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The Secret of Pembrooke Park

Page 42

by Julie Klassen


  “That’s right. I did.”

  “So where is it? Where is Robert Pembrooke’s treasure?”

  Leah slowly shook her head. “There is no treasure. Not really. It was my father’s pet name for me. He called me ‘my treasure.’”

  “I don’t believe you.” His eyes narrowed. “If you’re Eleanor Pembrooke, then who’s buried in her grave in the churchyard?”

  “My baby sister, who died of the same fever that took my mother.”

  “But my father checked the parish records when he heard some rumor one of Robert’s children was still alive.”

  Mac nodded. “The old rector agreed to change the records. To protect Eleanor.”

  Miles looked at Leah. “We did wonder when you came home from school. Harriet said you looked nothing like Mac or William, though a bit like Kate Chapman, perhaps. But we never guessed . . .”

  Returning his gaze to her adoptive father, Miles laid the gun on his knee and clapped lazily. “Bravo, Mac. That is quite a feat. And what do you get out of it? Fifty percent of the treasure?”

  “Nothing of the kind.”

  “You’re wrong, Miles,” Leah said. “It isn’t like that.”

  “Does Harri know of your claim?”

  “Not yet,” Leah said. “Though I plan to tell her.”

  He rose, taking up his ebony stick. “Don’t bother. I shall ride over to Hunts Hall right now and tell her myself. I want to see her face when she hears. She told me she had a feeling we’d find another heir—even wished the rumor was true and one of Robert Pembrooke’s children still lived.”

  He looked at Abigail, eyes glinting. “Apparently all this time I’ve been wooing the wrong cousin. . . .”

  Miles turned his smile on Leah like a weapon. “And you, Le—Eleanor. Do you know where the secret room is?”

  “Leah . . .” Mac warned under his breath.

  “I do,” Leah acknowledged, chin high.

  His eyes widened. “Where is it?”

  “I shall be happy to show it to you . . . tomorrow. You want to go and speak to your sister first, and I . . . shall collect a few personal keepsakes.”

  “Nothing too valuable, I trust?” His eyes glittered suspiciously.

  “As you will see, there is not a great deal of value in there. Mostly family papers. A few portraits. Things that will mean more to me than to you.”

  “If you say so.”

  Abigail thought he might demand to go in immediately, or to extract a promise that she remove no valuables until he’d had the chance to search the room. But he did not.

  Instead he drew himself up, handing Mac his gun at last. “Well.” He consulted his pocket watch. “I had better hurry over to Hunts Hall if I hope to beg a dinner invitation.” He wagged his eyebrows comically, but after the tense scene, no one smiled.

  Leah and Abigail waited until he had disappeared into the stables and ridden off before making haste to Pembrooke Park.

  Chapter 30

  Leah wanted time to cull personal letters, her mother’s portrait, and the ruby necklace before giving over the rest to Miles’s frantic search. Abigail offered to help her, briefly wondering if there was still hope of claiming that reward, now that the jewels had been reunited with their rightful owner. Harriet had hinted as much, but somehow she doubted it.

  They donned bibbed aprons and set to work inside the secret room—closing the door in case any servants entered the bedchamber. Leah gathered the family Bible, necklace, and a few other things and set them in a pile on one shelf. Then they carefully took down the portrait of Elizabeth Pembrooke from the back of the door and set it nearby. The nail the portrait had hung on clinked to the floor.

  Abigail glanced up and was surprised to see the tiniest pinprick of light. “Look! It’s left a hole.” She stood on tiptoe and put her eye to it. “You can see into the bedchamber—a little.”

  But Leah’s focus remained on the contents of the shelves in the hidden room.

  “How can I help?” Abigail asked, joining her.

  “I don’t want to miss anything personal. Letters between my parents, or to me.”

  “I understand.”

  Each took a stack and began reading through the correspondence. Leah spread a lap rug on the cushions and reclined back on them with a handful of letters. Abigail could easily imagine little Ellie snug in her private hideaway, reading a favorite book.

  Abigail sat less comfortably on the child-size chair.

  “Are you sure you don’t want to trade?” Leah offered.

