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Authors: Martine Bailey

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‘I'll wager it is. So is everyone written down in such a register? They can't be, can they? Not such as me?'

‘No, just men of property. Name, address, rank, occupation, all scribed out and ready for the plucking. But the likes of me and you? That's the last thing we want, to be inked down in the records.' He frowned. ‘Though, naturally, you've got the judgement against you at the Bailey. Just need a new moniker now, eh, Mary?'

She nodded mutely. Keep your trap shut, she told herself. Especially around Charlie.

‘I need to sleep now, Charlie.' She slipped down beside him, into the crook of his body. After he'd kissed the top of her head, she let herself fall into the dream that she'd lullabied herself with on countless nights. Only this time, she truly was in Charlie's feather bed, not on some hellish, rocky shore.

At dawn, she wanted nothing more than to carry on sleeping beside Charlie's warm body. Yet a stronger leash yanked her up from the warmth, a compulsion she couldn't fight. Leave me be, she protested silently, but it was no good. All her life she'd had to obey these devils of urges, prodding her like toasting forks. Pulling on her gown, she looked down at his placid face. In a moment she had the contents of his wallet weighing nicely in her pocket. Then, silently as a cat, she crept up close beside him, and scarcely breathing, slid out the silver case from under the bed. Taking it to the glimmer of light at the door, she removed the Penny Heart. Pulling it over her head, she tucked it down into her bodice. Again she felt that jolt, as if the metal disc joined past with future. She would keep it there by her beating heart. She would never take it off again, she vowed, until her revenge was complete.

Charlie's study might have passed for that of any man of law. The tall stool and copying desk were surrounded by impressive ledgers and cubbyholes. Paper, in different weights and colours, was stacked in piles, along with every hue of bottled of ink. Mary knew the manner of his work: anything from an attestation of an injury in a coal-mining disaster, to a false warrant from a bank. He had a very fine hand; or rather, he had a dozen fine hands, and hundreds of signatures filed away, to be copied out with a flourish.

Helping herself to papers, pens, and inks, she stuffed them inside her bundle. It took a frustratingly long time to find the first item she needed, the register he had spoken of. At last she saw it on a top shelf. It was all written out in parishes, not for the ease of someone like herself. Finally, she found it – a certain name, and beside it the address and occupation, just as Charlie had said. Hurriedly, she scribbled it down, sliding the scrap of paper deep inside her bodice. A groan from the bedroom made her freeze like a statue. Then, as Charlie's snoring started up again, she finished her task as fast as she might.

Now for the false Characters he was famed for. They were still filed by occupation: Able Seaman, Accomptant, Barber, Clerk – ah, here was what she wanted: a false Character for a Cook. Written by a ‘Mistress Humphries', it told of five years' service to an alderman, with never a dinner spoiled, nor a day taken sick. She pocketed the paper and made her way out by the back stairs. Peg Blissett was the name on the Character. She rehearsed it to herself as she set off in the early light. Fare thee well, Mary Jebb, I've had it with you and all your sorrows. Good day, Peg Blissett, she mouthed, eager to find that estimable cook a grand position up in the north country.

9
Greaves, Lancashire
Summer 1792

 

∼ Gingerbread for Fairings ∼

Weigh eight pounds of flour mixed with as much brickdust or clay as it will take and rub a pound and a half of used fat into it; put a pound and a half of raw sugar and spice with it, hot cayenne is cheaper bought than ginger, and wet up with treacle and water into a tight dough; let it lie a while. Then take your fancy mould; dust out with flour; press the dough well upon it, then take off, and bake in a cool oven. When cooked and cooled, gild it as you please: Dutch copper is best, being a counterfeit of gold of much less expense, though it does rub away pretty quickly. A small block might be sold for 6d but more fantastical shapes and gilding will command a most substantial profit.

