Read Beggars and Choosers Online
Authors: Catrin Collier
When the pie was in the oven, the peas podded and mixed with mint in a saucepan waiting to go on the hob, and the raspberries encased in a bread crust ready for baking, she cleaned the gas lamps, washed every surface in the kitchen, scrubbed the table and lino-covered floor and polished the dresser and window. She did her best with the range but it was obvious that it hadn't been taken apart and given a thorough cleaning for weeks. If Mr Evans allowed her to stay, she would clean it in the morning.
She found clean bed linen, towels and tablecloths in the linen cupboard, made her bed and changed the others. She only stopped work to set the buckets on the hobs to boil and set out towels on the rail on the basement range to warm. The soiled linen, she tossed on top of the mountainous pile in the basement.
She laid the table with crockery, cutlery and water glasses, filled a jug with water and set it and the vase of stock in the centre. The bread she used for the summer pudding and cut for the meal wasn't as soft as the ones she had learned to bake under Rhian's guidance. Seeing no yeast in the larder she resolved to order some from the shop tomorrow, if she still had a job.
The buckets started bubbling at twenty-five minutes past two on the kitchen clock. Using a jug she tipped the contents of two buckets down the tube. She ran down to the basement, dragged the full bath away from the pipe and replaced it with another. She found it harder, heavier work to carry buckets from the basement range to fill the baths than to tip water down the tube.
She left three baths steaming, and returned upstairs to tip down the last two buckets of water. She was returning the buckets to the pantry when she heard the door slam in the basement accompanied by the sound of masculine voices.
She opened the oven door. She hoped her employers wouldn't take too long over their baths. Another ten minutes and the pie would be browned to perfection. She was making extra gravy in the pan she had used to braise the meat, when footsteps sounded on the stone steps and the door opened.
âYou're the housekeeper Mrs Rodney has hired for us.'
The man in front of her was massive and she instinctively dropped a curtsy. Her father had been six foot but this man was taller and broader, with wiry, grey curly hair and a stern expression in his grey eyes. He was also turned out in a white shirt, collar, black tie and suit, more suited to a tradesman than a collier. He glanced around the kitchen, then at the table. âHave you made a meal for us, Mrs Jones?'
âYes, sir.'
âMr Evans will do, I'm not used to being called sir. Mrs Rodney stopped us on the way home and told us about you. I take it she has also told you what we expect from you?'
âYes, Mr Evans.'
âThe boys will be up in a minute.' He sat at the head of the table.
She picked up a pair of thick crocheted oven cloths, unlatched the oven door and, straining to hold the weight, heaved the pie on to a wooden board she had placed on the table to receive it. Straining the peas she had boiled with the mint into a bowl, she set them besides the pie, filled the gravy boat, put it on its saucer next to the peas, stood back and waited.
A man opened the door and smiled at her. She retreated, terrified. She had thought Mr Evans enormous but he stood half a head taller. He had to stoop to negotiate the doorway and his shoulders were wider than the door. He was young, with light brown hair and grey eyes like his father, but when she dared to look into them, she saw that they were softer and kinder. He was dressed in moleskin trousers, a dark shirt without a collar, and had a red handkerchief tied around his neck like a farmer.
âThis is the new housekeeper Connie has engaged for us,' his father informed him abruptly.
âHello, I'm Victor Evans.' He offered her his hand. âConnie said she'd told you all about us.'
âConnie?' Sali repeated in confusion.
âMrs Rodney.' Mr Evans looked suspiciously at the pie. âI thought we had a joint of best sirloin in the meat safe.'
âYou did, Mr Evans,' Sali answered nervously, âbut as I'm unused to the oven, I hoped you wouldn't mind if I turned it into a pie.'
âWhen did you arrive?' He looked around the kitchen.
âFour hours ago, Mr Evans. I am afraid I haven't had time to do very much, but if I stay on, I will do better tomorrow.'
âWaste of good sirloin if you ask me.' Mr Evans cut into the pie and spooned a generous helping on to the top plate of the four Sali had stacked in front of him.
âThat looks good, Mrs Jones,' Victor complimented, and Sali realised he was compensating for his father's rudeness. âIt is Mrs Jones, isn't it?'
