The Forgotten Garden (19 page)

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Authors: Kate Morton

Tags: #England, #Australia, #Abandoned children - Australia, #Fiction, #British, #Family Life, #Cornwall (County), #Abandoned children, #english, #Inheritance and succession, #Haunting, #Grandmothers, #Country homes - England - Cornwall (County), #Country homes, #Domestic fiction, #Literary, #Large type books, #English - Australia

BOOK: The Forgotten Garden
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There was a murmur as the crowd digested this information.

Looked anew at the small boy’s ruined body.

‘Any idea which house, gov’nor?’

‘I’m afraid I don’t know that.’

The butcher signalled to his lad. ‘Take him to Battersea Church Road and ask around. Someone ought to know him.’

The horse nodded at Eliza, ducked his head three times, then sighed and looked away.

Eliza blinked. ‘Wait,’ she said, almost a whisper.

The butcher looked at her. ‘Eh?’

All eyes turned to take her in, this speck of a girl with a long plait of rose gold hair. Eliza glanced at the man with the pince-nez. The lenses were shiny and white so that she couldn’t see his eyes.

The butcher held up his hand to silence the crowd. ‘Well then, child. Do you know the name of this unfortunate lad?’

‘His name is Sammy Makepeace,’ Eliza said. ‘And he’s my brother.’

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c

Mother had set coin aside for her own burial, but no such provision had been made for her children. Naturally enough, for what parent ever allowed that such a thing might be necessary?

‘He’ll have a pauper’s funeral out at St Bride’s,’ said Mrs Swindell, later that same afternoon. She sucked some soup from her spoon then pointed it at Eliza, who was sitting on the floor. ‘They’ll be opening the pit again Wednesday. Till then, I expect we’ll have to keep him here.’

She chewed the inside of her cheek, bottom lip pouting. ‘Upstairs, of course. Can’t have the stink keeping customers away.’

Eliza had heard of the paupers’ funerals at St Bride’s. The large pit, reopened every week, the pile of bodies, the clergyman gabbling a quick service so that he might rescue himself from the dreadful neighbourhood stench as soon as possible. ‘No,’ she said, ‘not St Bride’s.’

Little Hatty stopped chewing her bread. She let the lump rest behind her right cheek while she looked, wide-eyed, from her mother to Eliza.

‘No?’ Mrs Swindell’s thin fingers tightened on her spoon.

‘Please, Mrs Swindell,’ Eliza said. ‘Let him have a proper burial.

Like Mother’s.’ She bit her tongue to save from crying. ‘I want him to be with Mother.’

‘Oh you do now, do you? A horse-drawn hearse perhaps? Couple of professional mourners? And I s’pose you think Mr Swindell and me should be paying for your fancy funeral.’ She sniffed hungrily, enjoying the sour rant. ‘Contrary to popular belief, missy, we ain’t a charity, so unless you’ve got yourself the coin, that boy’s going to spend his after at St Bride’s. Good enough for the likes of him it is, too.’

‘No hearse, Mrs Swindell, no mourners. Just a burial, a grave of his own.’

‘And just who do you propose to arrange all that?’

Eliza swallowed. ‘Mrs Barker’s brother is an undertaker, perhaps he could do it. Surely if you ask, Mrs Swindell . . .’

‘Waste a favour on you and your idjit brother?’

‘He’s not an idiot.’

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‘Stupid enough to get himself trod on by a horse.’

‘It wasn’t his fault, it was the fog.’

Mrs Swindell sucked more soup across her bottom lip.

‘He didn’t even want to go out,’ said Eliza.

‘Course he didn’t,’ said Mrs Swindell. ‘It weren’t his sort of caper.

It were yours.’

‘Please Mrs Swindell, I can pay.’

Twin brows shot skyward. ‘Oh you can, can you? With promises and moonbeams?’

Eliza thought of the leather pouch. ‘I . . . I have some coin.’

Mrs Swindell’s mouth dropped open and a trickle of soup escaped.

‘Some coin?’

‘Just a little.’

‘Why, you sneaky little wench.’ Lips tightened like the top of a coin purse. ‘How much?’

‘A shilling.’

Mrs Swindell screeched with laughter; a horrendous noise so foreign, so raw, that her little girl began to bawl. ‘A shilling?’ she spat.

‘A shilling won’t buy you the nails to drive shut the coffin.’

