by Val Wood
About the Book
1860
Harriet Miles is trying to take care of her seriously ill mother, and just when she thinks things couldn’t get any worse she is fired from her job at the hostelry.
The last thing she expects after her mother dies is a marriage proposal from a man she barely knows, but her only alternative is the workhouse. And so begins her new life with Noah Tuke.
But instead of marital bliss, Harriet finds herself in the cramped farmhouse which Noah calls home, and in this overcrowded and angry household she meets with hostility and bitterness. The only person who offers her friendship is Noah’s brother, Fletcher. Gradually she learns the true reasons behind Noah’s desire to marry her – and realizes that the only person she finds real companionship with is the person she can’t possibly be with . . .
Contents
Cover
About the Book
Title Page
Dedication
Author’s Note
Preface
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Chapter Forty-five
Chapter Forty-six
Chapter Forty-seven
Chapter Forty-eight
Chapter Forty-nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-one
Ending
Sources
About the Author
Also by Val Wood
Copyright
For my sisters, and for Peter as always
AUTHOR’S NOTE
A man may not marry his brother’s wife, nor a woman her husband’s brother. Such unions were forbidden in scripture and in law by the Church of England’s Marriage Laws of 1560 until 1921, when the 1907 Marriage Act was amended accordingly, providing the first spouse was deceased.
PREFACE
The powerful force of a gale far out in the German Ocean abated slightly as the white crests of the high tide rushed towards the yawning mouth of the Humber estuary. The swell lashed the sinuous curve of Spurn Point, and struck again when it reached the reclaimed banks of Sunk Island and Cherry Cobb Sands in Holderness. But they didn’t break, and the tide went on to raise the level of the River Hull, already high from the draining of the lowlands, so that many houses sited close by were flooded, as they so often were.
Onward it flowed towards the confluence and wide flat plain of the Ouse and the Trent, the trumpet-shaped channel narrowing as it reached Hessle to create a flood tide that covered the wetlands and salt marsh beyond Brough, Broomfleet and Ellerker Sands and the outlying hamlets and villages in this low-lying and lonely landscape.
CHAPTER ONE
Hull, 1860
Harriet trudged up High Street towards the George and Dragon. How she hated this job! The customers with their stinking breath and coarse hands on her backside, who she had to push away with a smile and quizzical eyebrow so as not to upset them, so that they didn’t get nasty or complain about her to the landlord. The landlord wasn’t so bad; he saw what was going on and didn’t blame her for it, but his wife was a harridan.
Still, it was a job and they were hard to come by. She sighed. I suppose I must count my blessings and be thankful that I managed to find extra work at ’hostelry, she thought, but even so I don’t see how I can manage to pay ’rent, not if we want to eat. If I’d been nicer to ’mill foreman he might have kept me on full time, but his wandering hands are worse than ’hostelry customers’, and him with a wife and four bairns. So he punished me and has put me on half time, until I change my mind, which I won’t. Instead, she had taken the job at the George, even though she didn’t like being out late in the evening when her mother was so ill. The older woman hadn’t eaten for days but even so she still retched, although she brought up nothing but green bile. I’m going to ask if I can leave early tonight. I wish . . . what do I wish?
She turned into the yard. This was an ancient inn, one of the oldest in Hull and in the oldest street in the town, set close by the River Hull where the November fog drifted in from the sea and floated amongst the houses and alleyways. I don’t wish for riches, but it would be nice to have enough to eat, and not have to worry about paying ’landlord, and – to have a good man in my life, one who spoke softly, and would look after me and my mother. And I would tek care of him. Was there such a man, she wondered.
Two weeks earlier a stranger had come into the inn. He wasn’t local; she knew all the regular customers by sight if not by name, and she hadn’t seen this man before. He’d been polite, asked for food as well as ale, and she’d thought . . . well, she’d thought that he seemed pleasant. He’d asked for fresh bread as if he was used to eating good food, and although he hadn’t been flippant or saucy he’d seemed interested in her, for she’d caught him glancing to see if she was wearing a wedding ring, and there’d been something he said. What was it, she thought. Something about a husband. That was it: had I a husband to go home to? But I didn’t answer; I’m not in ’habit of discussing my life with a stranger. He was in Hull on business, he said, so he must live out of ’district. It would be nice if he came back like he said he would, and then I might find out who he is, does he have a wife, where does he live, is he in regular work? She let out a breath of resignation. But no use daydreaming, Harriet. This is your life, such as it is.
She swung open the door. There was a bright fire burning and already men standing by it warming their backsides. The landlord’s wife stood behind the bar counter with an expression so brittle it could shatter glass. ‘You’re late,’ she said.
‘I know,’ Harriet replied. ‘I’m sorry.’
