Read The Workhouse Girl Online
Authors: Dilly Court
âOh yes, miss. The doll's house was hers too. Miss Charlotte joined in sometimes but she was always the flighty one.' He plucked a cobweb from its roof. âMiss Charlotte loved pretty things and she was her father's darling. She was a sunny little thing and everyone loved her. We was all heartbroken when she died so young.'
âWhat happened, Parker? Was she ill?'
He shook his head. âShe was just setting off for a ride when a fox ran out of the yew tree tunnel and she was thrown from her horse. She lay there like a broken flower, so young and beautiful and not a mark on her. You'd think she was sleeping, but Master Toby was only five and he was walking in the grounds with his nanny. He was the first to reach his ma and he clung to her crying and begging her to wake up.'
âThat's so sad,' Sarah murmured, biting back tears. She tried hard to picture Grey as a small boy and failed. âHe must have loved his mother very much.'
âWe all did, miss.' Parker cleared his throat and turned away. âIt were tragic. The old master never got over it and Miss Elsie was heartbroken. She was never the same after that.'
âIt must have been a terrible time.'
âMiss Charlotte's husband never got over it. He gambled away his fortune and took to the bottle. He died a couple of years later and Master Toby was sent off to school, but he came here in his holidays. It's no wonder he got in with the wrong crowd.'
âHe's a good man at heart.' On the verge of tears, Sarah made an attempt at a smile. âI mean, he was a good man, who had taken the wrong path.' Setting aside the half-wrapped present she rose to her feet. âI refuse to believe that he and Davey are dead, Parker. I think I'd know it if anything dreadful had happened to them.'
He gave her a pitying look. âBelieve what you will, miss. But their boat was wrecked. They wouldn't have lasted long in them seas.' He ambled from the room, leaving her alone with her thoughts.
She clenched her hands at her sides, glaring at the portrait of Grey's sombre-faced grandfather. âYou could have done something more for your grandson,' she said angrily. âYou were the head of the family but you didn't stand by Elsie and it seems you didn't lift a finger to stop Grey from getting into bad company, and look how your son George turned out. He's not a credit to the family name.' She glanced round the wainscoted room, most of which was in deep shadow, and she smiled. âHow you would laugh if you could see me now, Grey. Here I am on Christmas Eve, talking to your long-dead grandfather.' She pulled a face. âAnd Davey would say I was a mad woman.' She gathered up the presents and placed them under the tree. At least the children would have a good Christmas. What would happen in the future remained to be seen.
The snow continued to fall in the days that followed and froze into a solid mass, making the roads impassable. When their meagre supplies ran out Sarah was forced to use the secret passage in order to reach the village, but it was becoming increasingly difficult to purchase even the most basic essentials. She bartered logs for flour, salt cod, herring and occasionally a pat of butter or a wedge of cheese that some hardy soul had trudged through the snowdrifts to purchase from one of the outlying farms.
Late one afternoon at the end of January, she was returning home from one of her forays to the village with half a dozen eggs in her basket together with a small bag of flour and a lump of salt cod, which would feed them for a day or two if she eked out the rations. She entered the church and took a few moments to say a brief prayer, before lighting a candle and going down the steps to the crypt. She had made this journey at least twice a week and was no longer afraid of the darkness or the creepy atmosphere below ground, but this time it was different. As she reached the bottom of the stairs she thought she heard a movement behind the closed door. She hesitated, cocking her head on one side and listening, but there was silence. Thinking it was her imagination playing tricks on her she opened the door, but as she stepped inside a draught of cold air extinguished her candle and someone seized her in a grasp that knocked the air from her lungs.
â
DON'T MAKE A
sound.' The voice was deep and gruff and the arms that held her were merciless. âGive us some light, Joe.'
She heard the scrape of a vesta being struck and she was momentarily dazzled by its glow. âWho are you?' she demanded angrily. âLet me go.'
âThis must be the one, Fred.' The man called Joe, a scruffy individual with a crooked nose, lit a candle and held it closer, peering into her face. âHe said as how she was a plucky little thing.'
