Kitty Little

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by Freda Lightfoot




  Kitty Little

  Freda Lightfoot

  Copyright © 2001 and 2010 by Freda Lightfoot.

  All rights reserved.

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. Nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  ISBN 978-0956607362

  Published by Freda Lightfoot 2010

  Description

  Katherine Terry is fleeing from a marriage her ambitious mother has arranged for her, as well as a scandal that threatens to wreck her own life and the happiness of those she loves. Charlotte Gilpin can have any man she wants, and she wants Archie - whoever is standing in her way. Esme Bield is weary of a life filled with the placid duty she has known as a parson’s daughter; but can the quiet, trusting girl cope with the reality of a wider world?

  Against the theatrical backdrop of the Lakes, a real-life drama is played out: One that threatens to destroy the very dream that brought them together, and the close friendship they once enjoyed. Three girls seeking escape. Each captivated by the idea of a travelling theatre. Each pretending to be someone she is not. All are in love with the same man . . .

  Another heartwarming tale from a master story-teller.

  Lancashire Evening Post on For All Our Tomorrows.

  The Favourite Child (In the top 20 of the Sunday Times hardback bestsellers)

  a compelling and fascinating tale

  Middlesborough Evening Gazette

  She piles horror on horror - rape, torture, sexual humiliation, incest, suicide - but she keeps you reading! Jay Dixon on House of Angels.

  This is a book I couldn’t put down . . . a great read!

  South Wales Evening Post on The Girl From Poorhouse Lane

  ‘a fascinating, richly detailed setting with a dramatic plot brimming with enough scandal, passion, and danger for a Jackie Collins’ novel.’

  Booklist on Hostage Queen

  A bombshell of an unsuspected secret rounds off a romantic saga narrated with pace and purpose and fuelled by conflict.

  The Keswick Reminder on The Bobbin Girls

  Luckpenny Land

  paints a vivid picture of life on the fells during the war. Enhanced by fine historical detail and strong characterisation it is an endearing story...’

  Westmorland Gazette

  Ruby McBride

  ‘An inspiring novel about accepting change and bravely facing the future.’

  The Daily Telegraph

  Act One

  London and the Lakes

  1912

  Chapter One

  The girl standing in the theatre lobby seemed oblivious to the crowds milling and jostling about her. A young man inadvertently knocked her elbow and a stream of wine slopped over the rim of her glass to splash the extravagant silken folds of her new gown. Not that she noticed. Nor did she pay any heed to her attentive young escort who took the offender to task on her behalf. She was examining the photographs that lined the panelled walls. A lively scene from Charley’s Aunt, the riotous comedy of She Stoops to Conquer recently performed at the Coronet Theatre; Vesta Tilley, Little Tich, Harry Lauder and other music hall favourites, and the aristocratic figure of Henry Irving playing Hamlet. She stood before them all, enthralled.

  But her face, with its open, friendly aspect, seemed quite at odds with the sophisticated image the dress presented. Quite bare of powder or the current daring fashion for rouge, some might consider it to be the face of a strong woman. A more shrewd observer would notice deep blue shadows and the faintest hint of fine lines, which should hardly be present in one who’d barely attained maturity, displaying evidence of many sleepless nights. It was, unquestionably, the face of someone who has known too early in life inordinate pain and the value of compromise.

  In truth very few people noticed her either, or paid her the slightest attention, being too tall and ungainly to be considered a classic beauty. Even the hair, undoubtedly glossy and of a deep, dark brown, was plainly styled in twin plaited coils that formed ear muffs nestling against the dome of each pink cheek. The eyes, a deep velvety brown, were commendably alert and questioning, but the lashes were neither long nor curling, being rather short and functional.

  This was evidently a young woman afraid to make the best of herself in case she should inadvertently reveal her vulnerability.

  Only the dress might have excited interest, and had certainly been purchased by her socially aspiring mother with that purpose in mind. It was meant to take the wearer without shame or ridicule to any social event a busy diary might throw up, hopefully attracting attention in the right quarters.

