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Authors: Rosalind Laker

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

The Golden Tulip (68 page)

BOOK: The Golden Tulip
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“That seems a likely supposition,” Gerard agreed. “It’s fortunate we have Francesca under that roof. How often are you going to Delft now?”

“Once a week. Design orders that I never expected have given me a legitimate reason for being there so often at this time of year, and I’m now on conversational terms with a remarkable number of people in the town, and others living in fine country houses.”

“When is your next visit?”

“Tomorrow.”

The first snowflakes of winter were falling, only to disappear as soon as they touched the ground, when Pieter entered his Delft office. His clerk was an older man, not yet ready to retire, who had answered Pieter’s advertisement for someone to do a few hours’ office work on six mornings a week, this being sufficient at the present time. Pieter greeted him.

“Good day to you too,
mijnheer,
” the clerk replied. “Have you just arrived?”

“No, I spent last night at the Mechelin. What is there for my attention today?”

Pieter sat down at his own desk while the clerk came from his to lay letters and various papers in front of him. He had dealt with everything when the door from the street opened and Aletta came in with a laden basket on her arm, snowflakes melting into sequins on her cap and cloak.

“I hoped you’d be here,” she said smilingly after Pieter had kissed her cheek and drawn her to the fireside. She looked around as she pulled off her gloves. “What a neat office! I’ve had no chance to come in before. I like those etchings of tulips and that painting of aquilegia on the wall. Most appropriate.”

“You’re not often in town, are you?”

“No, but I wanted to buy gifts for the Feast of St. Nicholaes. Constantijn still doesn’t like me to be absent from the house for long, so I keep short my time away.” They were able to converse without being overheard, for the clerk was partially deaf.

“How is de Veere? Has he received those wooden legs yet that Francesca told me about—such a good idea of yours.”

“No, not yet, although he is well enough. You see, at first I had only thought of getting him into the right frame of mind to use them, but then I realized that was not enough. He needed physical strength too. He is strong in the arms and shoulders through hoisting himself about, but his thigh and pelvic muscles had to be strengthened again or else he would never manage those heavy legs. Josephus agreed with me and I left it to him to urge Constantijn into a routine of regular exercise. Now Josephus is in his element, seeing himself as a coach again, although he is training Constantijn for a different purpose than before.”

“It’s a sensible decision. Only good can come of it.”

“I hope so.”

“Have you seen Francesca this morning?”

“No, I don’t call in during her working hours. Fortunately she can come quite often to see me at the de Veere house. I hear that the two of you are not meeting until Christmas.”

“That’s right. I only catch glimpses of her going in and out of the Vermeers’ home, usually in the company of Weintje. Yet we keep in touch.” It was easy enough with the Vermeer children or a tavern potboy as go-betweens. As yet Francesca had nothing to report. Two travelers had stayed overnight, but not in the room with the funnel, and she had had no chance to catch sight of either.

Aletta glanced at the clock. “I must go. Josephus will be waiting for me by the Town Hall and I don’t want him to catch a chill in the cold wind that is blowing today.”

“I’ll walk you there.” Pieter took his greatcoat from a peg and thrust his arms into it. Then he put on his hat and carried the basket for her as they went out of the office together. It was a crowded market day with plenty of traffic. He raised his eyebrows when he saw the old-fashioned but well-polished coach waiting for Aletta with Josephus on the box.

“You didn’t tell me you were riding in style today.”

“It’s the coach Constantijn’s grandparents used to ride in. I could easily have walked in and out of town, but he always insists that Josephus take me these days.”

Pieter put the basket on the seat for her and helped her into the coach. There was no glazing in the windows, but leather blinds helped keep out the drafts. He wished her happiness for the Feast of St. Nicholaes and the blessing of Christmas. She gave him her good wishes in return.

