Authors: Cora Harrison
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Historical, #General, #Mysteries & Detective Stories
‘No, we can’t; Rose has to do her maths,’ snapped Poppy. Sir Guy grinned at the discarded books on the table and Rose giggled.
‘Why don’t I have a look at that loose floorboard?’ said Justin. ‘My Boy Scout pocket-knife makes a good screwdriver, even if it failed the test as a lock-picker.’
‘What are you sewing, Violet?’ asked Sir Guy at the same moment.
Both of them were keen to bring a smile back to the leading lady’s beautiful face, thought Daisy. It did seem to her that Violet was making an unnecessary noise with that sewing machine. She continually refused offers of help with the clothes, but then wore a martyred air that she was left with all the sewing.
Justin lifted the sewing machine as if it were feather-light, then knelt down on the boards with his knife in his hand. There was no doubt that this particular floorboard seemed to fit badly. First he tried tightening the screws, but then shook his head with annoyance. Daisy watched as he loosened all the screws again, lifting the board from its place.
‘It just doesn’t seem to fit . . .’ he began at the same moment as Violet said in alarmed tones, ‘Don’t get dust on our skirts.’ The other two stopped playing.
‘There’s a box under there,’ said Daisy, bending down.
‘
Long-lost Treasure Uncovered from its Centuries-Old Hiding Place
.’ Rose came out from behind the piano.
‘No wonder that floorboard didn’t fit. I knew there was something wrong as soon as I put my trusty knife on to it.’ Justin dusted his hands with satisfaction and bent down, taking out the box. Daisy took it from him and carried it over to the window. The schoolroom was tucked into the north-eastern corner at the top of the house, and the light was poor there for most of the day.
The box was made from a thin, fine wood with a hinged lid. That was not what Daisy looked at though. There, on the outside of the box, scrawled in large, uneven, childish capital letters, was the name E
LAINE
C
ARRUTHERS
.
‘The mysterious Elaine again,’ said Violet, peering over her shoulder. ‘She’s apparently an aunt of ours,’ she added to Justin.
‘We imagine that she had some huge row with Great-Aunt Lizzie so her name must never again be breathed within the sacred portals of Beech Grove Manor,’ explained Rose.
‘Open it, Daisy,’ said Poppy.
‘Hope it’s jewellery,’ said Violet. ‘I could just do with a string of pearls like Daisy’s.’ Then she blushed and gave Sir Guy an embarrassed look.
‘You shall have one as soon as I am snapped up by one of the top London law firms – at a top salary, of course,’ promised Justin, and Violet glared at him.
‘I hardly think that will be necessary once I am married to a duke,’ she said airily. Justin made a show of being shot in the heart and falling down dead and she laughed.
‘Look, everyone – it’s a doll!’ exclaimed Rose.
The box was narrow and deep. On the top of it lay the most beautiful doll. She was a baby doll, her wax face so delicately made and so skilfully tinted that she almost looked real. She had pink cheeks, blue eyes and blonde curls made from real hair. She was dressed in an elaborately flowing gown of palest pink satin with a lace bodice, a frilled hem and a long sash of pink velvet.
‘What’s underneath?’ asked Rose. ‘Oh pray, let me hold her and imagine what it would be like to be young again.’
Daisy handed the doll to her sister. ‘It’s like a little bed,’ she said as she lifted out the tray where the doll had lain. It was covered in a tiny patchwork quilt with a small satin pillow. Underneath was a linen sheet, and beneath that a miniature mattress. ‘Oh, it’s a wardrobe!’
The rest of the box was designed like a child’s wardrobe, painted white with tiny primroses stencilled between the decorative scrolls. It had a hinged door. Daisy set it on end and opened it.
Hanging on the rail were more dresses and fur cloaks, even a muff the size of a stamp to keep the baby’s hands warm. Beside the hanging space was a row of drawers, each with a little brass knob. The top drawer was full of nappies and safety pins, the second had caps of all descriptions – lace caps, cotton caps and knitted wool caps – and the third held aprons.
Daisy pulled out the top apron and then she had a shock.
The apron, like all the clothes, was exquisitely made, but the embroidery on it was obviously done by a young child. In large, unsteady, uneven stitches was the word D
AISY
. The other aprons also bore that name.
‘She’s called after you,’ said Rose. ‘She must be your doll from another life.’
‘No, she’s Elaine’s doll,’ said Daisy. For a moment she had been puzzled by the name, but then she found an explanation. ‘I suppose when I was born I looked like Elaine’s doll – I was blonde and blue-eyed so Mother decided to call me Daisy – anyway, it went well with Poppy and Violet,’ she added briskly. For a moment she hesitated and then spoke out. ‘Don’t let’s say anything about this,’ she said with a glance at Justin and Sir Guy.
‘Or Great-Aunt Lizzie will sell it.’ Rose nodded wisely. ‘It’s a sad thing to watch one so old becoming so mercenary,’ she added.
‘Let’s talk about the film,’ said Daisy hurriedly. ‘Justin, can you put back the floorboard? Give me the doll, Rose. I’ll just take it down and hide it in my wardrobe.’
By the time she came back Poppy had disappeared but the others were busily discussing the film – or at least Justin was giving his views and everyone else was listening: Sir Guy with a good-humoured expression on his face, Violet with bated breath, needle in hand, and Rose drawing spiders inside glass boxes on the back page of her mathematics book.
‘What we’ve decided is the best plan, Daisy,’ said Justin with authority, ‘is for you to film me and Violet in all sorts of outdoor locations: near the stables – it could be me and Violet about to ride together, sitting on our horses, with Morgan watching over the hood of the car, of course – and then there could be Violet feeding the hens with me watching her, showing love and admiration on my face, and then . . . and then,’ he said with a sidelong glance at Violet, ‘there could be a scene where Morgan goes for a walk through the garden and comes upon me and Violet kissing under the archway . . .’