Anger coursed through his veins. It had for as long as he could remember, though he didn’t know why; but it was his retaliation, his way of dealing with what he considered to be injustice, his way of coping with long-standing rejection.
Noah Tuke rode the stallion hard, testing its health and strength. He’d bought him cheap, doing a shady deal with the owner who was pressed for money and had cursed him for his meanness. This would be Noah’s second visit to Hull and when his quest was done he had no intention of ever going back to the town again.
He’d gone there seeking a wife in the middle of October, and reckoned that he might have found one. With a bit of luck and a few choice words he might get as good a bargain as he had with the stallion.
He needed a woman who could work, and although he could have gone to Goole or Brough,
both nearer to his marshland home than Hull, Goole was a new company town of no more than four or five hundred people, built for the shipping industry and attracting few women apart from the dockers’ wives; and in the small community of Brough someone might have recognized the son of one of the farmers from the waterlogged wastes outside the town, and the last thing he wanted was raised eyebrows or inevitable questions of motive.
He had reckoned that a woman employed in one of the inns and hostelries of Hull would be used to long hours and drudgery; she should be young, but not so young that he’d have to teach her the facts of life. Mature, but no more than twenty-five, and presentable and attractive; not a whore, although he had no problem with previous experience, providing she was clean; and she should have no commitments. No children, no parents, no ties, and no one with claims on her. She should be looking for a chance to better herself and be prepared to leave the town and become a countrywoman.
On the first visit, he had become almost drunk in his search. He hadn’t realized just how many inns and beer houses the town held. He’d gone to those that were slightly run down, the kind of place where a woman without family might apply for a job and be prepared to work for a pittance.
Some of the places he tried employed women who in his opinion were nothing more than sluts. Some of them leered at him, giving him toothless grins as they asked if he was new to the area.
‘Passing through,’ he would mutter, drinking his ale and moving on.
Other hostelries, crowded with seamen, were attended mainly by a landlord and occasionally by a landlord’s wife, as tough and mean as they appeared to be, and he would leave swiftly without ordering a drink. The meandering High Street with its courts and alleys, the lanes running off towards the Market Place and narrow staithes leading to the River Hull, was a hotchpotch of ramshackle buildings, fine houses, barbers’ shops, workshops and law offices as well as many ancient, crumbling inns. The only way he could retain a sense of direction was by keeping the tower of the Guildhall or the medieval church of St Mary’s within his sight.
He had been about to give up his search and go home when he came to the stable yard of an alehouse with a sign of the George and Dragon swinging over the door. A narrow alley with the nameplate George Yard led through from the High Street into Lowgate and he decided to try his luck once more.
It was a cold night but there was a good fire burning in the grate with customers gathered round it; the bar counter was clean, as was the long table in the middle of the room. A woman in her twenties was serving ale from a jug and he saw her skilfully swerve away from a man’s hand reaching beneath her skirt.
Mmm, he’d thought. Not a whore then, unless she’s playing hard to get. She’d smiled at the man, but not provocatively; no doubt she’d be under orders from the landlord to be nice to the customers.
She might do, he’d thought, providing she wasn’t spoken for, and he leaned on the counter and ordered a pint of their best ale. She’d spoken pleasantly, with a trace of the local accent.
‘Haven’t seen you before, sir,’ she said. ‘Are you visiting ’town?’
‘Aye,’ he said. ‘A bit o’ business here. Went on a bit late. I’ll be on my way home after this. Have you got owt I can eat? I missed my supper.’
She hadn’t asked him where home was, but said she could rustle up a plate of beef or ham with bread.
‘Bread was fresh this morning,’ she said. ‘It’s not stale.’
‘Aye, that’ll do. I’ll not eat stale bread. I like my grub. Did you mek it?’
‘No.’ She laughed. ‘Landlord’s wife buys it from ’baker.’
‘Bet you know how to mek it though, don’t you?’ He’d pushed his hat back and watched her as she took bread out of a crock under the counter, sliced it, placed it on a plate and took two thick slices of beef and ham from beneath a covered dish. He noticed she wasn’t wearing a wedding ring.
‘Course I do,’ she said. ‘My ma showed me how when I was a bairn. I don’t mek it now, though. I don’t have a good enough oven, and besides, ’baker’s cheap enough. Mustard?’ she asked.
‘Aye, and plenty of it.’
He ate quickly. It would take at least two hours to get home; he’d left a note on the kitchen table to say he’d be late and reminding Fletcher not to lock him out.
‘That were grand,’ he commented, when he’d finished. ‘I’ll come again.’
‘Do,’ she’d nodded.
‘Are you here every night? Or do you have a husband to go home to?’
She’d looked sharply at him and he wondered if he was taking things too fast; he wasn’t used to dealing with women and didn’t know their foibles or eccentricities, except his mother’s and she didn’t count.
