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‘Chop chop,’ said Lydia, leading on; opening door after door and giving Stella just enough time to walk to the windows and back. ‘Do keep up.’
‘In there?’ Stella motioned to a door they passed that Lydia didn’t open.
‘Slaves.’
‘What?’
‘Don’t say “What”, say “I beg your pardon”,’ Lydia snapped. ‘It’s one of the slaves’ quarters. We don’t have them any more – not even Mrs Biggins. She’s a useless slave because she won’t do a thing I ask. But the house was once full of them.’
‘Staff,’ Stella said, relieved, when she went into the room and realized it was a sizeable store for linen and laundry.
‘The Fortescues have always called them “slaves” – in jest, of course. No one has ever minded,’ said Lydia. She ran her hand lightly over the butler’s sink by the window. ‘At least, no one said they minded.’ She looked around the room. ‘We didn’t call them slaves to their faces – we didn’t say, “Slave! Come here!” The youngsters were called by their first names, which was fairly liberal of the Fortescues. And the senior staff by their surnames. Apart from the housekeeper, who was allowed to keep her title. Hence, Mrs Biggins – though, really, she ought to be called Useless Woman.’
‘I love this,’ said Stella, fingering the embossed brass plate above the three taps. ‘Hot. Cold. Soft.’
‘For rainwater,’ said Lydia. She ran the tap and placed her hand under the water. She kept it there, as if the feel of it hastened a memory just coming back into focus and one that she wanted to revisit. ‘All the children had their hair washed in this sink – rinsed again and again with the water from “Soft”.’
Corridors that started poker straight and then suddenly veered off at angles with stairs to trip and confuse. Room after room after room. With clever wording in the particulars and positioning of furniture for the photos, Stella reckoned she could list twelve bedrooms at least. The three bathrooms were a worry though, not least because the most modern of them all, the only en-suite, was a homage to 1970s design with a corner bath, bidet, basin and toilet in a dull avocado shade.
It surprised her to find they were back on the ground floor. She’d quite lost her bearings.
‘Kitchen,’ Lydia said, opening a door and revealing a space so sizeable that even Mrs Biggins, ensconced in the Daily Mail, looked diminutive. Stella’s heart sank a little. Of all the rooms she’d been fascinated to see, this was the one she’d built up in her imagination. She’d anticipated flagstones and a vast range, scullery, pantry, cold store, gleaming copperware and all manner of utensils of historical importance. Instead, she stood in a large space in which rather nondescript units varnished an unpleasant amber sat haphazardly under a melamine worktop, like bad teeth. The fridge and the oven were free-standing and akin to those she remembered her grandmother having in her small flat in Wheathampstead. At least there was an Aga, if a relatively small one. It was some consolation finally to be shown a sort of pantry with lines of shelves painted soft white and an impressive run of slate worktop. Most of the shelves were empty; the ones that weren’t were stacked with jars of all sizes filled with jam.
‘I’m tired now so you must go,’ Lady Lydia announced, still walking ahead and not turning to look at Stella. ‘You will come back again tomorrow. To see the grounds. To see Art. Eleven a.m. Prompt, please. Mrs Biggins, show Miss Hutton out please. Goodbye.’
And with that, Lydia went.
‘Coat,’ said Mrs Biggins, bundling it into Stella’s arms. ‘Ta-ta, duck.’ And she chortled a little as if, perhaps, this was a scenario that had been re-enacted many times over the years.
The rain had stopped, everything glistened and shone but Stella shivered and put her coat on, hugging it tightly around herself as she walked across the driveway to her car. Inside, she put the heat on high and realized how that old house had quite chilled her to the bone. She thought again of Tess Durbeyfield, how Tess had wondered about Mrs d’Urberville.
‘If there is such a lady, it would be enough for us if she were friendly …’
Chapter Nine
Stella gave herself a stern talking-to as she raced to pick up Will from after-school club.
Lady Whatnot didn’t say you won’t be representing Longbridge.
She said you’re to come back tomorrow.
Money she may have – manners she has none.
