Moon Cutters (2 page)

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Authors: Janet Woods

BOOK: Moon Cutters
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Miranda’s resistance drained from her and her stomach growled like a wolf at the thought of a meal. She was so hungry she could gnaw the leg off a donkey. ‘I’d be grateful if you’d just allow us to stay until my sister is better. Then we’ll leave. The one thing she didn’t want was to be parted from Lucy. She would be if they were turned in. We won’t be any bother, I promise. I’ll look after her and will work for you in return for our food.’

When he whistled, the hounds and his horse returned to him. Taking the loaf, he tore it into three chunks and threw them to the dogs, which gulped them down in a few tearing bites. He turned to her. ‘There’s no evidence you stole from me now. You have no choice but to trust me, you know. I’ll take you in until I decide what can be done for you. Do you think you can hold your sister safely in front of you on the horse?’

She nodded. ‘I feel dizzy at times and my head hurts. Your cook brained me with the rolling pin.’

‘Nancy Platt usually wins the rolling-pin throwing championship at the county fair every year. We’re quite proud of her. Consider yourself lucky it wasn’t a carving knife she threw. Tell me if you feel dizzy, though it’s not too far to the house and I think we shall manage. Come here and I’ll give you a leg up.’

She put her foot in the stirrup he made with his hands and was tossed lightly on to the horse’s back. He kept his hand on her thigh to stop her falling over the other side until her dizziness abated. ‘All right?’

When she nodded, he lifted Lucy up to join her. Once they were securely settled, he began to lead the horse forward. The dogs ran on ahead, stopping to sniff the trail of blood spots she’d left on the ground or to mark the slush with a yellow scent for them to follow.

Sometimes the dogs looked back at the trio with the horse, giving small encouraging yips, their tails flaying at the snowflakes in the air like frayed ropes. Two of them were long-legged creatures in different shades of fawn. Caesar was handsome, his coat striped in brown and gold.

‘Yes, yes, we’re coming. Go and tell Jackson I’ll need him.’ He turned when the dogs raced each other towards the stables, barking loudly. ‘Allow me to introduce myself. I’m Sir James Fenmore, and you will address me as Sir James. And you are?’

‘Miranda Jarvis. This is my sister, Lucinda.’

He made a small bow as they approached the stable yard. ‘Miss Jarvis, Miss Lucinda. I’m pleased to make your acquaintances. We will get you both settled and comfortable. I will expect an account of where you came from, when we’re all ready. I will want to know where you intended to go on your winter travels, and how you happened to be trespassing on my estate and stealing from my kitchens. Be warned, young ladies, I will expect to hear the truth.’

Miranda was too tired to argue. Lucy was slumped against her and it took all of her strength to keep her secure. She figured that whatever she told him, he wouldn’t know whether it was the truth or not. After all, nobody would report them as missing.

The night before, they’d managed to get a ride with some gypsies and had fallen asleep when they’d made camp. Cold had woken them to find the fire had gone out. The gypsies were gone and she didn’t know in which direction. She didn’t even know where she was or which county they were in. ‘Yes, Sir James.’

Her head spun when he lifted her down.

‘Good … as long as we understand each other.’ He swore when she staggered, and put an arm round her for support. His other arm captured Lucy as she slid from the horse after her.

A stableman came out of the yard, followed by a boy in a flat cap who took the horse by the rein and led him away, the dogs dancing excitedly around them.

‘Alert the house staff, lad,’ Sir James called after him. ‘Jack, help the older girl back into the house. I’ll carry the younger one. She’s running a fever and looks done in.’

‘Yes, Sir James.’

Inside the hallway of the house, servants were rushing about as their master issued instructions, one after the other.

Miranda had an impression of swirling colour … embroidered tapestries, thick red and blue rugs. There was a life-sized statue of a woman with naked breasts and a wisp of cloth clinging to her hips. In the opposite corner stood a man carved from marble, his blank eyes gazing at her, his hair and beard a mass of curls.

From her half-reclining position on a sofa, Miranda could see under the statue’s fig leaf. Did men truly look like that? How odd. Her cheeks warmed as she looked at it. Although she averted her eyes, they crept back to the protuberance, as though being drawn there. How brazen of her! Even more brazen was the fact that the statues flaunted themselves. The woman was a hussy! Miranda closed her lids firmly, thinking how utterly prissy of her, when they were actually works of art, a dedication to Adam and Eve in the Bible.