Released without warning Sarah stumbled and would have fallen if he had not steadied her. âWho are you?' she demanded angrily. âWhat are you doing here?'
âI'd have thought you could work that out for yourself, duck.' Fred, a muscular fellow with a toothless grin, jerked his head at the piles of contraband. âTrade's been slack these past weeks, but you might say we're back in business now.'
Looking round she could see that they had been busy. Kegs, crates and bolts of cloth were stacked neatly around the room. âAren't you taking a terrible risk by coming here in broad daylight?'
Joe perched on the edge of a tomb. âThe excise men can't get about for the snow,' he said, chuckling. âIt makes our lives a lot easier so long as the natives don't peach on us.'
âAnd most of them are involved in one way or another,' Fred said with a careless shrug of his shoulders. âThey're all at it, from the vicar and the schoolmaster to the chap who owns the big house, and that's where you come in, missy.'
âI've nothing to do with it,' Sarah said hastily. âI know it goes on, but . . .'
âKnowing is as good as doing, according to the law.' Joe took an expensive-looking half-hunter from his pocket and examined it. âTide will be on the turn shortly, Fred. Best be going.'
Sarah clutched Fred's sleeve as he was about to open the door. âWait a minute. You can't just walk away without telling me who you were talking about. Who said I was plucky and how did you know who I am?'
He gave her a cursory glance. âYoung fellow by the name of Davey. We pulled him and his mate out of the sea a few weeks ago.'
âThey're alive?' Her breath hitched in her throat and the words came out in a barely audible whisper. âTell me, please.'
âThey was half dead but still breathing when I last saw them.'
âWhere are they now? Please tell me.'
Joe pushed past them to open the door. âWe left them in safe hands. C'mon, let's go, mate.' He mounted the steps. âI'll sail on me own if you don't get a move on, cully.'
Sarah barred their way. âWhere I can find them?'
âWe left them in a village near Calais. They'll be well cared for so long as they can pay their way.'
Sarah thought quickly. âDo they need money?'
âEverybody always needs money.' Fred sidestepped her and was about to leave but she caught him by the coat tails.
âWait a moment. Will you take me to them?' The words spilled from her lips before she had time to think.
âIt'll cost you.'
âI don't care. Where are they exactly?'
He rattled off a French name. âIt'll cost you more than you've got, I daresay.'
âIf I can raise the money will you take me to them?'
He stared at her, frowning. âAre you serious?'
âYes, I am. When will you be back?'
âCome on, Fred.' Joe's impatient voice floated down from the inner sanctum of the apse. âWe'll miss the bloody tide.'
âWe'll be back a week today with a bit of luck. If not you'll have to find your own way. Keep a lookout for us.' Fred disappeared into the dark interior of the church, leaving Sarah with the stub of a candle to light her way back to the house. She closed the door and leaned against it as she fought to control her erratic breathing. She did not know whether to laugh or cry. They were alive and that was all that mattered. It was all the incentive she needed to risk the perilous sea journey. She retrieved her basket, which she had dropped in her fright, and found that miraculously the eggs had survived in their bed of straw and not a single one was broken. It must be a good omen. She made her way back to the house.
She found Parker chopping wood in the log store and told him of her encounter with the smugglers. He listened intently. âWell now,' he said, bringing the axe down on a log and splitting it in two. âThat's good news in one way and bad in another.'
She stared at him in surprise. âI thought you'd be delighted to know that Master Toby is alive and well.'
âAnd I am, miss. But there's a haul of contraband to be collected and stowed away until the roads are passable.'
âYes, I understand that.'
âAnd that means that the she-devil herself will be back with her men to collect the merchandise.'
âI suppose so, but I hope to be in France by then.'
âAnd how will you raise the money?'
She shook her head. âI haven't worked that out yet.'
âAnd in the meantime we've got a dead body frozen like an icicle in the yew tree tunnel. We couldn't move it even if we'd got a team of strong men, but when the thaw sets in . . .' Parker's voice trailed off and he fixed Sarah with a meaningful gaze. âD'you see what I mean?'
