Read Every Mother's Son Online

Authors: Val Wood

Tags: #Ebook Club, #Historical, #Family, #Top 100 Chart, #Fiction

Every Mother's Son (14 page)

Melissa gave a small sigh. It was true. Christopher was ageing; he took longer to do everything nowadays, but he took his duties seriously and she knew he would want to see Charles and Daniel safely on board ship, just as he insisted on taking Beatrice to London to meet her escort for the journey to Switzerland. He would take her all the way if he could.

‘I’ll speak to him,’ she said. ‘I’ll persuade him.’

‘No,’ Charles said. ‘Sorry, Mama, but I’ll
tell
Father. It’s what we want to do. And,’ he added, ‘Beatrice would rather travel by train to London. She says she’s nervous when Father takes the reins to give Benson a rest. She travels across France to Switzerland by train, after all.’

‘Why has Beatrice not said? She’s usually quick to give her opinion.’

‘She doesn’t want to upset him. She knows how he worries.’

‘Well, it’s too late now. She travels tomorrow. I wish she’d told me,’ Melissa said. ‘I might have persuaded him. I could have gone with her to London, stayed a few days, done some shopping,’ she added pensively.

When Charles brought up the subject with his father, he thought there was a sense of relief in Christopher’s manner when he agreed that if that was what they really wanted to do, they should do it. ‘I’ll admit that I wasn’t looking forward to the long journey – but,’ he added swiftly, ‘if you should change your minds …’

‘We won’t, sir,’ Charles said equally swiftly. ‘And I think I should mention to you that Beatrice would prefer to travel to London by train. I suppose it’s too late for tomorrow, but perhaps next time?’

‘Oh, dear,’ his father sighed. ‘I hate travelling by train, noisy smelly things. I fear I’m becoming redundant. By the time you come home again from your travels – how long are you likely to be away, do you think? – you’ll be itching to take over the estate and I shall be ready for my rocking chair.’

I won’t, Charles thought. It’s the last thing I want. Stephen will suit the role better than I. But he answered amiably, ‘You’re a long way off the time for your rocking chair, Father,’ and avoided the question of how long he would be away.

Beatrice wished that the subject had come up earlier. ‘I’m stuck with travelling by carriage,’ she groaned. ‘But I’ll return by train when I come home in the summer.’

‘Easter, you mean,’ Charles said. ‘Or are you planning on being in Switzerland when Daniel and I come over?’

‘Yes,’ she said, her cheeks flushing. ‘I certainly am, so you’ll come straight there, won’t you? Sail to Le Havre as I do, and then take the train to Paris and make your way to Switzerland. By the way,’ she said casually, ‘I’m going to say that Daniel is my cousin, otherwise I might not be able to come out with you.’

‘Out with us?’

‘Yes. I’ll say that we’re going out for lunch or tea or something. If there are any girls staying at school for the holidays I might ask one of them to come, and then I won’t need a chaperon.’

‘Not Agathe,
please
,’ Charles begged. ‘Anyone but her.’

‘No, not her,’ Beatrice said contemptuously. ‘We don’t mix so much any more. She’s become very pompous.’

‘Will you go back after the summer hols?’ Charles asked, and he laughed as he spoke. ‘Or will you be
finished
?’

‘As much as I’m ever likely to be.’ Then she said despondently, ‘I don’t know. No, I hope not, but Mama and Papa will decide. But what do I do then? I’m nineteen. Must I do the rounds of partying and balls and wait for someone suitable to ask for my hand in marriage?’

‘Poor you.’ Charles patted her shoulder. ‘I’m so pleased that I’m not a girl.’

She pouted. ‘If no one desirable asks for me, then I might travel too. Women do, but not at my age. I’ll have to wait until I’m mature enough to go on my own or with a female companion, otherwise I won’t be classed as respectable.’

‘But would you mind not being considered respectable?’ Charles asked teasingly. ‘Except, of course, that you realize it would rebound on us, your brothers and our parents?’

‘Well, you wouldn’t mind,’ she said crossly. ‘You don’t care what anyone thinks.’

‘No, I wouldn’t.’ Charles grinned. ‘Unless you do something really reckless and stupid and then I might.’

‘Like what?’

‘Well, I don’t know, running off with a bounder. Ruining our name and your reputation.’

‘Ha!’ she said. ‘The chances of my finding a bounder are exceedingly slim.’

Daniel went over to the manor that evening. He’d spruced himself up and slicked down his unruly hair. He’d come to say goodbye to Beatrice before she left the next morning, and the boys too, he said awkwardly, in case he didn’t see them the following week.