‘Certainly not,’ said Violet, but she said it with a smile and Daisy noticed Sir Guy look appraisingly from her face to Justin’s.
‘
Quelle histoire ennuyeuse
,’ said Rose with a yawn. Aunt Lizzie had taught her from the battered copy of
French for Young Ladies
that she had used when teaching the older girls, but that was not enough for Rose so now she was teaching herself French by means of the books of Victor Hugo and a dictionary and liked to sprinkle her conversation with French phrases. Justin looked annoyed and Sir Guy amused.
‘Some good ideas there,’ said Daisy briskly, trying to banish speculations about the doll from her mind. ‘I’ll talk to Morgan,’ she said. ‘Now let’s plan what I need to film during the hunt and during the Murder in the Dark game.’
The day of the hunt started off gloomily but once breakfast was over the fine rain had begun to cease and the sun had appeared through the trees by the time the first of the neighbours trotted up the avenue. The Beech Grove Manor drag hunts were famous and people came from miles around to attend them. Traditionally everyone brought their own sandwiches and their own flask, whether of coffee or something stronger, so this was one of the few social events that the Derrington family could afford to keep up.
Daisy and Poppy had made up six packages of sandwiches for the house party the night before, sitting cosily in front of the kitchen stove wrapping them in greaseproof paper and filling flasks of coffee and tea. Lunch would be eaten at The Folly, an eighteenth-century copy of a Roman temple built by an ancestor on top of a hill in order to give a good view of the whole estate and its woods. The Folly, though open at the sides, was furnished with a cast iron table and a dozen chairs. Morgan had found pieces of an iron stove out in the stables which he had carried out and reassembled inside the stately building. Now everyone would be warm as well as sheltered while they ate their lunch.
The scene outside the stables was very colourful with black, brown, white and palomino horses and orange and white harrier hounds. Some of the neighbours were in hunting pink, although most, like the Earl himself, just wore their usual tweed jackets.
One by one everyone mounted, until only a single horse was left without a rider. Eventually Sir Guy appeared and looked without favour at the huge animal being held by the stableman.
‘What’s his name?’ he asked dubiously.
‘Morning Cloud, sir.’ The stableman moved the horse a little nearer to the mounting block.
‘Are you sure it’s not Brute?’ muttered Sir Guy as the horse backed and tossed its head.
‘C’mon, Guy,’ said Michael Derrington. ‘You’re always saying that you would like to experience a hunt. Well, now’s your chance. Anyway, that’s the only horse in the stable that will bear your weight, old man.’
Daisy eyed her father with a grin. She was a little sorry for her godfather, but on the other hand it was lovely to see her father so cheerful. She hoped that the day would go well for him. It would take a lot to disturb his mood this morning with the prospect of a good run through the beech woods ahead of him. He loved dogs, he loved horses, and above all he loved the woods and fields of the estate that had been owned by his family for hundreds of years.
‘Keep to the rear when we get into the woods, Sir Guy,’ she advised. ‘You’ll be all right with him. He’s an old horse. He won’t be too interested in trying to keep up with youngsters.’
‘Tell him that, not me,’ grumbled Sir Guy.
‘
Lifeless Body of Well-known Film Magnate Dragged Through Historic Woods
,’ chanted Rose as they walked their horses down the avenue behind the whirling, tail-wagging medley of white and orange dogs.
‘
“Nothing to do with me,” says Earl. “The man just did not know how to ride”
,’ chimed in Baz.
‘
“Gave him the best horse in my stables”
,’ said Edwin from the other side of Poppy.
‘
Ugly Rumours in the Neighbourhood
,’ went on Rose happily.
‘You can mock,’ said Sir Guy, ‘but I’ve got a huge Fuller’s walnut cake, sent down by train yesterday, for my lunch; I’m warning you now that only sympathetic and understanding young people will get a slice of it.’
‘They’ve picked up the scent!’ yelled Baz. ‘Hold on to your hats, you guys and dolls. Can you take that hedge, Poppy?’
‘You betcha,’ said Poppy. She jumped and they heard Baz yell ‘Jeepers creepers!’ as her horse almost tumbled, righting itself at the last moment.
‘Come on, Justin,’ shouted Violet.
But Justin had reined back his horse, watching Violet. It was not a good angle for her but she cleared the hedge magnificently.
‘I’m going around by the gate,’ Daisy heard him say as she herself cleared the hedge a little further down, but by then Violet was almost out of sight.
I should check on Sir Guy, thought Daisy, but she couldn’t make herself slow down or stop. Ahead were the dogs, screaming with excitement. Their noses were to the ground where a bag of aniseed had been trailed across the wet earth earlier this morning which still gave off a pungent, exciting smell. These were dogs bred to hunt and this was what they lived for: the rushing through trees, the scrambling up hillsides, the splashing through puddles, the swimming through streams, the agony of losing the trail, the ecstasy of finding it again.
There was nothing in the world as exciting as drag hunting, thought Daisy, who had never quite accepted the idea of hunting a living, breathing animal. She should have been filming, she knew, but she could not resist the first run of the day. Morgan had promised to bring her camera when he came out to light the fire at The Folly and she would sacrifice the second run for the sake of her film.
After two and a half hours of hectic riding, the hounds eventually found the bag of aniseed in a disused chalk quarry at the foot of Folly Hill. The dog cart was there already and the stableman had a bag of treats for the dogs to distract them from the aniseed, which was quickly packed away to be kept for another day. Wearily everyone dismounted. The horses were rubbed down and allowed to drink from the river before they could have their own lunch.