Black-garbed cheese factory workers, farmers, and shopkeepers entered Saint Jude’s beneath tolling bells. Through the gap between two servants on the second pew, Loretta watched the back of Mr. Gibbs’ dark head.
He sat alone, the last of his family. How she longed to provide some support and comfort, if only by assuring him that any day now the cheque would arrive that would save his house.
Vicar Phelps conducted the sermon. A woman who Philip whispered was Grace’s mother-in-law sang “Abide With Me” in a sweet clear voice.
After the burial everyone trooped over to the manor house. Past the foyer, Loretta could see tables set up in an oak-paneled hall already jam-packed with humanity. Donald stood to the right, wearing a black armband. He shook hands with those entering, expressing gratitude for their condolences.
With Philip at her side, she slipped her gloved hand into his and said in sympathetic tone, “Do you remember me, Mr. Gibbs? Mrs. Hollis. You came by asking for Jewel the day . . .”
He smiled sadly at the two of them. “You must have thought me a wild man, madam. I owe you a debt of gratitude for helping me clear my thoughts.”
Even when Donald’s greeting duty was finished, she could not speak with him privately. Philip was always nearby, or members of his family. Only Aleda was not present, though she had attended the funeral. Jewel and Becky had disappeared afterwards, too, which surprised her, given their affection for the squire.
Finally, opportunity presented itself for her to speak with Donald. An older man who introduced himself as the late squire’s solicitor, a Mr. Baker, asked Philip if he was owed any fee. As the two men conversed, she noticed a white-haired woman offering Donald a slice of cake at the end of a long table.
She threaded her way through the crowd and was halfway there when Vicar Phelps turned from chatting with a farmer-type man. Speaking over the chatter filling the hall, he said, “I’m glad you’ve recovered from your headache, Loretta.”
“Thank you.” She returned his smile while attempting to edge by.
His brow furrowed in thought. “You know, Mrs. Phelps once had a lodger who used feverfew. It’s an herb, in case you’re not familiar with it.”
“I didn’t have fever,” she said as the corner of her eye watched Donald shake his head politely at the woman with the cake.
Vicar Phelps chuckled. “For headaches. It grows at the foot of the Anwyl. I should be happy to collect you some, now that I’m out and about.”
Over his shoulder, she saw Philip and Mr. Baker part, and Philip move over to Jeremiah Toft and his wife.
“Thank you,” Loretta said. Now, how to rid herself of her father-in-law?
“You should get some food before it’s all gone,” he said with a step backwards, still smiling, as if he had read her mind and had not taken offense.
“Thank you,” she repeated, and resumed her mission. Donald was on the other side of the table now, moving in the opposite direction. She watched him draw aside Mr. Baker. They spoke briefly and exited the hall into some inner part of the house. When Mr. Baker returned, he was alone.
Dare she slip away and look for him? She could use the excuse of seeking a water closet.
But then Elizabeth Raleigh appeared out of nowhere. Loretta’s dutiful inquiry as to her health prompted a low-voiced description of morning sickness that made her wonder why anybody bothered to have children.
As Elizabeth prattled happily about how huge she had gotten while carrying the twins, Loretta’s mind traveled back to the embrace in the garden. She could feel Donald’s strong arms around her. “London,” he had said, affirming that they would resume their friendship in a more favorable clime. If only time would speed ahead.
When no cheque had arrived by Tuesday, worry robbed Loretta of sleep. Had the telegram actually reached her father? How tragic it would be for Donald to lose his house over a simple kink in the line. What would he think of her?
Wednesday morning, she dressed in her amethyst-and-gray silk gown and pinned on a straw hat.
“Good morning, Mrs. Hollis,” Jewel said from the stove.
“Good morning. Don’t cook breakfast for me. Perhaps an early lunch. I want to get my hat from that dreadful millinery woman.”
“If you’ll wait until Becky takes her nap, I’ll go for you.”
“No, thank you. A walk will be lovely. It seems a bit cooler outside.”
The twins were in the Raleighs’ garden, too engrossed in blowing bubbles to pay her any mind. Still, she walked quickly, lest Elizabeth come outdoors and pounce upon her with more pregnancy details.
She hoped to have children herself one day. She enjoyed Becky’s winsome presence in the cottage. She adored, in a bittersweet sort of way, Conrad and Irene’s fair-headed two-year-old son, Stephen. But with a future so uncertain, it was fortunate that it had never happened.
Lately, it would have been a miracle if it had.
“I smell rain in the air!” an elderly woman called from a cottage garden.
Loretta looked up through elm branches at the few benign white clouds, and wished her good day.
The woman behind the counter had yet to look up from her magazine.
Donald cleared his throat. “Miss Perkins?”
She jerked her head up, slapped the magazine shut, and squeaked, “Mr. Gibbs!”
“You mentioned that you sell men’s hats?”
“Why, yes.”
“I’d like to have a look at your wares.”
She giggled, lashes batting as if hinged at the lids. “But of course.”
