She could see that the argument carried some weight, but still Thomas frowned. âSweet, I would not risk my own daughter thus: how can I risk my poor sister's?'
âUncle . . .' Lucy began, then had to smile. Thomas stared in surprise. âUncle, can you imagine
Hannah
ever doing such a thing as this? Sheâwell, she's a sweet, gentle soul, but . . .'
Thomas suddenly returned the smile. âShe would be affrighted and she would beg me to take her home.'
Lucy nodded. âI'm not Hannah! I like the work very well, and . . . and I like this
cause
very well, if it can succeed without bloodshed! You are not risking me: I am risking
myself
.'
Thomas considered that for a long, uneasy minute. Then he drew a deep breath and nodded. âWell, then, I'll tell the others you'll attend after your cousin has left London.'
Cousin Geoffrey left the following week. A daily attendance at Westminster and a heavy expenditure in bribes had failed to get him the strip of land and at last he gave up and went home. Ned, who listened with interest to Lucy's account of the matter, said probably a Parliament-man had his eye on the land. Geoffrey, however, blamed Thomas.
âThis is what comes of rebellion!' he muttered angrily, as he mounted his mare on a wet Monday morning. He glowered at Thomas from the saddle and added, âI will tell them at home how you fare, Uncle!' He made the polite words a threat.
Thomas was distressed: he loved his brother, Geoffrey's father, and was afraid of a breach; he was also frightened of Daniel Wentnor, despite Lucy's assurances.
Lucy, however, was simply relieved to see the back of Geoffrey. Even if she'd been inclined to worry about what he'd say, she had little time for it. The flow of print had continued unabated, and in the middle of it they'd had to move the press.
The carriage house of The Whalebone had never been intended as more than a stopgap printworks: the authorities were well aware of the tavern's clientele. The only reason the press had been located there at all was that The Whalebone had been searched immediately beforehand and it would be a month or two before anyone searched again. The âcommon council' meeting which discussed Lucy's attendance had also settled on a new location for the press. This was a disused barn outside the city wall by Bishopsgate, over towards the parkland of Moorfields. It was immediately beyond Bedlam â Bethlehem Hospital for lunatics â which meant any casual traffic was disguised by people coming to gape at the madmen.
The barn was only a ten-minute walk from The Whalebone, but moving the press was still a huge task. It was too big and heavy to travel in one piece: it had to be taken apart, loaded on a cart, driven to its new home and then put back together again. The actual move was done using a dray borrowed from a brewery. Lucy packed up the cases of type, paper and ink, took down the drying lines and helped to disassemble the press. It was heavy work and left her with a sore back and a torn fingernail. She was glad of the nagging aches, though: it distracted her from the prospect of working
alone
in a
barn.
She'd been unable to do that since she went to milk the cows early one morning, two years before.
Ned was in the thick of the move: he borrowed the dray and drove it out to Bishopsgate in the evening, its incriminating load concealed under a stack of empty beer barrels. The next morning he turned up early at the barn and helped to reassemble the press before rushing off to put in a day's work at his tavern. He paused only to speak to Lucy. He handed her the key for the padlock that was to secure the barn door and said, âCome back to the tavern at dinner-time. You'll be in need of a hot dinner, working here!'
She was relieved: the prospect of The Whalebone at dinner-time would distract her from being
alone
in a
barn
â and, what was more, next door to Bedlam. The thought of finding an escaped lunatic terrified her.
When Ned had gone, she made herself walk right round the barn, checking that it was indeed empty. The place was draughty, damp and, worst of all, dark. The only way to get decent light was to leave the door open, but the spring continued cold and wet, and opening the door meant letting in the wind and rain. The press had been set in the middle of the room, and she strung the drying lines behind and to the side of it, where they wouldn't be rained on. She put the table and the cases of type against the wall near the door, though, protecting them with spoiled sheets of paper: she would need light for typesetting. She could already tell that that was going to be a miserable job here.