Her nose took over. The house smelled of polish … and a spicy perfume, probably coming from a pastille burning in the bronze cassolette on the hall table. There was an odour of dog and a faint reek of tobacco smoke, all of the smells so familiar to her that she could be at home. She wanted to cry because they no longer had a home or a family to go home to. It occurred to her that the house didn’t smell as though it belonged to a woman.’

She opened her eyes. ‘Are you married, Sir James?’

‘What an odd question to ask me on such a short acquaintance; do you intend to ask me to wed you when you grow up, then?’

She was sure her face had turned red and she placed her icy hands against her cheeks. She must not give away her age, which was eighteen, almost nineteen. Luckily, she and Lucy took after their mother, who had been small and neat in stature. ‘Certainly not! You are much too old.’

‘A pity; it’s been a long time since I had an offer of marriage.’

A woman joined them, grey-haired and capable-looking. ‘Shall I put your guests in the nursery wing, Sir James?’

‘No, Pridie, it’s too cold under the attic, and the younger girl has a fever. We’ll use my sister’s old room for Miss Jarvis. It will be convenient for the servants to come and go. It also connects to the maid’s room, and Miss Lucinda can sleep in there until the fever subsides. Miss Jarvis will be near enough to her sister for them both to be reassured.

‘But, sir—’

‘Enough, Pridie. My sister has been dead a long time. There is no need to keep the room as a shrine, because she won’t be coming back, despite you thinking you saw her ghost in that room. Perhaps you’ll find some useful clothing there for the children to use.’

He led them up the stairs to a comfortable chamber.

‘My guests will need a wash, and their clothing must be cleaned and repaired. You can get them something to wear from the cupboards. The hems can be shortened. Clean the wound on the older girl’s head if you would. I may have to stitch it.’

Miranda’s attention had been captured by a portrait over the fireplace. It was a lad, not quite into his manhood but confident in the beauty he’d inherited. His body was a long vibrant column, his slim hips thrust forward just a little – to emphasize his budding maleness, perhaps. Dark green eyes looked directly at her from slightly hooded lids, as though contemplating her, holding her gaze steady. But, then, he couldn’t look away; only she could. It took a while. There was something a little derisive about his smile, but the softly curved mouth was quirked into a dimple at one side. His hair curled.

Sir James anticipated her question. ‘No, it’s not me when I was young. It’s my sister’s boy – my nephew, Fletcher Taunt. This was his mother’s room when she lived. He and I had an argument two years ago, and the damned fool left to find his own way in the world. From what I gather, he’s not making a bad job of it, either.’ He fell into a moment of silent contemplation and then smiled. ‘He wouldn’t have changed much, I reckon.’

A little later, he pulled the edges of Miranda’s wound together with strands of her hair, knotting them together over the top of the wound. He placed a pad and a bandage over the top. ‘There … that’s better.’

‘I hope your nephew comes home.’

‘Do you now? If he does, it will be after I’m dead and he inherits this place, unless one of us admits we were wrong.’

Which of them had been wrong about what? She was about to ask him what they’d argued about when he changed the subject abruptly. ‘This might pull a bit, child, but it will be easier on you, and it will heal in a couple of weeks. Don’t scratch it when it starts to itch, and keep it dry.’

‘But my hair’s sticky with blood.’

‘And can stay that way. Once a scab has formed, the flesh under it will begin to heal.’

She was allowed some privacy while she washed herself and pulled on a large nightgown. Pridie treated the bites the dogs had left on her, bathing them in warm water, making tutting noises and pursing her mouth now and again. Miranda was glad he’d left that examination to Mrs Pridie, as she gently brushed the dark length of her hair that flowed out from under the bandage and then loosely braided it.

Sir James came in to question Pridie about Miranda’s bites and examined a couple on her arm and hand before pronouncing himself satisfied that the wounds were superficial.

‘There’s one on her thigh that will bear keeping an eye on,’ Pridie said. ‘It’s deeper than the others and might fester.’

‘I’ll make her a poultice, just in case. Are you dizzy, girl?’

Miranda’s head thumped when she nodded, making her wince.

‘You’re concussed, which is why you’re having dizzy spells. Your skull seems intact, but I want you to stay in bed for a few days.’

‘How is my sister?’

‘We shall go and find out. You come with me in case she takes fright. How long has she had this fever?’