Mother Eve's Secrets

 

Secretly, I was glad that my wedding was to be a quiet affair, performed by special licence at a church near Huxley House. It was with some relief that I learned Anne and Jacob could not attend, being summoned to a Mission meeting at Bradford that same week. Just before she left, Anne called at Palatine House to give me her wedding gift. In her precious free hours she had embroidered a wedding sampler, bearing Michael's and my own name, above our wedding date. It was the finest piece of embroidery she had ever made; the patterns of lover's knots, flower baskets, and wreaths all sewn in the most exquisite tiny stitches. Yet it was the verse she had embroidered that gave me the greatest pang:

Others, dear girl, may wish thee wealth,

I wish thee love and rosy health;

Health and love to make thee say,

Happy was my bridal day.

‘I shall always hang this above my bed,' I said, my voice catching in my throat. ‘I mean – our bed,' I added, scarcely believing that I would soon share a bed with Michael Croxon.

‘I would not have stitched it if I'd known it would make you so miserable,' she said with a teasing chuckle.

‘Oh, Anne, thank you for your good wishes – I do so hope they all come true.'

‘You must write to me, dear. And I will visit if I can.'

She took me in her arms, and for a few moments we awkwardly embraced.

∗ ∗ ∗

‘Let me give you some advice,' Mrs Croxon told me. ‘My son likes to cut a fine figure, and you must rise to his level, Grace.' Money for new costumes was therefore discreetly provided by Mr Croxon, and I did my best to make the necessary purchases. The mere six weeks' preparation time meant that Mrs Croxon's dressmaker was made frantic by the commission, limited as she was in both time and fabrics. As my mother-in-law was addicted to the latest fashion plates, I soon found myself parading in the apparel of a wealthy provincial matron. She favoured high-brimmed flower-pot hats trimmed with spiky feathers – a style that suited my tall figure very ill. Even my new gowns of fashionable white muslin left me feeling uncomfortably half-dressed. I made a stand when Mrs Croxon tried to foist upon my head a gigantic mob cap the size of a potato sack. How ridiculous I looked! Henceforth, however ungrateful I might appear, I insisted on plain dark gowns of garnet or brown silk, and my one great favourite, a ruby mantle lined with otter fur. As for my wedding gown, it was spoiled by its over-garnishing of lace and frills, and such a fandango of feathers and ribbons on my headdress, that I felt like a spectacle from a pantomime. The seamstress steadfastly flattered me and made some rapid alterations with her needle, but nevertheless, despite a fortune spent on silks and velvets, I still felt myself to be the scarecrow of my father's jibes.

In her passion for my wedding preparations, Mrs Croxon insisted a bride cake be baked, and that I inspect it at each stage of its embellishment. It was a great circular cake, more than a foot in diameter, first covered in almond paste and then hard white sugar icing. With an air of conferring a very great favour, my future mother-in-law took me to her closet and lifted the lid of an ancient box.

‘These are the Blair family devices, my heirlooms I might say. Look, here is the Blair crest in sugar.' She held in her palm a portrait moulded in white, of an angel's head circled by streamers of coiling hair. ‘Be careful. It is very old and may crack.' When she passed it to me I saw that the ornament, though as exquisite as a snowy cameo, was made from sugar.

‘My grandmother gave the entire collection to me.' She laid out a row of exquisite sugar devices: a gilded crown, toy-like beasts, shells, and other fancies. ‘Ah, now this is the mould for a Blair bride cake.' She laid two wooden boxwood moulds on the table, in which curious rectangular designs had been carved. ‘You cannot guess what it is?'

I shook my head.

‘It is from a rather cruder age, I'm afraid. It is a great tester bed.'

I looked more closely and recognised that the six sections could indeed be moulded and then assembled to make a tiny bed, complete with four posts, gathered curtains, and tassels the size of pin-heads.

I must admit I blushed at that, for this woman was, after all, Michael's mother.

‘Yes, I know what you are thinking. Let us have the wedding first.'

