The Earl's Wet Nurse
Page 1
The Earl’s Wet Nurse
by
Jacqueline DeGroot
Other books by Jacqueline DeGroot
Climax
The Secret of the Kindred Spirit
What Dreams Are Made Of
Barefoot Beaches
For the Love of Amanda
Shipwrecked at Sunset
Worth Any Price
Father Steve’s Dilemma
The Widows of Sea Trail—Book One
Catalina of Live Oaks
The Widows of Sea Trail—Book Two
Tessa of Crooked Gulley
The Widows of Sea Trail—Book Three
Vivienne of Sugar Sands
Running into Temptation
with Peggy Grich
Running up the Score
with Peggy Grich
Running into a Brick Wall
with Peggy Grich
Tales of the Silver Coast—A Secret History of
Brunswick County
with Miller Pope
Sunset Beach—A History
with Miller Pope
Ocean Isle Beach—Gem of the Atlantic Coast
Flash Drive
Cemetery Kids—The Ghosts of Bird Island
©2014 by Jacqueline DeGroot
Published by October Publishing
Cover design: Amy Blake
Format and packaging: Peggy and Jim Grich
All rights reserved. No parts of the contents of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means without the permission of the author.
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN: 978-1-4951-1030-6
This book is a work of fiction. All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names except where permission has been granted.
Dedicated to the women who help nurture infants when their own mothers are unable to. To the women who pump and donate their breast milk, you are truly God’s angels.
Thank You
Thank you to My Wonderful Team of Proofers
You are Amazing and Very Much Appreciated
Amy Blake
Barbara Scott-Cannon
Kris Ann Crane
Ray Cullis
Bill DeGroot
Regina Flemion
Peggy Grich
Jan Igoe
Deb Ilardi
Joan Leotta
Marlen Mapes
Sandy Payne
Sandy Raymond
Rose Sinay
Sandy Spinatsch
The Earl’s Wet Nurse
Students in an advanced Biology class were taking their mid-term exam. The last question was, “Name seven advantages of Mother’s Milk.” The question was worth 70 points if you could list seven benefits, but only if you could come up with seven. One student was hard put to think of seven advantages. However, he wrote:
1) It is the perfect formula for the child.
2) It provides immunity against several diseases.
3) It is always the right temperature.
4) It is inexpensive.
5) It bonds the child to mother, and vice versa.
6) It is always available as needed.
And then the student was stuck. Finally, in desperation, just before the bell rang, he wrote:
7) It comes in two attractive containers and it’s high enough off the ground where the cat can’t get it.
He was awarded an A.
I received this email a few days before starting this story. I’d been debating whether to write it. This email cinched it.
In the Vicinity of Southport, England—1928
Chapter One
In the village of Merseyside, situated high on a cliff on the Lancashire coast, it was a busy November evening for twin sisters, Marguerite and Madeline Merridale—both midwives by trade and both too far on in years to endure this much excitement in one day.
Marguerite sat with the full-bodied wife of the Earl of Borough Sefton who was about to give birth to a much-wanted heir. Inside the stately hillside manor—in the special birthing room that boasted an immense fireplace, flanked by its own inglenook on either side—her ladyship was laboring in the ornate canopied bed which every Sefton countess fortunate enough to conceive had used for generations. It was piled high with all manner of Belgian and Irish linens. Fancy pillows with eyelets, faggoting, scalloped edges and French lace caressed her cheek as her head thrashed from side to side, the long ribbons and ruched lace absorbing her perspiration.
Meanwhile, at the bottom of the hill, at the end of a rutted road, close enough to Southport to hear the gulls screeching across the frigid waters of the quay, tiny Catherine Cottingham was struggling to deliver her first child. The croft was so drafty that try as she might, Madeline could not keep the fire burning in the crumbling hole in the corner that served as a fireplace in the one-room hovel.