Mother’s brooch, she could sell the brooch. It was true Mother had made her promise not to part with it unless the Bad Man threatened, but surely in a situation such as this . . .

Mrs Swindell was coughing now, choking on her unexpected mirth.

She gave her bony chest a slap, then set little Hatty scuttling across the floor. ‘Stop with your caterwauling, I can’t hear myself think.’

She sat a moment, then narrowed her eyes in Eliza’s direction.

Nodded a few times as a scheme took shape. ‘All your begging’s set my mind. I’m going to see to it personally that the boy gets nothing better than he deserves. He’ll have a pauper’s funeral.’

‘Please—’

‘And I’ll have the shilling for me troubles.’

‘But Mrs Swindell—’

‘Mrs Swindell nothing. That’ll learn you for being sneaky, keeping coin hidden. Just you wait until Mr Swindell gets home and hears about this, then there’ll be hell to pay.’ She handed Eliza her bowl. ‘Now get me another serving and you can take Hatty up to bed.’

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c

Nights were the worst. Street noises took on a garish quality, shadows lurched without reason and, alone in the tiny room for the first time in her life, Eliza fell victim to her nightmares. Nightmares far worse than anything she had imagined in her stories.

In the daytime, it was as if the world had been turned inside out, like a garment on the line. All was the same shape, size and colour, but utterly wrong nonetheless. And although Eliza’s body performed in the same way it had before, her mind roamed the landscape of her terrors. Again and again she found herself imagining Sammy at the bottom of the St Bride’s pit, lying, limbs askew, where he’d been tossed amongst the bodies of the nameless dead. Trapped beneath the dirt, eyes opening, mouth trying to call out that there’d been a mistake, he wasn’t dead at all.

For Mrs Swindell had got her way and Sammy had received the burial of a pauper. Eliza had taken the brooch from its hiding spot and gone as far as John Picknick’s house, but in the end she couldn’t bring herself to sell it. She’d stood out front a full half-hour, trying to decide.

She knew if she sold the brooch she’d receive enough money to bury Sammy properly. She also knew Mr and Mrs Swindell would want to know where the money had come from and would punish her mercilessly for keeping such a treasure secret.

But it was not fear of the Swindells that decided her. It wasn’t even Mother’s voice, loud within her memory, making her promise to sell the brooch only if the phantom man came threatening.

It was her own fear that the future held worse than the past. That there would be a time, lurking in the foggy years to come, when the brooch was the lone key to her survival.

She turned around without setting foot inside Mr Picknick’s house, and hurried back to the rag and bottle shop, brooch burning a guilty hole in her pocket. And she told herself that Sammy would understand, that he had known as well as she did the cost of life on their riverbend.

Then she folded his memory as gently as she could, wrapped it in the layers of emotions—joy, love, commitment—for which she no longer had need, and locked the whole deep inside her. Being empty 130

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of such memories and emotions felt right somehow. For with Sammy’s death Eliza was half a person. Like a room robbed of candlelight, her soul was cold, dark and empty.

c

When was it that the idea first came to her? Later, Eliza could never be sure. There was nothing different about the day in question. She opened her eyes in the dim of the tiny room as she did each morning and lay still, re-entering her body after the harrowing stretch of night.

She pulled back her side of the blanket and sat up, placed bare feet on the floor. Her long plait fell over one shoulder. It was cold; autumn had surrendered to winter and morning was as dark as night. Eliza struck a match and held it to the candle wick, then looked up to where her pinafore was hanging on the back of the door.

What made her do it? What made her reach beyond the pinafore to the shirt and breeches that hung behind? Climb inside Sammy’s clothing instead?

Eliza never knew, but it felt right, as if it were the only thing to do.

The shirt smelled so familiar, like her own clothes and yet not, and when she pulled on the breeches, she savoured the curious sensation of bare ankles, cool air on skin accustomed to stockings. She sat on the floor and laced up Sammy’s scuffed boots, a perfect fit.

Then she stood in front of the small mirror and looked. Really looked as the candle flickered beside her. A pale face stared back. Long hair, golden red, blue eyes with pale brows. Without letting her gaze slip, Eliza picked up the pair of sewing scissors that sat in the laundry basket and held her plait out to the side. The rope of her hair was thick and she had to hack through. Finally it dropped into her hand. No longer bound, the hair on her head fell loose, shaggy around her face.

She continued to cut until her hair was the same length that Sammy’s had been, then she pulled on his cloth cap.

