Authors: Freya North
âHave you had them valued?'
âDon't be ridiculous! Cart the lot off to Christie's for them to be pored over so publicly?
Lady Lydia, your collection of two hundred years of pornography might fetch one hundred pounds at auction
.' Stella laughed â but Lydia gave her a look to silence her. She led on, back through the hallways and up one side of the double staircase.
âNow that,' Stella murmured, âis a backside to behold.'
âYou insolent young woman.' Lydia rounded on Stella who, for a split second, feared she might be pushed down the stairs. She'd already tripped over a threadbare section of runner.
âLady Lydia â no! I didn't meanâ! I was referring to â
that
.' Stella was holding on to the banister with both hands so she moved her head fast as if banging it against an imaginary wall, to signify where she was looking. It was a huge oil painting of a horse and rider, portrayed from behind. Only an eye and an ear of the horse were visible, while the rider looked most uncomfortable turning around in an already cumbersome military get-up. It was the horse's rump which all but filled the canvas, its tail mid-swish, revealing its arsehole.
âI'm sorry, Iâ' Stella glanced at Lydia who was staring at her. âI studied art. It was my world before Iâ' And then Stella thought, Oh, for God's sake, the woman's not going to bite you. And then she thought, I studied art before all the shit fell on me from a great height and I clawed my way out and am where I am today. And then she thought, But this woman doesn't need to know that. âBefore I went into property.' She made it sound like a sensible choice, that her current career was as dignified and hallowed as the study of art. Lydia's ice-pale blue eyes were still scoring straight through her, like a welder's flame through sheet metal.
âThis painting was a gift â to Lord Frederick Makepeace William Fortescue, the first Earl of Barbary, who built this house.'
âIs it Mallory Beckinsford?'
âAs I just said,' Lydia said slowly, witheringly, as if Stella was dim as well as deaf, âLord Frederick Makepeace William Fortescue, the first Earl of Barbary, who built this house.'
âI'm so sorry, I meant the artist â is it Mallory Beckinsford?' Stella could tell Lydia hadn't a clue who the artist was, and hitherto hadn't been remotely interested.
âBeckinsford,' Lydia said, in what she thought was a cleverly non-committal way. âIt's a portrait of the Prince Regent.'
Stella dared to take one hand from the banister. âIt's just Beckinsford was taught by Reynolds â and Reynolds painted a similar portrait of the Prince Regent.'
Lydia brushed the air. âLongbridge is full of portraits. Fortescues, royalty, Fortescues with royalty, with swords, guns, with horses, dogs â it's who we are.'
Stella worked hard to keep her tone conversational, but she was excited. âI think this painting would have been given to Lord Frederick Makepeace William Fortescue, the first Earl of Barbary â but as a rather barbed gift. It's a slur â an elegantly concealed two fingers â from the Prince Regent. He did it to others. A very nicely painted insult, quite literally shoving his horse's great big bum in the face of Lord Fortescue. But no doubt the Earl knew that and turned the joke on its head by graciously accepting it and hanging it right here, pride of place.'
Lydia was looking at the painting again, her eyes travelling over it in little bursts. She turned to Stella and nodded.
âSo one oughtn't to look a gift horse in the mouth â but up the arse?'
âSomething like that,' Stella smiled at the painting. âYou might want to have it valued. Do you know of any fracas between the Prince and the Earl?'
âThere is some salacious family rumour about the Earl and one of the Prince's mistresses and the billiards table right here at Longbridge.' Lydia's tone suggested it was all beyond ridiculous. âI'll be sure to call Christie's,' she said. âThey can come and sift through all the historic backsides at Longbridge â human and equine â whether hidden in the library or hanging, bold as brass, right here.'
She sounded sharp and Stella felt deflated. Best leave all art in the past â her own as well as the Fortescues'. Leave it behind. Move on. Here to sell the house, remember. Then a notion sent a shot of adrenalin which almost winded her.
âHow many bedrooms?' Stella asked, taking a sweeping glance at a queue of closed doors and that was just in this semicircular landing of the house.
âFive.'
âSorry?'
âSorry?'
