Wriggling in at the table, Eppie picked up a pea and popped it into her mouth. ‘The rain sounds like a water wheel. Why can I hear the wind, but never see it?’
‘Give me that leftover giblet pie, and all,’ Gillow told Martha. ‘I take some stuffing.’
After the meal, the storm intensified.
There was not much heat in the flames, so Gillow dragged his chair close to the hearth.
Her head resting on his chest, Eppie scarcely felt the meagre warmth of the gusting fire. Rain dislodged clots of soot and sent them rattling into the grate.
From the stream came the sound of stones rolling and grinding.
‘I fancy a drop of mulled ale with a double kick of rum,’ Gillow said. ‘It’ll knock me out for the night.’
Martha warmed the drink. ‘At Craft’s bakery they were selling quarten loaves for twelve shillings. They were only seven and a half pence at the start of the year. How most folk manage I can’t imagine.’
‘Mmm,’ Gillow answered, disinterested. ‘What d’ya say to a game of knuckle-bones before bed, my little maid?’
‘I’ve won!’ Eppie shrieked as her last sheep bone sent Gillow’s scattering across the hearthrug.
‘You cheated.’
She stamped her foot. ‘I never cog!’
‘If that’s true you look me in the eye, without giggling.’
Throwing back her head, she hooted with laughter.
‘See, you did cheat.’
‘It’s your face; your bushy eyebrows go up and down, all silly.’
He took the flagon from Martha and blew hard on it. ‘Lovely! Nice and warming on a miserable night.’
Eppie hopped before the fire. ‘Give us a taste.’
‘Eppie, is this your tumbler of milk in the larder?’ Martha asked. ‘It smells off.’
Eppie yawned. ‘I think it was left over from tomorrow.’
‘Sounds like someone’s ready for their sack,’ Gillow said, grinning at Eppie.
Martha helped Eppie to slip on her nightdress. ‘As it’s so cold tonight I’ll put your truckle bed beside the hearth,’
‘Shh!’ Eppie whispered, putting a finger to her lips. ‘The badgers are by the stream, saying quick, quick, quick. They’ll have soggy paws.’ Straw crunched as she snuggled down.
‘Now go to sleep,’ Martha said. ‘You’ll be exhausted after running around with Grumps.’
‘And Mister Lord’s new ram, Carronade. Grumps says he’s got an exploding bottom.’
Gillow chuckled. ‘I’ll have an exploding bottom if I sit here much longer.’ In weariness he rose and stretched to the rafters.
Martha was in the bedroom, plaiting her hair in readiness for bed. ‘I hope we don’t have trouble with that fox tonight. He killed Claire’s best layer.’
Gillow glanced at the fowling piece which hung from leather straps above the chimney hood. ‘If he dares show his muzzle in my garden I’ll make a cushion out of him, like I did to his missus.’ Staggering in the gloom, he kicked over the stool.
‘Are you sure you can see straight to get to bed?’ Martha asked.
‘Jus’ about.’
Wind tramped. Rain beat on the door like a drum.
Eppie threw her hands over her ears. ‘It’s a growly wolf picking up the cottage!’
Martha kissed her goodnight.
‘I can’t sleep, Mammy! Tell me a story out of your ears.’
‘Why don’t you tell me one out of your ears! That way you’ll talk yourself to sleep like you did last night.’
‘May I come in with you and pa?’
‘No chance,’ Gillow answered.
Eppie dived between them.
‘That dog’s place is in the stable,’ Gillow said, his feet squashed as Twiss curled up on them.
‘He’s frightened, like me,’ Eppie said. ‘He wants to come in with us.’
‘The things I have to put up with,’ Gillow grumbled.
Warm and happy now, Eppie told Martha, ‘Your belly’s as bumpy as a pig’s.’
‘Are you excited about the new baby?’ Martha asked.
‘Yes, I’m ‘cited. I’m glad I was born Eppie ‘cos I love you, Mammy.’
‘What about me?’ Gillow groused sleepily.
Martha yawned. ‘We thought you were in the Land of Nod.’
‘And you was snoring like Twiss,’ Eppie added.
‘Snoring was I? What about you last night, my little maid? You snored so loud it’s a wonder the chimney didn’t crash on top of you.’
‘I don’t snore!’
The door blew open and tapped. Martha made to get out of bed. ‘I’ll have to fasten it, else it’ll knap all night.’
