Nooks & Crannies (7 page)

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Authors: Jessica Lawson

BOOK: Nooks & Crannies
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Dim lighting came from a massive, low-hanging chandelier. Most likely it was secure, but Tabitha stepped out of its path nonetheless. Not one, but three suits of armor stood guard, looking out of place but ensuring the utmost sense of occasion. There seemed to be only one significant thing missing from the scene, Tabitha thought. One significant
person
missing, rather, she corrected herself.

“Where is she?” Barnaby asked. “Where's the Countess?
Ow
, Mother, you don't have to—
ow!
” Barnaby rubbed his ear and glared at Tabitha as though she'd done the tugging.

Clearing his throat, Phillips took in the group with a single gaze and double lip twitch. “Her Ladyship is delayed in her rooms and will join us for dinner. I'm to take you to the parlor for light refreshments. Parents, you may settle yourselves from the journey while the children are shown to their rooms. Once they return, I'm to give you a brief tour of the property.” He bowed again. “Agnes will take your coats and see that the children's things are deposited in the correct rooms.” He clapped twice, like you might do when summoning a dog. “Ag
nes
!”

A cowering maid appeared, quickly disappearing under the load of thick dress jackets and coats piled upon her. Mrs. Wellington had worn a mink, which looked to weigh more than two stone.

“I say, Phibbits,” Mr. Trundle said, “before we refresh ourselves with anything, what are we all doing here? We demand to know.” He dug in his pocket and produced a shilling, holding it out to the butler. “Out with it, now, like a good chap.”

Phillips studied the coin as though it were a piece of tummy lint. “Oh my, that is
most
unnecessary. Put it away, please, sir. And it's not my place to say why you've been summoned.”

“So you know, then?” Frances asked.

“We demand to know as well,” Mrs. Crum said. She slapped a hallway table for emphasis, rattling a Grecian mask. “First the hostess doesn't show up to greet us, and now the butler is flaunting knowledge that we don't have. I've never been so insulted in my life.”

Mrs. Trundle clucked her tongue. “Perhaps not to your face, dear.”

Frances whined like a squeaky vault door. “Give him twenty pounds, Daddy. I want to know
now
.”

“Quiet, Frances, I've told you not to speak to me when I'm assessing the art.” Mr. Wellington stroked his chin, gazing at the portraits. “Shades of Thomas Gainsborough's work, I believe.”

“Follow me.” Phillips began walking down a wide hallway, his shoes alternating between efficient clicks and a barely audible squelch. All of their soaked shoes were squelching a bit, Tabitha noticed, from the delicate heels on Frances to her own shabby pair.

With a dramatic roll of his arm, Phillips ushered them through a set of open double doors. Tabitha gazed at the finery in awe. Every surface burst with money, from elegant ivory effigies on side tables to the two large paintings hanging on either side of the fireplace mantel. Each showcased a single swan, swimming gracefully along a scenic lake.

“This is the high parlor.
Don't
touch that, sir,” Phillips said sharply, swiping a silver apple from the hands of Mr. Crum and placing it back on an end table. “A ladies' powder room and a gentlemen's room are just down the hall. Children, you will be escorted to your rooms shortly. Parents, please feel free to seat yourselves.” He pointed to a bound album resting on the lower shelf of a table near the fireplace. “There are more than three hundred thank-you notes cataloged in that album, if you would like to peruse them while you wait for the children. The Countess has been quite the benefactor.”

“If she's so rich, why hasn't she got a fleet of motorcars? Would've shortened the journey here,” snorted Mr. Crum.

Phillips raised one eyebrow. “The Countess keeps five of the finest new motorcars with custom-added luggage racks in converted stables on the property. I can only assume she sent her finest horses and carriages to convey an older sense of class and elegance, perhaps a difficult concept for some to grasp. I'll be back shortly.” He gestured to a stone-faced servant. “This is Jane. She's here to pour if you care for tea. There are assorted food items as well, though I should warn you that the Countess has quite a meal planned for supper, so do save room. She has”—he coughed into his hand, and a wrinkle appeared between his eyes—“spared no expense.” He bowed and closed the double doors behind him.

