In Consequence – Chapter 19, pt 1

In Consequence by Trudy Brasure

In Consequence by Trudy Brasure

John woke as pale light displaced the receding darkness in the small, unfamiliar bedroom of his wife’s maiden days. With drowsy deliberation, he roused himself to alleviate the dull ache in his hip, careful not to disturb the sleeper in front of him. Prickling pain surged through the arm now relieved from its ill-arranged position as blood rushed to resume its normal courses within.

He eased himself off the mattress and stretched as he stood upon a braided rug, his bare feet peeking from rumpled trousers. The crinkled cotton of his day shirt mocked the crimping crick in his neck. He passed his hand over the offending discomfort in a wincing exhalation of breath.

The house was silent. The horror of death’s dark visit had passed. Now there remained the tedious tasks to which the living must attend, walking and breathing the waking nightmare as they adjusted their lives to the loss while their minds searched the halls of memory to recall the voice and smiles of one who no more animates earth’s scene.

He gazed at Margaret with a painful longing to fill the void of her loss with all the tenderness of his powerful love. He wished her a peaceful repose for as long as it could be taken.

John put on the vestments of his position with thought to the unpleasant arrangements that must be made and the unavoidable alteration to his daily schedule. Unshaven and weary of heart, he dressed and silently slipped from the room. The chill of the morning fog seemed to penetrate the walls. He shivered in the October air as he descended the stairs.

Stepping into the parlor, Mr. Thornton noted the sleeping form of the gaunt servant girl – Higgins’ daughter, he had discovered – curled up under a gray wool blanket on the couch. A twinge of grateful sympathy softened the features of his face at the sight of her steadfast loyalty.

He crouched to start a fire in the cold room, where the family might gather before breakfast.

“I can see to that, Sir,” a wavering voice offered.

He turned to see the Higgins girl smoothing an errant strand of hair behind her ear. She was sitting upright, her tired face flushed in embarrassment of having been seen caught sleeping.

“I can manage here. Perhaps you could tend to the dining room,” he suggested gently. She sprang to follow his command, leaving him alone to set the coals glowing.

The doorbell rang a moment later, causing the girl to retrace her steps. Mr. Thornton’s ears pricked at the sound of a familiar voice in the hallway. He took swift paces to where his mother handed a large basket, laden with food, to Mary.

“Mother,” he exclaimed, in welcome surprise.

“Mrs. Hale…” she inquired with caution, the servant’s red-rimmed eyes and somber silence offering her little cause for hope.

The strong man dropped his gaze from the eager inquiry. “She is gone,” he muttered.

“When?” The whispered word was choked out after a moment of stunned silence.

“Sometime very late…in the night.”

Hannah’s heart bled for her son as she studied his weary, disheveled appearance. He would bear the burden of sorrow with strength and dignity, fighting against the forces which would try to crush out his happiness, so recently attained, in this unjust turn of fate. “And Margaret?” she asked after his new bride, uncertain how well the girl would bear up to the untimely strain of loss.

“She sleeps, for now,” he answered, his forehead creased in contemplation of breaking her restful peace.

“Do you go to work?”

He let out a long breath and shook his head in a quandary of indecision. “I am scheduled to meet with a buyer, who has been forestalled already for my wedding travels.”

“I will stay to assist in whatever way I am able. Go, if you have need. I will remain as long you are away,” she offered, receiving a nod of thanks.

“You have not eaten?” she asked, guessing the answer.

“Little thought has been given to food this past day.”

“Sustenance must be provided,” she said, brushing past him to survey the empty dining room. “There is little wisdom in starving the body at such a time. The heart needs strength. Call the house to breakfast in an hour. I will help see that it is ready,” she commanded as she turned to follow the young maid to the kitchen.

John moved to follow her firm direction, grateful to allow another to establish order in the confusing wake of tragedy. He knocked gently at the bedroom door he had so recently quitted and opened it to find Margaret hurrying to fasten on her petticoats.

“I heard the bell. Has someone come?” she asked in a fluster, prepared to forestall the morning’s oppressive gloom with needful activity.

“My mother has come to help. Do not trouble yourself,” he soothed, taking her hands into his to stay her restless motions. “She is even now preparing our breakfast.”

She stared unblinking at him for a moment before the tears began to gather in her eyes in awful comprehension of her loss. Here was one called mother, so unlike her own, who would offer comfort and kindness while her own dear mother lay cold and lifeless across the hall. Shameful jealousy stung at the realization that only one mother remained betwixt them. It was unjustly cruel – she would never have her gentle mother back again!

“Margaret,” her husband murmured as he witnessed silent tears spilling down her cheeks. He swiftly enfolded her into a tender embrace, holding her close as the first choking sobs of grief wracked her body. Relieved in some measure that her stoic stance had broken, John offered silent comfort to the sufferer until the tears subsided and she released him from his patient service.

The family was gathered for breakfast in an hour’s time. Somewhat embarrassed by his emotional outbursts the night before, Frederick attempted to meet the others with a measure of cheer but broke into tears over some remark of his sister, whose sympathetic and sorrowful gaze reminded him pointedly of their shared grief.

John spoke gently with the broken-down widower in his study afterwards, and was gladly given leave to make all necessary arrangements, Mr. Hale being neither able nor willing to make any effort towards these final steps other than to mumble a request that no grand gestures be made. He had an aversion to the pompous affectations of mortals to morbid social ritual and was certain his wife’s sure entrance to heaven required no earthly fanfare.

The newly married Master gave his wife an affectionate good-bye before heading out to accomplish several unbending tasks, with a promise to return as quickly as he could.

The hours passed with unbearable slowness for Margaret. The quiet efficiency of her mother-in-law was a mixed blessing for the mourning bride. The daily pattern of responsibility being wrested from her, Margaret yearned for some common toil to occupy the numbing emptiness of her mind and half-wished her mother-in-law away. Yet, underlying her temperamental annoyance, she found a certain comfort in the widow’s unseen presence and blinked away the fresh rise of tears at the remembrance of her soft-spoken words of sympathy and the surprising warmth of caring in her eyes.

It was both a pleasure and a hollow comfort to spend time with Frederick, who found relief in chattering away, telling her more of his past and his hopes for the future. Their eyes flashed at one another in shared anxiety when their father finally joined them in the drawing room, having spent most of the day in the closed room with the dead.

The faded light of late afternoon added to the somber atmosphere of the quiet room. The ticking of the clock on the mantle could be heard. Mr. Hale’s grave face appeared shocked into still confusion as he lowered himself onto his favorite easy chair. His children watched him intently as he drew his brows together, his eyes unfocused upon the carpet before him.

“Dixon has given me cause for alarm,” he announced, bringing his gaze to Frederick.

*****

Margaret and her brother spoke in hushed tones in the front parlor sometime later as the last light of day began to dwindle. Discussing the danger of Frederick’s stay had greatly agitated Mr. Hale and Margaret had coaxed her father to rest in his room before dinner. The siblings had not long been occupied in their new venue when a knock on the front door was heard. Dixon grumbled from some distant place as the door was opened without her aid.

A tall figure appeared at the threshold of the carpeted room. Margaret’s weary heart soared at the sight of her husband, his returning presence infusing in her fresh hope and strength in this sorest of trials. How the hours had dragged on without him! She rose instantly from her seat to greet him, suddenly glimpsing what had not been there before: around the upper arm of his coat was a band of black crape.

Tears sprang to her eyes at his gesture of unity with her family, the fresh recognition of her permanent bond with him striking her deeply. He was her husband now. She would never be alone again. He would stand by her through all of life’s trials.

“Margaret,” the returning groom muttered with agitated concern, taking gentle hold of her arms at the sight of her tear-filled gaze. “Has something happened?”

She shook her head, unable to look at him as she blinked back tears of gratitude and relief. She could not explain in words what had touched her so profoundly.

“Nothing has happened, but there is news,” she whispered, raising her face to his as she gained some control over her emotions. “The other day, Dixon encountered in the streets of Milton someone who sailed with Frederick in years past, and who knows of his history,” she related with trepidation.