  “No, I’m fine.”

  “Good.” Leah grinned. “I doubt my backside would fit in that chair nowadays.”

  They continued to read, the silence broken by the occasional rustle of paper or birdcall outside the window.

  Abigail then heard something else, from the other side of the door.

  Leah must have sensed her unnatural stillness, for she glanced up at her. “What?”

  “Shh . . . Someone’s out there. In my . . . our . . . bedchamber.”

  “Who?” Leah asked.

  Abigail rose and started to crack open the door but then remembered the nail hole. She raised herself on tiptoe and looked through it once more. At first she didn’t see anyone. She could see only a narrow shaft of the room—her side table and the edge of the bed. But then a figure walked past and opened the drawer of her side table.

  “It’s Miles,” she whispered, perplexed. There hadn’t been time for him to ride out to Hunts Hall and back, let alone to talk with Harriet. Had he come back hoping to catch them entering the secret room—catch them in the act of extracting all the “treasure”?

  Miles sat on the edge of her bed and lifted a stack of letters onto his lap—the letters Harriet had sent her anonymously. Letters about the past, about coming to Pembrooke Park, about the girl with the haunted eyes, about her increasingly violent father, her troubled brother, and the secret room . . .

  Oh no. How would Miles react? Should she bolt from the room and snatch them away? She certainly couldn’t overpower the man if he refused to hand over the letters. And in so doing, she would reveal their hiding place. And Eleanor’s treasures. And they weren’t ready to do that yet. Besides, the letters were written by his own sister. They were his business, in some ways, more than hers.

  Would Harriet wish Miles to read them? Probably not. But at the moment Abigail could think of no way to forestall him without revealing the secret room to him.

  “What is he doing?” Leah whispered anxiously.

  “Reading the letters you returned.”

  Leah’s mouth formed a silent O as she, too, thought through the implications.

  There was little in the letters Miles didn’t already know or hadn’t lived through himself. If he read through them all—and found the one in which Harriet mentioned finding the secret room at last, even then the letter did not specify where it was. There was no great risk to them. If anything, reading them would likely spur him to seek out his sister, as he’d claimed he’d do earlier. Abigail did not like the thought of driving a wedge between brother and sister. To cause problems for Harriet. But better for Harriet, than for vulnerable Leah . . .

  As Abigail watched, Miles lifted the glass off her bedside lamp, set it aside, and then fed the corner of one of the letters into its flame. Abigail gasped. “He’s burning one of them. . . .” She wondered which. Maybe the one in which Harriet had accused him of lighting a fire in the dolls’ house and blaming their brother.

  Miles carried the letter toward the hearth, then returned empty-handed to read another.

  Abigail watched for a few moments longer, then stepped away from the peephole and tiptoed back to her chair.

  “Let’s see how long he stays,” she whispered. They would wait him out and keep their secret to themselves for a little while longer.

  She sat down and picked up another box to sort through. Then she lifted the family Bible onto her lap and looked at the names written in the front leaves, tracing her fin
gers down the long list of births and deaths until she reached Eleanor’s birth date. Eight years later came the birth of Baby Emma. Her birth and death dates a poignantly brief span, followed by the death of her mother, Elizabeth. Abigail traced the entries but found no notice of Eleanor’s fictional death. Nor of Robert Pembrooke’s death, which had been all too real.

  Leah glanced over Abigail’s shoulder and said, “No wonder Mac hid the Bible in here.” She picked up another letter from her stack and resumed her reading.

  Abigail read for a while longer as well, and then leaned her head back against the wall. Her thoughts drifted to William as she idly glanced around the room. How strange to find herself there with Eleanor, Robert Pembrooke’s “treasure.” Her gaze rested on the rusted water pipes against the far wall. What was that verse William had quoted? “Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt. . . .”

  Sometime later, Abigail looked up and wondered what time it was. From the small window, she saw fading daylight in orangey twilight hues. She’d lost track of time as she’d read a series of love letters between Leah’s great-grandparents—distant relatives of Abigail as well. Even so, she wouldn’t have expected to see the sunset from this east-facing window.

