Read Sweet Rosie Online

Authors: Iris Gower

Sweet Rosie (3 page)

BOOK: Sweet Rosie
4.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Llinos rested her hand on his arm. ‘Isn’t it time you were getting married and having a brood of children of your own?’ she asked quietly. He met her gaze; he hid nothing from Llinos.
‘You know life is not that simple for me.’
‘I know. But you are like the brother I never had. I care about you, Watt, I can’t bear to see you wasting your life on a woman who can never really be yours.’
He moved away. ‘Llinos, you’re overstepping the mark, what I do in my private life is my own business.’ His gaze softened as she lowered her head. ‘Look, I can’t help how I feel, can I? I’m in love with Maura and none of us can choose who we fall in love with, can we?’
She nodded, accepting his point, she herself had married a man most people, including her father, had considered unsuitable.
‘I only want what’s best for you, Watt.’
‘Well try to accept that Maura is best for me, she is the only woman I’ll ever love. I didn’t know what love was before she and I . . .’ His voice trailed into silence, he was thinking of Lily, his first love, Lily the talented painter; Lily, the girl who had betrayed him, betrayed them all.
The silence stretched on and, in the way that women have of knowing a man’s thoughts, Llinos touched his hand. ‘You are right. We must forget the past, put all of the bad things that have happened out of our minds. That’s something Joe doesn’t seem able to do. Is he acting strangely, Watt?’
‘He’s acting like a worried husband! He adores you and so do I.’ They smiled at each other. They had shared a great many bad times, which was why Watt could never leave Pottery House and seek a more lucrative post somewhere else.
‘I’d better let you rest.’ He moved to the door. ‘We can talk later if you feel up to it.’
She looked up at him. ‘I’ll be up to it! I need to get back into the swing of things, it’s pointless sitting brooding all day. It’s time I got back into harness.’
As Watt left the sunlit room, he sighed. Like Llinos he had had his share of problems but he was a happy man now, all thoughts of the past were well and truly behind him.
Lily Wesley walked through the soft grass of the gardens that surrounded Portland House. The riot of roses ran over the arbour arch, drooping petals, ready to fall as though tired of their full-blown heaviness.
She sat on the garden seat and looked back at the house. It was not a large house, just a cottage really. Its name implied a much grander establishment but Lily loved the place; she had been secure there these past three years.
She had married a good man, a man so old she thought he would be past all the urges that seemed to rule men. She had been mistaken. Tom Wesley had been a vigorous man despite his years. But she had endured and now he was dead. And she was the new owner. She smiled to herself: she was a woman of property, as good as Llinos Mainwaring any day. Better, because she had married a respectable Englishman and Llinos had married a savage.
Briefly, Lily thought of Saul Marks, the man who had taken her virginity. She had thought she had loved him, thought he was going to take her to the heights of society, but she had been wrong. Still that had been an unhappy time of her life; now she was the Widow Wesley, respected in the small community of Lougher. She felt happy and secure living in her own cottage that faced the might of the great estuary where wild ponies grazed on mossy banks, sometimes up to their thin flanks in water.
She rubbed her arms; the sun was dropping away beyond the horizon, the evening was growing chill. It was time she went indoors and lit the lamps. Reluctantly, she turned her back on the garden, so peaceful, so quiet.
The cottage was well planned. The large sitting room opened out into a dining room and, at the other side of the passageway, there was a small study. Beyond was a large airy kitchen. Above stairs, there were three bedrooms, all of a good size. So much room for one woman.
Lily wandered into the study; it was there that her husband had kept all his business papers. Tom was a methodical man and so it had been no surprise when Lily had learned that there were no outstanding bills to pay. She felt alone, lonely for the first time in her life. There seemed no direction, no purpose any more. Looking after Tom had been her work, something she was good at. A girl came in to clean every day and Lily, with a little effort, had learned to be a modest cook.
Thinking of cooking made her realize she was hungry. There was some cold ham in the larder and a few slightly over-ripe tomatoes. The bread was freshly baked that morning and Lily sat down to what would have been a feast in the days when she had worked at the pottery as a painter.
Seated at the table alone, she realized she actually missed Tom. He had been a big man, a genial man. He had been happy, asking little of her except that she cook his food and warm his bed when required. That was something she had come to accept; though she never enjoyed the intimacies of the bedchamber.
