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Authors: Pamela Haines

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BOOK: The Diamond Waterfall
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But of course. I should have known. Greenwood is all right—but for me, it is a shopkeeper's name….

“Lily Greene,” she said again. “Yes, I like that … Miss Greene, goodbye, and good luck.”

In the foyer, indignation. Our carriage was waiting outside. Almost everyone else gone. “What's the meaning of this, eh, Lily? Eh?”

“Yes, Dad. No, Dad. I wandered off, then I couldn't find my way back. …” I whispered something to my mother and then Ma whispered to Dad. Needing suddenly … natural functions … But Dad said only, “You should have taken your sister with you—” (As if I would take Ethel anywhere I didn't have to—and certainly not the lavatory.)

I was so happy, though. And proud too, when the next day I had caught
her
cold.

She had never meant to run away. She had thought that, difficult as her father was, he would see the reasonableness of her ambitions and send her to London with some sort of blessing. If not immediately, at least when she was a little older. So just as Daisy had done a year or so earlier, she had made her announcement.

With similar results. But sadly there was no longer an Aunt Millie to run to. She had died soon after Daisy's marriage. I shall run away, Lily had thought then, it's as simple as that. I shall run away to London.

Money was the main problem. She had a small legacy from Aunt Millie, but it was hidden away, waiting for when she married. (“You'll have a tidy sum to bring with you, Lily,” Dad had said.) That was the trouble with money, in Yorkshire: you never had it
now.
Hers sat in the Leeds Savings Bank, meant for marriage, when it would not really seem hers.

And so on until the Last Day, when it was always “How much did he leave, what was he
worth?”
Dad, reading the “Wills” in the Yorkshire
Post.
Old Higging (“best Angel and Bride Cakes in the West Riding”) worth only half of what had been expected—a failure at the time of possibly his greatest triumph.

“No one'll say that of
me,
eh, Lily, eh, Ethel? If things go the way they should … another three shops by 1890 … I'll have the Co-operative off the map, eh?”

She had seen an advertisement in the newspaper: “£5-£100 lent to respectable people only on their IOU's and promissory notes without bonds— W. Trees, Esq., Park Villas, Heeley.”

“Respectable people.” She liked that…. She went, taking Harry with her: she took Harry everywhere so that she might go out alone. She gave her name, a false one. Said what it was about. The parlormaid went off.

And then, the enormous figure with rust-colored moustaches walking toward her in the hall. “Well, little girl, eh? My little lassie.
Well

She fled.

In the end she had sold bit by bit anything she could lay her hands on. Any trinket, small unwanted gift. Anything larger she pawned, intending to leave behind the tickets.

All those elaborately laid plans. The timing: when best to go,
where
to go. She had the grand sum of ten pounds, and her wicker canvas-covered dress basket packed. The advertisement in
The Stage
had read, “Well-furnished Rooms to Let from 3s.6d. per Week …” She had worked out how long the money would last. In so many weeks she must find work.

The best-laid plans … Harry in her confidence but no one else, not even Daisy. (Daisy would be upset for her. She would write to her from London.) Late at night was the best time to leave. The last train was half-past midnight. It was important to be at once on it so that she couldn't be followed.
But Ma was in bed always by ten, Ethel even earlier. And Dad was away, gone for two nights to Halifax.

Or so she thought.

“And what might you be doing?”

He said it twice, three times. Each time growing more angry. Standing at the bottom of the stairs, turning up the gas, revealing her in a pool of light. It would not do. Her stammered explanation. Then her defiant declaration. His stunned horror. “What's this?
What's this?”
She had not seen him so angry since Daisy's marriage.

Bundling her up the stairs. A door on the landing opening and Ethel peeping out, nightcap pulled over her forehead, mouth open. Dad shouting at her, too. He was rough. She had hold still of her wicker basket. Dad pushing her into her bedroom: basket, cloak, and everything, snatching the key from the inside, and then—but this she could not believe—locking it from the outside. The key turned—and was removed.

Five days ago now. They thought that they could wear her down. That in the end she would give up her foolish notions.
They really believed that

“Lily, Lil—it's Harry. Listen—”

“Harry, are you alone?”