When they had exchanged a wave she let the leather blind fall back into place and the coach went bumping away over the cobbles. Pieter stopped to talk to someone he knew and was on his way back to the office when a sudden commotion occurred just ahead. He saw that a drunken wagoner, who had been leaving the market after delivering goods, had whipped up his horses carelessly, startling them both with an unexpected sting of the whip’s end, and they had lunged forward to send the wagon into the side of a cart. No damage was done, but the wheels had locked.

Immediately Pieter ran with some other men to lend his strength in lifting the two vehicles apart. It was all over very quickly. The wheels were separated and the horses soothed. The wagoner, bawling his thanks to everybody, drove off down the lane leading into Voldersgracht while the two carters, sitting side by side in the cart, continued quietly on their way out of the square, disappearing from sight beyond the Old Church. Pieter sauntered thoughtfully toward his office, wondering what it was about that commonplace incident that had left a question mark in his mind. Inside the office the clerk looked up and saw the distorted image of his employer through the small leaded panes of the upper half of the door. Then abruptly it vanished again.

Pieter was on his way at a run to the stables to fetch his horse. It had come to him what had been unusual about that incident. Carters and wagoners were notorious for their rough language if anything riled them, particularly if their horses or vehicles were harmed in any way, and frequently resorted to fisticuffs, always to the merriment of any crowd who immediately gathered. Such a fight could have been expected from the drunken wagoner, who had been brandishing his fists in readiness, as if he had been the innocent party. Yet the men on the cart had not uttered a word of rebuke, merely concerned that the load on their cart had not been jerked loose under its covers by the impact. Their horses had shown sweaty signs of having been driven hard, but they had come into the square at a slow pace and had left again in the same manner. There was nothing out of the ordinary in that, but combined with the uncharacteristic behavior of the carters it demanded investigation.

As always on a market day, a good many farming carts and other vehicles were rolling in and out of town. Geese, newly purchased at the market, flapped their wings and squawked out of Pieter’s path as he rode through and then a flock of sheep slowed him down. Two separate herds of cows further hindered him, one ambling along the road and the other crossing it from one field to another. The distance he had to ride before sighting the cart he was looking for showed that the man with the reins had resumed the former speed of his horses in spite of the hazards of livestock and the difficulty of passing other vehicles in places where the winding road narrowed.

He could see how swiftly the two men ahead were bowling along and he matched his speed to theirs at a distance. He no longer thought of them as being carters by trade, certain they were engaged in some special business of their own. They might be thieves having no connection at all with the mission to which he had been recruited. Twice the companion of the man who was driving looked back at him, although it was impossible to distinguish his features. Then Pieter realized they were testing him, driving still faster and then slowing again to see if he altered his distance to any degree. He made his own speed irregular and when they settled to a steady pace again he was sure he had reassured them.

Suddenly the road formed an S bend through woodland and when he thought to come in sight of the cart again it had vanished. He spurred his horse into a gallop and discovered a crossroads. There was no way of telling which direction the men had taken. He studied the surface of the roads, but it was rock hard and there was nothing among the old tracks to give a clue. Undeterred, he searched diligently, taking one road until he could see the open countryside beyond the trees and then returning to search in another direction. Once he saw a cart in the far distance and galloped hard after it through a maze of farm lanes, only to find it was not his quarry. Finally he was forced to turn back to Delft.

That evening in the Mechelin he conversed with many local people, but he learned nothing except that the cart did not come regularly to Delft, although one man was certain he had seen it twice before.

“When was that?” Pieter asked casually, buying his new acquaintance as well as himself another pint of beer.

“The first time must have been last spring,” was the reply, followed by a slurp of beer.

“And since then?”

“About two months ago. Not long after the kermis.”

“How can you remember that particular cart? It’s no different from any other that is painted green with red wheels.”

“I’m a whip and thong maker and I made and sold the whip that’s on that cart. You know my place of work. Come and see me tomorrow and I’ll show you how to spot my whips anywhere.” The tankard was drained. “I thank you for the beer. You shall have a swig of my homemade brew in return. It’s the best in all Holland.” With a guffaw the whip maker left.