They were twins, it was little surprise that they should look so similar, and yet Eliza drew breath. She smiled, very slightly, and Sammy smiled back at her. She reached out and touched the cold glass of the mirror, no longer alone.

Thump . . . thump . . .

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Mrs Swindell’s broom end on the ceiling below, her daily call to start the laundering.

Eliza picked up her long red braid from the floor, unravelling at the top where it had been detached, and tied a piece of twine around its end. Later she would tuck it away with Mother’s brooch. She didn’t need it now; it was of the past.

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17

London, 2005

London, England, 2005

Cassandra had known the buses would be red, of course, and double-decked, but to see them trundling by with destinations like Kensington High Street and Piccadilly Circus above their front windows was nonetheless startling. Like being dropped somehow into a storybook from her childhood, or one of the many films she’d watched where black beetle-nosed taxis scurried down cobbled lanes, Edwardian terraces stood to attention on wide streets, and the north wind stretched thin clouds across a low sky.

She had been in this London of a thousand film sets, a thousand stories, for almost twenty-four hours now. When she’d finally woken from her jetlagged slumber, she’d found herself alone in Ruby’s tiny flat, the midday sun slanting between the curtains to cast a narrow ray across her face.

On the little stool beside the sofa bed, there was a note from Ruby: Missed you at breakfast! Didn’t want to wake you—help yourself to anything worth scavenging. Banana in the fruit bowl, leftover something in the fridge, though haven’t checked lately—may be all too gruesome!

Towels in the bathroom cupboard if you’d like to get clean. I’m at the V&A until 6. You must drop by and see the exhibition I’m curating at the moment. Something v. v. exciting to show you! Rx PS Come early afternoon. Wretched meetings all morning.

So it was, at one pm, with her stomach growling, Cassandra found herself standing in the centre of Cromwell Road, waiting for the traffic 133

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to stop its seemingly perpetual flow through the veins of the city so she could cross to the other side.

The Victoria and Albert Museum stood large and imposing before her, the cloak of afternoon shadow sliding rapidly across its stone front. A giant mausoleum of the past. Inside, she knew, were rooms and rooms, each one full of history. Thousands of items, out of time and place, reverberating quietly with the joys and traumas of forgotten lives.

Cassandra bumped into Ruby directing a group of German tourists to the new V&A coffee shop. ‘Honestly,’ Ruby whispered loudly as they herded away, ‘I’m all for having a café in the building—I like a good coffee as much as the next person—but nothing gets my goat like people who breeze past my exhibition in search of the Holy Grail of sugarless muffins and imported soft drinks!’

Cassandra smiled somewhat guiltily, hoping Ruby couldn’t hear her own stomach grumbling at the delicious smells emanating from the café. She’d actually been heading there herself.

‘I mean, how can they pass up the opportunity to stare the past in the face?’ Ruby flapped a hand at the rows of treasure-stocked glass cabinets comprising her collection. ‘How can they?’

Cassandra shook her head and suppressed a rumble. ‘I don’t know.’

‘Ah well,’ Ruby sighed dramatically, ‘you’re here now and the Philistines are but a distant memory. How’re you feeling? Not too jetlagged?’

‘I’m fine, thanks.’

‘You slept well?’

‘The sofa bed was very comfy.’

‘No need to lie,’ Ruby said with a laugh, ‘though I appreciate the sentiment. At least the lumps and bumps stopped you sleeping the day away. I would’ve had to ring and wake you up otherwise. No way I was going to let you miss this.’ She beamed. ‘I still can’t believe Nathaniel Walker once lived on the same estate your cottage is on! He probably saw it, you know, drew inspiration from it. He may even have been inside.’ With her eyes bright and round, Ruby hooked an arm through Cassandra’s and started down one of the aisles. ‘Come on, you’re going to love this!’

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With mild trepidation, Cassandra prepared herself to muster up a suitably enthusiastic reaction no matter what it was that Ruby was so keen to show her.

‘There you are then.’ Ruby pointed triumphantly at a row of sketches in the cabinet. ‘What do you think of those?’

Cassandra gasped, leaned forward to get a better look. There would be no need to pretend enthusiasm. The pictures on display both shocked and thrilled her. ‘But where did they . . . ? How did you . . . ?’ Cassandra glanced sideways at Ruby, who clapped her hands together in obvious delight. ‘I had no idea these existed.’

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