Read The Disgrace of Kitty Grey Online
Authors: Mary Hooper
I left it lying on the floor while I thought about it, until Betsy gave a shuddering, shivering sob in her sleep which near broke my heart. I touched her face; she was still icy cold. People could die of being cold, I knew that; every winter we'd hear about one or two travelling beggars who'd frozen to death in the hedges.
I put the wooden spur from the chair on the fire. The wood, being hard, did not catch immediately, but when it did, it began to throw out merry little flames all along its length.
There was no going back now. I removed all four legs from the chair, wriggled the seat so that the struts holding the cane fell out, then did the same for the backrest. In no time at all, it seemed, the chair was in pieces on the floor in front of me. I moved closer to the fire and began to feed the chair, piece by piece, on to it. As the flames burned up I thought of home, and sitting in front of the fire with my ma and pa on cold nights, as well as the huge marble fireplaces at Bridgeford Hall and the great logs they brought in every winter. Mostly, though, I thought of Will and how he'd come up to the big house one evening and, the other servants being already abed, we'd opened the front of the kitchen range and toasted chestnuts on a little brass shovel. How happy we'd been then.
When the cane seat went on to the fire, I felt I wanted to wake Betsy to see the sight, for the cane crackled and sparked and the orange, yellow and blue flames flared and danced, making the whole room light up and giving it an almost cheerful aspect.
I held my hands out to the heat, feeling them warm for the first time in days. If Betsy recovered quickly, I thought, maybe it would still be all right. We could search along the river for Will or members of his family â and perhaps be able to discover a way of earning a little money while we did so. Perhaps, if I made myself presentable, I might even get a job in the beautiful dairy in the Strand.
But as I sat there musing, disaster came â smoke began coming back down the chimney, first creeping into the room and then billowing out in great clouds of acrid black and making me cough.
I jumped up and flapped my skirts at the smoke a bit, not knowing what else to do. There came the sound of heavy feet crashing up the stairs, and Mr Burroughs burst into our room.
âYou've set my chimneys on fire!' he shouted. âYou stupid jade! Who said you could have a fire?'
Startled and frightened by his sudden appearance, I didn't reply, merely waved at the smoke to try and disperse it.
âIf you wanted a fire you should have paid for a climbing boy to sweep the chimney!'
âI'm sorry. I didn't know,' I said. I glanced at Betsy on the bed: miraculously, she was still asleep. âBut, anyway, I can let the fire go out now.' I stood up and shook out the still damp blanket, more as a distraction than anything else, for I didn't want him to see that his chair was missing.
âIf that smoke has blown back into my other rooms, spoiling people's clothes and such . . .'
âI'll pay for the damage,' I said quickly, knowing exactly how much money I had in my purse and thinking that Betsy and I would have to make a run for it. I edged towards the last piece of the chair: the curved back strut which was lying on the floor. If I could just push it under the bed with my foot . . .
âAnd there's to be no more fires here until â' His glance suddenly fell to the floor. âWhat is it that you've been burning?'
Betsy began whimpering in her sleep, then opened her eyes.
âFirewood,' I replied quickly, âand some newspaper and fish bones.'
âWhat's that on the floor, then?' He pointed at the chair strut.
âJust firewood,' I answered.
âThat's not firewood â that's my chair. My fine dining chair!'
â 'Twas not
fine
!' I said immediately. âIt was an old, broken-down kitchen chair, only fit to be used for a fire.'
He picked up the strut, regarding it as you would a bar of gold. âOh, the deceit of the girl!' he shouted. âShe has set light to my furniture!'
Betsy, struggling to free herself from the shawls that swaddled her, stared at him, terrified.
âI'll pay for the chair,' I said quickly.
âOh, yes, you will pay for it. Indeed you will!' He crossed to the small window, opened the shutters and leaned out. âYou, boy!' he shouted down. He pulled a coin from his pocket and threw it so that I heard it strike the cobbles. âHere's a penny. Go for a constable, will you?'
âIs it a fire, sir?' I heard the boy call back.
âNot a fire, a thie
f
! Arson! A malicious destroyer of furniture! Find a constable or go and ask the magistrate to send a Runner! Quick as you like.'
I heard the boy shout something in reply and the landlord gave a satisfied grunt and closed the shutters.
âVery keen on catching criminals, the Runners. A most efficient policing system.'
I began shaking all over. âPlease,' I said. âI know I shouldn't have . . .'
âSave your pleas for the court,' he said, and so saying he turned on his heel and went out of the room, locking the door behind him.
Â
Â
I was too angry to cry, too bewildered, too frightened â and too worried about Betsy. I took her on my knee and tried to comfort and reassure her, but even at five years old she could tell that I was just uttering meaningless words and it was
not
going to be all right. The awfulness had begun the moment we'd arrived in London and it had got steadily worse. I was too scared to think of what might happen to us now.
Mr Burroughs returned with two men: two officious, stout men in navy serge suits who came pounding up the stairs and, on the door being unlocked, came one each side of where I was sitting on the bed, took Betsy away from me and pulled me to my feet. I would have liked to have been brave in front of Betsy but I could not manage it, and began to weep.
