Read Brightling Online

Authors: Rebecca Lisle

Brightling (16 page)

BOOK: Brightling
8.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Start what?' Kate asked.

‘Sparking,' he said.

Brittel fed each spitfyre a handful of small orange benga-berries.

‘They can't resist them,' Brittel said, grinning. ‘The berries are doused in anti-spark potion. My invention. Stops them making fire.'

They got up on the wagon; a wagon that had arrived with a party of demure schoolchildren and a teacher with black curly hair, pulled by two brown horses. Now
four
brown horses would draw it back home again.

Brittel took up the reins and flicked them. ‘Off we go!' he called and he guided the wagon out of the field.

In the lane beyond, three glow-worm dots of light danced. It was Miss Minter, Violet and Hettie, waving phials of Brightling.

Brittel stopped for them and they climbed up onto the front seat.

‘We missed it!' Hettie said, forlornly. ‘The smoke came in and we missed the show.'

Glori sat her down beside her and put her arm around her. She exchanged a knowing look with Violet. ‘Never mind. I'm sure we'll get to see them again.' Hettie didn't know what the match-girls had really been doing; Miss Minter said she was too young to keep their secrets.

‘Tremendous!' Miss Minter said. ‘Well done! Perfect. Perfect.' She laughed. ‘And well done, Violet, for spotting Sparrow!'

Violet glanced over her shoulder at Glori and smiled smugly. Glori tensed. The others had seen Sparrow too!

‘There's something on the floor back here,' Agnes said, nudging the canvas bag at her feet. ‘What is it? Looks like legs  … '

‘That's our little friend,' Miss Minter said. ‘That's Sparrow.'

‘
Sparrow!
' Glori cried. Her heart sank like a lead weight. ‘How? It
can't
be!'

‘It is! Two spitfyres richer and Sparrow returned!' Miss Minter said. ‘We had a very profitable night! And,' she added under her breath, ‘those hateful Directors got what they deserve.'

30

A Visitor

Miss Knip stood on the pavement beside the orphanage cart and straightened her new black bonnet (made by the orphans to her specific design) and adjusted her shawl (knitted by the orphans in the finest lacy cashmere). She squeezed her shiny new krackodyle handbag against her chest. The handbag had been bought that day in Stollenback in anticipation of the reward she was going to get from the Butterworths.

‘You will wait for me here, Barton,' she said to her driver. ‘I may be some time.'

‘Yes, ma'am.' Barton nodded to the horse. ‘Me and Horace won't budge.'

Miss Knip stood at the gate for a moment regarding the neat little house in front of her and checking that the name and number matched the ones on her letter from Gerta. Very nice house, she thought, eyeing it up and down and trying to calculate its worth. Then she stepped lightly up the path and knocked on the door.

It was not Gerta Butterworth who opened it, but a large man with a knobbly head. He glared at her.

‘Yes? What is it?' he said roughly.

Miss Knip took a few steps back. ‘Mr Butterworth?' she ventured.

‘I'm Otto Butterworth,' he said, smoothing long strands of hair over his bald patch. ‘I expect you want my brother Bruno. Who are you?'

‘I've come to see –'

But before she could get any further, Gerta squeezed past Otto. ‘Excuse me, Otto. Sorry. I asked Miss Knip to come. You
are
Miss Knip?' she said. ‘Do come in. I'm Gerta. This is Otto.'

Gerta took Miss Knip through to where her sister and brother-in-law were sitting in the parlour. Gerta seemed unsure, worried. There was an odd, tense atmosphere in the room. What was wrong? Miss Knip fretted.

Bruno stood up and shook her hand. ‘Bruno,' he said.

‘And this is my sister Hilda,' Gerta told her. ‘Please have a seat.'

Miss Knip chose a hard, straight-backed chair and sat down, glancing at Hilda as she did so.

Miss Knip knew the signs of grief well, having caused them many times herself in the orphanage, and she could see that Hilda had been weeping.

‘Miss Knip is from the Knip and Pynch Home, where Sparrow was. I asked her to come,' Gerta said, ‘before  …  you know  … '

Again Miss Knip felt a small doubt creep in. She watched Hilda dab at her nose with a damp, lace hanky and warned herself to tread carefully.

