Read A Hint of Witchcraft Online
Authors: Anna Gilbert
They were interrupted by the arrival of Dr Pelman who called to chat and stayed to lunch.
âI'm not happy about her,' he said when the meal was over and Margot had left them. âIf she goes the way she's heading it'll be a breakdown or a decline.'
âShe's missing her mother.' Edward had brightened a little and was instantly wretched again.
âOf course she's missing her mother â and she's worn out with nursing and seeing to one thing and another. But it isn't her nature to droop as she is doing. She scarcely spoke a word at lunch. Is there anything else bothering her that I don't know about?'
âGood Lord, not as far as I know. It's dull for her here, I admit. She must see more of her friends when this tiredness wears off.'
âI don't know if it would interest you but I could make a suggestion.'
They put their heads together.
Margot went out of the cool house into the warm afternoon and presently found herself by the roofless gatehouse. It was this way that Miles might come if he ever came again. She often stood there or wandered to where the trees thinned to look along the woodland path. Sometimes she stood at the sitting-room window or on the front steps in a kind of limbo between the hope of seeing his car and the certainty that he would not come. And if he did come, he would be unlike the Miles she had known: a different person, as he had seemed when he came to offer his condolences like someone on an official visit. They didn't even sit down and she had actually wished that her father would join them so that she could excuse herself.
âAnd you,' she had ventured when he had told her how sorry he was about her mother, âwhat have you been doing? You seem.â¦'
It was not coldness that cut her off from him, he could never be cold, it was distance, as if the few words they exchanged should have been shouted across a chasm: murmured, they drifted away and became meaningless. His face had lost its gentleness and was unsmiling. His eyes? She could not see into them. He never really looked at her until he said, âGoodbye, Margot,' and after hesitating, âI hope all will go well with you,' as if he were going away like Alex and Lance â but permanently. It was then that she saw the bleakness in his eyes, their blue faded.
âYou're not well,' she said. âWhat's wrong?'
Again he hesitated, then with a deprecatory smile and a movement of his head, he was gone â to walk home, had she known it, wishing he had the courage to put an end to himself. It would be a fit climax to all his other shortcomings. The past ten minutes had been an ordeal, but if for one moment he had shown how he actually felt, she would have had to draw away, embarrassed, thinking of Lance, as he had done the whole time they were together.
Margot had rushed to her room and lain face down on her bed in the depths of disappointment and shame. She had been so sure, so childishly mistaken about his feelings for her, so naively over-confident. How could she have been so wrong? No one must know, no one must
ever
know that she had thought â that she had actually expected.â¦
She heard Dr Pelman drive away and at last went downstairs. The visit had done her father good: he looked more alert.
âPelman has made a suggestion. How would you like to have Jane Bondless here for a time? As it happens, she may soon be free.' And as Margot was slow to answer, âYou like Miss Bondless, don't you?'
âVery much.'
âThe arrangement wouldn't be permanent. She and her sister Constance have scraped up a little money, enough to set up house together. If she were to come here for six months or so, her salary would help to pay for altering and furnishing the house.'
It would undoubtedly be a stroke of luck if she agreed. He had dreaded engaging a stranger who might be officious or ceaselessly talkative or annihilatingly dull. He was disappointed by Margot's lack of enthusiasm.
âIt would be an immense relief to me, darling. I can't leave you alone here, but I can't afford to turn down consultation fees either. If we can get through the winter, things should be in better shape next year. Miss Bondless is rather a special sort of person. You've always enjoyed her company, haven't you?'
âOh yes.'
âThen shall we risk it?'
âYes, if you think so.' She was looking past him at the angle of the gatehouse visible from the study window. What did it matter who came if Miles did not?
