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Chapter Six

During the next few days, as the rain fell relentlessly outside and darkness closed in by four, Ellie grew quietly more and more desperate. Mealtimes with Miss Pringle and Lady Charlotte came round each day with monotonous regularity. Every evening at six, Ellie went down to the vast dining room whose panelled walls were hung with daunting portraits of Grayfield ancestors.

Lady Charlotte was invariably there before her—her ladyship was wheeled in by her footmen from her ground-floor suite at five minutes to six precisely. Once she was settled at the head of the table, she would watch with eagle eyes as the courses were brought in and served on fine china plates adorned with Lord Franklin’s family crest.

Soon Ellie knew by heart the ancestral portraits that hung on the walls and the sculptures that adorned every alcove, every niche of the great house. A nightmare for the servants, thought Ellie. They must require constant dusting—something else for Lady Charlotte to complain about. And complaining was her ladyship’s chief occupation, it seemed, especially at mealtimes.

Lady Charlotte criticised every course as it was served, pointing out to the unfortunate butler Mr Huffley that the soup was too hot, or the veal lacked salt. She never complained about the wine, though; she was partial to Madeira or sherry and liked her glass to be constantly replenished.

Miss Pringle didn’t drink wine and she ate her food in hungry nibbles, at the same time endeavouring to listen intently to Lady Charlotte’s every word. Lady Charlotte’s main topic of conversation, once the food had been criticised, was her son—she loved to talk of his travels and his many illustrious acquaintances amongst the ton. But she never, ever spoke of his dead wife, or of his son—who Ellie gathered held some colonial post out in India.

Once, Miss Pringle timidly mentioned after dinner that Ellie had told her she could play the piano.

‘The piano? Is this true?’ Lady Charlotte asked.

‘Only a little, my lady,’ Ellie replied. ‘My mother taught me to play in Paris and I—’

‘I cannot bear the sound,’ Lady Charlotte interrupted, ‘unless it is played by a true musician. I know what I shall do to entertain you this evening, Elise. You may come to my private parlour to look at some miniatures that a London artist painted of Lord Franklin when he was twenty-one. They are very fine. Come in an hour—I will have taken my rest by then.’

Ellie didn’t think she was early, but she must have been, because after knocking and walking into Lady Charlotte’s ground-floor suite, she saw Lady Charlotte in there alone. And she was standing—standing—by the sideboard, pouring herself a large glass of sherry.

Lady Charlotte heard her and spun round. With a face like stone, her ladyship returned to her nearby bath chair—walking with no obvious difficulty—and sat down. She said, icily, ‘Some days, I find that I can move a little better than others. Mostly, of course, I am a complete invalid. Why are you here?’

It took a minute for Ellie to find her voice. ‘You wished to show me some miniatures, my lady.’

‘Ah. The miniatures. Pringle got them out for me—they’re here, somewhere...’

Ellie looked around almost wildly for a servant or footman—for anyone else who might have witnessed the scene. Did anyone else know Lady Charlotte could walk?

Whether they did or not, Ellie knew she had to keep silent about this strange episode. You’re in enough trouble already. Quite enough.

* * *

Lady Charlotte appeared to forget the incident altogether and continued to goad Ellie at every opportunity. ‘I hear,’ she announced one evening at dinner, ‘that London has changed out of all recognition in the last few years.’

Miss Pringle looked up nervously, her eyes darting to Ellie; Ellie remained silent, aware now of Lady Charlotte glaring ominously at her.

‘I have been reliably informed,’ Lady Charlotte went on, ‘that the city is becoming overrun with poverty-stricken vagrants.’

Miss Pringle was nodding. ‘Oh, indeed,’ she echoed. ‘Overrun. Quite true.’

‘In particular,’ pronounced Lady Charlotte, ‘one hears the most dreadful stories of foreigners who come over daily on the packet boats hunting for work, or more likely looking for mischief. The French, in other words. Now that the war is over, I hope that our prime minister and his government will send them all back to where they belong.’

Miss Pringle let out a little gasp. Ellie rose from her chair abruptly and said, ‘Please excuse me from the remainder of the meal, your ladyship.’

Lady Charlotte peered crossly at her. ‘What? What? It’s really most irregular of you to retire before I have even begun my dessert!’

‘I realise that. But I feel particularly tired today and I really need to go to my room. Pray accept my apologies—Lady Charlotte, Miss Pringle.’