She hastened around the counter, took his arm, and almost pulled him to a dressing table. While he sat on a stool before an oval mirror, she pressed assorted sizes of silk top hats, felt bowlers, and straw boaters onto his head, leaning to peer into the mirror over his shoulder so that her ample cleavage was shown to best advantage.
Donald smiled at their reflections, sick to his stomach. After the funeral, Mr. Baker had asserted that not one drop of money would be available until the will was read. That he may not even sell one silver fork, one painting, or one horse to save his house, without facing charges of thievery.
He believed in his charms, and had patiently waited for Loretta Hollis’s cheque to arrive from her father. But only two days remained until the mortgage was due. He had paced a trail in his bedchamber carpet. Time for another plan.
Thus he sat allowing Miss Perkins to press her bosom into his back. Owning her own shop meant she had money.
“Sorry, won’t do at all,” he said, lifting a silk hat from his head and adding it to the stack upon the dressing table. Some had edged to fall to the carpet, only to be ignored. He swiveled around to face her. “I shall have to go elsewhere.”
Her lips formed a pout. “There’s no elsewhere but Shrewsbury. Why would you want to go to all that trouble when my hats are just as good?”
Minus those on the floor, he thought. He glanced toward the curtain behind the counter. “Perhaps you have more in the back?”
“They’re all out here.”
“Not even one?”
Her shoulders rose and fell with her sigh. “I’m afraid not.”
Take a hint, you stupid twit. He arched his eyebrows at her. “Perhaps you’ve overlooked one in some dark corner? I could help you look.”
Understanding flooded her eyes. A smile curled her full lips. She squeaked, “That would be very kind, sir.”
“Has the mail been sent out?” Loretta asked Mr. Sanders in the post office side of Trumbles.
“An hour ago,” he said, tinkering with a stamp machine. “I sort the incoming in the afternoons, and it goes out mornings.”
“Do you recall anything for Mrs. Philip Hollis?”
He chewed a lip thoughtfully. “I’m fairly sure there was nothing.”
“Could it be that the telegram I sent to London last week was misdirected?”
“Sometimes problems do happen. But most times we know.”
“It may have been sent to the wrong address,” Mr. Trumble called from his side. “London’s a big metric-polis.”
At her insistence, Mr. Sanders tapped out a new message: Please send fifteen pounds at once. Loretta.
The at once was the only new addition to the message of nine days ago. But even so, would the cheque arrive in time? Mail from London took three days.
If only she had thought to bring along some money from the household account. She had directed packing in a daze: clothes, toiletries, and jewelry.
A bell tinkled and two women entered just as a thought struck her.
Jewelry.
In particular, her pearls, hidden away with her jewelry pouch . . . just in case—after Donald had warned her that Becky liked to plunder.
She loitered before a rack of sewing notions, though she had never taken a stitch in her life. The women completed their purchases and launched into a maddening debate with Mr. Trumble over whether rain was indeed coming.
“How would you know?” one teased him. “Stuck indoors as you are.”
Mr. Trumble patted his shoulder. “My rheumatism knows. Care to make a wager?”
The two left the shop in giggles.
Loretta approached the counter with a brass thimble. At least Becky could spin it on her finger. She said, casually, “Are there not places where you may borrow money against valuables? Such as jewelry?”
“Why yes. But not here. In Shrewsbury. They’re called ‘pawn lenders.’ ”
“Will they return the valuable when you repay the loan?”
“Certainly. But at a barrelful of interest.”
“Then, it’s safe to deal with them?”
“Yes, I think. There are laws they’re bound to, just as this place. Mr. Stillman of the Larkspur . . . he goes down there on the look for military medals and war memo-randums.”
There was still time. She had only to get her pearl necklace to Donald, to pawn in Shrewsbury. If Jewel balked at delivering it, she would take it herself.
She thanked the shopkeeper and scooped up the thimble. The pair who had spent so much time at the counter chatted outside the shop clutching paper bags. One said to the other, “She may be snooty, but you’ve promised Amelia a bonnet for her birthday. Will you disappoint her?”
My hat, Loretta thought. Not wishing to wait yet again behind the two, she dashed around them.
“Pardon me, ladies.”
She swung open the door, but did have the courtesy to hold it open for them, now that it was established that she was first. The curtains behind the counter parted and Priscilla came through. She gaped at Loretta and the women, turned to close the curtain shut, and half squealed, half giggled, “Not yet, Donald!”
Fear and outrage propelled Loretta across the shop and around the counter.
“See here now!” Priscilla cried as Loretta yanked aside the curtain.
Donald Gibbs stood on the other side, looking disheveled but not dismayed. “Sorry, Loretta.”
“Out!” Priscilla shrieked, tugging at Loretta’s arm.
Loretta jerked away, consumed by rage. “I was going to pawn my necklace! I would have left my husband for you!”
It was only then that she remembered the women. She looked over her shoulder. Their eyes were wide, as if to absorb as much of the scene as possible.
“And I appreciate it,” Donald was saying. When she faced him again, he smiled and patted his coat pocket. “But that won’t be necessary.”