Rosemary Aitken

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by Flowers for Miss Pengelly




  Table of Contents

  Recent Titles from Rosemary Aitken

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Part One: Autumn 1911

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Two: April to July 1912

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Three: August – October 1912

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Four: October – November 1912

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Recent Titles from Rosemary Aitken

  AGAINST THE TIDE

  THE TREGENZA GIRLS

  FROM PENVARRIS WITH LOVE

  A CORNISH MAID

  FLOWERS FOR MISS PENGELLY

  Rosemary Aitken

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  First published in Great Britain and the USA 2013 by

  SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of

  9 – 15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.

  eBook edition first published in 2013 by Severn House Digital

  an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited.

  Copyright © 2013 by Rosemary Aitken.

  The right of Rosemary Aitken to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.

  British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

  Aitken, Rosemary, 1942-

  Flowers for Miss Pengelly.

  1. Lady’s maids–Fiction. 2. Social status–Fiction.

  3. Criminal investigation–Fiction. 4. Cornwall (England :

  County)–Social conditions–20th century–Fiction.

  5. Love stories.

  I. Title

  823.9'14-dc23

  ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8229-5 (cased)

  ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-381-5 (Epub)

  Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.

  This ebook produced by

  Palimpsest Book Production Limited,

  Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.

  For my neighbours,

  Angela and Pat

  Part One

  Autumn 1911

  One

  When Effie saw the policeman outside the Westons’ shop, under the sign saying ‘High Class Haberdashery and Subscription Library’, she almost turned and ran. Her heart, which had been pit-patting happily under her neat grey housemaid’s uniform, lurched suddenly to the bottom of her buttoned boots. She knew what this meant, of course she did. They’d found out about that business with Lettie and the books.

  So what would happen now? They wouldn’t send you to prison for a thing like that, would they? Or would they? Even if not – think of the disgrace! Once Mrs Thatchell knew the police had been involved she’d very likely turn Effie out at once, and then whatever would become of her? It was no good hoping to go back to Aunty Madge; Uncle Joe had made his feelings clear on that. ‘Girl is old enough to make a living now. You done your family duty, Madge, giving her a ’ome when her poor Pa couldn’t cope, and now it’s time to think about yourself. Besides, we need the bed. Young Sammy’s getting that much bigger now, it’s time he had one to hisself.’

  And Pa couldn’t have her – even now. He’d gone into lodgings after Mother died and he shared his bedroom with another miner as it was. And there was precious little hope of finding another live-in job – no-one would take a girl without a character. So would it be the workhouse? Probably it would, and that was almost worse than prison, in a way – great grey walls – and if you were in jail there was at least a chance you might get out again! Oh, glory! Why had she let Lettie talk her into this?

  Suddenly her job with Mrs Thatchell seemed a precious thing. Most other girls she knew were either (like her cousins) working down the mine, breaking the tin-stone so it could be crushed; or if they were in household service, it was in humble downstairs jobs, like laundry-maids and kitchen-hands or simply scrubbing floors. But the sewing teacher had heard about the vacancy for a general maid through that same Miss Blanche Weston who was looking at her now – who kept the haberdashery and subscription library – and had been persuaded to put in a word because Effie had won the leaver’s prize for ‘outstanding needlework’.

  It must have been a good word, because it did the trick. When a nervous Effie turned up for interview, Mrs Thatchell had asked a hundred questions (none of which Effie knew the answer to!), found a hundred faults, taken a long, hard, disapproving look at her, and then – just when Effie was sure of being sent away – suddenly decided, ‘Well you’re no worse than the others, and at least you’re half-polite. Since you come recommended, I suppose that you will do. I haven’t found anyone else remotely suitable and I hear you have one talent, if it’s only sewing hems. You will be living in, of course. No drink, no followers. If you suit, I can offer you your keep, one half-day off and three and nine a week.’

  It was less than lots of servants got, but Effie knew when she was fortunate. She nodded wordlessly.

  ‘Then you can start next Monday; report to Cook six sharp and don’t be late. We’ve got a uniform: had it for the last girl, but she didn’t last a month, so it is hardly worn. It will need alteration, but no doubt you’ll manage that, if you’re as good as sewing as they say you are. And a good thing too. Material costs money and it’s too good to waste.’

  Even then Effie could hardly believe her luck. Perhaps it was because – as she discovered as soon as she moved into the house – Mrs Thatchell liked to do needlework herself. Lovely things she’d made, as well – not common things like skirts and bloomers, like you made at school, but tapestries and cushions and embroidered chairs. It was a pity no-one ever saw them, Effie thought.