But it was not the wedding I was blushing at, but the wedding night, and whatever vast tester bed lay waiting for me at Delafosse.

‘Is there much company up at Earlby?' I asked my prospective mother-in-law another day.

‘Oh, the village is tolerably dull I suppose. Small farmers and weavers. But the Hall had such grand rooms, and the parkland was extensive. There is a hunting tower that was used for banquets in the days of Good Queen Bess, and a summerhouse quite in the classical style. One night there was a dance – my head was quite giddy from the punch—'

‘Grace doesn't want to hear those old tales,' interrupted her husband. ‘Michael will have his work cut out with the mill.'

‘Once the business thrives, they may aspire.' Mrs Croxon shot an affronted glance at her husband. He snorted and turned back to his newspaper. ‘One may always dream,' she pronounced defiantly, rising to leave the room.

I was growing used to such sudden chills in the Croxon household; in response I cherished hopes of far greater happiness for myself and Michael. Delafosse Hall would be a new start, far from this bickering family and my own father's sour remarks. I must make a friend of my housekeeper, Mrs Harper, I decided. In my daydreams, Michael and I were at last alone, waited upon by biddable servants, a pair of lovers in our own Castle Amorous, where our love could grow undisturbed.

The means to make my daydreams more substantial arrived as an appointment with a certain Mr Tully, the notary who had drawn up my grandmother's will. Though ordinarily a resident of Leeds, he wrote that he was drawing up my Marriage Settlement, and asked me to call upon him at a fellow lawyer's office in Whalley. I told Michael of my appointment, and after giving the news to his father, he offered to accompany me.

The appointment fell on the day of the town's annual fair, and the bustle and flurry infected us with the high spirits of a holiday. From the moment we met, Michael was more animated than I had ever seen him before. In his father's grand carriage, with only his mother's maid as chaperone, he made waspish remarks about those we passed; I supposed he was trying to impress me, his new bride, with his superior manner. I was as impressible as butter, dazzled by my elegant husband-to-be, and flattered to be seen at his side. When we arrived at the lawyer's he hung back, making enquiries of a groom about an equipage, as the eleven chimes of our appointment hour rang out across the yard.

When, reluctantly, he followed me into the dark-panelled lawyer's chambers, we had a cold reception. ‘Miss Moore?' said an elderly dyspeptic-looking man in a horsehair wig, lifting a large gold pocket watch from his waistcoat. ‘You are late. My next appointment is at noon. Sit, sit. I must make haste.'

Flustered, I nodded and he began to speak. Perhaps because Mr Tully had been my grandmother's notary, I had expected his manner to be straightforward. Instead he declaimed a jumble of percentages and legal terms, all spoken very fast in a monotone. The uncomfortable notion came to me, that because of my poor understanding of mathematics, I might never comprehend my own affairs. Thereafter, my anxiety made me ever more confused. Finally he announced with formality, ‘Those are the terms of the marriage settlement. You agree, Miss Moore?' The lawyer again took out his pocket watch. The clock on the wall showed that only fifteen minutes remained before noon.

‘Mr Croxon,' I said, turning to Michael. ‘I pray you understand the terms? I am afraid I am not used to such complicated arithmetic.'

Michael nodded. ‘Put your mind at rest, Miss Moore. I comprehend it entirely. You need not concern yourself.'

To my surprise, Mr Tully issued an exasperated sigh and fixed his eyes upon me.

‘This will not do, Miss Moore. It is my duty as your Trustee to ensure that you understand your situation entirely, before signing the Agreement. I shall repeat the terms in the simplest language. There are but three items you must inwardly digest. Firstly, some would say that the value of your property is presently inflated to an artificially high price. I wish you to know that I for one believe this cotton fever will not persist.'

‘Sir, you cannot know—' interrupted Michael.

The lawyer fixed his moist eye upon Michael, showing a marked disdain. ‘Oh, I do know, sir. I have lived long enough to understand that the pendulum of land prices will eternally rise and fall. Whatever you may have been told otherwise, the current price of land such as Whitelow cannot remain so high.' The last was said so stridently that I heard Michael make a tiny tut of derision.