‘Two days.’

Lucy whimpered when she opened her eyes. ‘My head feels wobbly.’

Miranda took her hand. ‘It’s all right, dearest. Sir James is just going to take a look at you.’

He examined Lucy’s arms, legs and face quickly and efficiently. ‘Does she have blisters on her chest, stomach and back?’

Fear thrust at Miranda. ‘Yes … It’s not smallpox, is it?’

‘It looks to be more like chickenpox. Have you had it?’

‘Yes, when I was an infant.’

‘Miss Lucinda should feel more lively in a day or two when all the spots have appeared. You must tell her not to scratch the pustules, especially if they come out on her face; otherwise they’ll scar. I’ll find a soothing salve to help stop the itch.’ He gave a bit of a laugh. ‘I’ve got one I made for the dogs. It killed their fleas by suffocation and took the itch from their bites at the same time.’

‘I didn’t know fleas breathed.’

Giving her a quick glance, he chuckled. ‘Didn’t you?’

‘You made that up,’ she accused.

‘Yes … but nature is fascinating. If you’ve ever examined a flea through a microscope, you would know that there’s a strong probability that it takes air in through little openings in its side.’

That sounded more likely. ‘So they get stuck in the salve and can’t get air.’

His glance travelled over the shapeless swath of flannel she was wearing, and he grinned. ‘You’re a child – too young to know of such things, or have responsibility for yourself, let alone your sister.’

She didn’t bother to enlighten him – to tell him she was nearly nineteen and her sister three years younger. She needed all the help she could get at the moment, and he obviously liked children. He wouldn’t have allowed them inside if he was going to throw them out. He might fall back on convention if he knew she was of marriageable age.

Mrs Pridie said, ‘Cook has warmed some chicken broth, but I don’t think the younger girl will eat much. Nancy is upset about what she did to Miss Jarvis.’

‘Perhaps you would tell her I’m not badly hurt, and it wasn’t her fault; it was mine,’ Miranda said immediately, which earned her a look of approval from Sir James as well as Pridie.

‘I’ll help my sister to eat her broth.’

Lucy shook her head and whined, ‘I’m not hungry, just thirsty.’

‘Could you manage some milk?’

When Lucy nodded, Sir James said, ‘I’ll send a maid up with some. In the meantime, you can try a little of the broth, Miss Lucy, since you need to get your strength up. I insist.’

Lucy managed a couple of spoonfuls before pushing it away. When the milk arrived, she only sipped at it at first and then found enough energy to gulp the rest down. Miranda sighed, wiping away her sister’s creamy moustache when Lucy’s eyes began to close. She tucked the covers over her, wishing she could set aside her cares and responsibilities so easily. ‘Sleep, then, Lucy. Call me if you need me.’

Afterwards, Miranda wolfed down her own bowl of broth, though her head ached with every spoonful she swallowed. It was the most delicious soup she’d ever tasted.

‘Into bed with you now, young lady,’ Mrs Pridie said.

The bed was the softest she’d ever known, like lying in a cloud. The room was blissfully warm and the light from the flames sent shadows leaping and dancing across the room. She yawned. Now they were safe, she felt tired and falling apart, as if all the pent-up tension that had been keeping her together was draining away.

It was dark outside the windows. Mrs Pridie lit a nightlight and pulled the window hangings across. ‘There’s a bell on the table next to you. Ring it if you wake in the night and need anything. There will be a maid sleeping on the day bed and she can see to you tonight. Don’t worry if you hear noises outside or see lights.’

‘What sort of noises?’

‘Could be men’s voices, or thumping and scraping sounds, maybe. If you do hear those things, don’t mention it to the master.’

‘Why not?’

‘It’s not women’s business, that’s why, and he doesn’t like people prying into his affairs. Course, it could be the apparition of the monk from the Abbey. He’s seen from time to time walking abroad. The master gets angry if he’s mentioned. Says it’s twaddle.’

‘And is it?’

She smiled to take the sting from her words. ‘Who knows? Sleep well, Miss Jarvis.’

‘Thank you, Mrs Pridie; you’ve been very kind.’

The woman gently patted her cheek and said in her soothing, almost musical voice, ‘It costs nothing to be kind to a body. You’re a nice young lady, with good manners. No harm will come to you and your sister here, though the master can be strict and expects to be obeyed. How old are you, dear – about fifteen?’

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