âYes,' she said slowly. âI do, and we've got the children to consider now. If I go to France who will look after them?'
âDon't look at me. I'm no nursery maid.'
âThey can't go back to the cottage. Mrs Trigg has let it to someone else. Old Mrs Scranton told me so when I bought eggs from her. She said that one of the fishing families has taken it for their newly married son and daughter-in-law. The children couldn't go back even if they wanted to.'
âIt'll be the workhouse then,' Parker said gloomily. âThe master won't stand for no nonsense, especially with that woman bending his ear.'
âI won't let it happen. I'll get help.'
Parker raised a shaggy eyebrow. âThe only one who can help is him up there.' He pointed at the sky with its iron-clad clouds threatening yet more heavy snowfalls.
âMr Moorcroft,' Sarah said, wondering why she had not thought of him before. âHe's a kind gentleman and he's rich. If I can get to London I know he'll help me.'
Once again Parker pointed skywards. âIt's going to snow again.'
âThere must be an answer.' She thought hard. âWhat about the railway? I've never been on a train but I've seen the great iron monsters steaming out of the London stations, belching smoke and spitting sparks. Where's the nearest station, Parker?'
âThat'd be Maldon, but you've still got to get there, and the roads are blocked with drifts.'
Sarah thought for a moment. âBut I could get there by boat. I just need to find a fisherman who's willing to take me.'
âAnd what will you do for money?'
âThere's a small fortune in contraband waiting to be collected by Trigg's men, or I suppose I should say Mrs Trigg's men now.'
âAye, that's true, and I'd best start bringing it back to the house.'
âYou're missing the point, Parker. What if it never reached the cellars here? What would the landlord of the Ferryboat Inn pay for a keg or two of finest cognac? Wouldn't the squire's wife love to have a gown made of pure silk at half the price it would cost if purchased in Spitalfields?'
He scratched his head, staring at her as if she was speaking in a foreign tongue. âBut it belongs to the master. He's paid for it in advance.'
âHe can hardly report the theft to the police,' Sarah said, chuckling. âHow can things get any worse? We've got a dead man on our hands and you stand to lose your job and your home simply because you gave us shelter. Mr Moorcroft will know what to do and he might be able to prove that Master Toby is the rightful owner of Blackwood House and not his uncle. Help me to do this, Parker. Please.'
It was arranged. Parker had delivered two kegs of brandy to the Ferryboat Inn, and, after a bit of hard bargaining, Moses Cable had agreed to take Sarah to Maldon in his boat.
They set sail at first light. The sea was reasonably calm for the time of year, or so Moses informed Sarah as he trimmed the sail. âIf the wind don't pick up we'll have to row,' he said, chewing on a plug of tobacco and spitting a stream of juice into the water.
Sarah huddled in the bows and said nothing. The smell of fish guts seemed to have permeated every inch of the small craft and she was feeling distinctly queasy.
âI'm wasting good fishing time by doing this,' Moses grumbled. âThe herring are running and I'm losing money by taking you to Maldon.'
âYou're being paid,' she said, stung into a response. âAnd you're helping to save Davey's life. Surely that means something to you.'
His blue eye glared at her while his brown eye focused on the sail. âI got to make a living,' he muttered. âStart baling out: the sea's getting up a bit.' He tossed a pannikin at her.
By the time they reached the calmer waters of the River Blackwater Sarah was feeling cold and wretched. When she stepped ashore her legs felt like jelly and her stomach was still churning from the effects of seasickness, but she paid Moses for his services and thanked him, trying not to sound too relieved that they were parting. He tipped his cap and put a fresh twist of tobacco into his mouth before pushing his boat away from the jetty and picking up the oars.
Sarah set off on foot for the station. It was hard going on the tightly packed snow and even harder if she stepped off the path into the drifts at the side of the road, but she arrived at the railway station at midday and bought a ticket for Bishopsgate.
âThe next train will leave at half-past two,' the man in the ticket office said, examining his pocket watch. âThere's a fire in the waiting room.' He peered through the glass partition. âYou look a bit peaky, miss. Are you all right?'