Authors: Hilary Wilde
Tags: #Large type books, #General, #England, #Inheritance and succession, #Fiction
Why had he made such an impression on her? she wondered. It was absurd, because she hadn't even seen his face properly nor knew the colour of his eyes.
The fog had gone in the morning. Relieved and with the excitement flooding her veins, she ate a hasty breakfast and then, with Mr. Ayres' painstakingly careful descriptions of how to find the castle by her side, Cindy set off. Now the mountains she loved appeared as the roads wove round the lakes and through the sleepy stone-house villages. It was absurd, she knew, but she felt that she was going home. Yet how could it be home simply because when she was seven, she had spent a few weeks there?
The beauty seemed to grow the further she drove. The mountains with their golden-brown bracken and
the clumps of trees reflected in the quiet stillness of the water seemed to be welcoming her. This was the life she loved, Cindy thought happily. Quietness, serenity . . . that was a good word. She felt serene here, free from troubles, far from the humiliation Oliver had caused her, far from the loneliness of life in big cities, far from the squabbles at the office, the pettiness she hated. Maybe she was what is called a loner, Cindy thought as she drove carefully along the twisting roads, enjoying the glimpses of blue water or a quick look at a square-towered church tucked away in a small village.
At last she was getting near Claife Castle. She knew because a large beautiful lake was Windermere. Of course the quiet roads would be very different in the summer months, but then, tucked up in the castle, she needn't see them.
If the castle is yours, she told herself quickly. After all, the real heir might suddenly turn up at any moment.
Ambleside ! She recognised the name on the signpost and knew that she could not be far. Slowing up by the side of the road, she read the directions.
"After Ambleside, you'll see a crossroads, take the sharp turn to the left ... after about ten miles, you'll see a white signpost on the right. This leads to the castle."
She drove on slowly. Mr. Ayres was right. Thu crossroads, then further on the white post with the words Claife Castle painted on it.
It was only a track with deep corrugations, so she drove slowly up the side of the hill and round it, until she found herself on a plateau. Far below was a lake,
a strange-looking one absurdly the shape of a heart. Grassy slopes went down to the water's edge while clumps of trees, their bare branches like animated fingers of a ballet dancer, were silhouetted against the bright sky. Then she saw the entrance to the castle. This she had not remembered, and it took her breath away. An old stone lodge with small windows, while on one side were two castellated towers with heavy wrought-iron gates between them that were closed.
Cindy hooted and a short fat man with a cap pulled over his eyes, wearing a thick pullover and corduroy breeches and wellingtons, came hobbling out and gave her a quick look.
"I'm Miss Preston," Cindy called. "Mrs. Stone is expecting me."
He came close to the car, his
weather beaten
face sou
r, his eyes suspicious. "Has ta
been afore ?"
"No, this is my first visit," Cindy told him, and smiled.
He pursed his mouth and nodded slowly. "I'll be seeing you now," he told her, and moved off to open the gates.
"Thanks," Cindy called, but he had turned his back as if glad to see the last of her. She wondered why.
Feeling a little shattered at his unfriendly welcome, she drove on more slowly down a curving narrow drive, hemmed in by tall bushes she thought might be rhododendrons. Down below, through gaps in the bushes she could see a small village, the houses huddled together near the lake, but then as she drove round a corner she had eyes only for what lay ahead.
The castle ! It was even more fabulous than she had remembered. She slowed down to look at it—a huge
square collection of castellated towers, joined together by grey stone blocks with narrow slits of windows and heavy wooden doors. Further round the building the windows were larger. There was a narrow moat and a drawbridge down.
She just could not believe it. They called it a mock castle ! It was exactly the kind of castle you thought of for fairy stories where the princess is rescued by the handsome prince. Beautiful, time-kissed grey stone and far below, the blue of the lake. What more could you want ?
