Suzie lay in the cradle of his arms, trying to imagine braving that house again. âYou were the one who spotted the bruise on her forehead, under her hair. If she's too terrified to tell the police Tamara's missing, she's hardly going to be brave enough to help us find her. Dawson's obviously ordered her to keep quiet. And we're the last people he wants her to talk to.'
âI'd come with you, but after the country club, that might only make things worse. It'll have to be girl talk.'
âI'll ring the agent in the morning. If she won't give me his number, she might at least pass on a message.'
âMm.' Nick's hold was relaxing as he drifted back towards sleep. âAnd what message would that be?'
âThat we want to know if Tamara's with him . . . Ah! I see what you mean. It's not going to work, is it? He'd keep her secret. Well, how about if I just ask him to contact me? Say it has to do with Tamara's safety. That might scare him into breaking cover, if he cares about her.'
âYou don't think we'll be making things worse for her? Putting her into more danger? More people knowing where she is? Even if it's us?'
âI don't see how. I thought you wanted to find her.'
âAll right, all right. Only, I'm beginning to feel this whole thing is like a keg of dynamite. I don't know what would be the match that sets it off.'
Suzie walked up the steps of the Record Office with a sense of heightened anticipation. She felt more optimistic than she had for a week. Surely it was more than a happy coincidence that the breakthrough in Pru's family search had led them directly to identifying Tamara's hiding place? Equating Johan Clayson with the Joane Clarkson of the bastardy bond, giving the revelation of Adam's father. And the notelet with Anne Hathaway's cottage, pointing so plainly to the Stratford area. In the past and the present, the pieces were falling into place.
She and Pru deposited all but the essentials in the lockers and entered the search room.
âA bastardy bond? Great stuff!' Enthusiasm lit up the archivist's face. âYes, you really do need to see the original. We only put the names of the principal characters on A2A. With luck, you should find out a whole lot more.'
As she turned away towards the stockroom, Suzie and Prudence exchanged triumphant grins. They settled down at their table to wait. It was not long before the archivist hurried over with a cardboard folder.
At first sight, the bastardy bond looked not unlike the apprenticeship indenture. Much of it was preprinted in eighteenth-century type. Their eyes were drawn to the handwritten entries which gave the details particular to this case.
âHere!' Prudence's voice was rising in excitement. â
Michael Atkins the Younger and Michael Atkins the Elder and Robert Clarkson. Bond for Maintaining Michael Atkins the Younger's Bastard Child.
So his father gets in on the act too.'
âAnd Robert Clarkson,' Suzie chimed in. âHe must be Joane's father, mustn't he? Do you think he's the Robert Clayson whose name we found on that lease? Son of the older Adam Clayson?'
âGee. I can see why it gets to you. When the pieces of the puzzle all start to come together.'
âThere's more. You've really struck gold.
Mr Michael Atkins the Younger and Michael Atkins the Elder of Corley Helliers and Masons, and Robert Clarkson of the same place Woolcomber.
You've got all their occupations.'
âHellier? What's that?'
âA roofer or tiler, I think. Anyway, they've all bound themselves to the churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor of Corley for forty pounds, to make sure the baby doesn't become a charge on the parish. That'll be so much for the lying-in, and then a weekly payment. And here!' She gave a cry that turned the heads of other researchers. âDo you see where they've signed their names at the bottom? The younger Michael Atkins signs his name. All Robert Clarkson can make is a rough letter C. But look at the older Michael's mark. See those half moons and that triangle? It's much more elaborate than a single letter. I wouldn't mind betting that's his mason's mark. He'll have left that on every bit of stonework he built.'
Prudence was only half listening. âWill you look at this?' Her finger was pointing to a long, unpunctuated sentence halfway down the page, which Suzie had skipped over. âSay, they didn't believe in much punctuation, did they?