“Yes, hush—I've got to be quick. You know about the key, Lily? … I've found where Ma keeps it—”

“Harry, dearest Harry—go on. Yes. Yes?”

“She locks it in her desk and the desk key is on her belt. But, Lily, there's a second desk key somewhere. I heard her say …”

“Harry, you've got to help me. I won't do anything terrible, it's not
her
fault—but I
must
find a way—”

“Ethel's after your blood, Lily. She thinks you
might
do something, she says she's always coming up with Ma. Every time.”

“Oh lor'. Harry, listen, I'm desperately, terribly unhappy. And I know I'm wicked but—”

“I'll set you free, never fear, Ensign Greenwood to the rescue. God save the Queen. And trust me.”

Already the second Sunday. Perhaps the worst day of all—Sunday. With the smell of roast beef from nine-thirty in the morning and a horrible hush everywhere: no piano, not even Ethel, no Harry with his tin trumpet. Just Dad's voice outside on the landing. “She'll be coming to her senses soon enough, will the lass. Don't trouble yourself….” And through the window, only the sight of people going to church….

To church. She could not believe her good fortune when it happened. When suddenly the door opened and Harry stood there.

He was in his sailor suit, dressed for church. And breathless too, as if he'd been running.

“You got in here,” she cried. “You got the key!”

“Quick, quick. You've got to be quick, Lily—”

“Harry, how did you do it?”

“No time to say really—but we were just about off, and I was holding the books for Dad when he said, I'd best get those papers for old Holroyd.' I followed him, Lily, and then—I couldn't believe it—I saw where he had a desk key hidden, so then I put the books down sudden, and bent double. I was poorly, I said—and now I'm meant to be lying down in my room. Only, Lily, you've got to be
quick—”

It was too much, now that it had happened. She was all fingers and thumbs—and worry. About Harry.

“I don't want you in trouble—”

“Don't reckon to me. Honest. And Lily, Sunday trains, you're sure? You know?”

“Yes, yes, I do. By heart. Harry, push this in the hamper for me. Harry, Harry, Harry …”

“What'll you do, will you change your name? They'll be after you, won't they? Won't they, Lily?”

“How long have I got?”

Without Harry, it would have been impossible. Hurry, Harry,
hurry
… in case someone should come back from church early.

Then, down the stairs, out of the door, look right at the front gate, left …

A kiss, a hug. “I'll write to you, Harry, I'll find a way …”

Free, free, free, at last. Hurry, hurry.

“Harry, I love you best of all. Best in all the world …”

“Hurry …”

Part One
1897–1918
1

Roses, roses, roses. Waiting for her this evening, as always. Yellow, white, and deep dark red. Roses. From Edmund.

In another part of the dressing room, a great basket of fruit tied with ribbon—hothouse peaches, grapes, nectarines. “Miss Lily Greene, star of
The Duke and the Shopgirl
Carlton Theatre …” She looked inside casually, flicking the card over, finger skimming the heavy raised copperplate. The Honorable Herbert or Algy or Whatever—the very same who had said (how original!) that her skin was like a peach….

Evie, her dresser, said, “Over there they are, ducky—the roses from You Know Who….”

But Lily had seen them already.

“He's out of Town,” she said, “my viscount—till Thursday.”

“Some other gentleman giving you supper?”

“Yes. It's the one you don't care for. Mr. Firth.”

“Romano's, is it, ducky?”

“No, the Savoy. But it's a party. We shan't be alone.”

I am just filling in the days, she thought—until Edmund returns. Anything, anyone else, it is nothing.

1897. And another Jubilee. Diamond now.
My
year, as well as Queen Victoria's, thought Lily.

How everything dazzled, this summer of the Jubilee. Day after day of sunshine, and excitement. The air shimmered with it. And then the great day itself—June TwoTwo, as they called it—it was as if the excitement could no longer be contained.

It had been a while coming. Sound of hammers and saws, smell of yellow pine. Carpenters putting up stands along the procession route. Scrubbing up of statues. Food imported for a million and a half people. Celebrations. Illuminations. Colored glass and gas jets. 1837–97 in fairy lamps. VR in cut glass, and brown paper.