Jane stood beside silver platters of cucumber sandwiches and smoked salmon sandwiches and savory-sweet ham sandwiches and open-faced sandwiches with thickly spread butter and fresh mint.

“Hello,
hello
, Jane!” Edward said, rubbing his hands together. “And
hello
, refreshments.” But just as he reached for a butter-and-mint, two nervous-looking female servants appeared and approached the children.

One was no more than fifteen years of age, with tired eyes and blond hair tucked under a cap. “Tabitha Crum?” she asked, fingers twisting together as though knitting an invisible scarf.

Tabitha raised a hand. “Yes, that's me.”

“Thank you, miss. Follow me to your room, please.” She turned and began walking quickly down the hall.

Tabitha pushed gently past Oliver and Edward, hurrying to catch up. Stepping alongside the young maid in the hallway, she had the sudden idea of practicing the art of conversation. Surely it would benefit her throughout the weekend ahead if she could become comfortable speaking with others. And, though clearly tired, the maid seemed kind enough to be a suitable trial friend. “So, have you worked here long?”

“No, miss. I arrived just two days ago.”

“And have you run into any ghosts?” Tabitha was joking, but the servant stopped at the base of the staircase.

Without looking at Tabitha, the girl spoke softly. “It's . . . not for me to say, miss.”

Hmm.
A hesitant answer is one that always begs another question,
Pensive would say. How to encourage the girl? Tabitha smiled. “I'm not frightened of them, you know. I just like mysteries, and ghosts are quite an exciting mystery, aren't they?”

The servant looked at Tabitha as though she had grown a second head. She began climbing the staircase at a fast clip.
Oh dear, Pemberley,
Tabitha said silently,
I'm afraid I can't talk to people the way I talk to you.

The servant was glancing down the long left hallway when Tabitha reached the top. “The rest will be in the west wing, that way,” she said. “There were only five guest rooms on that side.” Twisting her fingers, she turned right, hurried past a shut door, then turned down a short hallway that dead-ended with a single room. “Here we are. I'm so sorry you'll be separated. It's not my fault.” She bit her lip.

“No, of course not. It's perfectly fine. And I'm sorry to have brought up ghosts. Perhaps you can't talk about things like that.”

The servant gave her a long stare, deciding something. “Well, since I'll be leaving shortly and because you're staying in this room . . . it's probably best that one of you know that Hollingsworth Hall isn't all baubles and ten-course meals.”

Pemberley shuffled, and Tabitha gave him a light squeeze. She was certain that he gave her a nudge back.
Yes, I know, sir! It's exactly like something a maid would say in a Pensive novel before revealing terribly important information. You pay attention too!
“Yes,” she said, fixing her face with an open and encouraging expression. “Please go on.”

“I've heard something the past two nights. I stepped out of my room to see what was what, and it was almost as though something was walking the hallways, making the air currents shift. I swear I felt a presence. Something's not right with this house.

“I heard rumors before I took the job,” she continued. “Spirits calling for people in the halls. One poor girl even came back to the agency just to warn us not to work here. The voices, she said. The voices were moaning for an Anne and a George and a Victoria. Can you imagine?”

“No,” Tabitha said, though she could. She had a very healthy imagination. She also knew that sometimes people liked to play tricks on those they thought naive. It was likely that somebody had been having a bit of fun with this servant, but it would be rude to suggest that. No, it was best to play along. “Who are Anne and George and such?”

The servant shook her head. “Don't know. Now,” she said, opening the door, “it's not as large as the west wing rooms. I hope it will be acceptable, miss.”

Tabitha thought of her attic dungeon. “I'm sure it's wonderful, thank you.”

But the servant had already left, keeping her head low and muttering to herself. Tabitha reached into her pocket and let Pemberley scurry up her arm. “Fresh air, my little Inspector.” She stepped into the room and froze. All thoughts of ghostliness vanished at the sight of her quarters, and then young Tabitha Crum felt a surprising wetness at the corner of her eyes and realized that she had been placed into a story after all, just as she'd wished for only one day earlier. “I have entered a fairy tale,” she whispered.

