Celia remembered her manners, though they were easy to forget these days, without her mother constantly reminding her. âI'm Celia Laws and this is my sister, Lottie. Johnny is our friend, and we're travelling together.'
Busby nodded and spooned some porridge into bowls. âIt ain't fancy, but it will stick to your ribs, and there's some eggs, bacon and bread for after. I've only got two spoons, so us men will have to wait.'
âI'll sup it from the bowl,' Johnny said, his rattling stomach telling them all he was not prepared to wait. But at her bidding, he went off to wash the previous day's dirt from his hands and face.
âI'll share my sister's spoon. Are you sure you can spare this?' Celia asked Busby politely, and even though berating herself for being a miser, she added, âWe can't afford to pay you.'
âI wouldn't be offering it if I couldn't. You're welcome to it.'
Lottie opened her mouth for a spoonful, and tried to grab the spoon. She wanted to eat her meals by herself, but if Celia allowed it, half of the oatmeal would be wasted on her clothes, and she was determined that Lottie was going to swallow every scrap of the nourishment on offer.
Johnny came back, his face glowing with the cold. His eyes lit on the food.
Busby indicated a seat on a log and said as he dished it up, âTravelling far, Miss?'
âTo Hanbury Cross village in Dorset,' Johnny said, and Celia nudged him with her boot and gave him a warning look.
âThe road is dangerous these days. Where's your folks?'
She shrugged, saying briefly, âUp ahead . . . I daresay our kin are waiting for us at the next inn. It's just . . . it got dark . . . and it was cold and we got left behind, so we thought we'd better shelter here for the night. Besides, we've got nothing to steal apart from a few coins.' A lie, since she had a fortune in cash hidden under her skirt.
Busby gave a faint grin. âI believe you, but felons aren't always after goods, girl. I reckon you be old enough to know that.'
Celia remembered Charles Curtis with a faint blush and some amusement. Her fingers strayed to her mouth. Fancy him handing all that money over for a kiss. He was certainly adept at getting his own way, and she frowned at the thought. He'd been much too generous. Did he really think she'd go back to him and become his whore for a week? The most he'd get from her was his money refunded. After that, she would no longer be under an obligation to him.
She attacked her oatmeal before it got cold. She'd never tasted anything quite so blissfully delicious, except what followed after it â bread fried crisp in the bacon fat with an egg on top. They ate like there was no tomorrow, washing it down with hot tea.
Flakes of snow began to drift down from the sky and Celia eyed the low, heavy cloud doubtfully. She hadn't considered it might snow.
âDorset's a fair step, and the snow is going to settle. The sky is full of it. You'll be stuck when the wind piles it into drifts, and you won't know which way is left and which is right.'
âWe have to go on . . . we have no food and shelter.'
âWhat about your relatives?'
She shrugged. âThere are none with us.'
âAye, but I didn't think there were, since me and my missus own the place, and I've just come from there. Best you come back home with me.'
âCan't we stay here?'
Busby shook his head. âOnce I've adjusted the kiln and sealed it I won't be back here for several days, when it's cooled down. There's no food, and nothing to hunt this time of year. Besides, my woman would give me an earful if I left you here by yourselves, especially if you freeze solid. Now that would be a thing!'
The thought that Busby had a wife went a long way to settle Celia's unease of going off with a stranger. She remembered Charles Curtis and her fingers strayed to her mouth. She couldn't trust herself to a man who made her feel . . .' She didn't dwell on how he'd made her feel, but moved on to Thomas Hambert, who'd been so kind to them. Not all people were bad, and Busby seemed to be kind-hearted.
âI told the good woman about you when I went back to get something to feed you with. They're as thin as a trio of sparrows thrown out of the nest, I told her.'
âNow you feed them up real good, Busby, she says, and you bring them back here so I can look them over. Maybe they can help us round the place until spring stretches its feathers, then they can safely move on. Fact is, missy . . . I don't want to come back and find you frozen to death . . . that I don't. It would put me to too much trouble explaining it to the authorities and weigh too heavily on my conscience.'
âThat's kind of you and your wife, Busby. I think we could all do with a warm bed for a while, and I don't mind working for it.'
âNeither do I,' Johnny chipped in.
âGood lad.' Busby patted Johnny on the shoulder. âNow you've got some breakfast inside you, how do you feel about giving me a hand with the burner, lad?'