âYes.' Sali stepped back as a young man rushed headlong into the room.
âWhere have you been?' Mr Evans demanded.
The breath caught in Sali's throat. She had thought Mansel and her brother Geraint handsome, but the boy standing in front of her was the most beautiful she had ever seen. No other word could possibly describe him. His hair was as thick and curly as his father's but blueblack like Mrs Rodney's, and his enormous eyes so dark, the irises appeared to be as black as his hair. His features, smooth, perfect, reminded her of a print she had once seen of a portrait of the young Lord Byron.
Like his father he was dressed in a white shirt, collar, tie and suit as if he were going to a social, or the theatre for the evening.
âYou must be the new housekeeper.' He walked over to Sali, took her hand into his, shook it and to her embarrassment continued to hold it. âIt was so kind of you to get the baths ready and warm the towels. And this,' he looked at the pie, âsmells wonderful ...'
âStop flirting, Joey, and sit down and eat,' his father ordered brusquely. He eyed Sali. âHow old are you, Mrs Jones?'
âAlmost twenty-four,' she answered, hoping he wouldn't regard her as too young for the post.
âAnd already a widow.'
âYes, Mr Evans.' She found it even more difficult to lie to him than to Mrs Rodney.
Mr Evans filled another plate and handed it to his youngest son. âI'll need a ladle for the gravy in this pie.'
âYes, Mr Evans.' She lifted it from an overhead rack as his eldest son walked through the door. He was dressed, like his younger brother and father, for an evening out, in a dark suit, white shirt, collar and tie.
âDamn you, Joey. You have absolutely no sense of responsibility â'
Sali dropped the ladle and it went crashing to the flagstones.
âI'm sorry. I was so busy having words with my brother that I forgot Connie had engaged a housekeeper for us.'
Sali gripped the Belfast sink for support.
The man standing in front of her had been her father's deputy manager and had inherited five per cent of the Watkin Jones Colliery's stock on her father's death. Lloyd Evans. He obviously hadn't recognised her. Or had he? She wavered indecisively for a moment.
âMrs Jones.' Lloyd nodded to her and took his place at the table.
âMrs Jones, are you all right?' Mr Evans enquired frostily.
âYes, Mr Evans. Would you like more gravy?'
âI'd like you to get another plate for yourself and sit at the table so we can start eating.'
âThat wouldn't be proper, Mr Evans.'
âProper! Where do you think you are, girl? Living with the crache with their upstairs, downstairs, kitchen and parlour maids? I'll have no class distinctions in this house. You sit at this table. Now!' He banged his knife on the table.
Too terrified not to, and mindful of Mrs Rodney's instructions not to sit on either of the late Mrs Evans's chairs, she took another plate from the dresser, gave it to Mr Evans and took the empty seat next to Lloyd, opposite Joey, who flashed her a dazzling smile. Even in her present panic-stricken state, she sensed it was one that he had practised many times in the mirror.
Mr Evans handed Lloyd her plate, which held the same sized portion of pie that he had given his sons.
âPlease, Mr Evans, I can never eat all that,' she demurred.
âI suggest you try, Mrs Jones. If you intend to carry on working at the rate you have begun, you are going to need it. And don't stand on ceremony. Victor and Joey might follow the Popish doctrine but I'll have no grace said in this house. This food doesn't come courtesy of any God, but from our sweat and labour.'
After the summer pudding had been eaten and she'd made the tea, Sali cleared their dessert dishes to the sink.
âMrs Rodney showed you where you are to sleep?' Mr Evans sugared his second cup of tea.
âYes, Mr Evans.'
âShe warned you that you are on a month's trial? If you don't suit, you will have to go.'
âYes, Mr Evans.' A month, a whole month before she could start looking for her son, because she would never find the courage to ask this man if she could bring her child into his house. But a month's employment would give her time and money to look for another position, hopefully one where she could keep her son with her. And there was always the possibility that she might find something before the month was up.
Mr Evans patted his pockets and pulled out his pipe and tobacco pouch. He took his time over filling it, eyeing his sons as he did so. âI am going to the County Club. If any of you need me I will be in the library there. I will be back before ten o'clock. I take it you will be going down to Connie's to do her accounts, Lloyd?'