A car was parked on the gravel square before the castle, so Cindy parked alongside, took out her suitcase and walked over the drawbridge to the front door. She had to keep turning to look at the lake below or up at the trees that made a pretence of protecting the castle from the winds that must blow fiercely at times.
A huge carved brass lion's head was on the door, so Cindy knocked. Silence. It seemed endless, so she knocked, again. The door groaned and squeaked but slowly opened. Cindy caught her breath as she and the woman facing her stared at one another. Cindy found it hard to believe her eyes, wondering if this was some kind of joke, for the Woman looked like a tall scarecrow, her grey hair drawn tightly back from her forehead and neck with wisps of hair that had escaped. Her high cheekbones made her face almost like a skull, the skin taut and grey, her month drooping at the corners, her chin spotty, and her eyes— ! Her eyes were a strange grey and cold with hatred.
"Mrs. Stone," Cindy said politely, smiling a little nervously. "I'm Miss Freston."
"You were to come yesterday," the shrill impatient voice accused.
"I know, Mrs. Stone, but there was a bad fog and I had to spend the night on the way."
"You could have let me know."
"I tried to, but I was told the phone at Claife Castle was out of order."
Mrs. Stone frowned. "Is it ?" she said accusingly, almost as if it was Cindy's fault. "I'll get Paul to go down to the village and complain." She turned away, putting her hands to her mouth and bellowing : "Paul . . . Paul !"
Cindy fidgeted a little and put down her case, for what else could she do ? Short of pushing her way past the housekeeper, she had to wait.
In a moment, a long-legged man in blue jeans and a pullover came running. His fair hair curled on his shoulders, his eyes as he looked at Cindy were angry.
"So she's here now," he said.
"Paul, the phone isn't working. Go down to the village," Mrs. Stone told him.
Paul looked Cindy up and down, his eyes narrowed.
"I'll go now."
He bounded off to the car Cindy had seen parked and with a great roar and strange hooting, went off down the drive. Mrs. Stone looked at Cindy.
"The phone was working in the morning."
"Well, it wasn't in the late afternoon," Cindy said, trying not to be annoyed, though Mrs. Stone's voice had almost implied that she was a liar. "At least that's what the exchange said."
Mrs. Stone didn't answer and then turned away.
"You'd better come in," she said reluctantly, almost as if she wished she could think of an alternative.
Cindy followed, carrying her suitcase. In the hall, she paused, looking up at the lofty rafters, the stationary soldiers in armour that stood about, the wide curved staircase.
Mrs. Stone paused on the stairs, looking round. "Are you coming now ?" she said crossly.
"Of course." Cindy followed the older woman up the uncarpeted stairs, looking round curiously. Everything was old but also very shabby, she noticed, as if no money had been spent on the castle in years. Perhaps it hadn't been, for according to Keith Ayres, Uncle Robert had had financial troubles.
Mrs. Stone opened a door, stood back dramatically to let Cindy in, staring at her as if wondering what Cindy's reaction would be.
Cindy gasped, because it was like going into a museum—a huge four-poster bed with a torn but clean apricot-coloured silk bedspread, a dark brown' carpet, heavy dark green curtains hanging either side of a big window. Cindy acted impulsively. Dropping her suitcase, she ran across the room. It was indeed a beautiful view, for they 'were above the trees and she could see the whole steep slope down to the lake with the gentle mountains on the other side. It was so beautiful.
"The bathroom is down the passage. The door is open," Mrs. Stone said, but Cindy only heard her as from a long distance. "Lunch will be served at one o'clock," then a pause and Mrs. Stone's voice rose so shrilly that Cindy was jerked back to the present and turned round to meet the cold suspicious eyes that
glared at her. "And how long will you be staying now?" Mrs. Stone demanded.
"A week, Mr. Ayres suggested," Cindy told her, wondering at the animosity she saw.
"Ugh !" Mrs. Stone grunted, turned away and left the room, closing the door with a gentle bang that was far more expressive of her temper than a loud slam might have been.
