Friendship's Bond (28 page)

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Authors: Meg Hutchinson

Tags: #Sagas, #Fiction

BOOK: Friendship's Bond
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‘Mr Turley’s opinion is a sensible one.’

Though you yourself don’t be inclined to it! Ada noted the curtness of the reply but kept the observation to herself saying instead, ‘Everybody thought as much, even Jinny Jinks and meself agreein’ wi’ Ezekial there be no more ill feelin’ towards, Leah, that we should all be as we was a buyin’ of her dairy.’

The woman had said nothing which could not have been aired in the street or even in the chapel. Much of the same had been said there already so why bring it here? Thorpe’s mind raced. Had she truly come to talk of that stupid argument or was it simply bluff, was she lulling him into a false sense of security before finally delivering her blow? He looked at the woman watching him with what might almost be a smile. Knowing he had to answer, he pushed the words through stiff lips.

‘It is good to hear the dispute is ended and things are settled.’

‘Ar well,’ Ada’s dull eyes glinted, ‘don’t everythin’ be settled . . .’

It wasn’t
almost
a smile, it was the grin of a cobra poised to strike! Hairs on the back of Thorpe’s neck stood on end as the woman paused. He could strike her down with the poker, kill her, finish it here and now then vow she had struck him first and in the struggle to take the poker from her it had struck her on the temple; and the reason for her attack? Her misguided and wrongful accusation of abuse of her daughter.

‘Y’ see . . .’

He clenched his fingers as though already gripping the fire iron. ‘It be this way, Mr Thorpe, we all of us women be of the same mind regardin’ tekin’ custom back to Leah but ain’t not one of we be of a mind to go a’ tellin’ her so and that be what brings me to your door. I be to ask would you talk along of Leah Marshall?’

Chapter 25

‘How long have you been here?’

Edward frowned at the boy standing beside the horse, one hand stroking its shoulder, then before he could reply went on, ‘Do you have any idea the worry you’ve caused going off like that!’

‘I’m sorry Edward.’ Alec Romney’s blue-grey eyes clouded.

‘I should think you are sorry. What in the world made you do such a thing!’

Alec took a moment to answer. ‘You have heard what the people of the town say of me: I am a foreigner and so cannot be trusted.’

‘That’s just stupid tittle-tattle, it will have been forgotten in a month.’

His fingers suddenly stilled, his gaze rested on the smooth body of the horse. Alec seemed to enter a different world, one which reflected unhappiness on his young face.

‘No Edward,’ he said quietly, ‘what you call tittle-tattle does not always fade so readily. It can live and grow, spreading its poison, scarring minds and breaking hearts.’

Edward heard the catch of a stifled sob and as the boy’s glance lifted again saw in a beam of setting sun the sheen of tears glint in those wide honest eyes.

Alec emerged from a world only he knew. ‘Believe me Edward,’ he smiled painfully, ‘I know . . . I have seen the harm gossip can do, the pain it can inflict, and since coming here to Wednesbury I have seen it again; I have seen the sadness it still brings to Ann’s face, the harm it is doing to the livelihood of Grandmother Leah, the wretchedness it is placing in hearts filled only with kindness. Try to understand, I could not let that continue.’

What had happened in this young lad’s life, what had caused the grief lying deep in his eyes? Edward chose his words carefully. ‘I do understand, Alec,’ he smiled briefly, ‘I understand you did not want to be the cause of contention, that it was for the sake of Leah and Ann, to give them some measure of peace, but wouldn’t it have been kinder to tell them before leaving?’

Alec smiled fleetingly then turned again to the horse, riffling its mane through widespread fingers. ‘Kinder, Edward, for whom? For Grandmother Leah maybe, but not I think for Ann. She would have insisted on leaving with me but that could have seen the whole thing start over again; no matter where we went she could have been ostracised, rejected for consorting with a foreigner, for being with me. No Edward, telling Ann of what I planned would not have been a kindness.’

An old head on young shoulders! Appreciation welled in Edward. The lad might have acted wrongly but it had been done for all the right reasons.