âYes. I'll walk part of the way with you.' Lloyd pushed his empty teacup into the centre of the table. âThank you, Mrs Jones, that was a good meal.'
âVictor?' Mr Evans addressed his middle son.
âI'm meeting the boys and taking the dogs rabbiting over the mountain. Do you know how to cook rabbits, Mrs Jones?'
âYes, Mr Evans, and joint and skin them.' Sali found it strange to think that she had found the task so distasteful when she had first moved to Mill Street.
âNo one calls me Mr Evans, Mrs Jones. I'm Victor.' He gave her another of his shy smiles. âSo, if I'm lucky, we could have rabbit pie before the end of the week.'
âAfter the pie tonight, perhaps you'd prefer stew?' she suggested tentatively.
He looked at the pie dish that had been scraped clean by him and his brothers in search of second helpings. âPie will be fine, Mrs Jones, but you'll need at least half a dozen rabbits to fill a dish that size.'
âWhere are you off to, Joey?' his father enquired, as Joey left his chair, picked up a bottle of cologne from the window sill and splashed it liberally over his cheeks and neck.
âOut and about,' Joey replied airily.
âOut and about where?' Mr Evans questioned sternly.
Joey bent his knees to study himself in a mirror that had been hung low on the wall at the side of the range. âSome of the boys are going to catch the show at the Theatre Royal. I thought I'd go with them.'
âJust make sure that you stay with the boys and leave the variety acts to the professionals. I don't want to hear any more complaints about you or your antics,' his father warned. âThere is no need to wait up for us, Mrs Jones. We are on the six to two shift. I would appreciate it if you have breakfast on the table at half past four sharp in the morning. You will find bacon, eggs, lava bread and sausages in the pantry. And don't forget to cut the snap boxes and fill the water bottles.' He pointed to four square tins and four tin bottles stacked on the cupboard next to the sink.
Lloyd angled his trilby on his head, his father picked up his cap and they went out through the front door. Joey lifted his cap from a row of hooks on the wall, gave Victor, who was finishing his third cup of tea, and Sali a broad wink, and left by the basement stairs.
Sali opened one of the boxes and gazed at the small tin bottle and crumbs it contained. âVictor, please tell me, what I should put in your snap boxes?' she asked, as he rose from the table.
âYou've never cut a snap box before?' he asked incredulously.
âNo,' Sali admitted sheepishly.
He picked up the small tin bottle. âAfter you've washed these out, you fill them with strongly brewed tea, four sugars and a dash of milk to a bottle. The larger ones you wash out and fill with water.'
âWon't the tea be cold?'
âAll colliers drink cold tea. It's the one thing that gets the dust out of your mouth. In the boxes we like two rounds of sandwiches, meat, omelette or cheese. Nothing soft like tomato or cucumber that makes the bread soggy. My mother used to put in a slice of fruit cake or some of her cinnamon biscuits ... but we haven't had anything like that for a while.' He reached for his cap.
âThank you, Victor. Good luck with your rabbiting.'
âIt might help if you made the boxes tonight, Mrs Jones. My mother used to do that. We're always in a rush in the morning.'
Lloyd made a cross in pencil against the last entry in the ledger, leaned back in his chair and stretched his hands above his head.
âTired?' Connie Rodney's question was casual, but her eyes glittered as she gazed at him.
âNo more than usual.' He closed the book. âYour shop is doing remarkably well.'
âYour shop,' she corrected.
âSome day the government of this country is going to wake up and give women equal property rights alongside men.'
âIs that going to be the same day they change the law so husbands can't get their thieving hands on their wives' assets?' she enquired sceptically. âYou're forgetting that it's men who run the country, Lloyd.'
âPlease don't hold me personally responsible for the tyranny of my sex.'
âYou know as well as I do, that if my father had left the shop to me, Albert George would have gambled away every single penny I own by now,' she reminded acidly.
âI'm on your side, remember. Any time you want to organise a suffragette march I'll walk every step of the way with you. And you know my thoughts on this ridiculous situation. The shop may be registered in my name but I have absolutely no moral right to own it. I still think I should change my will and leave it to Antonia.' He referred to Connie's fifteen-year-old daughter by the husband she had left after two years of troubled and disastrous marriage.