A procession to St. Paul's. The hero, General Roberts, on his white Arabpony
(six medals hanging from its breast): “God bless you, Bobs,” called the crowd. And inside the cathedral, someone from the States paying two thousand dollars for a seat. The fabulous Indian princes, their coats sewn with real diamonds….

For Lily, starring in the most popular show of the Jubilee Season, the excitement felt almost unreal…. That in ten years she should have risen from a frightened, defiant seventeen-year-old to this. Her name on every smart person's lips…. And—but wasn't this the most important?—the betrothed (well, almost) of the Viscount Tristram. Of
Edmund.

It was that, wasn't it, the real excitement? Fairy tales
can
happen in real life, she told herself.

He was altogether too handsome, she had thought at first. Mistrusting such good looks. Then—why not? she had thought. Since for him, at least, it was love at first sight. And for her at the most, third sight.

It had all seemed part of the wonder: that it should have happened just this Jubilee summer. As if everything had conspired, as if it had been ordained.

Heroine of
The Duke and the Shopgirl.
Suddenly to be offered, fruit of ten years' hard work, this plum. … It had even caused Dad to get in touch with her (although apparently, for the past three or four years, he had been collecting clippings). Now he was actually proud of her. Even spoke as if her success were
his
doing. While she—she was in quite a bargaining position. She did not want to see him, and did so as little as possible. As for her mother: Ma, she felt, had let her down. Taken the wrong side. Ethel … well, Ethel was simply jealous. But what it
had
meant was being able to see something of Harry again….

Meantime the wonderful enchanted season that had begun with the opening of the show in April went on. She had never looked so well, and knew it. Her new way of doing her hair: waved and brushed back high from her forehead—so much better than last year's fringe. Those photographs: a silk thread held either side of her nose, just tilting it up slightly…. A year, too, when it was the fashion to show off the figure. And hers was good….

Oh, those lovely dresses, silk, batiste, ninon, lace, all stitched by hand, all paid for by Max Hochoy; it was his show,
The Duke and the Shopgirl.
Ascot Sunday, and an attentive Edmund—straw boater, white flannels. Herself, lying back on the punt cushions. Taking care not to be burned by the sun (had she not promised Max?). Her parasol of orange and gray chiffon, with its Dresden china handle. At Bolter's Lock, a crowd singing, as soon as they saw us, songs from
my
show….

And always Edmund. So much in love. (No sooner leaving me in the evening, than he must write to me.) Suppers, suppers, suppers—Gatti's, the
Savoy, private rooms at Kettner's, Romano's with its butter-colored front, and our favorite table, just behind the glass at the entrance.

Then, every evening—oh, the danger of it—home by hansom. Not any old hansom cab—Edmund's own private one, with its glittering harness and liveried driver (he
is
a viscount, after all). Dark green plush velvet of the upholstery into which I sink—and struggle. But not too hard. Oh, but there is nothing quite like a hansom cab—as it shakes from side to side, throwing us against each other, deliriously….

Edmund, Viscount Tristram. He had held the title for a year now, since just after his twenty-second birthday. His father's death, of a heart attack, had been very sudden. Edmund spoke of him movingly, as a devoted parent, completely wrapped up in his Suffolk estate and the care of his tenants. “I intend to be like him,” Edmund told her. That meant marrying, settling down, bringing up a family, thought Lily. How fortunate that she, at twenty-seven, was just ready for that. And fortunate too that he should be so much in love.

Her mouth full of pins, Evie said, “You're all right with your viscount, ducky. But—I wouldn't be too much with Monsewer Firth—”

“Why's that, Evie?” said casually. “He's not the marrying kind, for a start.”

“He's here often enough, ducky.”

“Only when there's no one else. When Viscount Tristram's away …”

But then when Evie said nothing further, perversely she felt a flutter of curiosity. She said, “He seems interested enough in women, if that's what you mean. Why haunt stage doors here, if
men
are the interest?”

BOOK: The Diamond Waterfall
13.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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