Read Lady of the Butterflies Online
Authors: Fiona Mountain
“I don’t mind if they do. I have changed my mind about freckles entirely. I think they are very attractive and desirable. I don’t mind at all if I grow a whole speckling of them.”
Bess rolled her eyes. “Is he really all you can think about?”
“Weren’t you the same with Ned? Didn’t you think about him all the time?”
“Not likely.” She gave me a hug, kissed my cheek. “But then, I’m not you. You’re like those blue birds diving for fish. When your mind’s set on a thing, that’s all you see.”
She linked her arm through mine and took me back through the trees. “Stop pining now. Look at that.”
The throng parted and I had a proper view of the slender tower of the maypole, covered with herbs and garlands of hawthorn and pinks, with streamers and flags flying.
“The hated heathen idol.” Bess quoted the Puritans with a ribald smile. “Encouragement to wantonness and lust. Not that some people need much encouragement.”
As if to prove her point, Ned Tucker came up behind her and seized Bess round her shapely waist. “I was beginning to think you’d gone and left me for good, bonny Bessie.”
“Would I ever?” She twisted round in his arms and he trickled a few drops of ale from his tankard down the top of her dress, then tried to lick them off. She writhed and screeched and slapped him away until he fumbled her for a kiss.
Ned was a hefty sandy-haired lad with a pleasant, round ruddy face and I watched, giggling at them, thinking that I very much wanted to be kissed myself.
“Stop it, Ned.” Bess laughed. “Miss Eleanor will have me for a common strumpet.”
Ned winked at me and then flung Bess away toward the dancing, swiping a pie from a long table as he passed by. With no contribution from the lord of the manor, the spread today was simple fare, but no less mouthwatering for that: rye breads and curds, custards and cakes, hogsheads of ale and cider. Our dining table in the great hall never looked half so laden and my belly felt empty as usual.
I stepped toward the table, about to help myself to a jam tart, when I saw someone who made me lose my appetite in an instant. Thomas Knight was standing sullenly at the edge of the trees, his hands stuffed in the pockets of his breeches.
He turned and stared right at me with his insolent black eyes and I shrank back into the trees. I looked for Bess but I could not see her.
I retreated back into the trees, almost wishing I had never come. It was cool and damp in the wood, almost primeval, the floor blanketed with huge ferns and moss and fungi. A nightingale was singing, and there was the hollow rap-tap of a woodpecker at work. A shimmer of brightness flashed past my nose. A crimson and gold butterfly. My eyes darted after it but at first I couldn’t see where it had gone. There it was again. It fluttered its gilded wings, dipped, drew a little wave in the air, a gliding aerial dance of more beauty and color than any I’d just watched. A tiny, bright-winged creature, it reminded me of the fairies Bess swore lived in these trees.
But it was gone again. Where? I was struck with disappointment, as if I’d been handed a precious gift only to have it snatched away.
A glittering, fleeting little presence. There it was! I ran forward. It was playing a game with me, leading me on, flickering over the low vegetation. It stopped on a thistle. I stopped. It flittered off. I followed. It finally settled on a water dock. It folded its wings coyly, revealing an underside of orange and white and blue.
I crept as near as I could.
The wings suddenly flipped open, magnificent golden-red wings with snowy fringes and inky black spots. I thought it prettier even than the maypole. I cupped my hands, lifted them slowly, trapped the butterfly in a single downward swoop.
In that instant I felt a sharp pain in the small of my back, heard feet smashing through the sedges right behind. I spun round.
“Well, if it isn’t the little lady of the manor, little Miss Eleanor Goodricke.” Thomas Knight’s voice was thick and slurred with drink. “What were you up to, then? Chasing after fairies, were you?” He sniggered. “I knew you were soft in the head. Not got your full wits about you.”
He was red-faced and dazed, his shirtsleeves rolled up, showing brown and brawny arms. He had a nasty smirk on his thick lips and another jagged stone in his hand, much larger than the one that had already hit me. He rubbed his bleary black eyes, flexed his arm. I squared my small shoulders and lifted my chin, told myself that he must not see I was afraid. I tightened my cupped hands and felt the butterfly’s wings frantically beating against the cage of my palms, so strong for such a small, fragile-looking thing, a peculiar echo of the feelings inside my belly.
“So much for quality folk having better brains than us,” Thomas sneered. “You’re obviously missing half yours. Your father educated you like a son, so maybe that’s what’s turned you softheaded, eh? Maybe that’s what makes you think you’re better than the rest of us, that you know what’s best for us all, that you’ve got the right to steal what’s ours. As if you’ve not stolen enough from me already.”
I frowned. “I don’t understand, Thomas. What are you talking about? What have I stolen from you?”
He lowered his spiteful eyes to my breasts, lurched forward. “Maybe I’ll take something from you, to make it even. Maybe I’ll teach you a few things myself.”
I pressed my hands against my chest, my arms shielding my body. The butterfly had quieted, as if it was waiting, its wings trembling against my skin. “Don’t you dare touch me,” I threatened. “Don’t you dare come any closer.”
“Or what? Tell Merrick, will you?” He stepped up to me. “Bet he doesn’t know you’re here. Bet nobody knows it, do they? Mary Burges will not be coming to rescue you this time, will she?” He looked me up and down with his leering eyes. I could smell the acrid sweat from his armpits; it reminded me that he was a grown man now and this was no childish scrap. We were no longer children. He was a man and I was a woman and this time it would be much more than a marchpane sweet that he was trying to force inside me.