Joane Clarkson of Corley aforesaid single woman did in her life time and by her voluntary examination in writing and upon oath before George Thorne Esquire one of his Majestie's Justices of the peace declare that she was with child and that the said Child was likely to be born a bastard and Chargeable to the said Parish of Corley and that the above bounden Michael Atkins the Younger was the father of the said Child which said Joane was about six weeks since delivered of a male Bastard Infant according to said her Examination which said Male Bastard Child is now living the mother thereof the said Joane Clarkson being since dead.
'
Her voice broke off.
Suzie followed her finger. A chill ran through her.
âPoor soul,' whispered Prudence. âShe may have brought little Adam into the world. But she paid the price with her life.'
The thrill of the eighteenth-century drama faded. Suzie saw an illegitimate child. A teenage mother dying in childbirth.
Tamara, pregnant. In the twentieth century, but in fear of her life.
âAnd that's the guy's father. Adam's grandfather.' Prudence was staring down at the mason's mark. âI have the strangest feeling. It's kind of beautiful, the way he does it. The guy couldn't even write, but he's a real craftsman. All over this little town, he'll be building walls, putting the roofs on. I get a feeling it's something I should be proud of. And yet his son's got this girl into trouble, and all
he
can do is sign his name to say he's going to pay for the kid. Why doesn't he marry her, for heaven's sake?'
âHe might be married already,' Suzie suggested quietly. âWe could check it out.'
With a touch of regret, she returned the yellowed document to the folder and left it on the desk. âThanks, that was great.'
They turned back to the Corley registers on microfiche.
âDéjà vu. This is how we met.' Suzie smiled at Pru.
âWas that only last week? It seems like I've known you the longest time.'
It did not take long to find what she suspected.
1735 was baptized Thomas son of Michael Atkins 22 August.
1737 was baptized Sarah daughter of Mr Michael Atkins 3 April.
1739 was baptized Alice daughter of Michael Atkins 4 October . . .
âThat last one's the same year as Adam!' Prudence exclaimed.
âThere's your answer. He already has a family.'
Suzie took the microfiche out of the machine with a heavy heart. It was what she had been expecting â the older man exploiting a fresh young girl, even if it wasn't the local squire. But at the back of her mind she had been hoping for a more optimistic story. A young mason's apprentice would have been better. Someone closer to Johan's age. A teenage romance that went too far, and the boy unable to marry until he had finished his indenture.
âI wonder how it happened? If he's a mason, I suppose he might have been earning enough to employ a maid. Or he might just have come staggering out of the pub one night and caught her on her way home in the dark.' She paused. Her head bent closer over her notes. âI missed that!' She slid the microfiche under the glass plate again and found the place in the register. âDo you see? Seventeen thirty-seven, daughter of
Mr
Michael Atkins. Hang on.' She searched for her transcript of the bastardy bond. âThere it is again. Mr Michael Atkins the younger.'
Prudence looked at her, baffled.
âThey didn't call just anyone Mr in those days. You had to be a bit of a gentleman. So your Michael Atkins wasn't just a horny-handed workman. He was someone with money and status. A substantial businessman. So we're getting back to something not unlike the squire in the big house abusing a female servant.'
âYou don't think she was his willing lover?' Pru asked. âShe could have been flattered by his attentions.'
For a moment, Suzie didn't know how to answer. Prudence had been shocked by the idea of premarital relations when they first met. âWe'll never know.'
She gathered her notes together. This time, she was the one with a sour taste in her mouth.
She had wanted a different outcome for Tamara too. A love affair with someone her age. It was silly not to be able to shake off the conviction that the two girls were connected.
She braved a smile for Prudence. âThere. You've got your story. The outlines of it, anyway.'
âNot a pretty one, is it? Whichever way you look at it.'
âAt least you know for certain who the father is. That's not what usually happens. And it opens up a whole new line. You can trace Michael Atkins back now . . .' She paused. âNo. I forgot. The Corley registers only start in 1729. This is nearly as far back as you can go.'
âI'm running out of time, anyway. I'm due back in the good old US of A the end of the week. I fly out on Sunday.'
