coming, Mr Brierley,â I said, holding out my hand. âI think the best I can do now is to speak to Lord Winterson personally and see if we can come to a more sensible arrangement. Even he must realise what an impossible position this puts me in. Good day to you, sir.â
He shook my hand and gathered his papers together. âMr Monktonâs servants will be gone from Stonegate by Friday,â he said. âAll of them except the top four have been paid and found new positions. The house will then be locked, prior to the new administration of the estate. If there is anything in the house that belongs to you, Miss Follet, I wonder if you would mind letting me have a list of the items so that I can isolate them. Oh⦠erâ¦one more thing. If I may have your key to the Stonegate property?â
I took it from the drawer of my writing table and gave it to him. There were several things at Stonegate that belonged to me: a pair of miniature cameo portraits, my silver pill box that Linas used once, the embroidery workbox I kept there and a set of ivory combs, brushes and manicure tools. They were private, and Iâd be damned if Iâd make a list for him to hum and haw over.
It occurred to me much later that night as I lay sleepless, that Mr Brierley had not brought with him the titledeeds to my house, or things to sign that would establish me as the new owner. Well, I must remember to mention it next time we met.
Chapter Three
H ad I misunderstood? Had I not listened to him with enough attention? Had he really said the house would be mine? Mr Brierley had made no response to my angry comment that I would have to sell it and find a small cottage with fewer servants. Reduced circumstances I was familiar with, the fortunes of women in my position being notoriously unstable, but was that really what Linas had wanted for me and Jamie? I found it hard to believe.
My house on Blake Street was newer and more fashionable than our old family home had been, furnished with woods that shone like satin, hung with soft tones in velvet and silk, carpeted with Axminsters and matching Persian rugs, my bedroom patterned with birds and trees. My canopied bed was carved by George Reynoldson of York, no less. I had a family of loyal servants who gave me no trouble at all, and Linas had paid their wages without me ever having to worry about the cost. I kept a phaeton and two horses in his stableat Stonegate with no clear idea of whether they would still be mine to use. I ought to have asked Brierley at the interview, but perhaps he had given me enough bad news for one day.
My first call on the following day was to Follet and Sanders. Leaving Jamie at home with Goody, his nurse, I trudged over new layers of frozen snow. Every rooftop and ledge was capped with rounded pillows of white, blown like lace into every crevice and beyond where the great white minster reared its spiked towers, draped like a bride, silent and virginal.
The workroom door let in a fall of snow as I entered. Shivering in the chilled hallway, I met Prue with chattering teeth. âItâs as cold in here as it is outside,â I complained. âWeâll never attract any customers at this rate.â
Unmoved, she kissed me daintily on both cheeks, casting her eye over my black outfit with the grey squirrel fur up to my ears. For all her fair, petite, middle-aged looks and elfin ways, she was as tough and sensible a businesswoman as any in York, with the typically dour sense of humour that can poke fun at what is difficult to accept. âNo, dear,â she said, without a hint of levity, âbut weâre selling fur muffs and knitted gloves like hot cakes, so we canât have our customers getting overheated, can we?â
âAnd fur-lined capes? Those fur hats, too?â
âFur-edged handkerchiefs,â she replied, deadpan.
âNo!â
âNo,â she agreed. âCome and see.â
âItâs not warm
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