"But why is she so mad at me?" Cindy wondered as she hastily unpacked. Glancing at her watch, she saw she had an hour to spend before lunch. She decided to stroll around, hoping to keep out of Mrs. Stone's way.
The castle was every bit as fascinating as Cindy had remembered, and yet it was different, not less beautiful or exciting, but sadly shabby as if no one had bothered about it for years. It was clean, the beautiful antique furniture well polished, so Mrs. Stone was not to be blamed. It was as if the owner of the castle had either ceased to care—or had given it up as hopeless, knowing he had not the money needed to revive it. Another favourite expression of Mr. Jenkins', Cindy thought with a smile, wondering how he and Maggie, who was relieving for her, were getting on.
Wandering round the castle, it was difficult for Cindy not to feel some dismay. She now understood what Keith Ayres had meant when he talked of money. It would need thousands of pounds to bring the castle back to what it once was. And where could she find thousands of pounds? Perhaps the antiques could be sold and the money raised could be spent
on new curtains and carpets, as well as repairs to the cracks in some of the walls.
Coming to an open door, Cindy stepped outside. The crisp cold air stung her cheeks, but she stood still, breathing deeply. There must be a way ... there had to be. But where was she to find it?
Walking round the garden, she decided that Paul Stone was not the hard worker his mother was, nor as conscientious. Cindy knew little about gardening, but it seemed to her that this garden was in a shocking state. Long tough grass, weeds everywhere, trees and bushes that needed pruning. Surely Uncle Robert must have noticed.
Glancing at her watch, Cindy had to hurry, for she didn't want to give Mrs. Stone more reason for her hostility.
The lunch was delicious, well cooked and served. Cindy congratulated Mrs. Stone and was repaid with an angry glare.
"So I ought to be—a good cook, I mean. The years I've cooked should have taught me. Ever since Paul's father died I've cooked for others, I have," Mrs. Stone said angrily, almost as if she blamed Cindy for it.
"I'm sure Mr. Baxter appreciated your cooking," Cindy told her.
"I don't think he ever noticed anything much. A sad man brokenhearted by his wicked son," Mrs. Stone said as she whipped off the plates.
"Was he wicked?" Cindy ventured to ask.
Mrs. Stone scowled. "Of course he was wicked—ungrateful, cruel. Lets his father give him a good education and then walks out—just when his father needed help because he wasn't well. This was before
I came, of course. Never came back—the son, I mean. Just walked out. Proper broke the old man's heart. He could never forgive the boy. And quite right, too ! Well, I must be getting on with my work now. Dinner at seven. Will you be wanting tea now?"
Cindy hesitated. She had just had coffee ! Then she realised it was just Mrs. Stone's habit of adding the word now on to most sentences.
"No, thank you." She stood up. "I thought I'd drive around."
"Better to do so while the sun is out. 'Tisn't often sunny, here. Fearful lot of rain for weeks on end," Mrs. Stone said depressingly as she lifted the tray and disappeared.
Cindy wandered round the dining-room with its long walnut table. She wondered how long it was since a dinner party had been held there. In the big glass-fronted sideboard she could see beautiful glasses of every shape and size. Once upon a time this must have been a beautiful room. Now it was sad—sad for the loss of beauty that time and lack of money had caused. But it could be put right. If the drab walls were repainted and cheap curtain material bought...
Upstairs, she put on her thick coat and a scarf round her head. Where should she go? Maybe just wander around. No, perhaps the local village at the bottom of the hill was a good place to start.
She drove through the wide open gates slowly, then ignored the track by which she had come and drove down a track that seemed to be going straight down the hillside. It wasn't, of course, instead it went sideways in a series of twists, rather like the way a snake moved, Cindy was thinking as she glanced about. Far
below she could see the spire of a church—from behind a clump of trees came rising the smoke from a cottage. Every now and then she saw the lake below as the branches of the trees moved. She wondered where the path from which the castle got its name was.