And it was. There were luxuriant fabrics, elegantly carved wood, and a thick, rich rug with colors that beckoned her inside and wrapped around her lonely heart like a magically woven blanket and cup of never-ending tea. A canopy bed dominated one wall. It was hung with green gossamer curtains, covered in a gorgeous pale yellow comforter, and piled with embroidered pillows. It was a bed fit for a princess.

There was an armoire and a separate closet as well, with a simple chair resting between them. Tabitha opened the doors of the standing wardrobe, almost expecting to see a row of fine dresses made just for her. Instead there were neat rows of clothing—four plain dresses that looked like something a maid would wear (or, Tabitha thought, what someone like herself would wear to a special occasion at a manor house), four trousers suitable for a groomsman or lower houseman, four aprons, six blouses, six shirts, what looked to be a driver's uniform, and a variety of shoes and hats. All very organized.

“This must be where the Countess keeps extra servant uniforms,” Tabitha told Pemberley.

A large dressing table, a mirror, and an elegant seat were next to the wardrobe. She touched the items on the mahogany dressing table, first letting Pemberley down to explore a carefully arranged plate of chocolate digestive biscuits. There was a silver brush set, a powder puff, and a small jewelry case holding several rings and tasteful pins. Among them was a simple silver finger band with a large, clear gem astride it. Tabitha picked it up as Pemberley scuffled onto the dressing table.

“This could make you a lovely collar, Pemberley.” She slipped it over his head and placed him in front of the looking glass. If mice were inclined to primp and preen, then Pemberley was doing just that. Paws on the glass, he sniffed his reflection, then sat back for a better angle.

“Oh my, aren't we fancy, sir,” Tabitha said. “Come, you can't wear it to dinner.” She pulled him away, though an indignant squeak told her that Pemberley would certainly be back to examine his diamond collar later. While he scurried beneath the bed to investigate, Tabitha lifted a small frame from the dressing table and sat on the mattress. “Who's in this photograph, do you think?”

The picture featured a tall man, a plumpish woman, and a half-covered bassinet that revealed the lower half of a baby, whose two legs poked out of a blanket, feet spread far apart as though he or she had kicked off the confines of a too-tight wrapping. The image sent an attention-demanding prickle to her mind, as though it was hiding something of importance.

I wonder if I was bundled lovingly.
Tabitha placed the frame on the bedside table and closed her eyes for a moment, trying to remember back to her days of being an infant. Did she kick off her blankets until her mother stopped wanting to bundle her at all? Had she been a poor fit, both in swaddling clothes and in her parents' lives, from the very start?

Pemberley dashed up the bedclothes and settled on her lap.

“What's that, Sir Pemby? I'm being tiresome? You're right. This, sir, is likely to be the most magnificent place we ever take lodging, so let's soak it in.” She stretched herself onto the bed, folding both arms behind her head, studying the swirling design on the canopy and sniffing the air. “Though it smells like old lady in here, Pemberley.”

Squeak. Squeakity-squeak.

“Yes, I meant musty, not like an actual elderly person. Really, it's a bit like Mr. Tickles's favorite chair.” She sniffed again. “And pipe tobacco.” Tabitha studied the one painting adorning the room's walls. It was a child sitting on a rocking horse, longish blond-red hair sweeping over his forehead and dangling into his eyes. He looked mischievous and happy. There was only one boy who had lived in the house with the Countess. Was this her son, or had the paintings already been there when the Countess purchased the estate?

A knock sounded on the door. “Time to meet for the tour, miss.”

“Yes, all right, thank you.” As Tabitha walked down the hallway to wait for the others at the staircase, she wondered at the chance of her being given the only isolated room. It was almost as though the Countess knew that she wouldn't fit in, while the others would be great friends.

Squeak!

“I know, I'm being ridiculous.”

Still, as the others exited their rooms in the west wing, Tabitha couldn't help but notice how confident Frances was, how she casually whispered something in Oliver's ear, and how comfortable Edward and Viola were together.

“Tabitha, come with us.” Viola held out a hand. “I simply can't wait to find out why we're all here! Isn't it exciting? I haven't a clue what's going to happen, but it's bound to be spectacular. It's like Bonfire Night, just before the fireworks light up the sky.”

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