‘I’ll do it,’ Gillow said, groaning.
He trudged back. ‘The wind’s torn the thatch by the door. There are a few drips coming through, as big as radishes. I’ve put the cauldron under them. Shift up; make way for a big ‘un.’
‘I’ll mop up first thing,’ Martha said. ‘I hope the larder will be all right. Those wretched mice have been in again.’
‘I don’t like the mousies running over me when I’m in bed,’ Eppie said.
‘They must get in at the bottom of the door, where it’s rotted,’ Martha mused. ‘Yesterday, I noticed the pigeon pie was nibbled around the edges.’
Eppie felt a pang of guilt, recalling Twiss’s training sessions. ‘They won’t come again, Mammy.’
‘We’ll have to get another cat. It was sad when Pickles died.’
‘What happened to her?’ Eppie asked.
‘In spring, Lord du Quesne makes Gramps put poison outside the hurdles on account of the new-born lambs to stop stray or wild dogs getting them. Pickles must’ve eaten the meat bait.’
Lying safe and warm, Eppie felt less fearful of the screaming wind. ‘Does the pin go right through the children’s skin when the glove-makers pin their children to them?’
‘Their mothers put it through their children’s petticoats so that they don’t go wandering.’
‘What if the children fall asleep, like I do when I’m turning the butter?’
‘I suppose their mothers wake them with smacks.’
‘I’m glad you and pa never hit me.’
‘That could be arranged, if you don’t keep your peace,’ Gillow grumbled good-humouredly.
Eppie was silent a while, staring into the noisy darkness. ‘My mittens is shrinking.’
‘Are they?’ Martha asked sleepily.
‘When I tried to put them on this morning they was trying not to fit. My hands are hurty; all purple with orange spots. Jenny was itching this morning. Wakelin pulled a tick off Twiss. It left its mouth bits in Twiss’s skin. He got a bumpy boil.’
‘That reminds me, we need more oil of turpentine to kill the ticks,’ Martha said.
‘The sheep fleece on top of my sack makes me itchy,’ Eppie said. ‘A nasty beetle bit me up the nose.’
‘Do you two mind?’ Gillow asked. ‘I’m trying to sleep even if you’re not. As if it isn’t bad enough having to put up with this storm, now I’ll be itching all night at the thought of fleas. Another thing,’ he rambled on, as Eppie and Martha giggled helplessly beside him, ‘it’s a bit hot with four and a half of us shifting about in here. And keep your legs down, my little maid. The last time you came in I was bruised all over by the morning. If you must be in here, lay still. I don’t want to sleep with a windmill that’s forever going round.’
‘Be quiet, Gillow,’ Martha admonished. ‘What with the wind, the beating rain, and you twittering on, we’ll never snatch any sleep.’
‘Me? It’s Eppie!’
‘It isn’t me!’ Grabbing a pillow, Eppie pummelled his head.
Twiss bounded around, barking madly.
‘If that pillow bursts we’ll be smowered in feathers,’ Martha cautioned, pushing Twiss’s wet muzzle away from her face. ‘Do as your father says, or we’ll be too tired to work in the morning if we don’t grab some shut eye.’
Eppie gave Twi
ss a goodnight tickle behind his ear, and snuggled back into bed.
‘And no chattering in the middle of the night,’ Gillow grumbled.
‘I can’t help sleeping in my talk,’ Eppie protested.
‘That’s all I need, if I can work that one out.’
Grumps lit a fuse. Wind roared like cannon fire. The bed shook.
In her dream, Eppie span from a cliff and landed in a garden.
A clutch of silver-pheasant eggs lay in a scrape beneath a yew tree shaped like a badger.
Crouching beside the abandoned nest were two children, Talia and Gabriel. Their kittens, Ophelia and Prince Ferdinand, frolicked on the damp grass.
‘What a pity,’ Lady Constance said. ‘The poor bird must have been disturbed or grown tired of the weeks of incessant rain. Be careful you don’t touch the eggs; they would smell dreadful if they broke.’
Upon hearing her mother’s cautionary words, Talia’s sadness was replaced by her penchant for mischief.
Later that evening, whilst reclining in the drawing room, Sapphira told Robert and Constance about the jangling skeletons, headless ghosts and shrieking demons she and Obadiah had seen at a travelling theatre in Malstowe.