John’s breath stilled. A chill of foreboding pulled his muscles taut.

“I should have let him pass by, but it was such a surprise to see a face from the south in these parts,” Dixon lamented with a shake of her head, stepping into the room. Mr. Thornton gave the family servant a look of impatient forbearance.

“You have no faith in this man’s sympathy,” John deduced, speaking to no one in particular. “What kind of person is he? What is his name?” he asked.

“The worst sort. His name is George Leonards. A sorrier sailor I’ve never seen,” Frederick answered with a flare of contempt.

“He’s a ne’er-do-well and a plague to his family since he was a boy,” Dixon readily added. “I asked him what he was doing in Milton and he said he had business to attend, but he looks just as he ever did – an out-and-out ruffian searching for some scheme for easy profit.”

“He did not like Frederick, I’m afraid,” Margaret relayed.

These accounts sank heavily in John’s heart. He let out his breath in consternation at this untidy complication. His experience as a magistrate had taught him only too well how unscrupulous greed and spite could motivate men to pursue their unscrupulous desires.

“Does this Leonards know where you live?” Mr. Thornton asked Dixon. “Did you meet him close to this house so that he might have followed you home?”

“No. He took the omnibus away,” she replied. “He does not know where we abide. And not many in Milton know of us, having come so recently from the south,” Dixon added in a more hopeful tone.

Her answer did little to alleviate the weight of his concern. There might be time for some reprieve, but there could be great danger in keeping a fugitive.

“You must not stay,” Mr. Thornton decreed, looking to Frederick.

“That is what father said as well,” the exiled son replied with a sigh. “But I’ve only just arrived!” he countered in rising rebellion. “I’ve a mind to stay as long as I please. I’ll not cower at the hand of a rogue such as Leonards!”

“No,” the Milton magistrate stated firmly, noting the alarm on Margaret’s face at her brother’s words. “It is too dangerous to act with impunity. You must return to Spain as soon as possible.”

“Frederick and I were talking,” Margaret interjected hesitantly. “Perhaps Henry could help him clear his name. More light may have been shed on Captain Reed’s offenses these past years. If testimony could be gained…”

“No,” her husband reiterated without cavil, meeting her startled look with sympathy for her innocence. “The tribunal is set apart from the court systems which we rightly trust to mete out justice from reasonable evidence. Clemency is not the method of the military. Their figures of authority exact strict obedience from the leagues of men at their command. To examine the justification of individual protest would be, you must understand, uncommon.”

Margaret bowed her head in concession, nodding her reluctant accord. The spark of defiance died in Frederick’s eyes and he gazed at the floor in stark comprehension of his fate.

“I regret that England can never be your home,” Mr. Thornton continued more gently. “But from all you have told us, it seems that purpose and place await you in Spain,” he added, eliciting a small smile from the English-born adventurer. “Perhaps someday we will set sail to visit you,” he remarked auspiciously, this time gaining the hopeful smile of his wife.

The subject of Frederick’s departure was discussed once more at the dinner table, where Mr. Hale confessed he would not feel at peace until he knew that his son had safely boarded the train to Liverpool. Margaret offered to take her brother to the station, but Mr. Thornton insisted that the departure must take place after daylight and that he would be the one to ensure that Frederick was safely on his way out of the country.

Hannah Thornton sat watching all that transpired with circumspection, her eyes widening at her son’s promise to safeguard one accounted a criminal to the Crown.

A solemn silence pervaded the Thorntons’ carriage ride home that evening until John’s voice pierced the settled gloom. “It may not be the proper time to tell you, but I must not keep news of such portent to myself any longer….Mr. Bell has given me ownership of the mill and the house as a wedding gift,” he announced without embellishment of emotion.

A passing streetlamp threw light upon his mother’s astonished face in the darkness.

“You own the land and all the property thereon?” Margaret asked, surprise sounding in her voice.

“Yes.”

“How wonderful,” she remarked with quiet enthusiasm. “He is very generous; you will not need to pay rent ever again. That must be a great benefit to your position, is it not? Are you pleased?” she asked, a little uncertain after her words if he was comfortable to be gifted what might over time be earned.

“How can I not be? Yes, I am pleased,” he assured her warmly, taking her hand in his in the shadowy darkness and giving it a gentle squeeze.

For the Love of a Widower – Part Twelve

For the love of a Widower

Original Handcut Silhouette by Kathryn Flocken

 

Chapter Eleven

 

And there it was, Jasper acknowledged. The question he had been asking himself for the last couple of minutes, and to which he had no true answer. Why had he suddenly decided that Freddie should become the next Countess of Trewarth?

He abruptly let go of Freddie’s hands, and sighed.

“For two reasons, Freddie,” he said, his voice giving way involuntarily. “First, I was desperate to find a woman willing to become my wife on short notice so that I can gain my rightful title. You were the first to cross my path, and I find you are well suited to fulfil the conditions, laid upon me by the Earl. Secondly, I am truly delighted with the manner you interact with my little Fiona and the way she responds to you. Fiona is the one that I cherish most in life, Freddie, and she likes you. That is what decided me ultimately, Freddie. You must be a good person because my Fiona already trusts you. If you will have me for a husband, you shall not regret it, as long as you agree to be a mother to Fiona.”

Winifred realised with a considerable shock that his eyes were burning into hers. She had not expected that from the matter-of-fact tone in which he had just stated his reasons for marrying her. It had all sounded so cold and businesslike. Jasper did not say that he cared for her and that hurt, more than she would like to admit. She was developing feelings for this man, and they frightened her. So now, when his eyes seemed to burn their way right into her soul, Winnie was lost. And confused, too. She needed to think, force her thoughts into some shred of order.

When the call for the last round came – indicating that the taproom was about to be closed for the night – Winifred stood. “I shall give you my answer after we reach Edinburgh, Jasper. First I have to learn about my father’s inheritance. I bid you goodnight.” And up the stairs she went, leaving Jasper to stare after her in astonishment.

 

Alone in his room on the floor above, Aloysius Bracknell clenched his fists in a sudden fit of rage. That brazen Lansing chit had found herself an ally!

Damnation! Rage coursed through him at the realisation that he had nearly overlooked the thin youth coming down the stairs. Oh, she had disguised herself very cleverly, indeed. She must have cut her hair, he mused. And, most importantly, she had managed to cling to that tall, strong fellow. The man must know she was not a young buck because he had not failed to see Aloysius’ interest in Miss Lansing, and had promptly hailed her to him as his ‘little brother’. Damnation, again! Aloysius hoped he had not given himself away because he meant to have the last say in this!

 

Winifred stepped into her room. She had barely closed the door when she was grabbed from behind. Her arms were being pinned on her back and wrenched upward, the movement lancing a sharp pain through her shoulders. The air was forced out of her while she was pressed against a wall by Bracknell.

“Well, ‘Freddie’…, He drawled, “I do not know if that fellow knows you for the minx you are, but I, on the other hand, recognised you right away. Did you reckon you could escape me, then? You had so unexpectedly disappeared from London after your mother’s death. Thanks to my cleverness, I knew for certain that you would go to Edinburgh. I took the precaution to read the letters that your mother so carelessly left on her desk. I think that Mr Archibald Spencer, your solicitor might have a pleasant surprise for you.”

Winifred gasped for air when his heavy body squeezed hers against the wall. She tried to free herself, but it was like trying to move the wall itself. Her mind was numb with fear – and fury because this scoundrel had apparently wormed his way into her home and taken advantage of her mother’s goodness! She gasped in fury which instantly made Bracknell tighten his hold on her.

“No sound, my girl, or I must do something nasty to you. I will not hesitate to inflict pain on you. You cannot escape me, wench, once I have set my mind on you. Not with the possibility of a fortune awaiting you in Edinburgh!”

Winnie was desperate enough to try and bluff her way out of this predicament.

“Mr Bracknell, let go of me this instant! You are breaching every rule of propriety, sir!”