“She’s done out of her mind with the pain, and into her twentieth hour, too,” Madeline muttered to herself as she swiped at the soot which streaked her arms from continually stoking the fire. “And here I am freezing me fingers to the bone and chaffin’ them with flint, while my darlin’ sister is doing the high and mighty with her ladyship in a room so warm that she’s probably drippin’ sweat onta the fine lace linens. Not fair I tell ye,” she said to no one in particular, as her patient was barely conscious.
She bent to check Catherine’s progress and saw the circle surrounding the baby’s dark cap of hair begin to widen. “Well, it’s about bluddy time!” She bristled, stretched her back and forced herself upright at the exact moment Catherine screamed from the pain, shouted for a man named Thomas, and passed out.
“Better for you that way, dearie, you’ll nigh remember the brunt of it. And here we’re in for it. Your bairn is goin’ ta greet the moon of this night after all.”
There was a rustling outside the door. It was pushed open to the sound of wind whistling through the chink.
“Patsy! Get that door pulled to, now!”
“I am. I am,” a small voice said. A young girl pressed her bony shoulder against the door, battling the gusts trying to blow it back open. When she finally got it closed, Patsy, whose small frame was lost in the ancient shawl borrowed from her Aunt Marguerite, leaned back against the door to catch her breath. Then she rushed over to where her other aunt stood in a matching shawl. Madeline’s hands were gripping her ample hips, waiting for her news from the hill.
“Aunt Marguerite says she needs you now! Lady Annaliese is clutching her heart and gaspin’. She cannot get her to push. The baby’s head is stuck and the cord is wrapped around its neck—she can feel it. Says there’s no warmth in the baby’s head. It’s cold like a stone. She doesn’t know what to do. She’s crying somethin’ fierce.”
“If she’s done lost that baby, the earl will kill her for sure. But I kinna go now. Look, look at this!” Between the woman’s legs, propped open on the worn cot was the scrunched up face of a caterwauling baby. The body was inching out and making its way into the world between the cold thighs of a young woman who had no idea of the momentous event happening, and how her not being awake to witness it would change many lives.
In seconds, the baby’s shoulders slid through, followed by the chest and torso. As its slick bottom cleared the passage, Madeline bent and scooped the ball of mottled red and white flesh into
her arms. “Oh, he’s a randy one. Look how fine . . . and big, so big for such a tiny little lass like her. But he ain’t gonna live, no he won’t, not here. This chill will take him by morning if he’s not kept warm. Patsy, you stay here. Take care of the birthin’ stuff that comes out o’ her. There’s a bucket over there in the corner. “If she comes to, tell her I got her baby, goin’ ta take it up to the manor house ta keep it warm and see if I can help Marguerite with her ladyship.”
“Yes’m,” Patsy said as she gingerly covered the new mother’s legs with the tattered coat heaped at the foot of the bed. She knew from experience that this could take a long while, especially if the woman wasn’t of a mind to help.
Madeline tore a ruffle from the bottom of her petticoat and used it to wrap the baby. Then unbuttoned her bodice and tucked the swaddled bundle against her ample bosom. She grabbed the lone flat pillow from under the woman’s head to shield the baby from the elements and opened the door. She fought her way through the biting wind toward the lights shining high in the distance. She’d made this trek a hundred times, and could make it now despite her unsure footing and the buffeting winds. Two babies’ lives depended on her, though it was likely that one of them was already gone.
It took longer than it should have, and she was ever so glad to see the elegant, sprawling house looming ahead of her. Flames beckoned from the wrought iron lanterns by the front door, but she hurried past them. It served her purpose better to go around to the side and pound on the door of the birthing room directly.
She tucked her head against the wind and stomped on the cobblestones that made a circuitous path near the house, knocking snow from her clogs and muttering about the imprudent choices these women had made nine months ago. The pain, the sufferin’, the mortal jeopardy they were putting themselves in. She didn’t think it was worth it most days. But then she’d never had the opportunity to know, had she?