‘Secondly, Miss Moore, under the terms of your grandmother's will, all rents from the land remain payable to you alone, even after marriage.'

‘I see,' I said

‘The farms currently pay £300 per annum each Lammastide, the first day of August, into an account I hold for you at Hoare's Bank, London. The balance is at present £3,000, as your grandmother made no withdrawals for the ten years prior to her death.'

Michael gave a little gasp. ‘Quite a nest egg.'

‘You might say so,' the lawyer said drily.

‘I had no idea,' I said. Michael met my eyes with a little grimace of joy. ‘And, Mr Tully,' I continued, ‘you spoke of the inflated value of the property. Might you tell me its value at present?'

‘In the region of £6,000.'

I shook my head in bewilderment. ‘I'm not sure I comprehend such a sum.'

Mr Tully sprang forward. ‘I shall attempt to explain. Take such a building as the one we are currently occupying, a dozen rooms, a useful situation. A house such as this might be valued at £100. Ergo, the value of your land alone might buy sixty such houses, and with the rents added to it, as many as ninety houses. So you see, your whole legacy is equal to the value of a small village.'

I nodded, both grateful and surprised.

‘Miss Moore, I must tell you that upon your marriage, though the property of Whitelow remains within your legal ownership, it must be managed entirely by your husband. Under the doctrine of
couverture
, you are not, of course, as a woman, able to enter any form of contract. Consequently, your husband will need to take upon himself the management of your property.'

‘I think I understand,' I said. ‘So while I legally own Whitelow I cannot make contracts upon it in my own name?'

The lawyer nodded briskly, and made to continue. But Michael shifted in his chair and spoke again. ‘Am I to understand, sir, that you should therefore transfer the deeds of the property to me?'

Mr Tully scowled. ‘I can think of only one reason to do so, Mr Croxon, and that would be to raise a sum against the property. And that is entirely what I have just spent valuable time advising your future wife not to do. Miss Moore is my client, and I strongly recommend that her inheritance is not exposed to such risky circumstances.'

‘But we must build a mill, sir. Are you not familiar with the saying, “He is not fit for riches, who is afraid to use them”? Our two families are agreed upon it.'

Mr Tully turned back to me, his pale eyes skewering me with a most penetrating gaze.

‘While I am not in a position expressly to forbid such an action, may I suggest, Miss Moore, that all actions in the nature of loans and mortgages be directed to me, at my Leeds office, for my personal scrutiny?'

‘I don't see—' began Michael.

‘I am addressing Miss Moore,' the lawyer interrupted.

‘Mr Tully is only helping me to safeguard my grandmother's legacy,' I said to Michael, in what I hoped was a calming manner. ‘What harm can it do to obtain his advice?'

Michael, seeming to reconsider, nodded civilly – though a trifle stiffly – to us both.

‘If all is now clear, Miss Moore, I will call my clerk as witness and you will both sign the Marriage Settlement.' And so we did. Michael made a rapid, theatrical squiggle with the lawyer's pen. I glanced once more through the dense papers of legal scribework, and tentatively signed my name.

Drawing his chair back, and placing his hands on the table, the lawyer looked up at the clock, just then commencing its midday chimes.

‘Fortunately, my final item is eminently simple. Miss Moore, as you remain the legal owner of the property, all instructions must of course be accompanied by your express permission, in the form of a current signature. Your signature, if I may be so bold, is a valuable commodity. Without your signature, I will not act.'

I reached out my hand to thank Mr Tully, but already the chimes of noon had ended; and, with a curt nod, we were dismissed from the room.

‘What an abominable pettifogger!' exclaimed Michael as we returned to the busy street. ‘Why the Devil did your grandmother choose such a buffoon?'

BOOK: A Taste for Nightshade
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