‘That's right,' Miss Knip said, removing her bonnet gently. ‘I know about the girl.'

‘Do you know where she is?' Hilda shouted, leaping out of her seat.

Hilda gave Miss Knip such a fright that her bonnet flew up in the air and she only just managed to catch the precious thing. She laid it like an eggshell on a nearby stool, not taking her eyes off it while her brain laboured furiously, trying to work out what was going on.

Hilda was helped back to her seat, wobbling unsteadily and sobbing. ‘Now, now, dear,' Bruno said. ‘Hush.'

‘Isn't Sparrow here?' Miss Knip said, composing herself and turning to Gerta. ‘You said  … ' She paused. Surely, surely her plan wasn't going to backfire now? She stared at Gerta through narrowed eyes. ‘You said she was here.'

‘So
you
don't know where she is either!' Hilda cried with a little moan. ‘Oh, my dear girl! Where can she be?'

Miss Knip looked to Gerta for help. ‘Sparrow isn't here with you?'

‘No, she  … ' Gerta stood up. ‘We're all rather upset. She's gone missing; we think she was kidnapped. And we are trying to get her back, but please, in the meantime, I want my sister to know what you know about Sparrow.'

‘Yes, do tell me – tell me everything,' Hilda said.

Miss Knip sniffed and fished about pointlessly in her new handbag, buying time. Her reward was looking doubtful now.

‘Sparrow came to the Knip and Pynch Home ten and a half years ago,' she told them. ‘I have the paperwork to prove it. She was brought to us by a woman called Nanny Porrit –'

Hilda's shrill screech stopped her in her tracks.

‘
Nanny Porrit? Nanny Porrit?
' cried Hilda. ‘Then we were right! She
is
the baby from Sampson's. Oh my dear girl, and she's slipped from our hands!'

‘Correct,' Miss Knip said calmly. ‘Sparrow came from the Sampson's nursery here in Stollenback. She'd been there since she was born  … '

‘Who was her mother?' Bruno said.

Otto suddenly took a heavy step towards Knip. ‘Come on, woman! Her mother's name?'

Miss Knip recoiled. What a dangerous person, she thought – slightly insane, possibly violent. She squeezed herself back in her chair and tried to look calm. ‘I had a visit from this nanny, this Miss Porrit,' she went on, not replying to Otto, ‘and –'

‘When? When?' Hilda cried.

Miss Knip hesitated. It wouldn't look too good if she told them it was weeks ago and she hadn't acted on the information received immediately. ‘Just a few days back,' she said quickly. ‘As soon as Nanny Porrit told me about Sparrow, well, of course, I planned to contact you – Butterworth being such a well-known name in Stollenback. Then when a letter came from you, Miss Gerta  … '

‘Do you have proof? Are you saying you have proof of her identity?' Bruno asked her. ‘Because we have our suspicions  … '

‘That she is a liar?' Miss Knip jumped in eagerly. ‘That she is a bad, wayward girl who needs to be treated firmly and whipped to keep her in order?' She added a little smile. ‘It works, you know.'

‘Absolutely not!' Otto and Bruno roared together.

‘
Never!
' Hilda said.

‘I thought she was bad too,' Gerta admitted, looking embarrassed. ‘But she's a nice girl, really she is.'

Miss Knip looked at them in silent amazement. They were mad, all of them, she thought.

‘We think she is our sister's child,' Bruno said, nodding to his brother.

‘When I looked across the circus ring at Sparrow it was like looking at a young Mayra,' Otto said. ‘The girl has her green eyes and perky little way of looking at things, and that hair  …  It was Mayra sitting there.'

‘Which makes her our niece,' Hilda said.

‘I am so glad,' Miss Knip said through gritted teeth. ‘That's wonderful  …  So, you recognised her!' She patted her krackodyle handbag. ‘I have the proof. Nanny Porrit gave it to me.'

Otto banged his ham fist down on a table, sending a silver pot leaping into the air.

‘Show it to me now!' he roared. ‘Now!'

‘Really, there is no need to shout, Mr Butterworth,' Miss Knip said, trembling slightly. She pulled out the locket and dangled it on its chain, smiling slyly at them. ‘Obviously I am expecting some remuneration before I  … '

Otto grabbed it from her.