His hold only tightened once more, and Winnie’s vision began blurring as her shoulders ached with a wrenching pain. Bracknell’s harsh voice sounded dimmed, but his angrily hissed words were still audible.

“What is your game, you little bitch? Are you trying to get that big oaf to marry you? Well, it is not about to happen. You will marry me and sign over all your money to me, do you hear! I know, for a fact, that you stand to inherit a fortune from your American father, because I stole those letters from your mother’s house, a long while ago. I could not have your suspicions of me come to life, could I? So listen what I want you to do. You will continue your journey and seek out that solicitor. Your bloke cannot be allowed to become suspicious, so you are going on as you were, posing as a boy.”

“No, no…I cannot…”

Winnie’s shoulders ached so much that she had to bite her lip to keep from screaming, but Bracknell’s grip did not loosen.

“Quiet, you conniving wench! I should horsewhip you for trying to double-cross me! Now, in Edinburgh, we will get a special license and marry. I will take you back to London and put you in one of my lesser tenements. There you will be at my disposal whenever I want you because you will have no other choice as my wife. You shall have only the tiniest amount of money, enough to keep a modest household. The rest of all that beautiful blunt will go to my very lucrative investments.”

Horror coursed through Winnie when she pictured all the scenes Bracknell described. How was it possible that she had experienced no such terrifying suspicions of him before? She must have been blind! She had to do something, her blurred mind screamed at her, but her body was limp and weak. Her aching shoulders prevented her from moving, and Bracknell was not loosening his grip.

Then, the temporary silence between them was broken by a knock on the door. Bracknell loosened his hold, just enough to pull a small clasp knife out of his pocket. He placed the blade against Winnie’s throat and whispered, “Answer that without opening the door, will you.”

 

“Freddie? Are you well?”

Jasper’s voice sounded muffled from behind the door but oh, how delightful it was to Winifred!

“Caution!” Bracknell hissed in her ear.

Winifred gasped, then coughed because of the pressure Bracknell exerted on her throat.

The knife point nicked her skin with a sharp pain. “I advise you to make him go away, woman.”

“Yes, Jasper, I…I am…W… Well, and very tired. Good night…” Fear coloured her voice with a stutter.

Silence. Then Fiona’s small voice was heard, wailing sharply. A second later, Jasper’s footsteps retreated from her door.

Bracknell snickered in appreciation, when he heard Jasper retreat to his room.

“Good work, missie! You could have gotten a job in Drury Lane with that quality of performance.”

With a hard shove, he suddenly propped her face first against the wall. The knife never left Winnie’s throat, where a sharp, short stab once again nicked the delicate skin. She felt the warm trickle of blood running over the delicate skin of her throat.

“This is the plan, wench. You will continue your journey, dressed as a boy, in the company of that fellow, and you do not say a word about me. I will not be travelling with the coach, but I shall be waiting in Edinburgh when it arrives. You will not see me, but I will be able to observe you at all times. My street days in London come to good use, when I want to spy on people without being seen. Go to the solicitor and claim your inheritance. I will be waiting, my lovely!”

Without forewarning, Bracknell punched Winnie in the lower back, and wrenched her arms upward one last time, which made her double up with fierce pain. The light was dimming when she heard Bracknell leave the room.

 

Peering through the crack of the door, Jasper felt his rage burn when he watched Bracknell sneak out of Freddie’s room. So he had been right after all, and that snake had approached her. Barely waiting for the man to disappear to his own room on the floor above, Jasper locked his door and hurried toward Freddie. Not bothering to knock, he went inside – and froze. Freddie was lying unconscious on the floor, causing his heart to leap in fear.

Jasper knelt by her side and carefully turned her over, placing her head into his lap. Lord, but she was hurt! A narrow trickle of blood ran from her throat and down onto her white shirt. What had that bastard been planning to do to her? Possession – fierce as a burst of flames – coursed through him. The inexplicable but immense need to protect Freddie dawned on him. He refused to go deeper into that sensation, for now. Freddie needed care, so he picked her up and brought her to his own room. When he lay her down onto his bed, Freddie’s eyes fluttered and opened.

“Jasper? What…”

“Shhh, be still, Freddie. You are hurt, and I must see to it first. You do not need to worry, dear girl. I have you safe. What has that blackguard done to you?”

“Nothing, truly…Ouch!”

Freddie winced when Jasper dipped a wet cloth on her throat, to cleanse the small wound she had sustained through Bracknell’s hand.

“Tell me everything, Freddie. Now.”

Winifred acknowledged the solid determination in Jasper’s voice and complied.

She narrated the story her mother told her, about her father dying just a few days after she was born. About Mama taking her to London, and making a life for herself and her small daughter. About Bracknell’s stalking, first in a civil manner, but now showing his true character. When she came to Bracknell’s plans for her, Winifred could not stop her voice from breaking. She swallowed her tears, not wishing to appear weak, but it was hard to keep up her courage.

Throughout Freddie’s story, Jasper had only felt his anger against Bracknell increase. He did not wish such a fate for Freddie because she was courageous, and witty, and sweet. Freddie deserved to be loved, not to be cowered into submission by a cruel scoundrel and reprobate. A marriage to Bracknell would destroy Freddie, for sure. Jasper could not let that happen, and he was now even more determined than ever to marry the girl himself.

“Listen,” Jasper said, when Freddie paused, “we will do as I said before and continue to Edinburgh together. What is the name of your solicitor in Edinburgh?”

“Mr Archibald Spencer. His office is in The Royal Mile, I believe.”

Oh, irony, Jasper thought, but he did not inform her about his own involvement with Spencer.

Freddie started to rise from the bed. “Thank you for looking after me, Jasper, but I will go to my own room now. We do not want to wake Fiona.”

“I think it better if you were to stay here, Freddie.”

In astonishment, Winifred stared at him. Then she understood and felt a sudden outrage. Jasper Danvers was no better – yet again – than Bracknell! He wanted her in his bed. She quickly jumped from the bed on the opposite side as to where Jasper was standing and started to run.

Surprised but quickly grasping what Freddie might have been thinking, Jasper covered the distance between them with his longer strides and caught her arm. His voice was an low, but urgent whisper.

“Freddie, wait! You misunderstood. I mean to protect you from further harassment from Bracknell. That man is dangerous, Freddie, and I cannot allow him to have easy access to you.”

Winifred looked up at him, confusion in her eyes.

“Jasper,” she ventured gently, “you are not under any obligation to protect me. I am obliged to you for helping me so far, but I shall no longer impose upon your good nature.”

“On the contrary, Freddie,” Jasper insisted, “since you are to be my countess, I feel by honour bound to protect you. At least, I shall assist you until I am certain that you are safely seen to.”

“Safely seen to? I do not understand…And I did not agree to marry you.”

She tilted her head in confusion, burning her dark, luminous gaze into his. Instantly, Jasper felt himself drown into those brown eyes. In an impulse, which he could not have quelled for the life of him, Jasper drew her close.

 

 

 

For the Love of a Widower – Part Eleven

For the love of a Widower

Original Handcut Silhouette by Kathryn Flocken

 

Chapter Ten

 

She should have anticipated Jasper seeing through her disguise, Winifred realised. It had been a shabby one since she had no notion how young men behaved. How they walked, and talked, and all the other things they did, things she knew she messed up. Yet she had to think of a new strategy, at this moment. She had no time to wallow in her failure.

“Come down with me to the taproom,” Jasper interrupted her thoughts.

“What?” Winifred uttered, blinking in stunned surprise.

“We cannot talk here,” He urged, his voice suddenly gone hoarse. “We need the safety of a crowd. Let us go downstairs, have a glass of ale, and then you can explain all this to me.”

It sounded like a command, Winifred mused, and yet she was unable to resist it. Why did they need to be in the presence of other people? And what was that fiery yet suppressed look in his blue eyes? Jasper seemed to be in some sort of distress. Puzzled, she grabbed her coat and set off to follow Jasper. He turned to her on his way to the door and said in a wry tone, “You might want to do something to…Those.” He then pointed at her chest.