“I’ll scream. I swear I will.”
“Nobody can hear you scream out here,” he jeered. “Even if they do, they’ll just think you’re enjoying yourself.”
He took a step nearer. “Tiny and light as a little fairy yourself, aren’t you?” he smirked. “Let’s see if you have a little pair of wings hidden away somewhere.” He lunged at me and thrust his hand down my bodice.
I ducked away, jerking free of his grasp, and ran as fast as I could.
Drink may have made him too unsteady on his feet to pursue me but it hadn’t damaged his aim much. I felt the stone graze the side of my head. Bright lights shot in front of my eyes and a hot drop of liquid trickled down my brow. I kept running. I ran all the way back across the moor, up the winding stone stairs to my bedchamber. I kicked the door shut and rested my back against it, my chest heaving and my head throbbing.
I carefully uncurled my fingers. The butterfly lay at an angle against my palm, wings firmly closed and crumpled at the top. I gave the little creature a prod. It didn’t move. I touched its small brown furry body. Nothing.
The poor little thing was dead. It must have been the shock, or else I’d held it too tight, squeezed the life out of it. I felt sad for a moment but then realized that at least I could keep it now, could look at it whenever I wanted. It was bright and beautiful and it was mine. Gently, I picked it up by its folded wings, its threadlike legs dangling, its feet briefly sticking to my skin. Gently, I prized open the wings.
I lifted my great King James Bible from beneath my pillow and carefully smoothed the butterfly between the pages of the Gospel of Saint John, beside the meadow flowers I’d collected with my mother.
I closed the book, turned my hand palm up and saw that it was stained with the finest sparkling of golden powder, which looked for all the world like fairy dust, as if marking me out as someone under an enchantment, someone chosen, someone to whom special things might happen.
IN THE AFTERNOON I was in the parlor with my father’s pair of globes, one of the earth and one of the heavens. I rested my finger on the earth and spun, waited to see where it would come to land. The Atlantic Ocean. I spun again. The continents whizzed past dizzyingly.
But it wasn’t only that which was making me dizzy. There was a scab as well as a bruise on my temple and it hurt when I moved my eyes. I shut them for just a moment, opened them to see Mr. Merrick scrutinizing me with thunder in his eyes.
“What’s wrong with you, girl?”
“Nothing, sir. I’ve a headache, that’s all.”
“That is not what I meant and you know it. Tell me, how did you enjoy the Maying?”
Any number of tenants could have told him they had seen me there, but I didn’t understand why he was so angry about it. I knew for a fact, from what Bess had overheard, that he was holding a supper for his merchant friends tonight in Bristol. Though not exactly a traditional May celebration, it happened to be taking place on the very same day.
“It was . . . interesting,” I said, picking the right word carefully. “I can’t see what’s so wrong with letting the villagers dance and enjoy themselves.”
“According to your father, it is what it invariably leads to that’s so wrong. Can you tell me there wasn’t all manner of wanton and ungodly behavior?”
That I could not. My cheeks flared as I remembered the encounter with Thomas Knight.
“What happened?”
“Nothing.”
He repeated: “Name of God, what happened?”
“Thomas teased me for chasing after a butterfly.”
Mr. Merrick’s arms were hanging down at his sides and I saw him clench and unclench his fists. “What exactly did he say to you?”
“That I must be soft in the head.”
A mirthless laugh of agreement. “Is that all he did?”
I was too ashamed to tell him, did not want to tell a blatant lie either, so I said nothing.
He seized me by my shoulders, and as he did, a carefully placed lock of my hair fell back, revealing the bruise and crusted scab.
“He threw a stone at me,” I said quickly.
The corded veins thickened in his broad neck. I did not see why his anger was directed at me rather than at Thomas Knight, as if it were I who had done the greater wrong.
“You are a little fool,” he hissed, thrusting me from him, “who deserves to have stones thrown at you. You are a little fool to think you can ask the likes of the Knights to pass comment on the fate of this land. Now every damned commoner and tenant knows what is afoot. I’ve already had a half-dozen of them marching up here demanding to know what is going on.”
“Why shouldn’t they know what you are considering? Why should they not have their say? They are accustomed to using the common. Why shouldn’t they have an opinion on what is to happen to it?”
“Why? Why? Why? Why don’t you realize there are some questions you just do not ask?”
“Why not?”
“Because”—spittle showered from his mouth as he shouted and he flexed his knuckles and punched his clenched fist against his own palm, as if it was me he really wanted to hit, and hard—“because the Levellers and Diggers were crushed before you were born, and their foolish radical ideals with them. All men are not freeborn. They do not have natural rights. Commoners have no right to an opinion. They do not have a natural God-given right to the land. That is the way of it. And that is the way it will always be, whether you like it or not. Do you understand?”
I did not. But I knew better than to say so.
I COULD NOT BEAR to wait around inside for Edmund’s arrival, so I asked the kitchen to make me up a parcel of white manchet bread and cheese and apple chutney, and went down to the moor to watch for him. Irises and purple orchids were in flower along the riverbank and the radiance of their petals matched my mood of optimism. Once he was here, once I could talk to him, all would be well.