‘Thank you!' Otto blasted her with such a glare she felt her skin was being roasted. He passed the locket to Hilda and they gathered behind her to look at what was inside it.

Hilda shook her head. ‘Poor Mayra,' she said quietly, staring at the tiny portrait inside.

‘That's definitely my sister,' Otto said. ‘Even says so, right there – Mayra Butterworth.'

‘Nanny Porrit told me the baby's mother had disappeared,' Miss Knip said. ‘There was no money to feed it so Nanny Porrit brought it to us  …  I must say, I was expecting a warmer and more polite reception and  … '

No one was listening to her. They were handing round the locket and examining the portrait again, studying it from every angle.

‘Dear Mayra,' Bruno said. ‘If only you'd come sooner, Miss Knip!'

Miss Knip sniffed. It was all Sparrow's fault, she thought, her fault for leaving, for ever coming, for having that cat – why, its meowing had put her off that evening and delayed her speaking to Porrit. She sat tensely and squinted at them, pursing her lips up tight and hating them greatly.

When they went on ignoring her, Miss Knip coughed loudly.

‘What's the matter?' Otto asked her, giving her such a look that she was silenced again.

‘Cosmo,' Bruno said suddenly. ‘He must have been the father.'

Otto nodded. ‘Cosmo was the circus owner,' Otto reminded Hilda, ‘and she adored him.' He paused. ‘I wish I'd known that my little sister had a baby. She never told us  …  She must have felt ashamed. She wouldn't leave that circus. I tried so hard to bring her back.'

‘Did Cosmo abandon her?' Hilda asked.

Bruno shrugged. ‘Who knows what went on between them?'

‘After the accident, Cosmo went wild,' Otto reminded them. ‘Crazy. He packed up the circus and vanished abroad. Did he know about Sparrow? We must find him and tell him!'

There was silence for a few moments and Miss Knip, who didn't care anything for their conversation, stared greedily at a silver pillbox on the sideboard. She was just about to reach for it and slip it into her pocket when Gerta whisked it away and handed it to her sister.

‘There you are, dear,' she said to Hilda, at the same time throwing Miss Knip a dark look. ‘Time for your pill.'

‘I'm sorry to interrupt, but time is of the essence and I must be leaving soon,' Miss Knip said. ‘Could you tell me – where is the wayward child now?'

‘She disappeared at the circus last night,' Bruno said.

‘Hah! She was always a sly little thing –' Miss Knip began.

‘I won't hear a word said against her!' Hilda cried. ‘She'd never do anything sly! She must have been kidnapped, that's the only possible explanation.'

‘It's probably best if you leave now, Miss Knip,' Gerta said. ‘It was very good of you to come and to bring the locket but as it turns out, we didn't need any proof. I have made a terrible mistake in not believing in her –'

‘But if you hadn't, dear, and hadn't asked Miss Knip to come, we wouldn't have the hard evidence,' Hilda said kindly. ‘So don't worry about it.'

‘Yes, thank you for coming,' Bruno said, going towards the door eagerly.

‘Perhaps
you
will show me out, Miss Gerta, if I can't be of any further help,' Miss Knip said, hugging her handbag to her bony chest, a handbag that was much lighter and emptier than she'd intended. ‘I've taken a whole day getting here,' she said bitterly as she was shown into the hall. ‘I've come right across the swamp. I'm not young you know; it was a vile and uncomfortable journey.'

‘I made a mistake about Sparrow,' Gerta said. ‘And I will pay for it if she never comes back  …  How much do I owe you?' She opened the front door.

‘Well, I was thinking about a hundred –'

Gerta didn't appear to hear her. ‘How will my dear sister ever forgive me?' She looked distracted. ‘I'm sorry you had such a long journey. Here is five pounds.' She was already closing the door. ‘Goodbye.'

31

Returned

Sparrow slowly became conscious. She remembered the circus, the beautiful spitfyres and the smoke. She remembered the strong smell of something coldly chemical and the feel of the heavy canvas bag over her head and the awful helpless feeling of having her legs knocked out from under her. She remembered feeling full of rage  …  Screaming and kicking.

Very slowly she opened her eyes. A headache was beginning to pound in her temples.

‘
Scaramouch?
' Her fingers patted the top of the bed, searching, searching.

‘Hello, Sparrow.' It was Glori, looking down at her as if from the other end of a long, long funnel.