‘I’m allus here,’ she told him, leaning on the counter. ‘I’m lucky to be in work. Landlord’s not bad, not like some I’ve worked for who expect you to work all ’hours God sends for onny a copper.’
He’d nodded and left it at that, leaving as soon as he’d finished his ale. She hadn’t admitted to having a husband, but he was fairly sure she would have said if she had, if only to warn him off.
Although it was a long shot, she was the reason he was going back now, two weeks later. He’d been tempted to return within a week, but he didn’t want to appear eager, only as if he really were there on business. Besides, he didn’t want his brother to become suspicious, and he would, he muttered beneath his ragged breath. The heathen would smell a rat and begin muckraking in every dunghill he could find until he discovered what Noah was up to.
They’d had a bet; at least he had challenged Fletcher to a bet. They’d been fighting as they often did as to who should have the last word over how the farm should be run, and as they’d raged at each other their father, Nathaniel, had come out of the house with a shotgun and fired it over their heads.
‘Get back to work, both of you,’ he’d shouted. ‘I give out orders here, nobody else.’
They’d both muttered and growled. They were grown men after all, too old to be taking orders from an old man, even if he was their father. It was that night, as they were going up to bed, that Noah had said, ‘If one of us had a wife and some bairns, that’d decide who was to run ’farm.’
Fletcher had glared at him. ‘And how would that decide? And what would Ma say to having another woman in ’house?’
Noah had shrugged. ‘Nowt,’ he said. ‘She’d have to put up wi’ it.’ He’d grinned. ‘I’ll bet you ’price of a young heifer I’ll find a wife afore you do.’
Fletcher hadn’t actually agreed to the wager and had turned away with a shrug. He generally avoided confrontation, but Noah thought he’d think about it and turn it over in his mind and decide he didn’t want to be beaten by his younger brother.
Tonight Noah rode straight into Hull’s High Street, dismounted, and walked to the inn’s stable yard. He looked about him. It was very dark and drizzling with rain, and late, about half past ten, yet there were plenty of people about. The doors of the Corn Exchange were open and groups of men were standing on the steps so he guessed there had been a meeting in progress.
There were also some youths hanging about under a street lamp that cast a sickly yellow glow on them; he eyed them up and down, ignored the ones who were making the most noise and pinpointed one who was standing quietly, not joining in with their frivolity but listening as an outsider might.
Noah stared hard at him until the youth, as if aware of his attention, turned his head towards him. Noah indicated with his thumb that he should come over.
‘Yes, sir?’ the lad mumbled. He looked about twelve or thirteen.
‘Are you honest?’
‘Yes, sir, as much as most.’
‘Is that a yes or a no?’ Noah hissed.
The youth took a step back. ‘Erm, it’s a yes.’
‘I need somebody to look after this hoss while I attend a bit o’ business. Can you do that?’
‘Oh, yeh!’ The lad brightened up considerably. ‘I c
an do that all right. That’s why we’ve been hanging about here, to see if any of ’gents wanted any errands running, onny they didn’t cos they’re all on their way home.’
‘This is a valuable hoss.’ Noah stared down at him and the youth nodded. ‘If owt should happen to him …’ He bent down so that he was breathing into the boy’s face. ‘I’ll give you a penny now and another two when I come back, and if you’re not here or ’hoss has gone, I’ll find you and slit your throat. Do you hear me?’
The lad’s mouth dropped open, and then he closed it again. He glanced towards the crowd of lads, who were beginning to split up and wander off. He swallowed and licked his lips.
‘Yeh,’ he whispered. ‘He’ll be all right wi’ me. You can depend on it, mister. I’ll wait here in ’yard.’
Noah dropped the penny into the boy’s palm and then made a slitting gesture across his own throat and a jabbing gesture with his forefinger. The boy took the reins and led the horse to the yard, away from the eyes of his mates.
Noah hitched up his coat collar and took off his hat, ran his fingers through his long dark hair and pushed open the hostelry door.
CHAPTER TWO
The girl was behind the bar counter washing glasses; the landlord stood with one foot on a chair, talking to a customer. He put his foot down as Noah came in and wiped his hands on his apron.
‘Evening, squire,’ he said and Noah nodded.
‘Pint of your best,’ he told the girl, and she pulled him a full tankard of ale and placed it in front of him. She looked tense, a creased and pinched look about her mouth, but she thanked him civilly when he pulled coins from his pocket and scattered them on the counter.
‘Any food tonight?’ she asked, and he was flattered that she remembered.
‘No thanks. I’ve had my supper.’ He’d eaten before leaving home and had got up abruptly from the table when he’d finished; he’d put on his coat and left the house without saying where he was going, which he knew would annoy his mother.
The girl nodded vaguely and looked across at the landlord, who came across to the counter. ‘Go on then,’ he grunted. ‘Get off, but you stay longer tomorrow to mek up for it.’