Christ! She had forgotten that she had already untied her breasts! Her cheeks were in flames in a second, and she covered her face with her hands.

“Oh, come on, Freddie,” Jasper said, his voice mild and comforting. “You owe me, you know. After all, we are travelling companions. Come when you are ready.” And he left the room.

 

Jasper found a table near the hearth of the taproom and ordered a bottle of burgundy. Not every inn could boast on serving French wine, with the growing enmity between France and England, but The Golden Fleece actually served it as one of the few pubs outside London. He surveyed the room with caution and was glad to see that there were but a few patrons left. They looked like regulars, Jasper thought, and he knew they would not bother guests that stayed the night. The landlord would see to that.

He was in turmoil. First, Fiona had called for her mother, which she had never, ever done before. Why would a child call for her mother whom she had never known? It unsettled Jasper to the extreme, and he was at a loss about how to handle this.

Next, why, by Jove, had he blurted out that stupid remark about needing the safety of people? He was the one who needed that, because all of a sudden, his gaze had locked on Freddie’s lawn shirt, right on the spots where her rosy nipples pressed against the thin material. An answering tightness in his groin followed suit, causing anger to blaze inside him. He cursed himself for lusting after the first female breasts he set eyes on in months. Granted the fact that it had been a long time since he had visited Pat O’Brien’s brothel, it still was weak of him to succumb to temptation so readily. Would he betray Jessie’s memory with the wayward thoughts a total stranger instilled in him? He grabbed his glass and took a deep swallow of wine.

The front door opened, and a man entered. Jasper turned his gaze toward him. Just a late customer, seeking lodgings for the night, he assumed. The man had the appearance of a gentleman if one judged him by his clothes. His greatcoat had three collars and was made of exquisite superfine wool. His stature, however, was that of a man used to manual labour, with heavy, broad shoulders and a barrel-like chest. Jasper estimated the man’s height to a good 6’, three inches shorter than his own height.

The landlord rushed forward to greet the newcomer.

“How can I be of service, sir?”

“Do you have a young, unaccompanied lady amongst your customers, at this moment?”

That forward question was barked at the landlord, in an accent that unmistakeably was London, albeit subdued. The poor landlord was thoroughly surprised, Jasper saw.

“Why are you asking, sir? Are you a magistrate? ‘Cause if you aren’t, I can’t give you any information about…”

“She is my ward. Is there a young lady staying here or not? The question is uncomplicated enough.”

The words sounded flat and cold as if the man were only slightly interested in the reply, but his pale grey eyes scanned the room with keen coldness, taking in every detail and every occupant.

“No, sir. You’ll find no young ladies here,” The landlord reluctantly asnwered, but his customer was still surveying the taproom. He grunted absent-mindedly at the landlord.

Something suspicious awakened in Jasper’s mind. To his own surprise, he became vigilant as if he were sensing some kind of trouble. The hairs at the back of Jasper’s neck pricked as he saw the man’s gaze wander to Freddie, who was just coming down the stairs in her male attire. The man studied Freddie for a couple of minutes, and his eyes narrowed in concentration. At that precise moment, Freddie saw the stranger and to Jasper’s astonishment, she literally froze. Her face grew white as a sheet, and her eyes were filled with horror. This man was no stranger to her, and more so, he seemed to scare the living daylights out of her.

On an impulse, Jasper rose and lifted his arm. “Here, brother!” He called out to Freddie, who – thankfully! – turned her head to look at him. Then she proceeded her walk down the stairs, and towards their table.

The man’s scrutinizing eyes wandered from Freddie to the waiting landlord. “Can I have a room for tonight?” He asked the man, who bowed and invited him upstairs.

Freddie was shaking head to toe, Jasper saw. She sat down to grip her glass of wine, lifted it and drank deeply from it.

“Who is that fellow, Freddie? You are shaking like a leaf in the wind, and your face is ashen. Talk to me.”

Freddie looked at him, the frightening horror barely lessened in her dark eyes.

“His name is Aloysius Bracknell,” she breathed, “and he tried to bully me into marrying him.”

Her lovely face just became a shade whiter, if possible. Jasper did not understand yet, what was haunting her so.

“And?” He prompted. “He seems a gentleman, judging by his clothes if not by his manners, which were a trifle on the rude side. If you dislike him, you can simply refuse him, can you not?”

“You do not comprehend,” Freddie said, tears now pooling in her eyes. “I am not yet of age, but I have my father’s inheritance to claim, and Bracknell knows that. He wants to lay his hands on my father’s money, taking me as his wife in the bargain. He is cruel and vindictive. I would spend my days in misery, were I to become his wife. He already threatened to compromise me, and frighten me into complying more readily to his proposal.”

She valiantly strove to swallow her tears, and the vulnerability of it tore at Jasper’s heart.

“So that is why you fled London, dressed as a man,” He concluded, in a quiet voice. “Because that was what you were doing, was it not? You literally fled London to escape this Bracknell fellow.”

“Yes,” Freddie whispered, misery written all over her face. “I first wanted to learn about my father’s inheritance. I hoped for a bit of money so that I could be independent. And now it is all for nought. He must have recognized me, just now. Oh, what shall I do? I am desperate!”

“Well,” Jasper replied in a calm tone of voice, “it is quite uncomplicated, Freddie. You must become my wife, instead of Bracknell’s.”

 

If Jasper had slapped her across the face, Winifred could not have been more stunned than she felt at that moment. Stunned…And, for some inexplicable reason, hurt beyond the pale. Jasper had just made her feel a fool and mocked her for it. She had been on the verge of confiding in him because she had come to trust him during the two days of their journey together. His tender love for his small daughter was what had breached Winifred’s natural reserve toward strangers. The care he showed, not only for Fiona, but also for Winifred herself, or for Freddie as she must have been seen by him. In Jasper’s eyes, she must have looked an unsure, young man, who needed help to reach his destination because he was alone on this long journey. Jasper gave Freddie that help, and it was what had touched Winifred deeply.

Until now, at this moment, when Jasper shattered it all by his flippant reaction to Winnie’s desperate situation. He was mocking her, for sure. Why would a total stranger want to marry a woman he met only the day before? It was utterly absurd – even cruel.

Cruel? Yes. Because she had begun to have feelings for Jasper Danvers.

A pain so sharp, that it tore at her very heart, engulfed Winifred. She was barely able to stay seated upright at the rough wooden tap room table, but instead, wanted to bury her face into her arms and cry her heart out from sheer despair and loneliness. She squeezed her eyes shut, and tried to hold back the silly tears that came from having placed her trust in this man. He was no better than Bracknell, not a whit.

 

The second the words came out, Jasper could not understand why he had spoken them. It had been utterly impulsive, and Jasper was never into acting impulsively, and never had been. Correction, the only time he had acted on an impulse was when he married Jessie. Their love had been so powerful that neither of them had been able to wait. They had longed to be united as soon as possible. Oh, Jess... The memory of her still had the power to strike him with deep distress, time and time again.

He mentally shook himself and focussed on the problem at hand. With his impulsive words, Jasper had indeed embroiled himself in a nasty predicament, so he had better do some intelligent thinking, for a change.

What was he so desperately in need for, since he received the family solicitor’s letter, he asked himself. Well, that was clear enough. He had to be well and truly wed, in order to have access to his inheritance. And here was a female in need of protection from a villain who wanted to lay his hands on her inheritance.

Could he find someone else than this wayward chit, before his grandfather turned eighty, he wondered? No, not a chance in hell. Not on so short a notice. So Freddie would have to do. He could always divorce her, once his grandfather would have…

No! Jasper could not for the life of him contemplate the old ruffian gone. Despite the old earl’s rough temper and stubborn doggedness, he loved his grandfather, even admired and liked him, once in a while. And, all of a sudden, Jasper realised that he longed for a reconciliation with the old grump so that Trewarth again became his and Fiona’s home.

