth and pray he’d find pity enough to grant her more time? The thought made her laugh. Pity? From a moneylender?

  “You’ve gone mad, Moll,” she muttered as she packed her wares.

  As the last cathedral bell chimed, she grabbed her basket and took off for Lombard Street. If the moneylender did—by some strange twist of fate—grant her the time, she had barely time to buy the bread and run home before the Bow Bells rang. She couldn’t risk angering Thomas by showing up late again. Her back was sore enough.

  Fat raindrops spattered around her on the cobblestones as she flew down Pudding Lane. She’d nearly reached the end when someone shouted, “Moll, wait!”

  She didn’t stop. She recognized the voice. ‘Twas either George or Francis, the twins, redheaded-cutpurses who roamed London’s streets. They were just boys, really, hardly more than children she’d befriended upon her arrival in London, a year ago.

  Again, the boy called her name.

  She hadn’t the time to spare. Whatever he wanted would have to wait.

  Moll scowled and ducked into a narrow alley. As she headed deeper into the maze of London’s streets, the gusts of wind blasted her nostrils with the usual stink of dead fish, but oddly, this time ‘twas mixed with an acrid stench. Smoke? The realization furrowed her brows all the more and she slowed her pace to glance about, uneasy.

  A man galloped past, riding low over the back of his horse, the beast’s hooves furiously striking the cobblestones. Moll watched with a dark sense of foreboding and quickened her step, and despite the scattered rain, the stench of smoke only grew stronger the further she went.

  As she turned onto Lombard street, the looming confrontation with the moneylender pushed all other thoughts aside. Again, she began to fret. Surely, he wouldn’t take the only coins that would keep her fed? Surely, even a moneylender could possess a shred of compassion?

  Gnawing her bottom lip with worry, she passed by the slate-roofed, half-timbered townhouses lining the street, the iron signs hanging above their doors the only defining feature that set them apart.

  Finally, Moll paused beneath the sign fashioned as a bag of coins.

  Mercy. If only the man would show mercy. The desperate thought made her eyes roll. Mercy? From a moneylender?

  “You’re an addlepated numbskull, Moll,” she half-growled as she shoved open the door.

  The weathered-wood floor creaked beneath her feet as she stepped inside the shop. ‘Twas empty, save the small table holding the leather-bound ledger and quill, but she’d no sooner closed the door and heard the sound of footsteps.

  At the back of the room the curtains parted, and the moneylender, Brian de Hause, stepped through, a distinguished man in a brown velvet doublet resplendent with brass buttons and black leather Spanish boots. A fine silver chain hung about his neck, and from the band of his russet-colored copotain hat, a pheasant feather stood on salute.

  Moll dipped a nervous curtsey. “I’ve only three farthings, sir, barely enough for bread,” she croaked, her throat suddenly dry. Next week, she’d likely have even less—unless she found more gold-gilled mushrooms.

  The moneylender cocked a cool brow and laced his hands behind his back. “Moll is it?”

  Apprehensive, Moll curtseyed again.

  The man’s sharp gaze dropped to her collarbone. His steely eyes hardened.

  ‘Twas instinct that made Moll take a step back, then she recalled the yellowed, fading bruises that dotted her neck—Thomas’s handiwork from the week before. She’d long since abandoned hiding the bruises. Truly, it wasn’t worth the effort when they never had the chance to fade away.

  A muscle twitched on the moneylender’s jaw, then he strode past her and opened the door. “Go, Moll,” he said with a terse nod. “Buy bread, but eat it first and take your time returning home, will you? I’ve men to round up, to beat your husband’s worthless hide.”

  Moll stared at him, stunned, and then loath to tempt her luck, bolted out the door before he could change his mind.

  Several streets over, she stopped to catch her breath. ‘Twas tempting to laugh from pure joy at the thought of Thomas suffering a beating, but ‘twas a beating she couldn’t allow, no matter how sorely her heart wished. ‘Twas she who would pay the price, once he’d recovered.

  Reluctantly, she picked up her skirts and ran down the street. She’d buy the bread later. She had Thomas to warn.

  Moll barreled around the corner of the pewter smithy, but she didn’t see the half-bent old woman until they went down in a tangle of arms and legs.

  Moll sucked in a breath as a sharp jab of pain lanced through her ankle. There would be no running home to warn Thomas now. Lord help her, she’d be lucky if she could limp.