  Undoubtedly exquisite, and of the purest silk, it was a wondrous example of the dressmaker’s skill and artifice. Encrusted with bugle beads and rows of tiny, non-functional buttons, the boned bodice sported a daringly low-cut neckline, and the multi-layers of the draped silk voile skirt, floated light as air against her legs.

  When Kitty had first seen the dress in the dressmaker’s boudoir she’d refused, absolutely, to wear it.

  ‘It’s a symphony in blues and lavender, Katherine dear,’ her mother had insisted, quoting the fanciful language of the dressmaker in the posh voice she always adopted whenever she felt outclassed. ‘You look a proper swank.’

  Clara Terry, whose real name was Smith but which she’d changed in honour of the famous actress, Ellen Terry, smoothed a hand over the shimmering silk and, completely ignoring the scowl on her daughter’s face, added, ‘I picked this design out special, ‘cause that’s what yer wears for half mourning, ain’t it?’

  ‘I shall feel dreadfully overdressed.'

  ‘Go on wiv yer. Draped skirts are all the rage this year.’

  ‘An excellent reason for me not to wear one then. Anyway, I don’t know that I even wish to go.’

  Clara had registered utter shock and disbelief at this remark. ‘Hark at ‘er? What a bleedin’ tale that is. Loves the theeayter she does.’ She made no mention of having invested a small fortune in goodwill and hot dinners persuading Frank Cussins to come up trumps and buy an engagement ring for her darling girl. The theatre tickets had been a part of her strategy of inducement. They were the best seats in the stalls and had cost her a mint of money.

  Clara had liked young Frank from the start, for all he was a bit pasty-faced. She’d let him have the best room in her Ealing lodging house, second floor front with a view over the common. The minute she’d sized up the solid state of his insurance business she’d made sure her Kitty was always the one to take up his tea or his hot shaving water. He’d taken quite a shine to the girl as a result. Took her up town regular, though he was close with his money and would as soon settle for a walk by the river or a cream tea at the Lyons Corner House, if left to his own devices. Men were like that. No imagination.

  It had been Clara’s idea to celebrate the couple’s engagement with an evening at the theatre, knowing how much Kitty would love it. Not that she’d any intention of revealing this fact, better the girl think it her fiancé’s idea. Clara had adopted her most cajoling tones. ‘Course you must go, cherub. Frank has got tickets specially, ain’t he? It’s Hullo Ragtime, what that American chap wrote, Irving Brussels.’

  ‘Berlin. Irving Berlin.’

  ‘There y’are then, Duchess. Yer knows all about it, so yer wouldn’t want to mi
ss it, would yer? Not when everyone says it’s a hit. You’ll look a proper duchess in that frock. Besides,’ Clara persisted, ‘You can’t hide yourself away. Raymond wouldn’t want you to. Life goes on.’

  ‘To die so young is too cruel, Ma. So unfair.’

  ‘Who said life was fair, and don’t call me Ma, dearie. You know ‘ow I do detest it,’ Clara hissed under her breath. ‘We can’t bring him back, now can we? Nor be in mourning for ever. Life must...’

  ‘Don’t say it must go on, not again. I can’t bear it. How can we go on? I’m not in the mood for high jinks and parties. I can’t flirt and jazz, drink cocktails and act as if everything is fine, because everything isn’t fine. Raymond is dead.’ Kitty revealed in every sigh, every gesture, every irritable pluck of her fingertips upon the silk fabric, her desperate unhappiness.

  ‘T’aint a party, dearie, it’s the theeayter. I thought you liked the theeayter?’

  Kitty hadn’t been near a theatre for over a year. Not since before the motor accident which had robbed her of a loving brother, when together they’d gone to see Charley’s Aunt with Raymond’s best friend, Archie. The beautiful eyes filled with tears. ‘I can’t do it. It’s obscene! Insensitive.’