She made a brief curtsey and hurried from the dining room. Just outside the doors stood the two footmen who pushed Lady Charlotte around in her bath chair. They had their backs to Ellie and were talking. And she felt a sense of cold shock, as their topic of conversation became only too apparent.

‘What do you make of the young French girl, then?’ one was saying.

‘If you ask me, she’s not as quiet as she looks. Got a spark of liveliness in her eyes, most definitely.’ The other footman chuckled. ‘A pity it’s all wasted here. But perhaps she misbehaved in London...’

Ellie walked past them and past the antique statues to the stairs, her cheeks burning as she climbed up to her room on the second floor. And as she stood in her lonely sitting room, trapped in that great, cold English mansion, with the footmen’s whispered vitriol and Lady Charlotte’s stark disapproval still echoing in her ears, she felt a hollow emptiness inside.

She’d been here nearly a week. The thought of another week was beyond endurance. I cannot stay here any longer, she thought. I cannot stay here, where I don’t belong.

To leave would mean breaking her vow to her father—her promise that she would come to England and be safe. But it had been a huge, huge mistake to put herself at the mercy of strangers.

She had to get away, and Brussels was the only place she could think of: Brussels and the lodgings where she and her father had stayed for the last few weeks of her poor father’s life. Maybe the kind landlady would allow her to rent her old room again, if it was still free? And surely she could find a job nearby—on a market stall, or in the baker’s shop itself. Then she would be able to visit her papa’s grave at the little church of St Marie every day.

She pushed aside the heavy curtains and gazed out of the window into the night. After days of heavy rain, the velvety sky was clear at last and far beyond the woods surrounding the Hall’s gardens, she could see the moonlight reflected off the distant sea. Suddenly she remembered the small fishing port she’d noticed on her way here.

Bircham Staithe, Mary had told her it was called. It lay only a little way beyond the boundaries of Lord Franklin’s estate—less than a mile, she guessed. And once there...

She had money. She could make up a story to some kind sea captain about how she had to return home now that the long war was over. Surely it would be straightforward to pay for a passage to northern France on a fishing vessel.

Already she was putting on her walking boots and her hooded cloak; already she was picking up her black leather valise, then she let herself quietly out of her room and stood there listening. The big house was absolutely silent. Making her way swiftly down the narrow servants’ staircase, she slipped out of a side door into the enveloping darkness of the garden.

Freedom. She drew in deep breaths of the cold night air, but still hesitated before plunging into the shrubbery; because she knew that like most landowners, Lord Franklin kept half-a-dozen great mastiffs as guard dogs, which were let loose from their kennels by his groundsmen after dark.

Sometimes the dogs were released for only half an hour, though the timing of their outings was changed deliberately each night. But now Ellie reminded herself that she’d heard them in the grounds earlier, as dinner was being served, so surely they would be back in their kennels by now? She took the path through the shrubbery, aware of her pulse racing, but there were no cries of alarm from the house—neither dogs nor servants were giving chase. All was mercifully quiet.

Ellie had learned, during her travels with her father, to choose her route carefully, then follow it without hesitation. She’d noted on her first day here that beyond the shrubbery, smooth lawns and flowerbeds stretched to the boundary of Lord Franklin’s estate, where the stone wall offered footholds in plenty for her to climb. From there she judged it was only a short distance to the road which led to the little port of Bircham Staithe.

She crossed the gardens and climbed the wall swiftly in the darkness. All that remained was to listen out for pursuers—and this was what troubled her now, as she hurried along the road that led down to the sea. She thought she’d heard muffled footsteps, in the woods to her right. She stopped, her breath catching in her throat.

Her thoughts flew to the man in the long grey coat, who’d held her father’s compass in his hand and looked at her as if he could read her innermost secrets. Her heart hammered, but there was nothing now—no sound at all, except the whispering of the wind and the distant hiss of the sea. Perhaps it had been a small wild animal, or a bird scuffling in the undergrowth...

Four men loomed out of the darkness ahead of her. Four men dressed in the rough garb of fishermen, who’d spread out to bar her escape.

‘Well, well,’ the first one said, drawing closer. He wore a short serge jacket and strands of lank fair hair hung around his thin face. ‘What have we got here? Looks like we’ve struck lucky tonight, lads.’

The Captain And His Innocent

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