‘I wish I could stay at home,’ Stephen told him out of his father’s hearing. ‘I’d much rather be working outside or going to agricultural college.’

‘Maybe next year?’ Daniel suggested. ‘They might not take you yet in any case.’

‘Perhaps not,’ Stephen said thoughtfully. ‘I hadn’t considered that, so maybe I’d better buckle down and be sure of being accepted.’

‘I like school,’ George said, and his brothers groaned and called him Swot. Beatrice went up to him and gave him a hug and he squirmed and looked sheepish.

‘I’d better be off,’ Daniel said. ‘I hope you have a good journey, Beatrice.’ He could feel his neck flushing and he hunched into his jacket. ‘I’ll, erm, see you in Switzerland.’ He laughed. ‘I can’t believe I said that. Pinch me, somebody!’

They all rushed to oblige, even Beatrice, and they were all laughing and jostling when Mr and Mrs Hart came into the room. Mrs Hart raised her eyebrows in her inimitable way, but Christopher Hart gave a small puzzled frown and Daniel wondered if he had ever had any rough and tumble with friends when he was young.

‘Daniel was just saying that he couldn’t believe he’s going to Switzerland,’ Charles explained ineptly. ‘And asked us to pinch him.’

And although Mr Hart murmured ‘Ah!’ Daniel knew that it was Beatrice he was looking at, not him, unless – and more likely – it was at both of them.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

Over the winter period and towards the Easter season, Daniel fitted in as many jobs as he possibly could. Ever since he was old enough to yoke a horse to a plough, it was considered and accepted that his role in the farming year was the ploughing, harrowing, sowing and reaping. He loved his horses and took great care of them, checking their health and their feet and feeding, watering and grooming them, and he knew he would miss them almost as much as he would his family.

Fletcher would take over their care whilst he was away, for he was the one who had taught him; Tom, who was able to turn his hand to most work, would fill in wherever he was needed. Lenny had his beloved herd of pigs, which had produced several litters of piglets, some of which he had sold on after they were weaned; and whereas Joseph was still rather nervous of horses since his encounter with them when he was a toddler, he liked to tend the sheep, and helped Fletcher repair and reassemble machinery.

Yet Daniel still said he felt guilty at leaving.

‘Tell you what, then,’ Fletcher said one evening after they had finished their supper. ‘When you come back home, Lenny can go off adventuring, and then when Joseph is old enough he can go.’

Lenny looked up. ‘I can’t go. I’m too busy to go anywhere. I intend building up an even bigger herd than I’ve got now, and I’m going to try out different breeds to find ’best meat for pork and bacon.’

‘But what about me?’ Dolly complained. ‘I’d like to travel too.’

‘You’ll have to find a rich man to marry you, Dolly,’ Tom said. ‘I’d marry you myself, but I’m done wi’ travelling.’

‘But you’re too old, Uncle Tom,’ Dolly objected. ‘You’re as old as Da!’

‘Your da and me have been having a discussion, Dolly,’ her mother broke in, ‘and we’ve decided that you and Maria can swap jobs. We think that you’re ready to start work. Maria has already asked Mrs Topham and she’s willing to tek you on. You can start after Easter.’

‘Oh, Ma! Really?’ Dolly was ecstatic. ‘And you mean that Maria will come home?’

‘Yes, she’d like to, even though she says she’s been happy enough at Mrs Topham’s.’ She smiled at Elizabeth. ‘And it’ll be nice to still have two girls at home, won’t it, Lizzie?’

Elizabeth, still scraping her bowl of custard, nodded.

The weeks sped by. Harriet worried about Daniel sleeping rough, and decided to sew him a sleeping sack in case there were nights when he couldn’t find accommodation. Fletcher drove her to Brough station, where she caught the train into Hull. There had been many changes in the town since she had last been and she wished she had more time to look round some of her old haunts. She located a draper’s shop and bought waterproof material, a pair of fustian sheets and some strong cotton thread, and returned home well pleased with her purchases.

When she had finished tacking it all together she asked Joseph to find her some sheep’s wool from the meadow. She washed and dried and teased it until it was soft and fluffy, filled the sack and stitched it up.

Daniel climbed into it to try it for size and declared it perfect. ‘Charles is going to want one, Ma. You ought to have bought enough material for two.’

‘I never thought,’ she said. ‘Surely Charles will have something similar already? But if he hasn’t, I think there’s enough material left, and I only used one of the sheets.’