  “Ach, have a care, lass,” a gravelly voice complained.

  Moll glanced at the old woman half-sprawled in the street. ‘Twas Bertha, an aged, withered crone she’d befriended, months ago.

  Horrified, Moll scrambled to her knees. “Bertha, forgive me. Are you hurt?”

  She held out a helping hand, but as her fingers brushed the woman’s skin, a spark crackled between them.

  Moll jerked back, surprised.

  Bertha’s rheumy eyes took on an uncanny glow. “Ach, Moll, dinna fret over me, lass. I’m as right as rain,” she cackled as her cold, bony fingers closed over Moll’s wrist. “Stay a moment, will ye? Let the men close the streets. We canna have ye on the wrong side now, can we?”

  “Pardon?” Moll lifted puzzled brows and squinted in both directions. The streets were empty. There wasn’t a man in sight. “Whatever are you speaking of, Bertha? There’s no one here.”

  A flurry of wind blew the curls back from her cheek and brought a fresh whiff of smoke to her nostrils. She frowned. The rain had stopped. There would be little to stop a fire spreading, now.

  Bertha patted her arm. “’Tis no matter, lass.” Her lips split into a conspiratorial grin and she added, “Never will ye suffer that man’s touch again, lass, and soon? Aye, soon ye’ll know a real man’s love. ‘Twill be love at first sight for the both of ye, though neither of ye’ll know it at first, ye fools. Aye, ‘tis a force ye canna halt.”

  Love? At first sight? Moll smothered a laugh, but then, she’d always thought the old woman mad.

  “Come, Bertha, let’s stand, shall we?” Biting back the pain, she struggled to her feet and again, held out her hand.

  Bertha’s bony fingers lashed out to close over Moll’s ankle.

  “Ouch,” Moll choked as pain stabbed her to the bone.

  Mumbling, the old woman let her go, and then leapt spryly to her feet. She grinned, her face splitting into a thousand wrinkles. “Aye, ‘tis I who have helped ye, lass. Ye can leave now. The children await. Have no fear, take them all. Aye, the more the merrier. ‘Twill only melt his heart all the faster, aye? He thinks he’s a lone wolf. Pah!” With a hearty laugh, she shooed Moll off as one might a dog, and then without a backward glance, shuffled around the corner of the pewter smithy.

  Moll arched a curious brow. The old woman had always stood on the precipice of madness. Clearly, she’d now ventured over the edge. With a shrug, Moll picked up her basket and eyed the mushrooms that
had rolled out onto the street. The delicate gills had been crushed. They were useless now.

  Grimly, she collected the silk and velvet scraps and with her basket packed, rose unsteadily to her feet. There was no hurry to rush home now. She might as well buy the bread and eat it as the moneylender suggested. With the way her ankle throbbed, she’d be fortunate to return home before the midnight hour.

  With a sigh, she turned toward Baker Street, hobbling at first, but then, to her astonishment, moving quicker with each step as the pain in her ankle faded.

  At the end of the street, she paused, puzzled. Had she misjudged the injury? She scowled. Surely, she had. ‘Twasn’t as if Bertha had healed her in any fashion. She rolled her eyes at the thought and turned once again toward home when she spied a dark column of smoke rising from behind the building to her left.

  A door slammed behind her as several men joined her in the street, pointing to the smoke in concern.

  Moll saw him first, a bald man charging down the street straight at her.

  “Plague,” he gasped. “They’re blocking the streets. Run.”

  Moll stood, stunned. Had she heard correctly? Had he said…plague?

  Then, about her, chaos erupted. Screams rent the air. A tide of people swelled down the street with clouds of smoke curling at their heels. They pushed and shoved her every which way. She pushed back, screaming and striking out lest she be trampled. Before harm befell her, hands suddenly grabbed her from behind and yanked her into the safety of an alley, scarce shoulder-width.

  Moll collapsed against a rough brick wall to catch her breath as the crowd stampeded past.

  Drawing herself upright, Moll turned to face her rescuers.

  To her surprise, the gangly, wide-eyed twins, George and Francis, stared back at her, their freckled faces smudged with soot.

  “We’ve got to leave, Moll. Now,” George urged, his hazel eyes wide with concern.

  “’Tis too late for Thomas,” Francis inserted quickly. Though identical to his brother, his crooked nose—a victim of one too many a fistfight—stood as a testament to the fact his temper ran much hotter.

 

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