She was clearing away the dishes, folding up the big damask tablecloth, when there was a knock on the door. She hesitated, wondering who could be calling on her at this time of the evening. She tidied her hair and pressed down the creases in her black dress and walked along the coolness of the passage.
‘Yes?’ She stood a little inside the front door looking at the man who waited on the step. She could not help noticing there was a large bag at his side and his clothes were dusty as if he had been travelling.
‘Good evening.’ He lifted his hat. ‘I’m sorry to call so late and without warning but the journey has taken much longer than I had anticipated.’
He spoke nicely, with a cultured English accent, and Lily looked at him, wondering what he could possibly want with her.
‘Can I help you, are you lost?’ she asked hesitantly. He was clearly an educated gentleman and Lily had never overcome her sense of respect, amounting almost to awe, of anyone with learning.
‘I think you can. I’m James Wesley, Tom’s nephew.’ He moved past her into the passage and put down his bag. He dusted his hat and hung it on the hallstand before slipping out of his coat. ‘I expect he’s told you all about me. I’m afraid I have been something of a thorn in his side.’
‘What are you doing?’ There was something like panic in Lily’s voice. ‘This is my house and I can’t have you staying here. It just would not do, you must see that.’
He walked through into the sitting room and dropped into the big chair that had been Tom’s.
‘Sorry, little lady, this is my home, I’m here to stay and I’m afraid you have no choice in the matter.’
Lily sank into a chair and stared uncomprehendingly at him. How could he threaten to take her home away? She swallowed hard; her new-found security was vanishing like a mist before her eyes.
‘But he left the house to me,’ she said. ‘I was Tom’s wife, you must know that. We were married all legal-like in the village church.’
‘I’m sure you were.’ James smiled not unsympathetically. ‘But, you see, I am the only male heir. This is my property now.’ He shrugged. ‘I don’t expect you to move out at once, of course, especially not at this time of night, so we’ll just have to put up with each other for the time being.’
He smiled and dimples appeared in his cheeks. ‘Indeed, if you choose, you may stay here indefinitely, providing we find a live-in maid to satisfy the proprieties.’
Lily breathed a sigh of relief, at least she had time to think, time to consult Mr Brentford the solicitor who handled Tom’s affairs.
‘I’ll make up the bed in the spare room with fresh sheets,’ she said. ‘The place isn’t aired, of course. There’s been no fire for some time in there but the weather has been warm enough, I dare say.’
‘That’s kind of you,’ he said. ‘That will do for tonight but when we are a little more organized, I’d like the main bedroom, the one that looks over the estuary. That was always a favourite of mine, that view, something you cannot buy.’
His cheek took her breath away but for the moment she held her tongue. Mr James Wesley might be the legal heir to Tom’s possessions and he might not but, in any case, as the widow, Lily was sure she must have rights too.
Later, when she climbed into bed, it was strangely comforting to think of James asleep in the other room. On an impulse, she had put a vase of greenery on his window sill; tomorrow she would pick fresh flowers. She snuggled down under the sheets. Now that the shock was wearing off, she realized it might not be a bad idea to have a male protector about the place and James was a very personable young man. When she drifted off to sleep, it was with a smile on her lips as she dreamed of James slipping a gold band on to her finger.
Llinos was pleased with the revamped firebird designs. The bold tail feathers of the bird were painted large on the dinner service that was meant for one of the richer families of Swansea. To have her own pottery wares on the tables of the élite was something she had always dreamed of.
‘You look better today, my love.’ Joe had come into the room on silent feet. Her father used to say that Joe was creeping about the house but her husband was naturally quiet, his movements, his voice, his every action contained. Joe had an inner strength about him that made people respect him in spite of the superstition about his origins that still abounded among the townspeople.
‘I am feeling better, Joe.’ She held out her arms to him and he drew her close. She loved him and wanted him as much as she had on their wedding night. He would always thrill her, even when they were both old and grey he would always be handsome in her eyes.
‘You are pleased with the new, bolder patterns, then?’ Joe held her in his arms, his long silky hair brushed against her cheek like tender fingers.
‘I think you are a man of vision, my husband,’ she said softly. He smiled and put her away from him. He stood near the door, his hands thrust into his pockets.
