Hidden Cottage

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Authors: Erica James

Tags: #General, #Fiction

BOOK: Hidden Cottage
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To Edward and Samuel for always saying the right thing
.

Contents

Cover

Dedication

Title Page

Acknowledgements

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

Chapter Thirty-Six

Chapter Thirty-Seven

Chapter Thirty-Eight

Chapter Thirty-Nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty-One

Chapter Forty-Two

Chapter Forty-Three

Chapter Forty-Four

Chapter Forty-Five

Chapter Forty-Six

Chapter Forty-Seven

Chapter Forty-Eight

Chapter Forty-Nine

Chapter Fifty

Chapter Fifty-One

Chapter Fifty-Two

Chapter Fifty-Three

Chapter Fifty-Four

Chapter Fifty-Five

Chapter Fifty-Six

Chapter Fifty-Seven

Chapter Fifty-Eight

Chapter Fifty-Nine

Chapter Sixty

Also by Erica James

Copyright

Acknowledgements

Help often comes in unexpected ways and I’m grateful to Ben and Sharon for introducing me to their very own hidden cottage and to Lucy for the informative email exchange.

Thank you to John and Victoria who, once again, contributed massively.

Closer to home, specialized neighbourly help was also much appreciated.

Chapter One

‘Expect the unexpected’ was Owen Fletcher’s new personal mantra.

And the unexpected was exactly what he got when he turned off the main road and dropped his speed to enter the village of Little Pelham and saw a floral sofa hurtling by at considerable speed.

Now that’s something you don’t see every day, he thought with an amused smile.

With two lads riding the sofa down the narrow street and a motley gang of children chasing after it, their happy laughter and boisterous cries of encouragement rang out in the peaceful still of the afternoon.

Keeping his distance, Owen carefully followed behind. Passing the stone-built cottages, their tiny front gardens vibrant with spring flowers, he recalled a time when he had used this very street to ride his bike at breakneck speed. He had to admit, though, sofa racing was a lot more inspired, much more of an extreme sport.

Ahead of him the sofa and children had come to an abrupt stop near the water trough, where the slope levelled and the village green with its semi-circle of thatched cottages began. Seeing that the sofa had tipped over – its wheels had dug into the grass, and its two riders had tumbled out to great cheers – he pulled alongside and with the top back on his car, he leant over. ‘Everything OK?’ he asked. ‘Anyone hurt?’

Judging from the laughter, he was fairly sure no one was injured, but there was no harm in checking. Without answering his question, two boys came over; they looked to be about eleven years old. The smaller of the pair said, ‘Cool car.’

With a roll of his eyes, the other boy said, ‘Of course it’s cool; it’s a Jaguar E-Type.’

‘You’re very knowledgeable for one so young,’ Owen said with a smile.

‘My dad’s into classic cars,’ the boy replied with a shrug of his shoulders, casting what appeared to be an expert eye over the Henley green bodywork of Owen’s pride and joy. ‘He takes me to the car shows.’

‘Well, I’ve got to say your turbo-charged sofa is pretty cool,’ Owen said with a laugh. ‘I wouldn’t mind a go on it myself.’

‘You can, if you help push it back up the hill.’

Owen laughed again. ‘Another time, boys. You take care now.’

He drove slowly on, passing the Fox and Goose on his left; it bore all the hallmarks of having been thoroughly updated to suit the needs of a discerning gastro-pub clientele. He doubted there would be a dartboard inside any more. Nor a bunch of old boys playing dominoes in a quiet dusty corner. In the late-afternoon sunshine, the pub’s pale walls, built of local Northamptonshire limestone and partially covered with wisteria, were mellow with age and added to the quintessential English village vibe. Stretching the full width of the building was a raised decking area with tables and chairs and umbrellas. A number of tables were occupied; Owen noticed a few curious glances being cast in his direction. The likelihood of anyone recognizing him was zero.

Next to the pub was a general store; it wasn’t dissimilar from the shop he remembered from his childhood. On the pavement, a man was tying a sign to a telegraph pole. On closer inspection Owen saw that it was a poster advertising Little Pelham’s forthcoming May fete.