She’s just an old dragon.
But Stella felt despondent – as if she’d failed a test and a carrot that had been dangled in front of her had been snatched away in a harsh peal of upper-class laughter; as if she’d been one of the balls hit around in a game of croquet. Why would she want to work for the old battleaxe anyway? She felt impotent – it seemed she didn’t have a choice. It appeared if Lady Up-Her-Bum wanted Stella, then Stella she would have.
‘Shall we go over and see the Twins? Aunty Ju said it’s fish and chips for supper.’
Will was delighted. Actually, Stella had food prepared at home for Will but her need for adult company – sane, sweet, adult company – overrode her usual timetable of homework, supper, telly, bath, bed and a long evening alone muttering at the telly. She’d phoned Juliet who was only too pleased to hear from her and to be able to help.
‘But it’s a school night, Mummy.’
‘I know!’ Stella said, as if it was the coolest, most daring concept ever.
With Will upstairs with Pauly and Tom, happy not to touch a thing, just to look at their stuff and be in their company as if hoping their cred was catching, Juliet had Stella to herself downstairs.
‘You all right, chook?’ Juliet asked nonchalantly while rooting around the cupboard for the ketchup.
‘Can I borrow a suit, do you think? One of yours?’
‘Well, I hardly thought you meant Alistair’s. Yes, of course.’ She looked at Stella, who looked glum and distracted. ‘But why? There’s not a funeral I don’t know about, is there? Uncle MacKenzie?’
‘No – Uncle Mac is still hanging on. I just need to look a bit more formal and estate-agenty tomorrow.’
‘Charming! Is that your sartorial judgement of me, then?’ Juliet gave her a long look, up and down, as if assessing which suit Stella would be entitled to. ‘You’re not wearing my Paul Smith then – I’ll dig out my old one from Wallis for that!’
Stella laughed. ‘You know what I mean – and I just need not to look like a waitress in a gastro pub.’
‘Firstly – you don’t, you look lovely. Secondly – why?’
‘Awkward client.’
‘Oh?’
‘Lady Up-Her-Bum Fortescue-Barbary OK-Yah Di-Fucking-Da.’
‘Oh,’ said Juliet. ‘Her.’ She paused. ‘Who?’
‘Lives in a Georgian pile over at Long Dansbury. It’s worth millions. She called for me – and then spent most of this morning being rude yet demanded I come back tomorrow.’
‘Can’t you send someone else from the office?’
‘She asked for me by name.’
‘Perhaps it’s just her manner.’
‘She may be a Lady – but she has no manners. She’s horrible.’
‘Yes, but blimey, Stella – have you calculated the commission?’
‘Exactly – it could be the solution to everything. That’s why I have to go. I’ll have to swallow my morals and sell my soul to the old devil – but hence the need for your suit.’
‘And you think she’ll be more polite if you dress the part?’
‘She said I was to see the grounds and art.’
‘Then you ought to go in wellies and a Puffa – with your own clothes underneath. Not your worky-waitressy garb – your off-duty clothes.’
‘Why?’
‘Because first and foremost you’re an art historian – and that’s who you are. Not a suity person. Dress as the real You.’
‘I’m an estate agent.’
‘In the interim.’ Juliet looked at her sternly. ‘Remember – that’s your game plan.’
Stella’s head dropped a little as she nodded. She fiddled with a frozen oven chip that had missed its place on the tray.
‘And my divorce came through.’
And then Juliet thought, sod the suit – that’s not why she’s here. ‘Good,’ Juliet said. She wiped her hands on her jeans and put her arms around Stella. ‘At long bloody last.’
‘I know.’ And Stella was shocked to feel tears scorch the back of her throat. She attempted to cough them away. ‘Actually, it came last week.’
‘Why didn’t you say?’ Juliet was upset.
‘I felt OK about it. Flat – but OK.’ Her throat still ached. A tear dropped. ‘Shit. I can’t believe I’m going to cry.’ She groaned at herself and stamped.
‘You haven’t heard from him, I suppose?’