âOnly five bedrooms? Here? At Longbridge?'
âWhat are you talking about? Twelve bedrooms including the three in the Victorian wing,' Lady Lydia said.
âPardon me, I thought you said five and I thought to myself surely notâ'
âYou are pedantic â it's tiresome,' she barked. âThese days,
five
of the rooms have
beds
in them â so the other rooms are
not
bedrooms, are they?'
Stella was tempted not to bite her tongue, she was tempted to say, well, if I'm pedantic, you're downright rude. âLogical,' she said instead. âIt's the estate agent in me â we're trained to call even a store cupboard a bedroom if the headroom is sufficient and it is physically possible for someone to stand and also sleep in it.'
âThe more bedrooms, the higher the price?'
âSquare footage is the priority,' Stella said, âand you certainly have that at Longbridge Hall â never mind the quota of bed frames.'
âWell,' said Lydia, âyou'd better see if the servants' rooms right at the top count too.'
âHow many bathrooms?'
âThree.'
âI don't mean with baths â I mean, rooms in which there is the relevant plumbing.'
âThree,' Lydia said loudly, giving the âr' a good roll around her tongue, as if Stella had reverted to dim and deaf again. âMind you, there was only one until after the War.'
Oh dear, Stella thought. Three bathrooms? That's
it
?
âChop chop,' said Lydia, leading on; opening door after door and giving Stella just enough time to walk to the windows and back. âDo keep up.'
âIn there?' Stella motioned to a door they passed that Lydia didn't open.
âSlaves.'
âWhat?'
âDon't say “What”, say “I beg your pardon”,' Lydia snapped. âIt's one of the slaves' quarters. We don't have them any more â not even Mrs Biggins. She's a useless slave because she won't do a thing I ask. But the house was once full of them.'
âStaff,' Stella said, relieved, when she went into the room and realized it was a sizeable store for linen and laundry.
âThe Fortescues have always called them “slaves” â in jest, of course. No one has ever minded,' said Lydia. She ran her hand lightly over the butler's sink by the window. âAt least, no one said they minded.' She looked around the room. âWe didn't call them slaves to their faces â we didn't say, “Slave! Come here!” The youngsters were called by their first names, which was fairly liberal of the Fortescues. And the senior staff by their surnames. Apart from the housekeeper, who was allowed to keep her title. Hence, Mrs Biggins â though, really, she ought to be called Useless Woman.'
âI love this,' said Stella, fingering the embossed brass plate above the three taps. âHot. Cold. Soft.'
âFor rainwater,' said Lydia. She ran the tap and placed her hand under the water. She kept it there, as if the feel of it hastened a memory just coming back into focus and one that she wanted to revisit. âAll the children had their hair washed in this sink â rinsed again and again with the water from “Soft”.'
Corridors that started poker straight and then suddenly veered off at angles with stairs to trip and confuse. Room after room after room. With clever wording in the particulars and positioning of furniture for the photos, Stella reckoned she could list twelve bedrooms at least. The three bathrooms were a worry though, not least because the most modern of them all, the only en-suite, was a homage to 1970s design with a corner bath, bidet, basin and toilet in a dull avocado shade.
It surprised her to find they were back on the ground floor. She'd quite lost her bearings.
âKitchen,' Lydia said, opening a door and revealing a space so sizeable that even Mrs Biggins, ensconced in the
Daily Mail
, looked diminutive. Stella's heart sank a little. Of all the rooms she'd been fascinated to see, this was the one she'd built up in her imagination. She'd anticipated flagstones and a vast range, scullery, pantry, cold store, gleaming copperware and all manner of utensils of historical importance. Instead, she stood in a large space in which rather nondescript units varnished an unpleasant amber sat haphazardly under a melamine worktop, like bad teeth. The fridge and the oven were free-standing and akin to those she remembered her grandmother having in her small flat in Wheathampstead. At least there was an Aga, if a relatively small one. It was some consolation finally to be shown a sort of pantry with lines of shelves painted soft white and an impressive run of slate worktop. Most of the shelves were empty; the ones that weren't were stacked with jars of all sizes filled with jam.