  She’d said as much to Mrs Lane, the stout cook-housekeeper, that very first day she was there. The cook had been rolling pastry for a pie, while Effie made a last adjustment to her uniform. It had belonged to Daisy – the one who had lasted no longer than a month – ‘a flighty piece’ according to the cook, and evidently a large girl, judging by the uniform she’d left. It wasn’t easy doing the alterations on your own, with no-one to pin and mark the darts for you (Aunt Madge and the cousins hadn’t had the time), but Effie thought she’d managed beautifully – until Mrs Thatchell saw her, said the hem was far too short and had sent her downstairs smartly to let it down a bit.

  ‘That better?’ She twirled around to show the cook.

  Mrs Lane looked up from flouring her board. ‘Better than on Daisy – I’ll say that for you. But don’t you take my word. You’d better show the mistress when you’ve done your chores.’

  ‘I’m half-ashamed to show her when she sews so well herself. Lovely things she showed me that she made. I only wish the ladies from the Haberdashery could see – show them what real needlework can be.’

  Mrs Lane flicked salt and pepper on her pie. ‘Well don’t you say so
to her, my girl, that’s all I can say, or you’ll be out of this house quicker than you came into it. The mistress doesn’t care for company.’ She must have realized that she sounded sharp, because she added in a gentler voice, ‘Shut herself more or less away, she has, ever since her husband was lost in the Boer War. And she never knew until his ship came in. Went all the way to Plymouth to meet the boat, poor thing – wanted to surprise him coming home, I suppose – and when she got there, just found he wasn’t there.’

  ‘And the army never even let her know?’ Effie was appalled.

  ‘Letter never reached her, see – though ’course they must have wrote. Before my time, all this was, but from what I hear of it, you never saw a body change so much. Used to be a proper beauty, by all accounts, and full of fun – lunch-parties and all sorts. And now look at her. Never a guest invited in all my years with her, apart from a yearly visit from her bank, not even for a single cup of tea. Stiff as starch, poor woman, and bitterer than sin.’ She glared at Effie and brought herself up short. ‘Still, she pays our wages and we mustn’t judge. Now, since you have finished fiddling with that blessed hem, are you going to stand here gossiping all day or go and do the grates?’

  So Effie had scuttled off to do her chores and – although she’d tried to raise the subject since – that was all that Cook could ever be prevailed upon to say. It was intriguing though. Strange to imagine Mrs Thatchell as a lively bride, instead of a sour woman sitting in a chair, shut up in the gloomy morning room, making tapestries that nobody would see.

  Even on Coronation Day it had been just the same. There were parties and pageants and dancing in the street, but Mrs Thatchell didn’t put bunting round the door, like everybody else, or even stand in the window with the curtains back, to see the pageant procession and the marching bands – though she let the servants have a half-hour to watch. She herself just sat in the morning room and sewed, as usual.

  But it was that same stitchery which brought Effie to the store each week, to buy new silks and also to return the books which her mistress always had from the subscription library. Improving sermons, mostly, though why she chose those, when there were hundreds of lovely things to read – Conan Doyle and that Mr Dickens whom they’d learned about at school – Effie could not see. She would have loved to borrow a few of those herself, but of course a penny was far too much to spare when she was saving every farthing towards a pair of boots, and there was a half-a-crown to give to Aunty Madge out of her meagre wages as it was.

  All the same she loved to come here to the shop. Usually Tuesday morning was the highlight of her life – the Haberdashery was like a coloured fairyland: not only silks but reels of ribbon too, racks of cottons, trays of beads and sequins, hanks of wool displayed on hooks and shelves, cards of buttons hanging on a stand, spools of lovely lace and even a few bolts of plain material. It reminded Effie of a story Mother used to tell, about a boy who found a cave full of enchanted things.

  And as for the little back room with all those books in it! The first time she saw it she could not believe her eyes. She had not known that there were so many books in all the world; she had only had one in her life – ‘for good attendance at the Sunday school’.

  That and the precious sewing-box, which had been her needlewoman’s prize, were the only things she’d ever really owned. Everything else, from the camisole and nightshirt in the drawer to these much-mended boots, was a hand-me-down and had once belonged to either cousin May or cousin Peg. Not even the name ‘Effie’ was properly her own. Mother had named her Ethel, after her own Ma, but when Effie went to live with Aunty Madge the youngest boy was small and couldn’t say ‘th’, so Ethel became Effie, and the name had stuck. Only Pa, when she saw him, ever called her ‘Ethel’ now.

  She had tried to change it back when she first went to work – ‘Ethel’ seemed more fitting for a maid somehow – but Mrs Thatchell had waved the suggestion loftily aside. ‘I was told that you were Effie, and that suits me very well. My first maid, as it happens, was called Effie, too – Ephegenia, I believe she was. So I am used to it. Besides, I like the name. It sounds “efficient” and it’s easy to recall. I never could remember what half those other girls were called, Daisy and Susie and all the rest of it. No, Effie will do me very well indeed.’

  ‘Count yourself lucky,’ Aunty Madge said when she heard. ‘At least it’s something that you’re accustomed to. There was a woman down Tresidder way called all her servants ‘Rose’, just so she never had to learn their different names. Anyway, what’s wrong with “Effie”? It’s what you’re always called. It’s even written on that box of yours.’ Which, of course, it was.