  She glanced at the cushions beside her and noticed Leah had fallen asleep, a letter lying on her chest. Abigail closed her eyes and listened for movement in the next room. Was Miles still there? She heard a low roar but couldn’t identify the sound. She took a long breath and suddenly stilled. What was that smell? She sniffed the air again. Smoke.

  She frowned. Was Miles still burning letters? Or had Polly come in to lay a fire for the evening? Abigail’s neck ached from bending over letters for so long. She rose on stiff legs and tiptoed to the peephole. She didn’t see Miles. But she couldn’t see the whole room from her vantage point.

  She laid her palm on the panel and gingerly opened it a slit. Suddenly heat penetrated her skin, and she snatched it back. The door was hot. What on earth . . . ? Then through the crack she saw . . . Her heart banged against her ribs. The dolls’ house engulfed in flames. As she stared, disbelieving, fire seemed to leap from the carpet before the hearth to the nearby window curtain. Then orange-red flames whipped up her bed-curtains.

  Panic gripped her.

  Miles. Had the letters he’d burnt fallen to the floor by accident? Or had he set the fire intentionally—somehow knowing Leah was there and meaning to snuff out her life, to follow in his father’s footsteps and do away with the rightful owner of Pembrooke Park? Please, God, no . . .

  Nerves zinging to high alert, she whirled to her companion.

  “Leah? Leah, wake up!”

  Leah groggily turned her face away. Was the smoke affecting her already? Abigail crouched beside her and shook her shoulder. “Leah! Get up. The room is on fire.”

  Leah’s eyes opened, and Abigail’s words penetrated, chasing the dazed look away.

  “Fire? Where?” Panicked, Leah lumbered to her feet, and Abigail gripped her arm to help steady her.

  “In the bedchamber. We have to get out. Now.”

  She yanked the lap robe from the cushion and told Leah to cover her nose and mouth. Lifting her foot, she pushed open the hot door with her shoe. The room beyond was now nearly engulfed in flames. Their way to the door blocked—the carpet runner between them and the door burned like a pathway of hot coals, and fire licked its way hungrily up the doorframe.

  Pulse pounding, Abigail whirled to look at the nearest window. Though high above the ground, they would likely survive the fall, far better than remaining trapped as they were.

  She glanced back at the window inside the secret room, but it was so small, and let out only to the steep roof, not to safety. Hardly an appealing escape route, even if they could squeeze through. Was the whole house on fire? Or just her room?

  Oh, God, help us! Abigail prayed.

  Flames leapt toward the bedchamber window, consuming the frilly curtains and cutting off that final way of escape. The fire billowed and roared closer. Abigail leapt back, the fumes slamming the hidden door and barely missing her face. Abigail turned and met Leah’s wide eyes.

  “What now?” Leah breathed.

  Abigail thought a moment, then prised open the small window, a welcome breeze rushing in to cool the stifling air within. If she yelled from it, would anyone hear her? What could they do about it, even if they heard her calls? Abigail’s mind whirled, searching desperately for a way out. To hatch an escape plan.

  To hatch . . . The word echoed in her mind, and she pictured the old building plans for the water tower. She and Leah now stood in one level of that tower, finished into a storeroom at some later date after the water tower had been abandoned. She recalled the rough sketch of stairs. Her assumption that the sketch represented a possible set of servants’ stairs, never completed. But what if they were never meant to be permanent stairs. While workmen were building the tower they had likely used a series of ladders to ascend and descend from one level to the next. Might they still be there?

  Clutching the desperate thread of hope, Abigail threw back one end of the square carpet covering the floor.

  “What are you doing?” Leah asked.

  Abigail studied the wood. No obvious hole or hatch cover—but wait . . . there. A seam. She fell to her knees and tried to tug it up, but even her small fingers were too big.

  “Find something I can prise this up with.”

  Leah searched the room, then snatched up the nail that had hung the portrait. “Try this.”

  Abigail slid it into the seam and tried to prise up the hatch, if hatch it was. Nothing. She came at it along the opposite seam, but it didn’t give. “Find something longer, to use as a lever.”