‘Mek him one, Ma,’ Daniel said. ‘He’ll be as pleased as Punch.’

So she did, and Daniel continued to plan their route and build up his list of what he would need for the journey. Granny Rosie knitted him thick wool socks, a scarf and a brightly coloured hat to cover his ears, which he gazed at in dismay even though he thanked her; he polished his best good strong boots and put aside several pairs of laces, because, as he told Elizabeth who was watching him, ‘The best boots you can buy are no good without laces.’

‘I’ll miss you when you’ve gone, Daniel,’ she said plaintively. ‘I don’t understand why you have to go.’

He gave her a squeeze. ‘I don’t
have
to go, Lizzie, but I want to. It’s important to me.’ He had already explained that he was going in search of his grandfather; when he came home again he would explain further if he had discovered any answers.

Easter fell in early April that year and Charles, Stephen and George Hart arrived home the week before. Charles was euphoric at leaving school for the last time, for as he explained to Daniel when they met, ‘Although I’ve left my options open for going to university later, and that is what my father expects of me, in all honesty I don’t think I will. I’d like to study art and maybe literature, but mostly art, and I think this journey through France and Italy will open my eyes, allowing me to see what is possible.’

‘I’d like to go to Paris,’ Daniel told him. ‘I’d like to see ’palace gardens and ’River Seine.’

‘Yes, I would too,’ Charles said eagerly. ‘And the Louvre. Not that I want to be an artist, I’m not good enough, but I’d like to see the works of art that I’ve read about.’ He lowered his voice. ‘And particularly Montmartre,’ he murmured. ‘Don’t tell your mother we’re going in case she’s heard of it.’

‘Why?’ Daniel whispered.

‘It’s where the artists and their models live,’ Charles said in an undertone. ‘There’s a lot of drinking and, erm, other things going on. Struthers, our art master, told us about it; he’s a very liberal-minded sort of fellow and spends his summers there. Have you heard of Camille Pissarro?’

Daniel shook his head, and Charles continued, ‘He’s one of the artists who live there and apparently he gathered a group of other artists together, including Monet and Cézanne, to create the Impressionist school of painting. There are other artists and writers living there too because accommodation is cheap and most of them struggle to earn money, but,’ his voice dropped even lower, ‘the area is considered to be very decadent.’

‘Oh,’ Daniel breathed in. ‘I can’t wait! Write and tell Beatrice we might be held up,’ and they both laughed with glee at what was to come.

The day before they were due to depart, Daniel decided to visit Granny Tuke. He was apprehensive, in view of her attitude towards him, but he felt he should. Her door overlooking the Haven was open and she was sitting inside in her easy chair looking out. He gave her a wave as he drew up in the trap and fastened the mare’s reins to the fence post.

‘I’ve come to say goodbye,’ he said awkwardly as he stood on the doorstep. He never knew what name to give her. Plainly not Granny, as she had told him that she wasn’t, but Mrs Tuke seemed far too formal, so he didn’t call her anything. ‘I’m off on my travels tomorrow,’ he explained. ‘I’m hoping to find ’whereabouts of my grandfather, or some relative at any rate.’

‘And then what?’ she said dispassionately. ‘Will that mek a difference?’

‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘I don’t think it’ll change anything, but I’d like to know about his background; it’s important to me.’

Ellen Tuke grunted. ‘I can tell you a thing or two about your grandmother, if you want to hear it.’

I don’t understand why she’s so vindictive, Daniel thought, but he said, ‘I know about Granny Rosie. She was very sad about losing her son; any mother would be, wouldn’t they?’ His question was searching. Surely she would understand. When she didn’t answer, he added, ‘I hope I’ve made up to her for ’loss of him.’

Ellen’s lip curled and he was sure she was about to say something cutting, so he said quickly, ‘So I hope you keep in good health and I’ll see you when I return,’ and turned to unhook the reins. She hadn’t invited him in but had kept him standing on the doorstep; nor had she enquired about his travels. ‘Goodbye.’ He nodded and, leading the horse, turned the trap and climbed in, and as he passed her door he raised his whip.

He had driven only a few yards when he heard her shout. ‘Hey!’ He drew on the reins and turned his head.

She was standing in the doorway and raised her hand. ‘Look after yourself,’ she said, and he felt exhilarated as if he’d scored a small victory.

The following day, Daniel said his goodbyes to his mother, his brothers, Elizabeth and Maria; Dolly had already said farewell when she departed to her new job in Brough.

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