âI'm tired now so you must go,' Lady Lydia announced, still walking ahead and not turning to look at Stella. âYou will come back again tomorrow. To see the grounds. To see Art. Eleven a.m. Prompt, please. Mrs Biggins, show Miss Hutton out please. Goodbye.'
And with that, Lydia went.
âCoat,' said Mrs Biggins, bundling it into Stella's arms. âTa-ta, duck.' And she chortled a little as if, perhaps, this was a scenario that had been re-enacted many times over the years.
The rain had stopped, everything glistened and shone but Stella shivered and put her coat on, hugging it tightly around herself as she walked across the driveway to her car. Inside, she put the heat on high and realized how that old house had quite chilled her to the bone. She thought again of Tess Durbeyfield, how Tess had wondered about Mrs d'Urberville.
âIf there is such a lady, it would be enough for us if she were friendly â¦'
Stella gave herself a stern talking-to as she raced to pick up Will from after-school club.
Lady Whatnot didn't say you
won't
be representing Longbridge.
She said you're to come back tomorrow.
Money she may have â manners she has none.
She's just an old dragon.
But Stella felt despondent â as if she'd failed a test and a carrot that had been dangled in front of her had been snatched away in a harsh peal of upper-class laughter; as if she'd been one of the balls hit around in a game of croquet. Why would she want to work for the old battleaxe anyway? She felt impotent â it seemed she didn't have a choice. It appeared if Lady Up-Her-Bum wanted Stella, then Stella she would have.
âShall we go over and see the Twins? Aunty Ju said it's fish and chips for supper.'
Will was delighted. Actually, Stella had food prepared at home for Will but her need for adult company â sane, sweet, adult company â overrode her usual timetable of homework, supper, telly, bath, bed and a long evening alone muttering at the telly. She'd phoned Juliet who was only too pleased to hear from her and to be able to help.
âBut it's a school night, Mummy.'
âI know!' Stella said, as if it was the coolest, most daring concept ever.
With Will upstairs with Pauly and Tom, happy not to touch a thing, just to look at their stuff and be in their company as if hoping their cred was catching, Juliet had Stella to herself downstairs.
âYou all right, chook?' Juliet asked nonchalantly while rooting around the cupboard for the ketchup.
âCan I borrow a suit, do you think? One of yours?'
âWell, I hardly thought you meant Alistair's. Yes, of course.' She looked at Stella, who looked glum and distracted. âBut why? There's not a funeral I don't know about, is there? Uncle MacKenzie?'
âNo â Uncle Mac is still hanging on. I just need to look a bit more formal and estate-agenty tomorrow.'
âCharming! Is that your sartorial judgement of me, then?' Juliet gave her a long look, up and down, as if assessing which suit Stella would be entitled to. âYou're not wearing my Paul Smith then â I'll dig out my old one from Wallis for that!'
Stella laughed. âYou know what I mean â and I just need
not
to look like a waitress in a gastro pub.'
âFirstly â you don't, you look lovely. Secondly â why?'
âAwkward client.'
âOh?'
âLady Up-Her-Bum Fortescue-Barbary OK-Yah Di-Fucking-Da.'
âOh,' said Juliet. â
Her
.' She paused. âWho?'
âLives in a Georgian pile over at Long Dansbury. It's worth millions. She called for me â and then spent most of this morning being rude yet demanded I come back tomorrow.'
âCan't you send someone else from the office?'
âShe asked for me by name.'
âPerhaps it's just her manner.'
âShe may be a Lady â but she has no manners. She's horrible.'
âYes, but blimey, Stella â have you calculated the commission?'
âExactly â it could be the solution to everything. That's why I have to go. I'll have to swallow my morals and sell my soul to the old devil â but hence the need for your suit.'
âAnd you think she'll be more polite if you dress the part?'
âShe said I was to see the grounds and art.'
âThen you ought to go in wellies and a Puffa â with your own clothes underneath. Not your worky-waitressy garb â your off-duty clothes.'
âWhy?'
âBecause first and foremost you're an art historian â and that's who you are. Not a suity person. Dress as the real You.'