His speed still low, he drove on. To his left was Cloverdale Lane, where he had once lived. He’d been nine years old when his father had been taken on as a farm labourer at Cloverdale Farm. He could remember so clearly the day they had moved into the terraced cottage. The sun had been shining, just like today, and the next-door neighbour had called round with a fruitcake she had baked. ‘Welcome to the village,’ she had said. ‘Anything you need, just knock on my door.’ A jolly elderly woman who lived alone with her two cats, she had been quickly labelled as an interfering busy-body by Owen’s father, the sort of woman he didn’t want nosing around in his business. And with good reason: Ronald Fletcher got up to plenty of stuff he didn’t want people to know about. Despite his father’s predictable disapproval, Mum had been the happiest Owen had seen her. ‘Everything’s going to be all right here,’ she had said when she had kissed him goodnight that first evening. ‘From now on, things are going to be different.’

But things hadn’t been different. Within the year his father’s vicious temper had once again got the better of him. Just as it always did.

Owen made no effort to turn left for Cloverdale Lane, not even for old times’ sake, but kept to the main street through the village, towards the church on his right with its squat Norman tower, where he had once been allowed to have a go at ringing the bells.

Running adjacent to the churchyard was a footpath and on this side of it was the vicarage where, for a short time, before his father put a stop to it, Owen’s mother had worked as a cleaner for the vicar and his family. The house had backed on to gently sloping green fields with woodland beyond. He wondered if it still did. Perhaps now a development of houses had been built on the land. It was then that Owen spotted something that was definitely different – the sign on the gatepost no longer said The Vicarage.

He stopped the car and blatantly stared at the handsome five-bay-fronted Georgian house with its elegant sash windows and front door painted dark blue and the sign that read: Medlar House. What was that all about? Another example of the Church of England hitting hard times and selling off more of the family silver? Very possibly.

Idly wondering where the present incumbent of St George’s lived, Owen pressed on, and the nearer he got to his destination the more his excitement and anticipation grew exponentially.

Expect the unexpected
.

Some would say that his expectations for coming here were too high, that the reality couldn’t ever live up to the dream. But it was a risk he was prepared to take. After all, what was life without taking a risk, or more importantly, chasing a dream?

Ever since the day, thirty-four years ago, when he was ten years old and had left Little Pelham he had dreamt of returning. It had not been a case of casual or wistful daydreaming, but an actual and very persistent dream. And it was always the same. It was a hot summer’s day and, alone and lost, he would be drawn in to the cool and leafy shade of a dense copse of trees. Wandering amongst the trees, he would find a path that led to a house. But the only way to reach the house was to cross a small lake in a wooden dinghy. Untying the rope that was looped around the stump of a dead birch tree on the bank, he would row across the lake, somehow not destroying the perfect reflection of the house in the glassy-smooth water. The front door would always be open and music – faint and beguiling – would reach out to him, inviting him in like a beckoning finger. Exploring the house, searching for the source of the music, he would discover that behind every door was a room with yet another door that led to yet another room and another door, and he would be endlessly surprised and fascinated.

Always when he woke from the dream, he felt a sense of pleasurable contentment. And a pull, as if a tiny thread was attached to him and was being tweaked.

The house he dreamt of so regularly was not entirely the product of his imagination; it was based on something very real right here in Little Pelham. It was where he was going now.

To The Hidden Cottage.

Chapter Two

The woman turned around from the mirror. ‘What do you think? And be honest.’

Mia picked up a medium-sized brimmed hat that was softened with a pretty layer of gauze and trimmed with a silk bow. ‘I still think this one suited you best,’ she said with well-practised diplomacy.

Wrinkling her nose, the woman scrunched up her face, giving herself the unfortunate appearance of a bulldog. ‘But it’s so boring,’ she said. ‘Every other woman will be wearing a hat like that at my son’s wedding. Whereas this little beauty will make me stand out from the crowd.’ Sighing like a love-sick teenager, she patted the red and black miniature top hat that was perched at a jaunty angle on her head. ‘Yes,’ she said decisively, ‘this is the one I want.’

Mia knew when she was beaten and with a smile firmly in place and agreeing that the woman would indeed stand out from the crowd at her son’s wedding, she thought of her own son, Jensen. It was his thirtieth birthday today and they were having a family get-together.

It was a while since she’d managed to get everyone in the same place and she was looking forward to seeing Jensen and Eliza and Daisy. She was also looking forward to meeting the girlfriend Jensen was bringing with him. A girlfriend they knew nothing about, as Jeff had been only too quick to point out when Jensen had phoned last week to ask if he could bring Tattie.

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