So Freddie would have to be the woman, who would allow Jasper to try and accomplish that immense feat. And, as he already realised before, he could always divorce her, once he would have gained his inheritance.

“Why are you heading to Edinburgh, Freddie? What business have you to attend in that fair city?”

There were a few matters that needed clarification, so Jasper resolutely plunged on. Until he saw Freddie’s face. Tears were running down Freddie’s pale cheeks, and her eyes were vague as if she were stripped of all hope.

A peculiar feeling stirred inside Jasper’s chest as if the air had left his lungs. He could not have felt so winded if someone had kicked him in the stomach. He gripped Freddie’s icy cold hands and forced her to focus on him.

“Freddie…Look at me! I apologize for blurting it out so bluntly, but I am most serious about my proposal. Allow me to explain.”

That brought on a reaction in so far that the girl now  looked at him with suspicion. Yet she kept silent which, in turn, gave Jasper leave to continue.

“My family lives near Inverness. We are what the Scots call ‘Sassenachs’, or the descendants of the English usurpers that overtook the estates from the native Scottish lairds after the Glorious Revolution that banished the Stuarts. My great-grandfather was one of those, and our estate was granted by William and Mary in 1689.”

Jasper paused when he saw the interest return in Freddie’s eyes. Good. That was good.

“Recently, my father died,” He resumed and raised a hand when he noticed the concern on Freddie’s face. “No need for condolences, dear girl. We were estranged for more than ten years.”

“Why were you estranged?” Freddie threw in before Jasper could stop her.

“Because of my grandfather and his stubborn ways. All he cares about is the estate, and he will do whatever is necessary to enhance its wealth and prosperity. My father never had the courage to stand up to him, and I ended up hating him for it. Together, we could have found a way to make the Earl see reason, but my father refused to stand by me. My grandfather is a tyrant, Freddie. He wants me to marry a Scottish girl in order to be the next Earl of Trewarth. Are you – by any chance – from Scottish descent?”

“I am partly Scottish,” Freddie said, frowning. “Mama was Scottish, but Papa was American. That is all I know for sure, Jasper. I was going to Edinburg, to see our solicitor and ask him about my family.”

Disappointment slammed into Jasper like a blow.

Freddie was American? Blast it all to hell, this was disastrous! The Earl would never accept an American as his grandson’s wife. Unless…The Earl was unaware of it. Jasper would see to it that his grandfather would never find out. The thought of losing Freddie after they would reach Edinburgh suddenly made him uneasy. Besides, this was too good an opportunity to thwart his dictatorial grandfather. If Jasper turned up at Trewarth Castle with a wife, the Earl would be faced with a fait accompli. Freddie was half Scottish, at least on the maternal side.

“Well then,” Jasper said, gently squeezing Freddie’s hands, “let us see what we can do once we will have reached Edinburgh. Keep your male attire as a disguise, Freddie. It will fend off all unwanted attention. Do not worry about this Bracknell fellow. I will be with you and keep you safe.”

 

Winifred was utterly confused by this wholly unexpected proposal. She needed an explanation, preferably one that would reassure her a bit more. The warmth of Jasper’s hold on her skin befuddled her greatly as it was so comforting and strong. She only knew she liked Jasper’s touch, his strength, his explicit masculinity. With an effort, she gathered her thoughts and asked, “Is your predicament truly that serious, then? Can you not claim your title without having a wife?”

“No,” Jasper answered, in a level tone, “I cannot. I must be married before the 14th of February next, which is less than three months from now. If I cannot accomplish that, my grandfather will simply return the earldom to the Crown of England, for the king to bestow it upon someone else. I cannot not bear to think of that, Freddie. It is too disastrous. I love my home, the Trewarth estate and its hard-working people, who depend on their master for their livelihood. I want to make it stronger than it already is, and be the best Third Earl of Trewarth for generations to come.”

The quiet determination in which Jasper had spoken these words made a deep impression on Winifred and she became aware of Jasper Danvers’ deeply engrained nobility and pride. Winnie had to swallow the lump in her throat before she was able to continue. “Why are you considering me as your future wife, Jasper? We only met two days ago. I have no wealth, no noble breeding, no connections. I am a simple London teacher with no grand prospects.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Consequence – Chapter 18, pt 3

In Consequence by Trudy Brasure

In Consequence by Trudy Brasure

A clank of metal and a dull roar sounded in Margaret’s ears, filtering through the haze of consciousness to slowly rouse the drowsy sleeper. Someone stirred within this room. She heard the faint slosh of water and an abrasive scraping not far away.

John stilled his hand as he detected movement from the bed. He laid his razor down beside the water basin and held his breath as the waking sleeper turned her head. He stepped toward the bed at the first motion of her arms.

“You’re up,” she noted groggily as he sat down on the bed beside her.

“Yes,” he answered softly, enchanted by the restful flush of her face and the careless way her hair tumbled over shoulders and pillows. It had taken every ounce of his willpower this morning to leave the blissful warmth of his bed. “Did I wake you?” he asked, lines of concern gathering on his forehead.

“No…I don’t know…the mill…work has already started?” she answered in sleepy confusion.

“The steam engines are started early. They must be at full power by the time the men arrive. Did the sound awaken you?” he asked with a sudden fear that he had selfishly stolen her from some destiny more serene and comfortable than that of a manufacturer’s wife. All the raw noise and uncouth environs of industry that he took as a matter of course would be new and unfamiliar to her. The pang of unworthiness that had plagued him from the first moment he had dared to dream of her began again to insidiously creep through his veins.

“Perhaps…I believe so….”

His frown deepened. “There is a room down the hall, near Fanny’s, that is farther from the noise…”

“No…no,” she interrupted, sitting up to face him. “It is a faint noise.  It’s merely strange to me at present. I’m certain I shall get used to it,” she assured him.

Her reply did much to calm her husband’s rising distress. “You should go back to sleep, it is early yet, while I have much to attend to,” he gently urged. “I will tell my mother that you mean to spend the day in Crampton. You are not obliged to stay here,” he reminded her with some reluctance as he took her hands fondly into his own.

“You are very kind,” she answered as her gaze drifted over the shape of his firm form beneath gauzy cotton, falling with fascinated interest upon the base of his flexile throat which rose as a bronze column from the white fabric draping open at his chest.

The spicy aromatic scent of him, freshly shaved, aroused her senses. She longed to be near him at this moment, to feel the comfort of his strength this morning. “I feel a little selfish today,” she murmured, moving her thumb distractedly over the ridges of his fingers as she struggled to explain something of the conflicting emotions of desire and duty that wrestled within her breast.

“Selfish?” he echoed with taut expectation, striving mightily to restrain the urge to taste and feel all that his eyes roved over of her loveliness and inviting tenderness.

“I am glad to be home again in Milton (how sweetly those words sounded to his ears!)…but a portion of me wishes to be back in Scarborough,” she finished, feeling the warm blush come furiously into her cheeks. She could not look at him.

The boundaries he had firmly set for himself shifted at this utterance. The power to speak left him for a moment as a racing, eager hope dared to imagine that her secret longings mirrored his own.

“Not selfish,” he murmured as he reached to raise her blushing face to his. “Not selfish at all,” he affirmed, looking into the depth of those eyes that gleamed with beautiful timidity and pleading hope.

He brought his mouth nearer hers. The mere brush of lips – tentative and slow, as if it were the very first time they had met thus – made his body shudder in aching longing for the tender passion they had shared before. It was his right; she was his wife.

Her kisses, sweetly mingled with his own restrained ardor, were yet edged with a faint urgency that turned his blood to fire and unwound the bonds of measured expression. His kisses grew more fervent.

She returned his passion. A small hand skimmed the curve of his shoulder to clutch about his neck, shattering every pretense of constraint and sending the scorching impulse of need through his veins. How much he had longed to take her as his wife in this very bed!

He pressed her back against the soft cushion of pillows to show her — if it were possible in one act of loving — what she meant to him and would mean to him the remainder of his days.

