‘Oh? What’s he like?’ she asked, interested. ‘Hunky?’
‘He’s well-built, with white-blond hair, bright blue eyes and a very attractive smile.’
‘Sounds lovely!’
‘But on the downside, well the wrong side of forty and a widower with an adult son. He said I was a strapping lass and he liked my mince pies, which may constitute an offer of marriage round here, for all I know. Only I think, from something he said, that Oriel was favourite before my mince pies stole his heart.’
‘Are you going to fight her for him?’
‘No, I think I’ll probably retire gracefully from the field. . though he is nice. I’ve bought you one of Oriel’s pamphlets of inspirational verse for your birthday present, with matching shopping bag.’
‘I can’t wait! Ring me on Christmas Day if you get a chance, but I know it’ll be difficult to get away so I won’t worry if you go quiet for a couple of days at some point.’
‘I’ll do my best. And could you ring Ellen and just update her with the situation for me?’ I asked, to cover my back in case the objectionable Jude was miffed at my arrangements. ‘And tell her not to bill Jude extra for the cooking and cleaning, because she’s sent the list of charges to him and he thinks she is.’
She promised to do that and then she had to go. My bottom had practically frozen to the bench while talking, but I left my bags there while I had a quick look into the unlocked church, which was chilly, but quiet and lovely, with an old stained-glass window at one end showing Noah’s ark and all the little animals going in two by two, including a pair that looked like giant slugs. I think Noah should have given those a miss, together with spiders and a few other unlovely things.
Collecting my shopping I trudged through the snow to the Auld Christmas, where I ate delicious crumbly Lancashire cheese, bread and pickles in a snug empty of anyone except old Nicholas Dagger, who was in the same hooded chair by the fire.
I chatted with Nancy a bit and then, perhaps awoken by our voices, Nicholas poked his head around the side of the chair like a strange species of tortoise.
‘I’m Auld Man Christmas,’ he piped. ‘My father was Auld Man Christmas and his father before him, and—’
‘Yes, we know, Father,’ Nancy said soothingly, adding to me in whispered explanation, ‘he gets excited at this time of year.’
‘That’s all right, Noël Martland told me a little bit about the Revels and then George Froggat did too, on the way down when he kindly gave me a lift.’
‘They told you, did they, then?’ She looked at me thoughtfully.
‘Only a bit — I know it’s a fairly private ceremony, just for the village. Do you play a part in it, too?’
‘Oh no, I only watch. Women have never taken part in it.’
‘Isn’t that a bit sexist?’
She looked doubtful. ‘No, because we don’t want to be in it. There’s a man dressed up half as a woman, though. I like the Rapping best.’
‘You know, George said he joined in the Rapping, but I thought I’d misheard him — it seemed a bit unlikely. They don’t breakdance too, do they?’
She giggled. ‘No, the Rapping’s just dancing with swords.’
‘What, on the ground, like Scottish dancing? Rapiers?’
‘Rapper dancing is different to that — they weave their swords together to make a sort of knot pattern. Then after the Dragon kills St George, it puts its head in the middle of the knot and they chop it off.’
‘It kills St George?’
‘Yes, but it’s only pretend and the Doctor makes him better. Old vicar says it’s all deeply symbolic — rebirth and suchlike. It’s in his little pamphlet.’
‘Noël said he would look for that in the library later, I must read it. So is that the end of the Revels, after the Dragon’s head is chopped off?’
‘Pretty much. St George gets up and they all dance again and that’s it. We open up the pub afterwards, but everyone’s usually still full of wassail.’
‘Sounds fun.’
‘Mrs Jackson, that used to be the cook-housekeeper at Old Place, she used to bring the Revel Cakes, but of course they retired after Jude’s father died.’
‘Oh? What were they like?’
‘Spicy little buns with candied peel on top and lots of saffron to make them yellow. Sort of coiled round like a Cumberland sausage.’
‘They sound interesting — I’ll look for the recipe. It may be up there somewhere, she left a lot of recipe books. If I find it, and I’ve got the ingredients, I’ll make some before I go and Jude can bring them down with him on the day.’