Phyllis and Freda had written sympathetic letters full of gratitude to her mother who had made Monk's Dene such a wonderful place to visit. Each urged her to come â Switzerland was so beautiful, London so stimulating. At the end of the month came a third invitation from Jane Bondless in a letter to Edward. Nothing would have suited her better than to come to Langland and lend a helping hand for a while. Unfortunately, Miss Crane was unwell and could not be left just now. She enclosed the address of an agency which might have a suitable person on its list. In the meantime why not let Margot come to Cannes on a visit?
She had also written to Margot.
It would not be like coming to strangers. I knew your mother so well. It would make me very happy to be reminded of my visits to Ashlaw. Miss Crane often regrets that her spare room is never used. She is more or less confined to the apartment at present and would enjoy the company of a younger person â as you would enjoy sunshine, sea and glimpses of the leisurely lives of the well-to-do. Actually I sometimes feel the urge to give them a good talking to and I do have spells of longing for home. Do come and soothe me.â¦
Edward smiled when Margot showed him the letter.
âJust like Jane.' She had known how to make the invitation difficult to refuse. âA splendid idea. It's extraordinarily kind of her â and Miss Crane. You'll write â at once?'
Margot did so, with many thanks for the kind invitation which she would have been happy to accept if it had not meant leaving her father alone. He was often away on business trips and must not come back each time to an empty house. She looked forward to seeing Miss Bondless on her return to England and hoped that Miss Crane would soon be well again.
It was all perfectly sincere but not absolutely straightforward. It was hard to admit even to herself that she could not bear to move so far away from Bainrigg House. To salve her conscience she tried to give her mind to the decorating and furnishing of a room for Miss Bondless. In the absence of other company the emptiness of the house was gradually occupied by the two who were there: not merely occupied but filled. For Margot in her downcast state they became larger than life. She was always conscious of them, expecting them to appear before they actually did, Ewan with step-ladder or tool-box; Toria with a string-bag of items to be checked and change to be counted; the two of them at the end of a passage or in the kitchen when Bessie Todd had gone home. Talking or silent, they did no harm, were known to be reliable, yet they seemed significant like messengers from a painful past or a worrying future.
It was impossible to think of them without thinking of Katie, of her pitiful end, the cruelty with which she was sacrificed and its consequences. The old days at Monk's Dene seemed a lifetime away, the family no longer a living organism, friends out of reach or estranged. Instead there was Ewan, self-contained, bitter, liable at any minute to erupt into reckless anger, and there was Toria forever responding to some weird dictate of Providence. A spark from one could set the other alight.
Foxgloves grew tall, pink and purple in the shelter of the priory walls. The birds were silent, it was high summer. Next there would be harebells to warn of its approaching end. Weeks passed and Miles did not come.
CHAPTER XVI
Margot's instinct had not misled her. From the beginning, Toria and Ewan were allies, drawn together by a common interest. On one subject at least they were in complete accord and since the subject was one of many facets â more than either of them knew â as a topic of conversation it never grew stale.
On the morning after Boxing Day, having watched the departure of Mr Humbert, Alex and Linden, Toria had gone downstairs. In the hall she met Ewan who had just closed the front door after them.
âGood riddance,' he said.
âWho do you mean?'
âHer. Swanking about in her silver dress and white fur.'
âMiss Grey?'
Toria was not surprised. From the gallery on the previous evening she had seen a good deal, including Ewan's ferocious snarl in Miss Grey's direction. She had not known then that he was a Judd. Heedful of Margot's warning, she did not pursue the subject, which cropped up again a week later when Alex went back to the university.
âHe'll be safer in London,' Ewan remarked grimly. âOut of her way. I had her summed up from the minute I first laid eyes on her.' Under their scowling brows the eyes were now baleful. âThat was before I ever came here and when she turned up last week I thought trust her to be in with the bosses and driving about in motor cars.'
They moved to the kitchen. Having by this time begun to make herself useful, Toria started on the washing-up. Ewan riddled the fire in the huge grate and banked it up with coal.
âWhen did you first lay eyes on her?'
