Time of Blood. Robin Jarvis
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Название: Time of Blood

Автор: Robin Jarvis

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Учебная литература

Серия: The Witching Legacy

isbn: 9781780317342

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ fog will conceal her. I can’t do this without you. Please.’

      Hesper chewed her lip fearfully. She glanced over at the many huddled buildings of the human town and shook her head. Then she saw how earnest her friend was and she groaned with resignation.

      ‘We’ll rue this, I know it,’ she muttered.

      Between them, they gently lifted the unconscious girl and carried her from the pier. Even though the mist still clung to the town, Hesper’s nerves were on edge and she looked about her constantly. When they crossed the bridge into the cramped lanes of the East Cliff, she was sure every dark window held a pair of hostile eyes and felt hopelessly vulnerable.

      ‘How much further?’ she whispered.

      ‘Almost there,’ Nettie answered. ‘There’s an opening yonder – through that and we’re done.’

      It was with great relief that they entered one of the many yards leading off Church Street and were able to lay the girl on the ground.

      ‘Now, let’s go!’ Hesper urged, eyeing the cottages around them suspiciously.

      ‘A moment more,’ Nettie replied, removing the string of shells from around her brow and throwing them, one by one, against an upstairs window.

      Hesper folded her arms impatiently.

      ‘Who’s that stood standing down there?’ a stern voice called suddenly. ‘If that’s you, Eli Swales, I’ll learn you to chuck stones at the casement of a respectable widowed lady’s boudoir – I’ll give you such a clout round the lughole you’ll have to wear your hat backwards.’

      The aufwaders stared up at the annoyed face leaning over the sill above.

      ‘It’s me,’ Nettie answered. ‘You must come down!’

      All anger vanished from the voice and was replaced with an almost girlish excitement.

      ‘Ooh, it’s you, is it? And who’s that there with you? Brought a friend? What must you think of me? I’ll be down in two rattles of a sheep’s whatsit.’

      The face withdrew and moments later the front door opened.

      ‘Fetch yourselves in – don’t be shy. Why didn’t you let me know in the usual way, or use the passage? If I’d known you was coming to visit I’d have spruced the place up a bit and flicked a duster about, and here I am with curling papers in my hair.’

      ‘I’m not going in one of them stone boxes!’ Hesper refused, stepping away.

      ‘Don’t be like that. I’ve got fruit cake keeping fresh in a tin. Happen you’ll not have had fruit cake before. Ooh, you don’t know what you’ve been missing.’

      ‘Nannie Burdon,’ Nettie greeted sombrely. ‘See what we bring – a human child, spat out of the darkness. I fear there’s only a gasp of life left in her.’

      The woman on the doorstep peered through the mist at the girl lying on the ground.

      ‘Get her inside,’ she said sharply.

      And so the Whitby witch and Nettie carried Lil Wilson into the cottage.

      Grace Pickering placed the covered dish of curried mutton and rice on to a tray and shook her head.

      ‘He won’t touch none of it,’ she said, wrinkling her nose at the aromatic scent that had filled the kitchen.

      Mrs Paddock, the cook, leaned across the wide table and rapped the back of Grace’s hand with a wooden spoon.

      ‘The master’s young ward is accustomed to stronger flavours than plain fish and mashed turnip, or whatever else you were used to in your shabby hovel on the East Cliff, my girl,’ she scolded. ‘They wolf down all manner of spiced dishes in foreign parts, them being foreigners.’

      ‘He didn’t fancy that kedgeree this morning, nor them devil’s eggs at dinner time, if he even got so much as a whiff of them. I don’t think Mrs Axmill is giving them to him. And my home weren’t shabby – just crowded was all. Kept it spick and span for my dad I did.’

      ‘Devilled eggs,’ Mrs Paddock corrected. ‘And it was luncheon, you ought to know that by now, Flossy; you’ve been here since Penny Hedge day and here we are at the back end of August. And you just keep those nasty suspicions about Mrs Axmill to yourself. If you start flinging slanderous accusations around, you’ll be out on your ear and worse.’

      ‘Don’t think I’d care much. It were a different household when I joined. It weren’t on its ears back then. ’Sides, I can’t never get used to being called Flossy!’

      ‘That’s what your name brooch says and that’s who you’ll be for as long as you’re in service in this house so you can cut that backchat, else I’ll put a dent in my turbot kettle the shape of your head. The mistress has her quaint fancies and she always likes her maids to be called Flossy. Goodness, you can’t expect her to learn the name of every new chit of a girl what Oakeys her doorknobs and dusts her conversation pieces.’

      ‘But Mistress in’t here – and Esme kept her proper name. It’s not fair. Flossy’s what you’d call a dray horse.’

      Mrs Paddock pursed her lips and the apron that barely contained her meaty frame inflated with indignation.

      ‘Don’t you mention that ungrateful wretch Esme Fuller to me!’ she snorted. ‘Up and vanishing in the dead of night, leaving me without a scullery maid to do the heavy work and wash the pots. I can only wish her the very worst and that’s the Almighty’s honest truth of it.’

      ‘She were frightened, that’s what it were – with good reason. She’d never have gone otherwise. It’s ever since the family went away and he took over Bagdale.’

      ‘Frightened? Fiddle-faddle! Mrs Axmill told me she’d slunk off with some gawky farm lout from the Dales. Disgraceful! Always knew the girl had dirty hands, but it’s a stained reputation she’s got now. Fie and shame! And her with a face covered in more blackheads than a Sunday seed cake. All I can say is they must be powerful short of female company up in them Dales if Esme Fuller is thought to be any sort of catch.’

      ‘That’s unkind, Mrs Paddock. I liked little Esme – and she worked her hands raw for you. There weren’t a bone of a lie nor no wink of slyness in her whole body neither. She would’ve told me if she’d had a young man, and he’d have been the lucky one for it. Don’t care what Mrs Axmill says. I don’t trust her nohow; she’s swanning about the hall like she owns the place nowadays. No, Esme ran off because of the goings-on here.’

      ‘Plain absurdity! Why, there’s less than half the work to do with the family gone and most of the rooms locked up.’

      ‘It weren’t the work.’

      ‘What then, I ask you? It’s clear as custard to me.’

      ‘For one, there’s that СКАЧАТЬ