‘Or you could stay for the Revels and bring them yourself?’
‘I think Jude is expecting me to have gone by the time he gets back. I’ll probably be exhausted by then anyway and ready for a rest! I’m used to cooking for very large house-parties, it’s my summer job, but then the food preparation and cooking are all I do. Now I’m cleaning and doing all the rest of it, too.’
‘It’s a hard time for women anyway, Christmas: nothing but cooking and washing up, cooking and washing up. .’ She sighed heavily.
‘Yes, and you’re working in here as well.’
‘Well, that’s the way of it,’ she said with resignation and then she was called into the public bar on the other side, which was getting busier, and I was left to the roaring fire, the snoring Auld Nicholas and the rest of my bread and cheese.
I sat there quietly reading the next few entries in Gran’s journal, though without making any further major discoveries other than her desire to get their romance on to an official footing.
As I was about to leave, I remembered that I wanted to buy a half-bottle of brandy for the flaming Christmas pudding, because the stuff Noël had brought up from the cellar looked much too good to use for the purpose. Nancy was just giving me my change when the outer door slammed heavily and a thin, tall blonde staggered into the snug, dragging behind her an enormous glittery pink suitcase on wheels with a vanity case strapped to the top of it.
‘It must be one of them SatNavvers,’ Nancy whispered. ‘Barking mad if she tried to get a car up the lane in this weather!’
Chapter 18
Ice Maiden
Today I accused N of putting off telling his parents about us, because he feared they would not be pleased and think me not good enough, being the daughter of mill workers. He said neither would mine approve of him, since he was not a Strange Baptist or, indeed, any other kind of Baptist.
March, 1945
‘Hello?’ she said, looking from one to the other of us while pushing back a large, white fur hat that had slipped drunkenly over a face that was still extremely pretty, despite being pink and shiny with cold, exertion and temper. ‘Thank God there’s some sign of life in this hole. I was starting to think everyone had been wiped out by the plague, or something!’
‘Did you turn off the main road to get to Great Mumming?’ I asked her. ‘Only those SatNav things send you the wrong way.’
‘No, I intended coming here, but my car slid on the ice on the first bend and now it’s in the ditch. I need someone to drive me to Old Place.’
Nancy had been eyeing her narrowly. ‘Aren’t you that model that was engaged to Jude and came here last Christmas, the one that took up with his brother, instead? Arrived with one, and left with the other?’
‘I suppose you could put it like that. I’m Coco Lanyon. I expect you know me from the Morning Dawn Facial Elixir TV advert.’
‘No,’ Nancy said simply: I don’t suppose she gets a lot of time to watch the telly.
As well as the fur hat, Coco was wearing shocking pink Ugg boots and a long, white quilted coat. Her hair was platinum-pale too, but her face was still almost as pink as her boots.
Her voice, a trifle on the shrill side, must have penetrated Nicholas’s ears, because his wizened face suddenly appeared around the side of the chair again and he chipped in, in his own high but sweet, elven tones, ‘I’m Auld Man Christmas, you know!’
‘We know, Dad,’ Nancy said. ‘You just sit back and let me see to the customer.’
‘I’m not a customer,’ Coco snapped. ‘I’m merely in search of transport.’
‘But why are you going to Old Place?’ I asked and she swivelled her ice-blue eyes in my direction and looked down her retroussé nose at me. . or tried to, because I was inches taller.
‘And you would be?’
‘Holly Brown. I’m looking after Old Place while Jude Martland’s away.’
‘Oh, right. . did your husband drive you down? Because if so, you can take me back up with you right now.’
‘You’re mixing me up with the couple who usually come — I haven’t got a husband and I didn’t bring my car today, because it would never have got up the hill. In any case, why do you want to go there?’
‘You mean — Guy hasn’t arrived yet?’ she demanded, staring at me.
‘He hadn’t when I left a couple of hours ago and we certainly weren’t expecting him — or you. Why did you think he might be here?’
‘Because this is where he said he was going, of course!’
‘But. . surely he wouldn’t have come here when he’s fallen out with his brother?’ I asked, puzzled.