Setting up took her until noon, by which time it was raining hard. She padlocked the barn, then ran to The Whalebone with her shawl over her head. She entered in a rush, then paused to let her eyes adjust to the dimness. The tavern was dark and low-ceilinged. There was no fire burning on the hearth â it was, after all, May â but the room was crowded enough to feel warm after the cold outside. It smelled of unwashed bodies, dirty wet woollens, beer and stale tobacco. It was about half full; most of the customers were men but, to her relief, there were also a few women. A vaguely familiar older woman in an apron came over to her and asked, âWhat do you lack?'
âI . . .' began Lucy, then stopped, unsure how to answer. âIs Ned here?'
The woman looked at her more closely. âOh, it's
you
!' The business-like attention dissolved into a warm smile. âWell met at last! I'm Nancy Shorby; I've been here since old Mr Trebet's day. Ned's fetching beer from the cellar but he'll be up again in a moment. You come into the kitchen and sit down by the fire!'
âWhat's that?' called one of the customers. âNed's sweetheart?'
âNever you mind if it is!' replied Nancy and bustled Lucy through another doorway and into the warmth and comparative brightness of a large kitchen. âRafe! Sarah! See who's here!' The cook and another serving-maid, their faces familiar but their names previously unknown, turned from their work and came over smiling. The warm welcome made Lucy very uneasy, but she rubbed her ink-stained hands on her apron and smiled and exchanged greetings.
âWe've all been agog to meet you,' the younger serving-maid confessed.
âBut Ned, the scoundrel, kept you all to himself,' said the cook.
Lucy smiled weakly and was spared the need to reply by Ned himself, who came up the stairs from the cellar, carrying a barrel. He beamed when he saw Lucy. âHere you are!' he exclaimed. âThe sight of you is as good as a rest. Nan, get her some dinner. I'll be back anon!' He hurried through into the tavern's common room with the beer.
He returned while Nancy was ladling out Lucy's stew. âAll's well? Nancy, Rafe and Sarah have made themselves known to you? Fine people, all of them; Nancy's worked here since I was but a boy.' He turned to Nancy. âNan, the party in the panelled room want more bread.'
âI'll see to it,' said Nancy and hurried off.
Ned settled Lucy in a corner of the kitchen, asked about the press, then rushed off to draw more beer. His staff hurried in and out: it seemed that The Whalebone was popular. Rafe, the only one fixed in the kitchen, told her the tavern had eight private rooms and two common ones, and that at least half were full every afternoon. The tavern was thriving, he told her, with a meaningful smile, but would do better still if it had a mistress. They'd been waiting for Mr Trebet to find one ever since the war ended.
She felt sick. She bolted the rest of her dinner and got up. Ned, on his way back through the kitchen to fetch more beer, gave her a startled look and cried, âYou're not going so soon?'
She ducked her head. âI must. We're two days behind and still not ready to print.'
Walking back to the cold barn through the rain, she found herself furiously angry. It was clear enough that
Ned's sweetheart
was exactly what Ned's staff thought she was. What right had he to give them such a notion? She ought to demonstrate that she wasn't: she ought to stay away from The Whalebone in future.
It would mean packing herself a cold dinner and eating it
alone
in the cold
barn
â if she had enough appetite to eat at all, with her stomach in knots.
It was absurd! If she'd been a
man
, there would have been no trouble: she could have gone to sit in the warm kitchen, talking and laughing, and nobody would suppose she owed them anything, but because she was a girl â and, worse, a pretty girl â she was expected to pay her way with kisses!
She imagined being kissed by Ned. Part of her was curious, even eager, but part of her recoiled, remembering the soldiers and her own frantic struggles, the violence and the
pain
 . . .
She stopped in the street, telling herself that it was the rain running down her face that made her eyes sting so.
Spoiled goods
.
Oh, why should she blame Ned Trebet? His intentions were undoubtedly honourable, as far as they'd yet taken shape. He was a young man with a bit of property who needed a wife. He'd met a young woman â pretty, hard-working, a fellow-believer in a cause dear to his heart. Obviously he was thinking about her!
Your father has a dairy farm, freehold. Will told me.
She should have taken good note of that: he had spoken to Will about whether her family had enough money to make her a suitable match.