  Clara sighed. For all she regretted the death of her only son and had done her share of grieving these last months, she’d no intention of making it her life’s work, as Kitty seemed set on doing. But then the poor girl couldn’t help being soft as marsh mallow, disguise it as she may, and the two had been especially close, them being twins and all.

  Tears were rolling down her cheeks and she was sweeping them angrily away. ‘I don’t deserve to enjoy myself, or to see new American musicals. It would be like a betrayal. How dare I even think to buy a new dress? I won’t go and that’s that.’

  She’d begun to prise open loosely stitched buttons and scatter pins in every direction, sending the dressmaker scurrying about the room, picking them up as best she might. Clara, to her credit, had simply shaken her head in sorrow.

  In the end Kitty had allowed herself to be persuaded. Oh, and wasn’t she glad? It had been the most wonderful experience of her life. Now the show was over and people were streaming out onto a wet London street and Kitty couldn’t bear to drag herself away.

  The performance had been stunning, the costumes dazzling, the music foot-tapping, in particular Alexander’s Ragtime Band which she could hardly stop humming. There she’d sat, very straight and proper in her elegant gown in the orchestra stalls, feeling as if she were up there with the actors on that stage, living every scene along with them. The whole atmosphere of the theatre had been thrilling and exciting. Simply to experience row upon row of delighted, happy people laughing, applauding and singing, felt as if for the first time since Raymond’s death she was vividly and stupendously alive.

  Kitty bestowed a dazzling smile upon the ever-patient Frank in his shiny suit and stiff collar, despite his somehow having managed to irritate her beyond endurance all evening by attempting to anticipate her every need. She felt suffused with guilt since it was their engagement night after all. For a fleeting second the smile transformed her, making the fine lines vanish, winging the eyebrows upwards and seeming to lengthen the laughing eyes into a delightful almond shape, endowing the face with a radiant and unusual beauty.

  ‘Wasn’t it all wonderful?’

  ‘Of course, my dear. Don’t I always know what is best for you?’ Frank concluded in self-satisfied tones. And while he collected coats and capes and hailed a cab, Kitty experienced the slightest chill drift across her shoulder blades.

  On their arrival home Frank lingered in the hall hoping for a goodnight kiss but Kitty hastily excused herself and made for the stairs, claiming she was tired. From the first landing she watched him disappear into the back kitchen, no doubt for a night-cap with Ma, then picked up her skirts and fled. But instead of going directly to her own room, tucked away in the front attic, she scrambled up the back stairs and slipped quietly into the top floor back.

  Archie Emerson was sitting up in bed, a muffler tucked in the neck of his striped pyjamas and an old cardigan draped loosely over his shoulders. His too-thin face looked a sickly grey in the light of the gas mantle above his head and Kitty stifled the anxious enquiry concerning the state of his health which sprang instantly to her lips whenever she saw him.

  Archie had survived the accident that had killed her brother, physically at least, with barely a scratch. Outwardly he was unchanged, the same relatively fit young man, as raven-haired, blue-eyed and handsome as when he and Raymond had first met years ago at some motor rally or other. But this was merely the shell. Inside, Kitty could tell that, like herself, he was quite different. The accident had changed him.

  It had been Archie who’d been driving the motor, probably far too fast on a country road slick with rain and mud. It had run out of control, hit a tree and Raymond had been killed outright. Guilt now ate away at Archie’s soul. It was this awesome weight of responsibility, in addition to grieving for a much loved friend, which had led him into depression and near starvation till, in the end, he’d caught a ferocious attack of ‘flu which had in turn resulted in pneumonia. For a while his life had hung in the balance, and, with no family of his own, Kitty had brought him to Hope View to nurse him.

  Surprisingly, Clara had not blamed Archie for her son’s death, taking a philosophical view about the pranks of boys. She’d gladly taken Archie in, didn’t even charge him rent for all she was not known for pampering her guests, and ordered special egg custards and beef tea to be made for him. Nevertheless, for all he enjoyed being the centre of attention, he couldn’t bear to be fussed over.