âI can go on hunting for you. See if I can find who he married. It's so annoying when you get a rector like this one, who doesn't think it's worth recording the mother's name. Unless she was single, of course. There might be other documents about the Atkins family. Like that lease we guessed might be for Johan's father and grandfather.'
âLooks like you were right about her father. He could make his initial. That C.
The mark of Robert Clarkson
. It was a bit shaky, but it kind of touched me.'
âI wonder how he felt, putting his name to that bond? At least he'd got Atkins to own up to being the father of his grandchild, and to put his hand in his pocket to support him. That must have been some sort of satisfaction.'
On their way out, Prudence stopped at the enquiry desk. âIs that really true that an unmarried mother had to parade through the streets in a white sheet?'
âOh, that!' The archivist laughed. âWhat date are we talking about?'
âSeventeen thirty-nine.'
âIt was going out of fashion in the eighteenth century.'
âWell, that's a relief.' Prudence was turning away when the archivist's voice called her back.
âUnless she was a Dissenter. The Establishment would seize on any excuse to stigmatize someone who had stepped out of line.'
Prudence's face fell. âHer child grew up a Dissenter.'
As they made their way back to the locker room, Suzie reflected, âSo Johan might still have been marked out in the village as a loose woman. Even after she was dead. Her father would have had to live with the shame on his family.'
The same shame the moralizing Leonard Dawson was feeling?
âI guess that's why those magistrates made him sign the bond too. So he couldn't just turn her out of house and home. He had to stay responsible for her.'
Suzie was aware of the double conversation going on. On the surface, they were talking about Johan Clayson in the eighteenth century. But neither of them could get out of their minds Tamara Gamble and the role her stepfather might or might not have played in her pregnancy and her flight from home.
Suzie threw open the door of the house to usher Prudence in. The women almost fell over Millie on the hall phone.
Her pointed face was animated. She was even blushing slightly. She flattened herself against the wall so that they could get past her. As Suzie brushed by, she saw that Millie was cradling the receiver against her face, so that her mother could not hear the conversation.
Suzie was halfway to the kitchen before she realized what was odd. Millie, like any other fourteen-year-old, was perpetually on her mobile. It was not often she used the landline. Yet the expression on her face clearly said that this was a personal conversation.
She'd been blushing. As Suzie ran the water into the kettle, she reflected that it was probably an unexpected call from a boy. Someone who didn't know her mobile number. A smile twitched at her lips. Some new romance? Someone from an older class, perhaps? If Justin Soames could nurse dreams of the curvaceous Tamara, someone else in his year might surely be stopped in his tracks by this newly-blonde and sophisticated Millie.
Too soon yet to start worrying.
They took their tea into the garden. Suzie was itching for an opportunity to do a little maternal detective work. But Millie was likely to retreat to her bedroom when she had finished the phone call. Curiosity would have to wait.
It was therefore a surprise when her daughter appeared through the patio doors. Her usually pale face was still flushed, and there was a glint of both pride and defiance in her eyes.
âYou'll never guess who that was.'
âNo,' Suzie said. âBut I expect you're going to tell us.'
âOnly Dan Curtis!' The unfamiliar name fell into the silence. âOh, come on, Mum. You know. That gorgeous guy at the tennis club? They've got a dinner dance there on Saturday night. He found out my real name from Leonard Dawson, in spite of Dad's daft idea of pretending we were somebody different. He's invited me to go with him.' Her face blazed triumph. âJust wait till I tell the girls!'
Suzie's teacup almost crashed on to the table. âThe coach? The one we thought Tamara might have . . . Millie, for heaven's sake! Besides, you're only fourteen. You're too young to be dating grown men. You don't even
know
him.'
Millie tossed her blonde crop. âI've met him. Even if Dad was giving him the third degree. It's your fault for taking me there. And he's drop-dead gorgeous, isn't he? The girls will be soâo jealous.'