  The recollection troubled Effie now. Would Mrs Thatchell have to learn a different name again, when she had been sent off to the workhouse in disgrace and a new maid took her place? She could not bear to think about the possibility. She had known that it was naughty, the trick that she and her friend Lettie had contrived, but it had all seemed so simple at the time.

  Lettie was lady’s maid and dresser to the daughter of a grand house on the outskirts of the town: a pretty young lady who always looked a treat, but properly spoiled by her Papa, by all accounts. Miss Caroline was a member of the subscription library herself, but – like Mrs Thatchell – sent her maid to get her books for her, usually on alternate Tuesdays, luckily enough. That was how the two servant-girls had come to meet and now they looked forward to their little chats.

  ‘Proper waste of sixpence,’ Lettie grumbled once, taking an exciting-looking volume from the shelf. ‘Only joined the library because her smart friends belonged. Sends me in each fortnight for her books – the latest things so she can show them off – then scarcely even seems to glance at them. Read them myself to save the waste, I would, except I’ve never been a one for books, myself.’

  ‘Oh, I am!’ Effie said, unthinkingly.

  Lettie turned to her with a wicked smile. ‘Tell you what, there is always something I could find to bring me into town – letters to be posted or shoes to be re-soled – even on non-library weeks. Suppose that on the alternate weeks I come and stand outside, bringing some book Miss Caroline’s decided not to read? She’ll have already paid the fee so if you take it home, and promise me you’ll get it back before the date runs out, who will be the wiser? And don’t look at me like that. It’s not as if it’s stealing – it’s only borrowing. And she don’t want it, so who is hurt by it?’

  Effie had been easy to convince. Surely it was doing no-one any harm? And it had worked like magic – up to now that is! But obviously the Misses Weston had discovered it. And now the police were here and it was too late to escape – Miss Blanche had seen her and was gesturing her to come.

  Miss Blanche was not pretty, she was too tall and thin for that, but she was generally kind and – unlike her elder sister – would greet you with a smile. Absurdly, she was smiling now. ‘There you are, Constable, this is Effie Pengelly – the very girl that we were talking of.’ Her voice seemed very loud as she beckoned to Effie with a bony lace-trimmed hand. ‘Come along, Effie, you are just in time. This policeman needs to have a word with you. I was about to direct him to Mrs Thatchell’s house.’

  Effie gulped. Thank heaven he had not come knocking at Mrs Thatchell’s door! Things were bad enough, without being made an exhibition of in front of the whole street. It was all her own fault, too, that was the worst of it. It was a mercy Lettie hadn’t yet arrived to be involved in this – though doubtless the policeman would catch up with her as well. Effie found that she was blinking back the tears as she stumbled down the pavement towards Miss Blanche Weston and the waiting constable.

  Blanche Weston looked affectionately at the girl as she approached. Nice little creature, she had always thought. Almost a young woman, now, and very nearly pretty if she weren’t so skinny and anxious-looking, poor thing. Blanche was glad that she’d defied her sister, just for once, and recommended Effie for the maid’s post at that house, even though they only knew her by reput
e. It was all very well for Pearl to say that she should not have spoken up.

  ‘Just because that sewing-teacher at the school asked if we knew of any vacancies, you did not have to put our reputation at such risk,’ Pearl had chided sharply, when she heard of it. Pearl had been disappointed of marriage in her youth, and had been very fond of chiding ever since. ‘Simply on the basis of some stupid sewing-prize! What do we know about this Effie, anyway? Suppose she turns out to be a thief, or worse?’

  But of course, she hadn’t. It had worked out very well and Blanche took a particular pleasure in the fact. It was almost as if the child was her personal protégée. But whatever was the matter with the girl today? She was walking as if her legs would hardly carry her. But of course, it was the presence of the policeman at the door – the child must have realized that something was amiss.

  ‘Come on, girl, do hurry. This poor young constable hasn’t got all day!’ That was Pearl now, bounding from the shop, rather like a sheepdog harrying the lambs.

  Blanche smiled inwardly at her own comparison. Pearl did look rather like a terrier, the way she held her pointed chin up high. She was slightly the shorter of the two but had inherited their mother’s air of effortless authority, which made her seem somehow larger than she was. And she had the looks. Blanche had no illusions on that score. She herself had a bony face and long teeth like a horse, but Pearl would have been handsome if she were not so severe, though since her ‘disappointment’ with that dreadful man she seemed actively to rejoice in making herself plain. Her hair was always scraped back into an unforgiving bun and her thin lips were pursed into a disapproving ‘O’, as if to echo the hairstyle from the front.

  She was turning those pursed lips to Effie now. ‘Well now you’re here, you’d better come inside. Don’t want the whole town listening, do we?’

 

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