‘Ah, you think I can do no wrong. You are biased in my favour which is what a good wife should be.’
‘And you have been everything a good husband should be.’ Joe had been at her side constantly since she had lost the baby and yet she sensed something in him, a withdrawing of himself from her, and it troubled her. But she must let him be free; she could not tie him to her apron strings; Joe had never been that sort of man.
Llinos made up her mind, it was time she took charge of the pottery again. ‘Tomorrow, I’ll go back to work. Now I’m feeling so much better I need something to do with my time.’
Joe nodded his approval. ‘That’s what I wanted to hear, now I know you are on the mend and I can breathe easy.’
Llinos forced herself to smile; he seemed eager to go. ‘And you can have a drink at the club with the men. Oh, don’t think you fool me for one minute, Mr Mainwaring, you have been chafing at the bit these past weeks!’
‘Of course I have!’ He opened the door. ‘I think it’s about time I asserted myself. I shall go to the club tonight and there will be no complaints from you, madam!’
As Llinos watched from the window, Joe strolled along the drive, turning only once to wave to her. When he was out of sight, she returned to the drawings and took up a pencil. But she was thinking about Joe and how happy they had always been together. Was the death of their daughter going to change that? Perhaps she had taken everything for granted, had been too happy in her marriage. She shivered and bent over the paper, staring at it blankly. She was worrying about nothing. Joe loved her, would always love her. If nothing else in this world was safe, their love was.
CHAPTER TWO
The paint shed was quiet; the artists were engrossed in their work of decorating the china. Looking down the long table that was littered with pots of spirit and discarded colours, Llinos watched as Watt demonstrated to one of the newcomers how to fill in the latest designs. He worked with bold, confident strokes of the brush, bringing into being the riot of red and gold feathers of the firebird design.
Llinos, wrapped in a paint-stained apron, her sleeves rolled above her elbows, moved closer. ‘You haven’t lost your touch, Watt.’
He made a face at her as she went on past him. Llinos ignored him.
‘Good morning, Pearl, how do you like the new designs?’
‘Morning, Mrs Mainwaring.’ Pearl was inclined to be formal when other, less senior, workers were in earshot. She brushed her face with the back of her hand and left a streak of rust paint across her cheek. She put her head on one side, examining her painting. ‘Not a bad design, though some think birds are unlucky.’
‘That’s just silly talk!’ Llinos smiled. ‘The china is selling well, birds or not.’
‘How’s my Rosie shaping up as a maid?’ Pearl asked. ‘Pity the girl hasn’t got her mam’s talent with a brush, isn’t it?’ She laughed good-naturedly.
‘Rosie’s doing very well,’ Llinos said. ‘She’s as good a worker as her mother any day. She has a much sweeter nature though!’
Pearl laughed, her head flung back, her dark hair escaping from her cap. She was not one whit offended by Llinos’s jibe. They knew each other well; Pearl was a trusted overseer, her tongue sharp sometimes but her heart always kind.
‘How are you keeping, Pearl?’ Llinos did not need a reply. ‘That’s a silly question, you look fit as a fiddle.’ It was true; Pearl was blooming with health. Her cheeks were full, her large breasts straining the material of her apron. She laid her hand on her rounded stomach.
‘He’s kicking like a mule today,’ she said cheerfully. ‘I’ll be glad when he’s out, I will indeed!’
‘Gossiping again, Pearl!’ Watt rested his hand on Pearl’s shoulder. He caught Llinos’s eye and winked. ‘You shouldn’t be so active in the nights, Pearl, you need to get some sleep at your age instead of fooling about with Will Shepherd all night!’
‘Hey watch your tongue!’ Pearl’s eyes were full of humour. ‘You’re not too old to get a slap across the earhole, mind.’
‘I think you asked for that, didn’t you, Watt? Well, I’d better get on.’
BOOK: Sweet Rosie
4.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Only One by Kelly Mooney
The Golden Leg by Dale Jarvis
After the Moon Rises by Bentley, Karilyn
The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty
Thankful for Love by Peggy Bird
Watersmeet by Ellen Jensen Abbott
Death on the Diagonal by Blanc, Nero
The Christmas Tree Guy by Railyn Stone