‘Oh, but he rang old Noël early last week, so he knew Jude would be in the States right over Christmas and it would be safe to hole up here. But I’m not letting Guy get away with this — he can’t throw me over just because I sent the announcement of our engagement to The Times and set a date for the wedding! We’re going to Mummy and Daddy’s for Christmas, too, and they’ve invited all the family to an engagement party on Boxing Day.’
‘You didn’t tell Guy any of this beforehand?’ asked Nancy, clearly fascinated.
‘He’s a commitment-phobe, he’d have carried on dithering forever,’ Coco said shortly. ‘He may have dashed up here in a panic, but he’d better have got over it by now, because he’s coming straight back to London with me.’
I wouldn’t put it past her, either, because even cross and pink-faced she was stunningly beautiful. . if you liked chilly blondes with ice-chip pale blue eyes, that is, and presumably, both Guy and Jude did.
Still, I certainly didn’t want another unexpected visitor, so she could remove him with my blessing. ‘I suppose you’d better come back to the house with me, I don’t really see what else you can do. Perhaps he’s arrived by now — he probably stopped off for lunch on the way, or something.’
I turned to Nancy. ‘Would it be all right if we left the luggage here for a bit? I’ve got all my shopping and I don’t suppose Coco can carry much more than the beauty box up with her. That case is enormous!’
‘What, this little thing?’ Coco said, astonished. ‘It’s only an overnight bag, in case we decided to go back early tomorrow instead of today. And I’m definitely not carrying anything anywhere, because I’m still exhausted from the walk from the car. You can go up to the house and tell Guy to come and fetch me. I’ll wait here and—’
George stuck his head through the half-open door just at that moment and, spotting me, said, ‘I thought you might be in here, Holly, Orrie said you headed this way. Did you want a lift back up to Old Place? It’s snowing again and I’m on my way home.’
‘I certainly do!’ Coco exclaimed and he raised a flaxen eyebrow at her.
‘This is—’ I paused. ‘I’m so sorry, I’ve forgotten your second name.’
‘Coco Lanyon — the model.’
‘She was the one that was engaged to Jude last Christmas, and then took up with Guy instead,’ Nancy explained helpfully.
‘Only they’ve had a bust up,’ Nicholas piped. He was evidently following the intricate plot without difficulty now he was fully awake. ‘She thought he was up at Old Place and she’s followed him.’
‘Ah, that explains it! I thought I just saw that big black Chelsea tractor of Guy’s go up the lane, monster that it is,’ George said. ‘It’s well-gritted and he took a run at it, so he probably made it.’
‘There, you see?’ said Coco. ‘He is here.’
‘Is that your car in the ditch further down?’ asked George. ‘Ben from Weasel Pot said some madman had tried to get a sports car up the hill.’
‘Madwoman,’ Nancy suggested and Coco gave her a nasty look. ‘Yes, it’s mine and I’d like it towed out and brought up to Old Place as soon as possible.’
George removed his cap and scratched his head thoughtfully. ‘Them from Weasel’s Pot’ll tow it out for you all right, but it’ll cost you. And there’s no point them trying to get it up to the house, so they’ll probably leave it here in the village. Those little cars are too low down to be any use in the snow — or in the country, come to that,’ he added disparagingly.
‘Whatever,’ she said haughtily. ‘Now, please take me up to Old Place.’
‘If you don’t mind, George,’ I said apologetically. ‘But just as far as the lodge will do, I don’t want to put you out any more and we can drop off the bags there. Perhaps Guy will go down and fetch them.’
‘Don’t be silly, he must take me right up to the house,’ Coco insisted. ‘You can walk if you want to.’
‘I’ll take you home gladly, Holly — but I’ve two sheep in the back now, and the dog’s in the front, so I’ve no room for another passenger.’ He raised a fair eyebrow at Coco. ‘You’ll have to wait and see if Guy will fetch you, unless you want to try asking young Ben — he went into the public bar.’
‘Young Ben?’
‘From Weasel’s Pot.’
‘What is this weasel’s pot you all keep rabbiting on about?’ she said irritably.