âWell, I can tell you exactly. It was the day they had prayers and that at the War Memorial. I was coming back from Elmdon where I'd been to sign on and there were these two women waiting at the bus stop. It's against the animal-feed warehouse. The bus came all of a sudden. There was a bit of a splash and her high and mighty ladyship stepped back, never looking behind her. And there was this woman like a pedlar, standing up against the wall with tapes and stuff like that on a tray hung round her neck. Hair-pins and bootlaces. Her ladyship barged into her and knocked the woman off balance. The tray tipped up and all the things were scattered on the ground in the mud and muck.
âDid yon stuck-up bitch apologize? Did she not know the woman was just trying to make a living? Had
she
ever had to wonder where her next dinner was coming from? You'd have thought she might have slipped the woman a bob or two â or a tanner â or a threepenny bit. Not likely.'
âIt was a shame.' Toria had listened with deep attention as if the story confirmed what she already knew of Miss Grey. âA wicked shame.'
âThe woman had to get down on her knees and pick up a few of the things. I tell you it sticks in my gizzard, a thing like that. That's life, I says to myself, some down in the gutter and some riding their high horse. And the woman felt the same. “You may be down in the muck yourself some day”, she says to her, “and that's where you ought to be”.'
âShe was right. “He hath put down the mighty from their seats and hath exalted the humble”.'
âAnd so he should,' Ewan said, guessing from her tone that
He
was someone in the Bible. âTake the French Revolution.' He had not made the most of his years at the village school but he had been interested in
A Tale of Two Cities.
âCan you blame them for cutting the heads off them aristocrats? I'm not saying it was right: all I'm saying is that it was understandable.'
At an early age Ewan had made the discovery that the bosses existed in order to grind the workers into the dust. In the hope of unseating them he had joined the Labour Party. He found the meetings tame, but they had enlarged his vocabulary.
âI saw her at that party,' Toria said, âand the way she treated Mr Alex.'
âYou haven't heard the rest of it. A constable came up, a chap I know. He used to play quoits with our Bob. “This gypsy is annoying me”, she says. “Leave it to me, miss”, Charlie Sparr says and gives me a wink.'
âShe was a gypsy?'
âGod knows. I never had a good look at her. She had a shawl over her head.' There had been only a minute before the bus left and he, too, had been stooping to pick up some of her wares. âShe could have been. There's a few of them about. You can take it from me â yon upstart very likely put that woman in the workhouse. And that wasn't all. I saw her again at Ashlaw that same day.'
Ewan's voice had changed. He could not speak of Katie. Linden's high-handed treatment of the pedlar stuck in his gizzard, but that she had somehow contrived to frighten his sister stirred him to the depths of feeling. He could not forget that she had followed close behind when Katie rushed out from the Humberts' gate, speechless and trembling, nor his resentment at the contrast between the two: one shrinking, defenceless, never telling her fears: the other confidently at ease as if the world belonged to her.
On the morning in June when Alex left for Kenya, Toria and Ewan were again on the front steps to watch for the taxi and help with the luggage.
âHe's doing hisself a good turn,' Ewan said. âGetting away from her.'
âIt's a long way to Africa. He could have got away from her without going so far.'
âHe's maybe found out what she's like.'
During the summer months Linden did not appear at Langland and for a time she was not discussed. Neither Ewan nor Toria was given to talking for talking's sake.
A year had passed since Katie's death. To the Judd family it had brought more than one change of mood. Shame and grief had found vent in fury against Miss Burdon: pride in the funeral had tempered the shame. As public interest faded, the tragedy became an intimate family affair with Katie herself as its centre, to be mourned and missed and inevitably transformed. She took on a rare unearthly quality and was becoming sanctified. As the sharpness of grief subsided, memory was to undergo other shifts and variations.
It was some time before interest reverted to the actual circumstances of the theft. It had been taken for granted that Katie, being as she was, strange and unpredictable, had been prey to some abnormal influence.
âWhat made her do it?' âShe'd never taken so much as a pin that wasn't hers.' âSomething must have got into her.'