******

It was nearly nine when, after having patiently allowed the young ladies’ maid to assist her into her dress, Margaret stepped onto the crimson-patterned carpet of the still hallway.  She crept down the stairs, conscious that this was the first time that she had done so, although her husband had trod the same passageway countless times. She slowed to study with curiosity the portraits and framed silhouettes along the wall.

She entered the empty drawing room with the nervous hesitation of a visitor and stole to the window for a moment to stare at the movement of men and carts below, a testament to the industry of the great brick mill behind. She lifted her gaze to the factory with a soft smile of pride and sought for the window that might be his, surprised at her pang of longing to go to him. A rush of emotions swept over her – love, excitement, uncertainty, gratitude, sorrow. But gnawing fear encroached upon the happier feelings that might have been hers today, were circumstances different.

An irascible melancholy settled deep within as she thought of the painful truth that must be faced. She turned with a sigh to find her way to the breakfast room.

Margaret trod softly as she peeked around each new corner, slowing her steps as she caught sight of the dark-clad figure of her mother-in-law, sipping a cup of tea at a square table draped in cream linen.

“Good morning,” the new bride ventured, calling out in a politely cheerful tone.

The older women turned her head, her agile eyes appraising at once. “Good morning,” she returned, the trace of a smile softening the rigid line of her lips. “Did you sleep well?” she asked, endeavoring to match in the girl’s demeanor the same contented deportment that she had discerned in her son this morning.

“Very well, thank you,” Margaret answered her mother-in-law’s expected inquiry, blushing to tacitly acknowledge her complacency in sharing a bed with her son.

Both women were relieved for a moment from conversation as the maid entered to bring Margaret a breakfast of poached egg and toast with marmalade.

The young bride sipped her tea and tasted a bite of her egg before renewing communication. “I’m sorry I shall not be able to spend the day learning some of the regimens of this grand house, but I…”

“John has explained all to me,” Mrs. Thornton interrupted gently. “It is well for you to attend to your mother. There will be time enough to learn the workings of this house.”

“Thank you,” Margaret replied, feeling a small burden of apprehension lift from her shoulders.

They talked very little while Margaret finished her breakfast.

“I hope you will find your mother improving. If there is anything I can do to be of aid…” the older woman offered as Margaret excused herself and rose from the table.

“I thank you for your kindness,” the girl gratefully replied.

Fanny entered the room at this moment with her traditional morning languor. Obligated to make her appearance before ten by her mother’s rules, she felt it was entirely unfashionable to be up at the same early hours kept by a servant or common laborer.

“Good morning, Fanny. I’m sorry not to join you for your tea, but I was just leaving. I believe you know my mother is not well,” the new Mrs. Thornton relayed.

“I’m sorry your mother is ill, how unfortunate a time…will you take the carriage? It is a long way to Crampton,” Fanny encouraged, assuming her sister-in-law would take every advantage now available to her.

“I’m sure there is no need. The walk will do me good,” she answered with an uncomfortable smile.

The walk did indeed give Margaret time to gather her thoughts and renew her strength. Immersed in the bustle of human activity outside the pleasant walls of domestic tranquility, she felt her own purpose draw clearer. Grateful for the ready help promised by her new relations, she faced the future with renewed fortitude.

She was full of bright confidence to offer sustenance of spirit to her family when she arrived within paces of her parents’ home. She looked up in time to see Dr. Donaldson’s tall figure exit the door, black bag in hand.

Margaret froze in fear for a moment. She studied the grim lines of his face with fainting heart as the family doctor descended the steps.

“Dr. Donaldson,” she called out as she resumed her approach. “My mother….how does she fare?” she asked with a forced calm that belied the turbulent beating of her heart.

“I’m afraid your mother took a turn for the worse last evening,” he gravely declared, knowing the girl would demand the truth. “Morphine gives her sleep for now. But if she should have such a spell again…”

“I understand,” Margaret answered in a tight voice, the color drained from her face. “Thank you for your care,” she offered with a brave nod as the kindly old doctor tipped his hat and continued on his way to his next patient.

Gathering the remaining fragments of her courage, Margaret climbed the same steps to face the inevitable.

*****

Mr. Thornton briskly walked his rounds among the humming weaving machines to ensure that all hands were at their stations and work proceeded apace. Passing by the women and men who worked for him throughout the day, he was unaware that he himself was be the object of scrutiny of every pair of eyes.

The Master returned to the relative quiet of his office, and sat to attend to the correspondence that awaited his hand. But his distracted thoughts that deafening industry and activity had kept at bay clamored to be heard in the stillness. Would Margaret find her mother improved this day? He fervently wished his mother-in-law had been too disparaging of her condition, and that she might yet continue for many months longer. And what of Frederick – how long could he be kept a recluse in this town?

Such were the swirl of restless questions that beset him until he was at last impelled to set down his quill and rise to turn to the window.

The house he had lived in for years stood sentinel across the dirt yard, a testament to his determination to establish for his family a place of dignity and purpose. It now housed his wife as well. She would be in it at this moment, waiting for his return, if disease had not taken this importune time to strike at the happiness that had accumulated so long in their favor.

The enticing memories of those unforgettable days and nights in Scarborough began to drift into his thoughts.

“Thornton.”

The intruding voice, instantly recognizable, caused him to pivot from his listless peering.

“Mr. Bell,” he declared in some surprise. “You’re still in town?”

His visitor could not suppress a satisfied smile, amused to have caught the newly married man gazing out the window like some besotted lover. “I have had some papers drawn up which require your signature,” he announced, pulling out a portfolio from under his arm and handing it to the young Master.

Mr. Thornton sat at his desk, withdrew the documents from the leather case, and pored over the contents. He looked up after a few moments’ silence, his face contorted in confusion. “This is the deed to the mill,” he stated, fixing his landlord with an uncomprehending stare.

“Precisely. I have signed over ownership of the mill and its surrounding properties to you. I should like you to consider it a wedding gift.”

Mr. Thornton shook his head in disbelief. “I don’t know what to say…”

“A simple ‘thank you’ will suffice. It pleases me to think that Providence guided me to send the Hales into your care. Hale is my oldest friend, and Margaret my goddaughter. It was ever my intention to make Margaret my beneficiary upon my demise. You have saved me much worry. It does my old heart good – and Richard’s as well, I can assure you – to know that that you will take good care of her.”

“Thank you,” the Master said quietly, still blinking in bewilderment to be handed the ownership of everything he had worked years to build to success. “But what of you?” he thought to ask, considering the staggering amount of wealth being given up.

“Oh, fie! Think nothing of me!” Mr. Bell responded, directing attention to the unsigned papers with an impatient wave of his hand. Mr. Thornton dipped his quill and began to seal the transfer of property with ink as his former landlord continued his explanation. “I have other properties and investments which do me very well. I am an old man, after all, and have very few wants or needs to make me quite comfortable. No doubt you will soon be a family man. Security will give great peace of mind, so that you may attend to matters of far greater importance than business.”

“By the by, how is Mrs. Hale?” the elder gentleman inquired, his demeanor changing to one of solemn concern.

“Not well, I’m afraid. You have visited the house of late?” Mr. Thornton’s cautious question sought to determine whether Mr. Bell knew of the family’s great secret.

“Yes, yesterday. I’d not seen Frederick in years. He was still a lad when he left Helstone for the lure of the sea. It was a devastating blow to Hale to have his son excoriated by the Navy. Think of it – his only son branded a traitor! By heaven, he must not stay long. If anything were to go wrong…”

“I will take every precaution to guard him well,” the Master interrupted with growing unease at the notion of the severity of the predicament in which he was placed as Milton magistrate and brother-in-law to one marked with treason.

“I thank you,” Mr. Thornton reiterated as he handed the portfolio back to Mr. Bell. “Your gift is more than generous…”

“I expect great things of Marlborough Mills. Always have, now more so than ever. It will be my pleasure to see what you will do now that everything under your command is indeed yours,” he announced with conviction, shaking hands with the man who still appeared stunned by his new status.