‘The farm you passed after turning off the main road,’ I told her. ‘They have the council contract to plough the lane up to the village, and George here ploughs the lane down.’
‘That’s right, and you can ask Ben about towing your car out too, while you’re at it,’ George suggested.
‘Look, I’m in a hurry, so you get a lift up with this Ben, and tell him to get my car out for me,’ Coco said to me. Then she indicated her case to George, clearly expecting him to pick it up. ‘Right, I’m ready — but you’ll have to put the dog in the back.’
‘Sorry, no can do,’ he said, not looking sorry at all. ‘And I didn’t offer you a lift in the first place. I’m none too keen on that perfume you’re wearing and if it makes my Land Rover reek of musk, it’ll unsettle the dogs. They squeeze it out of weasel glands, you know.’
She stared at him. ‘Rubbish! This perfume is very, very expensive and they wouldn’t use something like that!’
‘Isn’t it musk rat glands?’ I said. ‘That sounds more likely.’
‘Happen you’re right,’ he conceded.
‘There’s an old Lancashire saying about weasels,’ piped Auld Nicholas and then declaimed in a thin, singsong voice: ‘“If you see a weasel, pee in its ear. If you see another, tie its bum up with string.”’
‘What on earth does that mean?’ demanded Coco.
‘No idea,’ Nicholas said. ‘Hee, hee!’
‘Senile!’ she muttered and, abandoning him, turned a sweetly seductive smile on George. ‘Please do take me up to the house — I’m so cold and tired! I can pay you for your trouble, you know.’
‘I’ve told you already, try your wiles on young Ben, you’ll get nowhere with me,’ he said shortly and she furiously flounced out in the direction of the public bar.
‘Let’s hope you get rid of her and Guy tonight,’ George said, helping me out to the Land Rover with my million and one purchases. ‘If not, she won’t be driving that sports car home, because nothing short of a four-wheel drive will make it down to the main road by morning.’
‘But Guy’s got one of those, you said? So I suppose he’ll drive them back tonight and arrange something later about her car,’ I suggested hopefully.
The sheepdog obligingly made room for me on the bench seat and we set off, George refusing to stop until he’d taken me right to the front door, where we found a larg
e people-carrier still steaming gently: Guy had arrived.
I staggered in with my shopping and found all the family in the sitting room, which someone had now artistically festooned with swags and swathes of artificial greenery, mixed with the real thing that George had brought.
Tilda was sitting in her usual place on the sofa before the fire, Merlin fast asleep on the rug at her feet, while Noël, Becca and Jess were putting final touches to the Christmas tree.
A tall, dark, thin and very handsome man was leaning on the stone mantelpiece watching the proceedings and I would have easily recognised him as Guy from the family photos, even if I hadn’t expected to see him.
As I came in and put down the heavy bags I thought the room looked like a stage set, especially the way they all turned to look at me as if they’d been given a cue. Merlin hauled himself to his feet and ambled over, tail wagging furiously.
‘Ah, Holly, there you are! We’ve had an unexpected addition to the family party,’ Noël said gaily. ‘This is Guy, Jude’s younger brother.’
‘How do you do?’ he said, with a charming smile, shaking hands. ‘I’ve been hearing all about you!’
‘That sounds ominous,’ I said, bending down to stroke Merlin. ‘Actually, I knew you were here because I just ran into your—’
‘Have you got anything for me in that shopping bag?’ interrupted Jess.
‘Yes, some chocolate tree decorations.’ I rummaged in the hessian bag and found them.
‘Oh good, we hadn’t got any of those and Uncle Guy didn’t think to bring anything at all.’
‘I didn’t think I’d need to, because I expected to find that couple here Jude usually hires when he’s away. And since I knew they’d already invited Tilda, Noël, Becca and Jess for Christmas dinner, I thought one more wouldn’t make any difference.’
‘And you knew Uncle Jude wasn’t here to throw you out on your ear,’ Jess said. ‘You were sneaky and mean, going off with his girlfriend, even if I didn’t like her much!’
‘Neither do I now, that’s why I’m here,’ he drawled, not noticeably put out by this criticism.
Twelve Days of Christmas Page 17