‘I have only one fear,’ Alec was speaking again, ‘it is that Ann sees my going as a renunciation of our friendship, and all that we have come to mean to each other.’

‘Then you need have no fear!’ The swift return came sharper than intended. Edward paused, catching hold of his emotions before adding, ‘I hold Ann Spencer to be a better judge of character. It’s my belief she would see your going for what it is, a sincere and very loving act of friendship.’

‘Would you tell her so? Would you tell her and Grandmother Leah I left only out of love for them?’

Grandmother Leah! Edward let the phrase echo in his mind. There had been no affectation in the term, just a quiet affirmation of love and respect. Listening to his own thoughts Edward stepped across to the stall, the horse immediately nuzzling his hand. Should he say that Ann had spent an entire day searching town and heath, tell of Leah’s fainting which was probably helped along by worry over his safety? Edward dismissed the thought. The lad had likely had all he could take for now.

‘If that is the way you want it, then I’ll tell them though I think they would much rather hear it from you.’

Glancing at the man who too had become a friend Alec shook his head. ‘The break is made, Edward, that is the way it must remain. It was wrong of me to come here, to sleep in your barn without obtaining permission.’

‘You slept all night in the barn? Why not come to the house?’

‘To be seen there would have brought the same troubles to you, the people who refused Grandmother Leah’s products would refuse yours. I meant to be gone by daybreak but when I woke you were in the yard. I didn’t want you to know I was here so I decided to hide in the hayloft until it got dark. That way I would not be seen leaving but –’ he patted the horse’s neck – ‘I stayed too long talking with Jess, telling him how much he would like Vanka. Vanka is my donkey, Father bought him when he got too old to perform any more in Cinizelli’s circus. The tricks he learned there delighted us, especially that of putting his nose into pockets. My sister Tasi would put sugar lumps and sweets in the pocket of her coat then after petting Vanka a while would turn to leave. That was when Vanka would wave his head up and down showing the treats “stolen” from Tasi.’

Seeming of a sudden to realise where he was, he said quickly, ‘I’m sorry I disturbed your evening Edward.’

‘Hold on.’ Edward caught a sleeve as Alec brushed past. ‘You are not going anywhere.’

‘I have to.’

‘No, no you don’t have to.’ Edward clung on. ‘You have no idea of the danger – one wrong step on that heath could find you at the bottom of a mine shaft, or should I say you might never be found. It isn’t even known how many there are or where they may be. It would be wiser to stay the night and then if you still feel you have to leave I won’t stand in your way, but one thing I ask, let me tell Leah and Ann you are safe, spare them another night of worry.’

 


I be to ask would you talk along of Leah Marshall.

Thomas Thorpe secured the white clerical collar about his neck and slowly fastened the row of buttons running the length of a long black gown, his fingers lingering on each one from sheer pleasure.

He had been on the verge of refusing Ada Clews’ request. But then a thought had struck him. Going to Leah Marshall’s place would provide him with an unexpected treat.

He smiled at himself in the mahogany-framed cheval mirror which his mother had so prized as he smoothed the sleeves of the gown meticulously about the wrists.

Just at the moment of telling the woman to go, he had realised Leah Marshall would not be the only woman in that house; there would be another one also, who a few hours hence would be giving herself to him: Ann Spencer.

To see the fear leap to her eyes, fear of what she knew she could not avoid if she wished to see the boy again, had appealed. He would watch her glance at the older woman without uttering a single word asking for help; Ann Spencer would know that for her there was no going back.

He took a folded white cloth from where he had placed it with almost reverential care on the foot of his bed and draped it about his shoulders, gently shaking the ends until the fringes dropped neatly into place.

Should he wear this to Chapel House, allow Ann Spencer to be the first to see him so dressed? Perhaps she could be granted the privilege, perhaps he could be gracious, permit her the knowledge it was not just plain Thomas Thorpe who stripped and raped her but Reverend Minister Thomas Thorpe.