“I will stay in town a few more days while Mrs. Hale’s condition is uncertain. If I can be of any help, I can be reached at the Clarendon,” the aging bachelor offered.

“Thank you,” the Master replied, his words a hollow token for the kindness and generosity shown him by his longtime landlord and friend.

Mr. Bell gave a comprehensive nod and departed as quickly as he had appeared.

When the daze of astonishment had cleared and duty faced him across his desk, Mr. Thornton returned to his work with zeal to accomplish. Heedless of the noon whistle that freed hundreds from their posts, the Master remained bent over his desk. A knock on the door did nothing to alter the flow of ink from his quill. A vacant command was given to enter the room.

“Yo’ asked to see me at half day,” Higgins announced, taking a step inside with a cautious glance at the Master.

Mr. Thornton scribbled unperturbed yet a second more before putting up his writing instrument. “I did,” he said, raising his eyes to acknowledge the staunch laborer he had once looked upon with enmity. “I’ve been turning over something in mind since we last spoke. There’s an old store house by the far side that might be emptied and utilized for different purposes,” he began, noting he was being studied with shrewd curiosity.

“If meat from the butcher were bought wholesale,” he continued, “and other goods purchased in quantity at a low price, portions might be made for which the hands might pay a penny and get a decent meal in their bellies that would better fit them for their daily work. What say you? If it were feasible, would the men pay for pottage here?”

If the former union leader had scrutinized his employer with uncertainty at the outset, he now stared at him as a specimen never before encountered. Struck dumb for a moment, the words that formed his faltering reply yet bore the sting of doubt. “A scheme like yourn would take a great deal o’ planning. There’s the market to haggle, the transport and laying up of goods, a cook….”

“I’ve not time to tend to the details. If you can search out the facts and figures, I’ll see what I can do.”

This was altogether new – collaboration between men and master. Higgins surveyed the man before him with a flicker of something more than respect, which warmed his insides and relaxed the lines of his mouth.

“There’s them that ‘ave wagered that there’d be more changes to come. I had na’ believed we’d see it while the bridal air yet sets over the town. Tongues’ll wag that the master is o’er run by the petticoat set,” the laborer dared to warn the man he had oft called an “ol’ bulldog.” A smile hovered over his lips as he looked at the love-smitten groom.

“Margaret knows naught of this,” the Master countered with narrowed eyes, frowning in uncertain indignation at Higgins’ forthright manner. A spark of independent pride rose up in rebellion at the accusation, and then softened at the inward admission of having imagined receiving a smile, and more, from his wife upon relaying to her the news of this venture.

“A man mun keep his pride,” Higgins allowed, a merry twinkle in his eye. “I’ll believe yo’ if yo’ tell me straight. But I canna save yo’ from the prattle of the bawdy lot of ‘em.” He could no longer hide his grin.

The flash of a smile turned up the corners of the Master’s mouth. “Then be off with you!” he commanded in mock severity, feeling the flush of embarrassment rise to his cheeks. “And mind what I said.”

“That I will,” came the grinning answer as Higgins touched his cap with a nod and made his hasty exit.

*****

The Master took heed of the long whistle at day’s end, and did not linger long once the looms stilled and all human life had abandoned the binding call of labor.

He climbed the tall staircase of his house with a fervent hope to find the object of his affection returned and settled in her rightful home.

“Is Margaret not returned?” he asked his mother, taking a sweeping glance of the family’s formal living space. Fanny and his mother sat in their usual places.

A shadow of annoyance crossed Hannah Thornton’s features at this abrupt greeting, but dissipated as she studied her son’s distracted visage. She rose to retrieve a letter. “She sent word to you,” was the answer he received, as the parchment was placed in his hands.

He opened it at once and scanned its contents, his eyes darting in deepening alarm. “Why was this not delivered to me earlier?” he demanded.

Hannah flinched at the spark of anger in his voice. “The instruction was given that you not be disturbed from your work,” she retorted in firm defense. “What is it, John?” she asked, his testiness forgotten as she observed the dark shadows of gloom cloud his countenance.

“Mrs. Hale. She has grown worse,” he answered. He turned to the next room to retrieve the coat he had just removed.

“Is there anything I can do?” his mother asked helplessly as she watched her son prepare to leave without taking his supper.

“I don’t know. If I do not return, you will know there can be no good news.”

Their eyes met. Hannah nodded in solemn understanding.

“Good night, Fanny,” he remembered to say with a brusque kindness as he turned to go, leaving his sister gaping at his sudden departure.

The pulse of fear quickened his steps as the last vestiges of color seeped from manmade landscape and sky in the fading daylight and cool air of coming night crept in like a fog. His stride was certain as he passed the familiar byways of this well-trod path with unseeing focus on the pavement ahead. Words of reprimand muttered in his mind amidst pangs of irrational hurt. Why had she not called for him in her distress? Those passersby that noted the hurried gait and frown of the Master gave him space to pass unencumbered.

The meek Higgins girl admitted him into the house, which already seemed to echo the somber stillness of a mausoleum. Dread filled his senses at the thought of arriving too late.

The sound of rustling petticoats sent his gaze to the stairs, where his wife descended as swiftly as silent grace would allow. “John…you’re here,” she spoke aloud, her relief palpable as she reached the last steps and tumbled into his waiting arms.

All impulse to scold vanished as he clasped her close to his breast. “How is she?” he asked, gently pulling back from her to find tear-stained eyes.

“She lies unaware of all around her. At least no sign is given…oh, I did not think she should fall so swiftly into such a state!” she moaned at last, feeling a fresh resurgence of tears falling as she was enfolded once more to his firm chest.

He followed her up the stairs to the somber bedside scene. Frederick looked up at the newcomer, keeping his mother’s bony hand firmly in his own. A wild desperation flashed in his eyes, as one who yet sought salvation from a harrowing fate.

Mr. Hale grasped his wife’s other hand. The sight of the pale, stricken face of the kindly vicar pulled a deep chord of sympathy in the Master’s breast. Dixon sat in helpless misery in the corner of her mistress room.

And so the vigil continued, Mr. Thornton escaping the stifling atmosphere once or twice to pace alone in the parlor below.

Near midnight, the convulsions came on once more. Husband and son shrunk in horror as the listless figured in suffering. Margaret endeavored to calm her mother with her husband’s gentle help as Dixon administered morphine through lax lips. Water given to chase the sedative down trickled from the glass to the patient’s chin. Dabbed and soothed, the limp patient was lowered to the pillows once more, never more to rise.

Father and son resumed their bedside vigil with renewed earnestness, holding hands of one who would soon slip away. The lip of the younger one quivered before he bowed his head into the covers and released a muffled sob.

Before another hour had passed, Mrs. Hale breathed her last.

That awful moment of comprehension when the sundering of worlds is made final draws deeply into the souls of those left behind. All are affected, but the flow of emotions varies course for each. Dixon bowed her head, the tears streaming from her face while Frederick clung to his mother’s hand, heaving wrenching sobs. Mr. Hale stared at his wife’s pale gray face in stunned silence.

Mr. Thornton felt the dull weight of sorrow gather inwardly with rushing force as he watched his wife’s countenance contort into the horrible recognition of loss.

After some time, John gently urged his wife to leave the dead. Stoic and mute amidst her brother’s tears, Margaret moved only as directed like one dispossessed of all will.

With utmost patience, her husband led her to her bedroom where a few objects from her childhood remained on the dresser and floor. He helped her remove the binding layers of her clothes with tenderness like unto a father for his young child. When she at last stood in her cotton slip, he guided her to the narrow bed and pulled the covers aside for her to climb in, settling her with a gentle promise that he would return in a few minutes.

She merely nodded.

When he returned with food and some water, she was already sleeping. He set his offering down on a small table and heaved a heavy sigh.

John took off his coat and waistcoat in the shadows. He sat wearily to remove his boots before snuffing out the single candle and climbing into the narrow bed with his wife.  Gingerly, he turned onto his side and slid his arm around the sleeper to fit himself against her back. He let out his breath in tired relief, reveling in the comfort of her very nearness.

