The Betrayal

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by Mary Hooper


  ribband – a ribbon

  scry – to see or divine, especially by crystal-gazing

  simples – medicines made from herbs

  sucket – a type of sweet, typically orange or lemon slices, sugared and crystallised

  tilt – a type of joust played by armoured combatants mounted on horseback

  tiring room – the dressing room of a theatre, probably deriving from ‘attiring room’

  vittles – food; also spelled victuals

  Bibliography

  Bremness, Lesley, DK Pocket Encyclopedia of Herbs

  Dorling Kindersley, 1990

  Dickson, Andrew, The Rough Guide to Shakespeare

  Rough Guides, 2005

  Fell Smith, Charlotte, John Dee 1527–1608

  Constable and Company, 1909

  Hibbert, Christopher and Weinreb, Ben, The London Encyclopedia

  Book Club Associates, 1983

  Jenkins, Elizabeth, Elizabeth the Great

  Phoenix Press, 1958

  Picard, Liza, Elizabeth’s London

  Phoenix, 2003

  Weir, Alison, Elizabeth the Queen

  Pimlico, 1999

  Williams, Neville, The Life and Times of Elizabeth I

  Book Club Associates, 1972

  Woolley, Hannah, The Gentlewoman’s Companion (1675)

  Prospect Books, 2001

  If you enjoyed this book, why not try the following,

  also by Mary Hooper

  At The Sign Of The

  Sugared Plum

  Read on for a tantalising extract …

  Hannah is excited as she embarks on her first ever trip to the capital to help sister Sarah in her sweetmeats shop. But she does not get the warm welcome she expected. Sarah is horrified that Hannah did not get her message to stay away – the Plague is taking hold of London.

  Chapter One

  The first week of June, 1665

  ‘June 7th. The hottest day that ever I felt

  in my life …’

  To tell the truth, I was rather glad to get away from Farmer Price and his rickety old cart. He made me uneasy with his hog’s breath and his red, sweaty face and the way he’d suddenly bellow out laughing at nothing at all. I was uneasy, too, about something he’d said when I’d told him I was going to London to join my sister Sarah in her shop.

  ‘You be going to live in the City, Hannah?’ he’d asked, pushing his battered hat up over his forehead. ‘Wouldn’t think you’d want to go there.’

  ‘Oh, but I do!’ I’d said, for I’d been set on living in London for as long as I could remember. ‘I’m fair desperate to reach the place.’

  ‘Times like this … thought your sister would try and keep you away.’

  ‘No, she sent for me specially,’ I’d said, puzzled. ‘Her shop is doing well and she wants my help in it. I’m to be trained in the art of making sweetmeats,’ I’d added.

  ‘Sweetmeats is it?’ He’d given one of his bellows. ‘That’s comfits for corpses, then!’

  He left me in Southwarke on the south bank of the Thames, and I thanked him, slipped down from his cart and – remembering to take my bundle and basket from the back – began to walk down the crowded road towards London Bridge.

  As the bridge came into view I stopped to draw breath, putting down my baggage but being careful to keep my things close by, for I’d been warned often enough about the thieving cutpurses and murderous villains who thronged the streets of London. I straightened my skirts and flounced out my petticoat to show off the creamy ruff of lace I’d sewn onto it – Sarah had told me that petticoats were now worn to be seen – then pushed down my hair to try and flatten it. This was difficult for, to my great vexation, it stuck out as curly as the tails of piglets and was flame red. Nothing I wore, be it hat, hood or cap, could contain it. I pulled my new white cap down tightly, however, and tied the ribbons into a tidy bow under my chin. I hoped I looked a pleasant and comely sight walking across into the city, and that no one would look at me and realise that I was a newly arrived country girl.

  It was a hot day even though it was only the first of June, and all the hotter for me because I was wearing several layers of clothes. This wasn’t because I’d -misjudged the weather, more because I knew that whatever I didn’t wear, I’d have to carry. I had on then: a cambric shift, two petticoats, a dark linsey-woolsey skirt and a linen blouse. Over these was a short jacket which had been embroidered by my mother, and a dark woollen shawl lay across my shoulders.

  I’d been studying the people carefully as we’d neared the bridge, hoping that I might see my friend Abigail, who’d come from our village last year to be a maid in one of the big houses, and also hoping to see some great lady, a person of quality, so I could judge how well I stood against her regarding fashion. There was no sign of Abby, however, and most of the quality were in sedan chairs or carriages, with only the middling and poorer sort on foot. These folk were wearing a great variety of things: men were in tweedy country clothes, rough working worsteds or the severely cut suits and white collars of the Puritans, the women wearing everything from costly velvet down to poor rags that my mother would have scorned to use as polishing cloths for the pewter.

  ‘That’s a fine red wig you’ve got there, lass!’ a young male voice said, and I realised that I’d paused beside a brewhouse.

  I turned indignantly on the speaker. ‘It’s not a wig. It’s my own hair!’ I said to the two men – one young and one old – who were leaning against the wall, mugs of ale in their hands.

  ‘And fine patches across your nose, too,’ said the elder.

  I opened my mouth to say more and then realised that the youth and man outside the Gown and Claret were making fun of me.

  ‘They’re not patches, William, they’re called sun kisses!’ the first said, and they both roared with laughter.

  I picked up my basket, feeling my cheeks go pink.

  At The Sign Of The Sugared Plum

  AVAILABLE NOW

  Books by Mary Hooper

  At the Sign of the Sugared Plum

  Petals in the Ashes

  The Remarkable Life and Times of Eliza Rose

  At the House of the Magician

  By Royal Command

  The Betrayal

  Text copyright © 2009 by Mary Hooper

  Illustrations copyright © 2009 by Peter Bailey

  All rights reserved. You may not copy, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (including without limitation electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, printing, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages

  First published in Great Britain in 2009 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Published in the United States of America in October 2010

  by Bloomsbury Books for Young Readers

  Electronic edition published in October 2011

  www.bloomsburyteens.com

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to

  Permissions, Bloomsbury BFYR, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10010

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  available upon request

  eISBN 978 1 59990 876 2 (ebook)

 

 

 


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