âThis is the wicked girl, is it, sir?' the first Runner asked the landlord.
âI am not wicked at all!' I cried, and I struggled with them and kicked out at their shins. I know now this was the worst thing I could have done, for if I had acted meek and repentant it would have gone better with me and they would not have been so rough.
âWhy, I have never had anyone more wicked under my roof!' Mr Burroughs said. âBurning my furniture . . . stealing my chickens â'
âChickens!' I cried, stopping my struggles. âWhat would I be wanting with chickens? I haven't even seen any chickens.'
âBut you admit to burning furniture?' asked the second Runner.
âI burned a rickety old chair,' I said. âIt could have only been worth a penny or two.'
âShe wantonly destroyed good furniture,' said the landlord. âShe came to my house and set fire to my things! That's arson.'
âIs this true?' asked the first Runner.
â 'Twas only one thing that I burned, and that just because it was fierce cold in the room and the child was not well â'
âI had five chickens when she arrived â now they're nowhere to be seen,' Mr Burroughs interrupted. âI do b'lieve she's taken them up and sold them!'
âI have not!' I cried. âThere are no chickens and never have been!'
âBut, anyway, arson alone is surely a hanging offence,' added the landlord.
I was terrified by this last remark and hoped that Betsy wouldn't understand what it meant. âI burned a small, old chair for firewood!' I protested, as images of the scaffold rose up before me. In my mind's eye I saw myself kneeling to take a last blessing from a cleric, having a hood fitted, the noose being placed over my head . . .
The first man nodded towards Betsy. âIs this your own child?'
I shook my head. âShe is my friend's sister.'
âThen why is she with you?'
âHave you kidnapped her to use for begging?' the other wanted to know. âIf you have, it would be as well to confess it now.'
â
Kidnapped
?
' I began incredulously.
The landlord made a gesture with his hands, as if to say he'd heard quite enough. âJust take her away! We are not able to sleep easy in our beds with such wickedness in the house.'
âDo you admit that you burned furniture?' the first Runner asked.
â
Valuable
furniture,' put in Mr Burroughs.
I nodded. There was not much else I could do, seeing as the charred remains of the chair were still smouldering on the fire.
âShe is guilty as charged; a wicked and wayward girl who has no place in an honest and God-fearing house.'
Suddenly, realising that the Runners' grip on me had loosened a little while they'd been speaking, I slipped and wriggled out of their grasp and made a dash for the door. I had only reached the top of the stairs, however, when Betsy gave a piercing scream and I stopped in my tracks. How could I go? How could I even think of running away and leaving her?
âYou were going without me!' she wailed as the Runners took hold of me once more.
âOf course I wasn't.'
âYou were! You were!'
âI was going to escape, then come back and get you later,' I said, already deeply ashamed of myself.
âTake up your possessions,' the first Runner instructed. âWe are going to the courthouse so you can be formally charged.'
âWith arson, that will be,' the landlord said, giving a nod and a malicious smile. âAs I said before, a hanging offence.'
Betsy looked at me. âWhat does
that
mean?'
I didn't reply, but the landlord â that evil man â replied for me, by putting his hands around his neck and, pulling a grotesque face, pretending to choke himself. Betsy shrank back from him in terror.
âBring your things and come with us,' said the first Runner.
Turning my back and weeping heartily, I prepared to leave. Packing did not take more than a few seconds, for we had only Betsy's cloth bag and her corn dollies to think about; we were wearing everything else.
We were bundled downstairs, forced out of the house and pushed and pulled through the lanes with the landlord coming up behind. I would have gone quietly so as not to draw attention to ourselves, but Betsy â who was back in full voice â shrieked and struggled with each step she took, so that passers-by turned to stare and even crossed the street to get a better look at whoever-it-was being carted off to Bow Street. Not everyone was on the side of law and order by any means, however, for several women patted Betsy's head and murmured, âShame on you' to our captors, and one old man gave me two apples, saying, âPoor child' with the utmost pity.
The way to the magistrates' court was, unfortunately, past Mr Holloway's dairy, and seeing that he was standing outside, I lifted my shawl and swathed it around my face in the hope that he wouldn't recognise me. It didn't work, though, because he came to ask the Runners what I had been involved in.
The landlord spoke first, butting in rudely to say, âBy speaking to this drab you address an arsonist and a thief. This wicked creature has set fire to my home and stolen my chickens!'
âIndeed?' Mr Holloway said. âI'm most surprised to hear it.'
âYou know I wouldn't do such a thing!' I said to Mr Holloway.
âDon't be deceived by her innocent looks,' the landlord returned. âShe's wicked through and through.'
âMr Holloway!' I said quickly. âI'm very sorry about your cows. Betsy was ill and I couldn't leave her.'
âAh. I thought it might be something of that nature,' he replied, and to my astonishment he pressed two shillings into my hand and said to the Runners that I had been a good and hard-working girl and that he would give me a character reference if it was needed. I was quite overcome at this and would have liked to thank him properly, but there was no time for such a civility before the Runners had hold of me again and I was being marched along with Betsy sobbing and clinging to my skirts.