She looked up as she turned the corner and saw light from the windows shining on the bushes leading to the herb garden. Madeline knew the house well. Every Christmas, the town was invited to a lavish feast at the manor house. The townswomen were encouraged to wander the rooms on the main level to see the works of art, the colorful tapestries, and the lovely floral arrangements fresh from the greenhouses. Instead, the women marveled at the vastness of the kitchens, the formal dining rooms, and the lavish suite that occupied an entire wing—the immense birthing room. A carryover from when the house was first built; it was the original master bedchamber with its adjoining salon. Additions had been built around it, leaving the imposing stone structure as the focal point of the well-tended gardens.
At her knock, a heavily perspiring, softly whimpering Marguerite opened the door. “He’s gone, she’s gone,” she wailed. “There ain’t nothing of any good come here tonight.”
Madeline bustled by her, “What are you saying?”
One look at the palatial bed mounted high on a platform, told her all she needed to know. Her ladyship was whiter than her Brussels-made sheets. Her lifeless eyes stared unseeingly toward the frescoed ceiling, high above the canopy. Her long black hair trailed over the side of the bed, a fair portion having escaped from her thick shiny braid. Painted angels played high above her head, but she could not see them. Across her chest lay the lifeless form of a tiny, blue-gray baby boy.
Madeline hurried to the platform and looked down at the bed, at the bloodied sheets between the woman’s legs. She reached out a shaking hand and closed her ladyship’s eyelids with her frigid, arthritic fingers. The baby was too small for full term. She must have been carrying him long after he had stopped growing. The cord, wrapped tightly around his tiny throat was still attached to his dead mother. Disappearing into her body, it was a terrifying sight. Madeline shuddered. Marguerite sobbed. “I din’ do nothin’ wrong. Honest Maddy, I dinna!”
Madeline patted her sister’s shoulder, shook her head and sighed. “I know ya didn’t. That babe hasn’t quickened for many weeks. I wonder did she not suspect? Did she say naught to you?”
“No! Nothing. She said she was heart sore, that her shoulders and arms were numb, then she grabbed her chest, and made this awful choking sound and her eyes rolled back. That’s when I sent Patsy for you.”
“Patsy told me. I couldna come right away. No matter though, for the long walk against the gales, it would have made no difference. She was probably gone afore Patsy ere left the mansion gates.”
“Aye. Her pulse went thready, then she was gone. It was only a matter of seconds, I tell ya.”
“Does the earl know yet?”
“Oh no! I couldna tell him! He will have my hide. His wife. His heir. Both lost. He will believe it is my fault, that I killed them! You have to help me Maddy. Help me get away. Hide me!”
“That may not be necessary.” Madeline dropped the pillow she still clutched to her with fingers formed into claws by the cold. Working them until they uncurled, she gingerly placed her hand inside her bodice and pulled out the warm bundle hidden there. Silently she unwrapped the package.
Marguerite stared down with eyes gone wide, her gray brows grazing the errant curls that had slipped from her crooked mobcap. “It’s a baby—a big baby—and a boy at that,” she said in hushed awe.
“Yes, the one just delivered of the tenant renting the old Cyrus place. She fainted from the pain and hadn’t come to when I left. Patsy is sitting with her waiting for the membranes.”
“What are you thinking?” Marguerite asked, recognizing the frown lines knitting between her sister’s brows, knowing she was deep in thought.
“I’m thinkin’ that this babe won’t live the night with its natural born mother. Catherine I ken was her name. And ev’n if it did, she has nothing for it, no clothes, nary a blanket, save for a tattered scrap of wool on her bed. She has no coin—told me straightaway she couldna pay me for my services until she found work, but begged me to see to her and promised to pay when she could. I know Old Man Cyrus told her to move on yesterday, as she’s late with her rent, and I hear he has another tenant riding in today. There warn’t a scrap of food in the place. It’s no wonder she was no’ strong enough for such a long labor. I doubt she’s had a meal in days. This babe will be better off with the earl. She kinna take care of it.”