Pieter went to see the whip maker the next day, and found that the homemade beer proved to be extremely potent. He grinned appreciatively after the first swig as he stood in the man’s workshop with windows that faced the road along which both he and the mysterious cart had passed the day before.

“How can you find a barrel strong enough to hold this brew?” he asked, wiping some foam away from his mouth.

The whip maker enjoyed the joke. “It’s not easy. Now you take a look at the handles of those whips for sale in that rack over there and then you’ll know why there’s no mistaking a whip of mine.”

The whips were standing upright with the thongs tied. After setting down his tankard, Pieter took one and examined the handle. It was bound in thin strips of soft leather in an intricate pattern that in no way detracted from the smoothness of the grip. One strip was stamped in gilt, enhancing the general effect, and others in the rack had variations of design.

“These are examples of splendid craftsmanship,” Pieter commented. “They must be very expensive.”

“They are. That’s why it stuck in my memory when a carter bought one of them. Never before have I sold one of those whips to any but the well-to-do, who want their coachmen to be smart in every detail. I went outside to take a closer look at the cart itself, expecting it to be something special, but as you know, it was far from that. Why are you so interested anyway?”

“I once had a cart like it at my Haarlem bulb fields,” Pieter answered truthfully. It had been an old one used on the farm before he had replaced it with another.

“So you think this might be yours? Stolen, was it?”

“Maybe. It was stored in one of the brick barns. All I can say is that I’ll be glad if you’d let me know if you see it again.”

“Indeed I will.”

Pieter took Francesca’s sketch from his pocket. “Was this the carter who bought the whip?”

The whip maker studied it and shook his head. “No.”

“Could it have been his companion riding with him?”

“I can’t say. I didn’t pay him any attention.”

Back in his own office Pieter studied a map of the area he had hanging on the wall. His gaze followed the lanes leading out from the crossroads, as he wondered where he had lost the cart. The most likely solution was that the two men had hidden themselves and their cart in one of the farm stables or behind a barn out of his sight. At least he could be sure that if the same cart came this way again, the whip maker, who seemed to have eyes in the back of his head, would be on the watch and quick to inform him.

         

O
N THE MORNING
of the Feast of St. Nicholaes, Aletta exchanged small gifts with Sara and Josephus. Presents arrived in abundance for Constantijn from his parents and relatives, but several were more suitable for a bedridden invalid and defeated the purpose for which they had been sent. He would give his own gifts to the domestic staff in the hour before dinner, a tradition of the house from his grandparents’ time. He had already handed over purses of money to Aletta for her to give to the gardeners. Sara was preparing a meal of his favorite dishes and Aletta had selected the best of the wines to serve with each course. She had already made up her mind to change that evening into one of her special gowns, unworn since she had attended events in the company of Francesca at the Vermeers. Normally in her role as housekeeper she dressed soberly with plain caps, although she wore dark silks in the evening and usually a more flattering cap of lace with a lining in a contrasting hue.

When the hour came she selected a lilac-blue velvet that was far from new, but which had always suited her. She brushed her hair well, pinned it up again and put on one of her party caps, which was covered in small glass beads. Lastly she took the Florentine bracelet and fastened it around her wrist. It was the first time she had worn it since trying it on after Francesca delivered it in the spring. She felt quite exhilarated to be dressed up again and her footsteps were light as she returned to the kitchen. Sara threw up her hands at such elegance and Josephus agreed she was a pretty sight to behold.

When everything was ready for the dinner, Aletta told Sara and Josephus to go to Constantijn for their gifts. As a housekeeper she would receive hers from him on her own. She knew what he had for them, because he had entrusted her to make the purchases and also those for his parents, which she had dispatched in good time. When Sara and Josephus returned to the kitchen they were well pleased with his generosity. Then it was her turn. She had a present for him and took it with her.

Constantijn eyed her up and down with raised eyebrows of surprise. “You’re looking very grand this evening.”

“Only in keeping with this feast day.”

BOOK: The Golden Tulip
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