  From the bedchamber beyond came the sound of breaking glass—windows shattering from the heat. Would the sound draw help in time? Or would it allow in wind that would fuel the fire into a frenzy?

  William saw Miles Pembrooke leaving the manor, walking in the direction of his family’s cottage. Unease instantly nipped at him.

  “Mr. Pembrooke!” He strode over to meet the man.

  “Ah, Mr. Chapman. Perhaps you know. I have been looking for Miss Foster and your sister without success. The servants tell me they saw the two ladies enter the manor an hour ago but haven’t seen them since. And I can’t find them anywhere. Have you seen them?”

  “No,” William answered in mild surprise, having seen the girls enter the house from his own window.

  Suddenly the front door banged open and Polly ran out, waving her arms. “Fire! The house is on fire!”

  “Where?” William called, hoping for a simple kitchen fire.

  “Upstairs! I saw it from the landing!”

  William’s heart lurched. Panic gripped him and in turn he gripped Miles’s arm. “Did you check Miss Foster’s room?”

  “I did, yes. But no one was there.”

  “But what about . . . the secret room?”

  Miles stared at him. “How could I check that, when I don’t know where it is?”

  William’s stomach clenched. Were Leah and Abigail even aware of the fire? He said, “I wager that’s where they are.”

  Miles paled. “Is the secret room anywhere near Miss Foster’s bedchamber?”

  “Yes—opens right into it.”

  “God, no . . . The room was empty. I made sure, before I . . .”

  “Before you . . . what? Good lord, Miles. What did you do?”

  Abigail forced that nail, then a tin lid, then any other object she could find into that seam until her fingernails had broken to the quick and her hands bled. Desperate, she pounded the boards with her fists and let out a frustrated cry.

  Leah grabbed one bloodied hand, staying her futile beating. Abigail’s eyes snapped to hers and saw the calm, tear-filled eyes of her friend, the brave resignation as she slowly shook her head.

  “It’s no good, Abigail.”

  “We can’t give up.”

 
“We must be ready to meet our Maker. I am not afraid to die—if it is our time to go.”

  “It’s not our time.” Abigail beat the boards with her free hand once more.

  Leah grasped that hand as well. “I pray not. But if it is, we need to be ready.”

  For a moment, Abigail paused in her frenetic efforts and held Leah’s clear, resolute gaze. Then she closed her eyes and prayed, “Lord, please save us. Please pluck us from the fire or protect us from the fiery furnace. I know you can do anything. But if you will otherwise, please let us wake up with you in heaven. I know I don’t deserve it. But in your Son’s name, I ask you to save us both. Here on earth, if at all possible. And if not, for eternity. We—”

  A pounding interrupted her prayer, hammering the air and shaking the floor beneath them. Was the tower about to collapse? Would they be buried alive before smoke or fire did them in? Abigail braced herself and squeezed Leah’s hand. Any fate seemed better than that wicked scorching fire.

  Over the roar of the encroaching flames, Abigail heard a muffled voice. Was she imagining it?

  Leah said, “Shh. Listen.”

  Abigail, already on her hands and knees, bent forward and laid her ear on the floor.

  “Abigail! Leah!” she heard faintly.

  “We’re here!” she shouted, mouth close to the wood. “We’re here!”

  “Back away from the hatch!” came the shout—William’s voice. Tense and harsh and, oh, so welcome.

  “All right. We’re clear!” Abigail called.

  Bang, came the first blow. Then another. A sledgehammer? An axe?

  Crack! A flash of silvery metal sliced through one of the planks. Then again. Two bent nails went pinging across the floor and landed near their feet.

  Behind them, the door of the secret room wavered, then burst into flames, and a wave of heat rushed into the small room.

  “William, hurry!” Leah cried. “The fire is getting closer!”

  More grunts and blows, more splintered wood. The cadence changed, as did the pace. Two men wielding tools at once, Abigail guessed.

  She dared another glance over her shoulder. The fire had entered the secret room like an evil intruder. It lapped at the shelves and seared the walls, moving toward Elizabeth Pembrooke’s portrait among Leah’s gathered things.

 

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