Nothing nauseated his lordship more than the ridiculous notion of the belief in the unquiet dead, and it was not helped by Zelda, his nephew’s crazed mother. Listening behind the door, she squealed, ‘Ghosties! Whooo!’
The whole thing had put du Quesne in a bad mood for the remainder of the evening, and he was snappy with the footman when he drew back his chair for him at the dining table. Huffing, he plumped himself, unnecessarily heavily, into his padded seat. The rotten eggs crunched.
Wafting her nose with her fan, Sapphira glared suspiciously at Robert. ‘Whatever is that foetid smell?’
A sour expression on his face, du Quesne circumspectly peeled back the cushion.
Obadiah rumbled with laughter, highly amused at the sight of the gelatinous mess and shattered eggshells. It was at this moment that Zelda, prancing on the lawn, screeched, ‘Whooooo! Ghosties!’
Beside himself with rage, Robert threw back the window and shouted at the woman to rid herself from his life.
Constance pleaded the innocence of the children, who had spied the calamity from behind curtaining drapes in the dining room. Du Quesne, though, had had enough of their practical jokes. The last time he entertained guests, Talia had poured salt into his brandy when the butler was not looking. Then she had the inspiration of sprinkling flour onto his wig. Caught in the rain, a sticky mess had dripped down his nose.
He marched the children to the nursery and snatched the kittens from their arms. ‘It is high time that you both had a punishment to remember. I am going to drown your kittens!’
Gabriel screamed. Talia hammered on the locked door.
Regardless of the lashing rain, their father strode across the topiary lawn. Momentarily, he glared up at their horrified faces pressed against the windowpane.
They knew he was heading to Shivering Falls.
Stood at the bottom of the bed, Twiss whined. Forcing herself to wakefulness, Eppie opened her eyes upon the blackness of night. With the breaking of its banks the roaring turbulence of the stream was replaced by an ominous, brooding silence. ‘Mam, summat is wrong with Twiss!’
‘Ignore him,’ Martha answered, sighing.
‘No, summat’s up!’
Martha fumbled sleepily with the bedclothes. ‘It’s probably that cauldron overflowing with the drip. I’ll go see.’ Her legs splashed into water. ‘Gracious! There’s water almost up to my knees!’ She drew her legs back into the bed and dried them on the coverlet. ‘It’s freezing and so slimy! The stream must’ve flooded. Our cottage was flooded once before, shortly after your pa and I wed. No wonder his great-grandfather called this Dank Cottage. Gillow, wake up. You’ve got to check on them animals. I can hear the chickens squawking.’
‘Hum?’ he muttered between snorts.
Martha huffed. ‘I suppose it’s all down to me, again.’
‘I’m coming!’ Eppie said enthusiastically.
‘Don’t be silly, what could you do? Go back to sleep.’
Lifting the hem of her nightgown, Martha waded steadily away. Pushing aside the partition sacking, she surged into the parlour. ‘You can never rely on a man. This is awful!’
Eppie dragged the blanket around her shoulders and shut her eyes.
Though she waded carefully, Martha’s heel struck a knuckle-bone which had been left lying on the floor. Falling backwards, she knocked her head against the dresser and slid, dazed, beneath the floodwaters.
Something icy blew down Eppie’s neck. Something like damp grass brushed against her face. Startled into alertness, she sat bolt upright and found herself staring into a pale, glowing face, its eyes wild and beseeching. In the same instance that Eppie recognised the apparition from her dream, Talia vanished.
Eppie fingered the warm hollow in the pillow where Martha’s head had lain. She scrabbled her way out of the sheets. ‘Mammy! Where are you?’
Gillow groggily slapped his lips. ‘Here.’
Leaping clumsily into the flood, Eppie gasped as the freezing waters momentarily took her breath away. Air billowed beneath her nightdress. Immediately, the folds fell, sodden and tugging.
Martha grasped the corner of the dresser. Spluttering for air, she sought to keep her head out of the waters. So terrible was the stabbing pain in her womb that she had been unable to cry out for help.
Eppie’s teeth chattered involuntarily. ‘Twiss! Wake pa!’
‘What the!’ Gillow cried, terrified out of his wits as Twiss leapt about, pummelling his face with his soil-engrained paws.
Gillow surged towards them in his nightshirt. ‘Martha! What’s happened? Why didn’t you wake me?’ Gathering Martha into his arms, he ploughed back to the bedroom.