  Kitty flopped down on the bed beside him, lying flat out on the crumpled eiderdown.

  ‘Hello Kitty-Cat, old thing.’ Raymond had given her this pet name from childhood, when he couldn’t quite get his tongue round Katherine, and Archie had adopted it. She didn’t mind as she missed her twin sorely, as did Archie, so was content for him to act as Raymond’s stand-in, a sort of surrogate brother. ‘Good show, was it?’

  ‘The best. You wouldn’t believe how marvellous it was.’

  ‘Did the actors declaim and rant and rave in suitably heroic fashion?’ he teased.

  She sat up, eyes bright, fixing her gaze earnestly upon his. ‘No they did not. They sang and danced and spoke with such feeling, you wouldn’t believe. Not in the least Victorian but entirely modern. A glorious riot of colour, wickedly clever scenery and there was the most wonderful song performed by a woman with cropped hair, would you believe? topped with a huge ostrich feather.’

  Unconvinced, as if determined to prove that he had missed nothing by being forced to remain in bed, Archie persisted. ‘Surely the keynote of good drama is simplicity, in order to let the characters shine. The set should not in any way detract from the play.’

  ‘Oh, I do agree, in principle. I mean, in the straight theatre, words, words, words are everything. The set doesn’t need to be so important then as you can leave much to the imagination of the audience. But this was a musical, so those rules don’t apply.’

  Kitty loved to air her views on the theatre, most of which she’d picked up from the constant stream of thespian tenants who had passed through the doors of Hope View over the years. Years in which she’d grown up without a father, and with a mother whose sole aim was to create a vastly different future for her only daughter. Yet Kitty loved to soak up the many stories of theatrical life which buzzed all around her, longing to taste it for herself. If she had a dream, this must be it. To appear on stage. Sadly, it was never likely to happen.

  ‘But was it art, darling?’ There was a mocking cynicism in his tone, one she’d grown accustomed to of late and Kitty paid it no heed.

  Slapping playfully at him, she laughed. ‘Don’t be such an horrendous snob. Why should it not be? It was all so - oh I don’t know. Exciting, wonderful, marvellous! I simply adored it.’

  Archie was laughing too, enraptured as always by her
enthusiasm. ‘You were glad you went then?’

  ‘Oh yes.’ She began at once to repeat her tale, frequently digressing with descriptions of a particular scene, the magnificence of the costumes and brilliance of the acting, gesticulating wildly with her slender hands and finishing with a detailed description of the pictures in the lobby. ‘I was looking at a photo of some actor or other doing Charley’s Aunt. Do you remember us all going to see it ages ago? Raymond doing a wonderful takeoff of Lord Fancourt Babberley. I laughed till I cried.’

  ‘Light comedy,’ Archie grumbled, snuffling into his handkerchief and reverting to his self-appointed air of gloom. ‘Hardly Shakespeare, my dear.’

  ‘But brilliant dialogue. Such wit. Don’t patronise, Archie dear, it doesn’t suit you. You know it’s one of your favourites. Of course this show was entirely different.’ And as she once again pressed home her point, he lay back on the pillows with a sigh and let his eyelids droop, making it clear that he was bone-weary, far too tired for further discussion.

  In truth she knew him to be miffed at having missed the show. And he always hated to lose an argument. But then, recalling the lateness of the hour, realised that he might indeed be tired. Kitty stopped in mid-sentence and leaning forward, kissed the lean cheek. ‘Cocoa? You look all in.’

  ‘Am rather, old thing.’

  ‘Dearest Archie, I’m sorry for babbling on. I’ll tell you all about it tomorrow, shall I?’

  He knew that she would anyway, so didn’t trouble to reply.

  As Kitty crept out, pulling the door softly closed behind her, she heard him call after her. ‘Don’t drip cocoa on that new frock or Ma will kill you. Giggling, she skipped along the landing, up the front stairs and into her own tiny room where she prudently stepped out of the dress before pulling on an old check dressing-gown and heading for the kitchen.

 

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