busy day.â
âYes.â I took the letter back. Remembering the last time I had visited Hampton Court, the thought of presenting myself there again set a knot of fear twisting in my stomach.
Chapter Two
IT WAS LATE AFTERNOON when I finished my last brief and sanded my notes. Barak and Skelly had already left and I set off up Chancery Lane for my house nearby.
It was a perfect summer evening. Two days ago had been Midsummerâs Day, but the normal celebrations and bonfires had been curtailed by royal proclamation. The city was under a curfew now, with extra watches set through the night, for fear lest French agents set it alight.
As I reached my house, I reflected that these days I no longer felt the uplift on coming home I had when Joan was alive; rather, a worm of irritation stirred. I let myself in. Josephine Coldiron, my stewardâs daughter, was standing on the rush matting in the hall, hands clasped in front of her and a vacant, slightly worried expression on her round face.
âGood afternoon, Josephine,â I said. She curtsied and bobbed her head. A tendril of unwashed blonde hair escaped from under her white coif, dangling over her brow. She brushed it away. âSorry, sir,â she said nervously.
I spoke gently, for I knew she was afraid of me. âHow is dinner progressing?â
She looked guilty. âI havenât started yet, sir. I need the boysâ help to prepare the vegetables.â
âWhere are Simon and Timothy?â
Josephine looked alarmed. âEr, with Father, sir. Iâll fetch them and get started.â
She scurried into the kitchen with her quick, tiny steps, like an agitated mouse. I crossed to the parlour.
Guy, my old friend and current house guest, sat on a chair looking out of the window. He turned as I came in, venturing a weak smile. Guy was a physician, a man of some status, but that had not stopped a gang of apprentices on the lookout for French spies from wrecking his house down near the Old Barge one night two months ago, tearing to shreds the medical notes he had made over the years and smashing his equipment. Guy had been out, or he might have been killed. No matter that Guyâs ancestry was Spanish; he was a well-known foreigner with a dark face and a strange accent. Since I had taken him in he had sunk into a deep melancholy that worried me.
I laid my satchel on the floor. âHow now, Guy?â
He raised a hand in greeting. âI have been sitting here all day. It is strange; I thought if ever I was without work time would pass slowly, but it seems to race away without my noticing.â
âBarak says Tamasin is feeling the heat.â
I was pleased to see interest come into his face. âI am seeing her tomorrow. I am sure she is well, but it will reassure them. Him, rather. I think Tamasin takes it all in her stride.â He hesitated. âI said I would see her here, I hope that was not presumptuous.â
âOf course not. And you are welcome here as long as you wish, you know that.â
âThank you. I fear if I go back home the same thing will happen again. The atmosphere against foreigners grows more poisonous every day. Look out there.â He pointed through the diamond-paned window to my garden.
I moved over and looked out. My steward William Coldiron stood on the path, hands on his skinny hips and a fierce expression on his cadaverous, grey-stubbled face. My two servant boys, tall fourteen-year-old Simon and little twelve-year-old Timothy, paraded stiffly up and down in front of him across the garden, each with a broomstick over his shoulder. Coldiron watched them keenly from his single eye - the other was covered with a large black patch. âRight turn,â he shouted, and the boys obeyed awkwardly. I heard Josephine call from the kitchen door. Coldiron looked up sharply at the study window. I opened it and called âWilliam!â sharply.
Coldiron turned to the boys. âGet