Arms outstretched to keep her balance, Eppie followed, mud squelching between her toes.
Gillow hastily lifted her onto the bed beside Martha, who lay groaning in agony. He splashed away to seek help.
Moments later, he floundered back through the leaden waters. ‘It’s only us; our cottage is in a dip. Claire says for me to carry your ma over to her.’
He seemed to have been gone ages. All the while Eppie lay with her arms around Twiss, her tears soaking into the dog’s wiry fur.
‘Let’s be having you, my little maid. It’s lucky you were in with your ma and me, otherwise you’d have drowned in your sleep.’
Eppie clung to his neck. Passing beside the half-submerged gate, she glanced back. Surrounded by swirling blackness, the cottage looked like an island in a lake. Beneath her cheek she felt Gillow’s strong veins pulsate, and was conscious of his heart beating next to hers. Never did she want to let him go.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE WHITE ROBIN
Curled upon Betsy’s sack bedding in the corner, Eppie had not uttered a word since Martha’s accident.
Betsy stirred the stew over the iron-trivet crab, her face warmed by the fire. She spoke quietly to Gillow, ‘I’ve had enough sadness in my life to know I mustn’t impose myself. Grief takes many guises and silence is one of them. It’s hard with a child, though, knowing what to say to comfort her.’
Gillow laid Elizabeth beside Eppie. ‘It was fortunate you left her in the loft.’
No emotion flickered in Eppie’s wide, dull eyes as she stared at the doll.
‘It was the alder with Eppie’s swing on that fell and partly blocked the stream.’ He glanced at the hearth. ‘I see your wood store’s running low. Jacob’s bound to have some to spare. I’ll go and see for you, if you like.’
Twiss was slumped on the rug, shattered after his disturbed night.
Lucy, Betsy’s black cat, crept in and glared warily at the dog.
Betsy roused herself to be cheerful for Eppie’s sake. ‘Remember that painful swelling I had on my eyelid? When I rubbed Lucy’s tail on it, the boil disappeared.’
Ga
zing at Betsy’s warty parsnip chin, Eppie wondered whether Wakelin was right, that Betsy really was a witch.
Gillow stooped beneath the low threshold with a basket of logs.
‘You’ll stay for something to eat?’ Betsy asked.
‘That’s mighty kind of you, Mrs P. I appreciate all yer doings.’
‘Sit yersen down.’
Betsy sopped bread into her potage. ‘Will Eppie soon be able to see her mam?’
Eppie stared hopefully at Gillow over the rim of her bowl.
‘I don’t think so. She’s too badly.’
Eppie bit her lower lip, forcing back tears.
‘I tried to stay Doctor Burndread on his way to learn Master Gabriel, to ask him about Martha. He didn’t so much as look my way.’
‘Don’t ‘e fret, Gillow. Claire lost her two bairns before they were born, so she’ll know how to care for Martha. After losing a child, the most important thing is that the clots and tissues come loose, else the rot sets in.’
Lethargically, Eppie stirred slithers of cabbage and prodded bacon.
‘Try and eat your meat,’ Betsy said, adding, as a bribe, ‘then I’ll give you a cake as a copsy. Take a look at Twiss begging with his paw up!’ She placed a bowlful of stew on the floor for the dog. ‘How are your beasts, Gillow?’
‘The geese had a jolly time, though the pigs were up to their necks. I’ve lost a lot of vegetables.’
‘Bring any ‘taties over afore they go bad. Grated down, they’ll be fine in garlic soup.’
Standing in the doorway, Betsy watched him trudge across the lane. The sun shone between racing white clouds in a heavenly blue sky. ‘It’s as though there’d never been a storm. What about an amble, though you’ll need summat on your feet.’
Rummaging in a cobwebby corner, she fetched out a pair of goatskin shoes, and exclaimed in dismay at the sight of a pair of worn stockings. ‘I’ll stilt these.’ She set to the repair, knitting needles clattered in her skilful fingers. ‘These belonged to Anne. Most of my children died before they were seven. Pox took ‘em. Always grumbling about the coverlets rubbing their sores the poor mites were.
‘We lived in Pear Tree Cottage, just past the church. It borders onto his lordship’s orchard and looks lovely in spring with the blossom. After I buried my last child, my husband fell ill. Daily I dosed him with tartar and brimstone, but he died of the fever. An impotent pauper his lordship called me when he turned me out of the cottage.
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