The idea was titillating. He raised an arm in the attitude of blessing. ‘Reverend Minister’, he smiled at the reflection silently repeating the words exulting loud on his tongue. Then caution prevailed. To give Ann Spencer the honour of being first to witness him in his ministerial robes might be to rob himself of the longed-for gratification of that first appearance in the chapel. He could not be one hundred per cent certain she would not reveal the secret he wished to keep to himself a while longer, unless . . . he lowered the raised arm in a slow regulated sweep, smiling at the man in the mirror . . . unless once again he borrowed Enoch Phillips’ pony and trap.

 

She had not spoken with Leah. Ann sat on a bench in the park and stared unseeingly at the empty bandstand. She had taken the coward’s way out, telling herself it would be less distressing for the woman if she were not called upon to say goodbye. But that had been a lie, to salve her own conscience. She had waited in that upstairs room until she had seen Leah go for her usual afternoon visit to the cow pasture. She would most likely be there for an hour chatting to each animal like it was a personal friend. Ann’s insides twisted. Those cows proved truer friends to Leah than ever she herself had. She had watched the dark skirts move deeper into the field, the figure become gradually lost among much the larger shapes of the animals, watched until she was sure any backward glance of Leah’s at the house would not show her leaving it.

She had forced herself to walk with head held high, giving no word to the women glancing openly at her as she passed by. They had murmured to one another, murmured and nodded as she crossed the market square stopping at none of its stalls, watching as she turned left along Spring Head no doubt happy in the thought the town might well be seeing the last of her.

And they would. In the very moment Thomas Thorpe’s evil was done she would take Alec and they would run and not stop until they dropped from exhaustion.

‘Sorry Miss . . . Miss . . .’

An apologetic voice was speaking as though from a distance. Ann looked at the man standing a few feet from the bench.

He spoke again, raising a finger to his smartly peaked cap. ‘The park closes at eight, I be ’avin’ to ask you to vacate the grounds.’

Still somewhat bemused, Ann stared at the green-uniformed man now taking a large silver watch from a pocket of his coat.

‘It be that time now, miss.’ He glanced at the watch, ‘There y’be, what did I tell you, eight o’clock it is, church clock don’t never be wrong.’

Led by the nod of the man’s head Ann turned in the direction of the parish church of St Bartholomew, its spire now ebony dark against a sky veiled in the deep grey of late evening.

‘Five, six, seven, eight,’ he counted the strokes, his glance on the watch. Then returning it with a triumphal flourish to his pocket he went on, ‘Church and watch they keeps time together, ain’t one fails the other and both now says eight. And seeing that be the time the park gates needs be closed I ’ave to ask you to leave.’

The market square was empty of shoppers, its stalls closed. ‘
Not like times afore this war started, times was then the market would be busy ’til gone eleven at night, but now wi’ food short and folk not ’avin’ money enough to pay prices some be askin’ then it don’t be wondered at the stalls and shops be closin’ sooner.

Leah’s sad words came to her as Ann walked on into Union Street, its shopfronts dark and shuttered, her footsteps echoing eerily along its silent length.

What imp of fate had decided she come to this town? Why had she and Alec not made a home for themselves in Grimsby? The people of that town had shown no animosity, accepting them for two young people displaced by Zeppelin raids they had read of in their newspapers.

It had been such a relief when Aarno had told her they were nearing the English port. It would cause no concern, he explained, fishing boats from Finland used often to land their catch here and still did whenever they evaded German gunboats, but even so it would be better if Alec and herself went ashore in the evening when the dockside would be empty of fish merchants and porters. They had remained below deck all of that day, Aarno pointing out that the boat should be seen to leave the port with the same number of crew as when it had docked.

Evening had seen Alec and herself dressed once more in their own clothes, he manfully hiding his emotion as he shook hands with each of Maija’s sons. She had not been so strong; her tears had threaded her words of farewell. Aarno had taken them to the house of a cousin who years before had married an English woman and settled in Grimsby, then he had insisted on giving them English coins accrued from the sale of fish. She and Alec would need money, he had said, then left before she could fully protest.

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