If he knew, though, that she was no maiden and that her dowry had gone to buy cows, would he want her then?
From nearby came a shriek and then a long desperate wail, and she glanced up in surprise and saw that she was next to Bedlam hospital. She shuddered and hurried on back to the barn and the work waiting for her.
The next two days were miserable. She did not go to The Whalebone for dinner but ate bread and butter alone beside the press. The various people who'd come to help her with the machinery â or, like Liza, to talk â didn't make the additional walk over to the barn, and she was left on her own. Operating the press by herself was as exhausting as she'd feared, and she had to keep stopping for a rest. She became expert in checking the bolts and greasing the slides.
The following evening, however, was a Thursday, the day of the âcouncil meeting'. She didn't go back to Southwark but met Uncle Thomas in the City instead. He said it would save her walking across the bridge and back again, though they both knew that the real advantage was that it postponed the argument with Aunt Agnes.
It was after supper when they arrived, and growing dark, but the common room of the tavern was better lit than it had been the rainy afternoon when she first visited, and busier. Tallow candles on sconces about the walls cast a warm yellow light over a dense crowd of men and women. Lucy noticed a thin, tired-looking woman, heavily pregnant, sitting in a chair in the middle of the room; she later learned that this was Elizabeth Lilburne, Freeborn John's wife. (She was permitted to visit her husband and even to stay the night; when the baby was born, it was christened âTower'.) Next to her sat a round-shouldered older man, and behind them stood a crop-haired soldier in a cavalryman's buff-leather coat, with a sword and a pistol in his belt. Nearby, an elderly lady in a lace-trimmed collar was talking to a young man with a notebook; over at the side was another young soldier, this one elegantly dressed, with long dark locks and an officer's sash. He was talking to a slim gentleman in a fine blue coat and lace ruff.
Ned hurried over to them, looking anxious. âLucy!' he said; then, quickly, âMr Stevens, you are welcome. Lucy, I . . . never mind; we'll speak after. Will you have a draught?'
They accepted mugs of beer and squeezed into places on a tavern bench just as the crop-haired soldier rapped on the table and the room fell quiet.
âWe've a deal of business tonight,' said the soldier briskly, âso let's not delay!'
The older man got to his feet; he was tall and heavily built, but his wide face was exceptionally gentle. âThank you, Mr Sexby,' he said, with a polite nod to the soldier. âMy friends, let us take a moment to beseech God's guidance on our counsels!'
Everyone bowed his or her head. âOh God, let us “walk circumspectly”,' said the big man, â“not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil”.'
Some of the âAmens' which greeted this were fervent, some perfunctory. Lucy, glancing round the faces, wondered what they believed in, beyond the need to reform the government. Many would be sectaries â Anabaptists and Brownists, who had the most to lose if religious toleration was denied. She wasn't sure what Anabaptists believed but she knew her Calvinist father abominated them. The thought of how angry he would be if he knew she was here was oddly cheering.
âMy friends,' the big man began, âI fear the news is bad. As most of you have heard, Parliament commanded our last petition to be burned by the public hangman. We must petition again, but I fear that there is little hope of a better outcome unless we have means to win Parliament's attention.'
âYou have that, in
us
,' said the crop-haired soldier, Sexby.
âOh, you and your friends in Saffron Walden have indeed won Parliament's full attention,' said the blue-coated gentleman in a dry voice. âBut I fear that my colleagues are of two minds. While I and the more sensible part favour making concessions â as you saw at the start of the month â Mr Holles and his friends are outraged at your defiance. They believe that if they cannot bring you to heel, no gentleman in all England will ever again be master of his own servants, and they are determined to put you down. They have proposed an ordinance to win them control of the London militia.' There was a stir through the room, and he raised his hand and went on, âThe new Militia Ordinance â which I have no doubt will pass â takes control of the Militia Committee away from Parliament, and grants it instead to the Common Council of the City of London â a body which, as I am sure you're all well aware, is entirely in the hands of good Presbyterian friends of Mr Holles, and, unlike the Commons, untroubled by inconvenient Independents such as myself.'