“You gonna tell the earl this baby is his baby?” Marguerite was aghast.
“Yes,” Madeline pronounced, suddenly decided. “Yes, that’s exactly what I’m goin’ to do. It’ll be best for all around. And you, you’ll be spared his scorn, ‘cause truth be told, he’d ’a probly chose the bairn over her ladyship given the choice. He has to have an heir. We’ll have to tell him it was God’s will that the babe live and not ‘er.”
“Will you tell him, Maddy? I beseech you . . . after you show him his son, he might not take it so badly. I just canna,” she broke down in sobs, her hands covering her face, her shoulders shaking as she slumped into a chair.
It wasn’t the first time Madeline had to bail Marguerite out of a hashed up mess, and she knew it wouldn’t be the last. She stroked her sister’s soft silver curls, tucked them back under her cap and patted her shoulder. “I can do that. You clean her ladyship up a bit. The earl’s going to want to see her, say his farewells.”
Madeline scooped the baby up from the end of the bed where she had placed him and took him over to the hearth to clean him up as well. He was a beautiful baby, Madeline noted, strong of limb, with a fine bright gaze that warmed her heart. Yes, he would live, she’d see to it.
Chapter Two
Marguerite was sent to the tiny hovel to tell the poor young woman Patsy was tending, that her baby had been stillborn. As proof, she had the earl’s lifeless baby wrapped in linen and tucked under Maddy’s shawl. To keep Patsy quiet, Marguerite gave her the shiny gold coin that had been in her ladyship’s night table. As customary, money was left in a bedside drawer to pay the midwife fee, no matter the
outcome. Due to the tragic circumstances in the birthing room, Patsy would be the only one profiting from tonight’s labors. Madeline had said that they couldn’t tell the earl his wife was dead and take his money. But Patsy, not one to hold her tongue, had to be reckoned with. Bribing her with more money than her family would see in two harvests, would assure her silence.
At the manor house, Madeline, having cleaned the squalling baby, swaddled it tightly in the embroidered Porthault receiving blanket that was folded and waiting on the dresser. Her ladyship had painstakingly sewn the signature pattern for the express purpose of presenting the newborn to its father. Tiny embellished hearts ran around the edges, each one stitched with a mother’s painstaking care. The baby was silent now, comforted by the warmth of the baffle-stitched blanket’s tight embrace. Taking a deep breath, Madeline opened the connecting door into the manor house and walked confidently through the central court and up the stairs to the earl’s study.
5
As soon as he heard footsteps making their way down the hall, the earl jumped from his seat to meet the midwife at the door. His anxious face brightened into a wide grin when he saw the small bundle in her arms.
“Your Lordship, you have a son,” Madeline announced. Gingerly, she uncovered the baby’s face and allowed him to have a look. The earl, easily two heads taller than she, bent to the tiny face and lightly ran his fingertips over the baby’s smooth cheek.
“He is beautiful.” His tone was reverent; his voice lowered as to not wake the sleeping babe. “Everything accounted for?”
“Yes, my Lord, he is nigh onto perfect.”
“And her ladyship? How is she faring?”
“My Lord, it is with great regret that I must inform you that her ladyship did not survive the birthing. Her heart could not handle the strain. She died and the baby had to be taken.”
He blinked at her as if he hadn’t understood her words. Then, as if to absorb the shock, he closed his eyes, took in a deep breath and made his way back to the chair he had just vacated—the very same one he had been sitting in all night. He dropped into it, not a wit of grace to his manner. His hand covered his face for a spell and Madeline watched as his shoulders slumped forward. She saw the slight trembling under the slope of his broad, wool-clad shoulders. After a few moments, he thrust his shoulders back as if bracing for all that must come, as if he knew that this was not the time to allow his emotions to rule.