Sparrow shut her eyes again. ‘Where's Scaramouch? I was dreaming about him  …  Is that really you, Glori?' she asked, keeping her eyes shut. ‘Are you  … ? Am I back in the nest?'

‘Yeah, you're back. Are you OK, Birdie? It's just you and me here. You've been out cold. It's Sunday night and they've all gone to see some dancing. What d'you need? Can I help you? You're white as a blooming sheet.'

‘What happened?' Sparrow opened her eyes again. She squinted at the light. ‘What about Hilda?'

‘Who's Hilda? Miss Minter gave you knock-out drops,' Glori said. ‘I swear I didn't know they was going to do it. Told you Miss Minter didn't want you to leave!'

‘But how did they know I'd be there?'

‘Didn't,' Glori said. ‘Luck or bad luck or something.' She grinned lopsidedly. ‘Nice to have you back, Birdie. There's some hot pie here if –'

‘
Scaramouch?
' Sparrow gasped, struggling up. ‘Where
is
he?'

She turned back to Glori quickly, wincing as a wave of sickness rolled through her.

Glori shrugged. ‘I don't know – Oh Sparrow, don't!' she cried as Sparrow tried to get out of bed. ‘D'you have to?'

Sparrow collapsed back on her bed.

‘Where's Scaramouch?' Sparrow cried, looking towards the big window. ‘The missing pane's blocked up! How could he get back in?'

‘It were really cold,' Glori said. ‘That were it. Miss Minter said it were too cold. It's only a bit of card over the gap. And he could push it; I swear he could. I checked. One push and he'd be in. But no one's seen him, Birdie, no one at all. That's the truth.'

Sparrow looked out at rooftops that were white from a recent snow shower. The sky was a deep, steely grey behind them. She began to shiver.

Glori draped Sparrow's new coat over her. ‘There, in't that nice?'

Sparrow stroked the coat. ‘Hilda will be so worried.'

‘Aren't you pleased to be back with us?' Glori asked her. ‘I hope you're pleased to come back. I did miss you, Sparrow.'

‘I was happy,' Sparrow said. ‘The Butterworths were kind to me. They were like – they were like a proper family, Glori, and I was starting to feel –'

‘Ah, but they weren't family, were they? Not
real
family,' Glori said brightly. ‘We's your proper family, Sparrow. Think how we get on. We look out for each other, don't we?' She leaned over and patted Sparrow. ‘There, there  …  oh, what's that?' Her fingers had touched against a soft lump in the coat pocket.

‘Have a look,' Sparrow said.

Glori took out the spitfyre that Bruno had given her. ‘Oh, that's lovely, that is. Such tiny stitches and pretty wings and everything; like a real one.'

Sparrow shook her head. ‘It should be lovely,' she said, ‘but this nasty bloke Tapper made it; him and his awful mother – well, no, they didn't make it – they get girls to make them for them. They're the ones who tried to lock me up and force me to sew – I told you about them. I bet lots of Knip and Pynch girls have got trapped in there. So there's no love in that toy, Glori.'

Glori pushed the spitfyre back into the coat pocket so she couldn't see it.

‘Got proof?' she asked, avoiding Sparrow's eyes. ‘I've heard Tapper's a good fellow, nice young man  …  Wouldn't people have looked for those girls when they disappeared?'

‘Once you leave the Home you're on your own,' Sparrow said. ‘No help from anyone,
ever
.'

She leaned over and pulled her bag out from under her bed and took out her
Sampson's of Stollenback
shawl. She showed Glori the maker's name on it. ‘That's why I came here in the first place,' she told Glori. ‘That was all I had to link me to my past. I found out I wasn't a Sampson but I think I was in a nursery there. I want to know where I come from, where home is –'

‘The nest is your home,' Glori interrupted. ‘You're back home now.'

Sparrow sighed and turned to the window forlornly. ‘Nowhere is home without Scaramouch,' she said.

BOOK: Brightling
8.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Whisper Box by Olivieri, Roger
Single Combat by Dean Ing
The Black Key by Amy Ewing
The Women in Black by Madeleine St John
The Courier (San Angeles) by Gerald Brandt
The Knave of Hearts by Dell Shannon
A Trip to the Beach by Melinda Blanchard