Stella shook her head and then reached for some kitchen roll to blow her nose. ‘I’ve been fine – and I’m absolutely fine.’ She was frustrated – more at her tears and herself than at any number of the transgressions that could be pinned on Charlie. ‘Why am I crying now? I’m not really.’
‘I know you’re not. It’s just relief and closure and you’ve waited a long time for it. Welcome to the rest of your life. Come on, chook. Let’s go and raid my dressing-up box.’ Juliet led the way upstairs, pausing with Stella to watch, unseen, Will sitting on Pauly’s bed in utter heaven as one cousin strummed a few chords on his guitar and the other chewed gum and texted on his phone.
‘Try the Paul Smith,’ Juliet said, proffering it for Stella’s approval like a maître d’ presenting a Dover sole.
‘Is that because you feel sorry for me?’ Stella asked wryly, hauling herself back on form – a person who, once a good cry had been had, gathered herself together, dug deep for a smile and wore it until it worked independently.
‘Yes,’ said Juliet. ‘Of course not! Just try it on – the more it’s worn, the more the cost-per-wear goes down and the quicker I can justify the purchase.’
Stella undressed and, though she stood there in black socks and mismatched underwear, Juliet thought what a cracking figure she had. ‘Promise not to bite my head off?’
‘Pardon?’
‘Just – promise.’
‘I promise.’
‘Not to bite my head off.’
‘I promise not to bite your head off!’
‘Please let me sort out a date for you – please?’
‘When? To do what?’
‘No – a date, date.’
Stella wanted to bite Juliet’s head off but as a girl who’d never break a promise, she fell silent and just sent Juliet a black look instead.
‘Do you not feel ready, Stella – is that it?’
Stella didn’t answer, didn’t appear to have heard.
‘It’s been over three years, lovely.’
Stella shrugged. ‘I’m busy. I have Will. I’m fine. Actually, I’m just not interested.’
‘Then you ought to go to your GP and have your hormone levels assessed.’ Juliet thought that might have sounded a little sharp. ‘You’re bloody gorgeous – it’s a waste! And you’re denying yourself the chance to have someone really lovely in your life – not to fill a gap, just to enhance it.’
‘My life is good,’ Stella said and she really believed it.
‘Not all men are like Charlie,’ Juliet said quietly. ‘In fact, few of them are. You know that deep down. I know you know that.’
Stella turned for Juliet to zip up the skirt.
‘Look at your peachy bum, missus!’
Stella looked at herself in the mirror. ‘That’s the genius of Paul Smith tailoring,’ she said.
‘Rubbish!’ said Juliet. ‘It doesn’t look half as good on me, you cow.’ She held the jacket as Stella slipped it on. ‘Just look at you!’
Stella looked. And had to grin. ‘Blimey.’
‘That’s an understatement,’ Juliet said. ‘It would be nice for you to have a little fun,’ she said softly. ‘You deserve it. It’ll be good for you – for your self-esteem.’
‘You sound just like Jo – different vocabulary. She witters on about my mojo.’
‘Go, Jo.’
Stella didn’t want to be drawn. ‘I just don’t think I’m that bothered any more.’
‘If that’s the case, you’ve let bloody Charlie define the rest of your life – and yet he’s now out of your life. You’re really good in a couple, even when the other half was a prize shit. Don’t let what you went through change something that naturally suits you.’
Stella hadn’t thought about it that way. ‘But – Will,’ she explained, as if Juliet (like Jo) had missed the point. ‘It’s too complicated.’
‘No,’ said Juliet strongly. ‘That’s an excuse. It needn’t be complicated – and there’s no reason for Will to be involved. You need to have you-time, doing grown-up stuff. You need to pep up your self-confidence. You think your divorce has diminished you – but actually, it gives you your life back. You’ve probably forgotten what that’s like.’
Stella sighed. She stroked the suit as if it was living. ‘If I say yes, will you stop lecturing me?’
‘Yes,’ said Juliet.
‘But no gynaes.’
‘Roger.’
‘And no one called Roger.’