An unworldly cry rose in the darkness – a call from the bereaved son for his lost mother.  John closed his eyes against the sound, and pulled closer to the sleeping form in front of him.

For the Love of a Widower – Part Ten

For the love of a Widower

Original Handcut Silhouettte by Kathryn Flocken

 

Chapter Nine

 

The lunch at the White Stag in Doncaster, a modest establishment with a half-timbered white-washed facade was abysmal, but the travellers were glad to have something warm in their bellies. It was growing colder and gloomier by the minute.

“I ‘ope we’ll reach York ‘ere it starts snowin’,” their coachman said, his voice already gloomy enough.

“Snowing?” Winifred asked in alarm, “Does it already snow in November here?”

“Aye, laddie,” the man replied, “an’ it goes on ‘till April if we are t’ ‘ave a ‘arsh winter.”

Winifred lifted her gaze to Jasper, who raised his shoulders in philosophical resignation.

“Do not be alarmed,” he whispered to her. “Those coachmen are always worried they will have to plough through inches of snow. I am sure it will not be that dramatic.”

Soon they were on their way again, to tackle the rest of the journey to York. It was forty miles,  so not that long.

Fiona had fallen asleep yet again on her father’s lap, so Jasper and Freddie were enjoying the warmth of a heated stone at their feet in silence. The stones were no luxury as it was rather chilly inside the carriage. Winifred shivered now and then, although she tried to suppress her trembling.

“Would you be so good as to open my bag, and retrieve a blanket, Freddie?” Jasper asked. “I do not want Fiona to catch a sniffle.”

Winifred obliged and draped the blanket over Jasper’s form. She envied them their blanket and wished she had brought one, too. She shivered violently, all of a sudden.

“Feel free to join us, Freddie,” Jasper’s quiet voice came from the corner where he sat. “No use getting ill, when there is a solution to it.”

Winifred did not reflect on this because she was glad to do as he told her. There was no one to see her, now. No one but Jasper, who thought she was a man. So she cautiously scooted closer to Jasper and draped the blanket over herself. A delicious warmth instantly overwhelmed her, and she sighed in delight.

Once again assaulted by her lavender scent, Jasper strove to divert his sudden rampant thoughts of Freddie’s soft body. Blast it all to hell! What was he thinking? He cleared his throat and decided to strike up a conversation.

“You seem to have a way with children,” he began, “Have you had any experience with them in London?”

Winifred hesitated. Should she reveal something of her life to him? But then, what would it matter? In a few days, they would part.

“I once was a teacher,” Winifred replied. “I love it. Children are so fascinating, so worth discovering in their uniqueness and in the talents they have yet to develop. I taught gi…Erm children of every age, from six to twelve.”

That had been a slip of the tongue, Jasper knew, at least a partial one. She had almost mentioned girls instead of children.

“And this was in the Charing Cross area?” He pressed on, casually.

“Yes, at the St Mi…”

She abruptly shut her mouth, and Jasper, who already knew enough, stopped his inquiries.

“You do not have to tell me anything, Freddie. I did not want to pry into your personal life.”

Winifred could not, for the life of her, give him some shred of explanation, without revealing that she was a woman. So she kept silent, and felt extremely embarrassed for not trusting Jasper Danvers with her secret. But she had to keep her secret to herself, had she not? She did not know Jasper Danvers well enough and never would, too. But blast it all to hell! He was so kind and charming that it was hard not to blurt it all out to him. She would have to be more careful, in the future.

 

It was again late that night when they reached The Golden Fleece Inn on the Pavement in York. Winifred felt absolutely exhausted, and she hoped there would be a room for her, but a separate one, away from Jasper. She needed to bathe and remove those dreadful bandages from her aching breasts.

It took Winifred several moments to entangle herself from Jasper’s blanket after he had disappeared into the inn with Fiona. No doubt, he would be impatient to get his daughter a supper and a bed. When she finally entered the common room, Winifred found it almost empty, but for a few last stragglers. It must be near closing time, then.

The landlady popped her head around the kitchen door, as soon as Winifred called out for someone.

“Oh, forgive me, young sir! Didn’t know there was another customer! Are you wanting a room for the night?”

“Yes, please,” Winifred answered, in the deepest voice she could muster.

“Come with me, then.”

The landlady preceded Winifred up the stairs and showed her to a room, on the broad landing. It was just opposite the stairs. “I’ll be sending one of my girls up with supper and hot water, sir.”

“Thank you, that would be most kind.”

A long time after, Winifred was finally able to settle to sleep between the sweetly scented sheets of the large bed, relaxed by a delicious hot bath and an excellent supper of beef stew, vegetables and freshly baked bread. She was asleep in mere seconds.

 

At Fiona’s first, loud and thoroughly anguished cry, Winifred sat up in bed. What was happening? Why was the child screaming so? Winifred shot out of bed, slipped on her shirt, breeches and coat and pushed her bare feet into her boots. She then went into the direction of the heart-wrenching sobs and to a room further down the corridor. The door was unlocked, so she entered. Inside the room, it was utter misery.

Fiona was now crying as hard as she could do so, fighting off her father’s attempts to comfort her with clenched fists. “Mama! I want Mama! You must fetch her, now! Mama!”

The next moment, Fiona had pushed Jasper away and was rolling on the floor, banging her little fists and screaming like a banshee. Jasper Danvers was at an utter loss. His face was haggard, and his hair was standing on end, but what truly cut through Winifred’s heart, was the look of total despair in his blue eyes. No, she thought, it was up to her to restore some peace and quiet here.

With a frown, she placed her hands on her waist and shouted, “What the devil is going on in here? Is there a fire-breathing dragon in the room? Let me get my magic sword so that I can slay it!”

Winifred went over to the fireplace and grabbed the poker, which she started brandishing about her in exaggerated thrusts. “Where are you, beast? Show yourself! Ah, there you are!” She made some faint trusts toward Jasper, who was staring at her in sheer bewilderment.

However, Fiona had stopped shrieking and was now giggling. “No, Freddie, that is my Papa! There is no dragon, you silly!”

Winifred laid down the poker and sank down on her knees beside Fiona. The little girl went into Winifred’s arms like a dove returning home after a mile-long voyage.

“Freddie…” Fiona sighed. “Freddie, do not ever leave me, please? I love you, Freddie…”

A huge lump in Winifred’s throat had first to be swallowed before she was able to say something. But she did. “I love you, too, Fiona, sweetheart.”

She then made the mistake looking up and meeting Jasper’s eyes. The hurt in them was immense, and it sliced through Winifred’s heart like a blade. With a startling realisation, she knew she had somehow temporarily driven him away from his daughter’s affection. Winifred, a total stranger, had been preferred by Fiona over her own father.

Fiona yawned exhausted as she was by her crying. “Come on, damsel,” Winifred joked, “let me tuck you in. Here is Victoria, and she is truly tired. You must both sleep now. Tomorrow, we shall be on our way to Edinburgh, once again.”

The child made no protest, gathered her doll in her arms and fell into a deep sleep, as soon as her head touched the pillow. Winifred arranged the covers neatly around her small form, then straightened.

“I shall return to my own bed now too,” she said. “Goodnight, Jasper.”

But his voice stopped her before she reached the door.

“We have to talk,” he said, and took her by the arm, nearly dragging her out of the room.

 

Winifred had no inkling of why Jasper would want to talk, but she followed him outside. He gestured toward her own room, still holding her arm. She began to feel a little alarmed because his grip was going to give her bruises if he kept his grasp that firmly on her. But under the circumstances, she had no choice but to follow him inside her room and let him make her sit down with a thump. He did not take a seat, but stood towering over her, arms crossed over his chest, and scowling down at her. Even in the poor candlelight, his eyes were blazing blue diamonds of fury.

“The game is up, Miss Preston,” Jasper said, in a clipped, barely controlled voice. “You had better tell me your story.”