Johnny nodded. âWhat do I have to do?'
âSee that pile of wood there? We have to pack it nice and tight so no air gets inside to make the wood burn too fast. Then I'll set a fire in the middle and put the lid on. When things get nice and hot we'll seal the kiln with those sods of earth there. It will take a week or so for it to cool down.'
Celia tidied up the camp while Busby and Johnny set about fixing the kiln, and the scene was imprinted on her mind, so she began to weave a story about it. It wasn't long before the two males were covered in dirty streaks. She wished she hadn't left her notebook with Mr Hambert, and decided to buy one at the next town they passed through. In the meantime, the story would grow in her mind without too much effort, just like a mushroom.
Before too long the mound was covered in the sods that man and boy had pitchforked into place, which prevented them from coming loose. Busby grunted, placed his hands on his back and stretched. She grinned when Johnny did the same, leaving two dirty handprints on his waist.
âReady, lass?' Busby said, grinning at her through a face streaked with charcoal ash.
âNo, Mr Busby, we're not ready. Johnny, you look like a chimney sweep. You can brush the dust from your clothes with a leafy twig and wash your face and hands in the stream if you want to make a good first impression on Mrs Busby.'
âMy Aggie does have a bit of a sharp edge to her tongue if somebody carries the muck indoors after she's cleaned the floors,' Busby thought to advise.
As she tucked Lottie into the cart, Celia decided she could trust him, even if they didn't have much choice. âThen you'd best tidy yourself up too, Mr Busby . . . then we will be ready.'
He chuckled as he trundled off after Johnny. âDamn me if you ain't as bossy as my Aggie,' he said.
Seven
Foul weather meant that there was little traffic on the road; so few people required bed and board.
âThe railway has taken away some of our regular traffic,' Busby said. âStill, it's not too big a place to manage, and the sale of charcoal will keep us going.'
The sky was so low it nearly touched the earth. It snowed heavily, not the sooty slush that had fallen on London now and again, but a thick coating of white that rolled over the countryside like a blanket, piled up on the hedges and merged into the horizon. There, the sky met the land without trace of a seam. Icicles hung from the thatch, and from the apple and pear trees in the yard, and their breath, and that of the animals, steamed the air where they walked.
Celia could only imagine what would have happened to them if they hadn't been persuaded to stay.
The silence pressed against their ears until Tinker went leaping through the snow, disappearing under with each landing, only to leap out again and disappear under again. The animal's antics made Lottie laugh. But the little dog had attached itself to Johnny, and slept on his bed.
Celia didn't want to be beholden to anyone, so she helped Mrs Busby in the inn, doing the cleaning jobs and making the beds of the occasional traveller. The woman was a fine cook, and she made a big fuss of Lottie.
âThe poor little thing,' she said on occasion. âIt's a wicked world out there if you've got nobody to look after you.'
In case the woman took too much of a liking to Lottie, Celia said firmly, âLottie has got me.'
âAye, and you're a capable girl, no doubt, and no mistake. But you're young and you haven't got much to your name.' She dragged out a trunk and unearthed a couple of serviceable grey skirts from its depths, followed by a bodice of blue velvet and another of green. âHere, lass, they'll be a bit big round the waist but we can put a couple of tucks into them. You'll grow into the bodices in a year or so, no doubt. I don't know why I was keeping them, since I'll never fit into them again.'
âI like you a bit on the buxom size,' Busby said with a grin, and gave her a smacking kiss on the cheek.
His wife blushed. âYou watch what you say when the children are present, Busby. Get about your business now.'
She pulled out a flannel nightdress after he'd gone, muttering as she shook it out of its folds, âI don't know what's come over Busby, that I don't. I reckon we can make some smocks out of this, for young Lottie.'
They spent the dark evenings in company with each other in front of the fire. Busby sucked on his pipe and gazed into the firelight. Mrs Busby sewed. It reminded Celia of evenings spent with her mother stitching trouser seams â except they were now well fed and warm â so she had to swallow hard to keep back the tears. Johnny whittled on a piece of wood and seemed contented, and no wonder, for the Busbys made a real fuss over him.
With the firelight creating grotesquely dancing shadows on the walls, Celia told them the stories her mother had told her when she was growing up, or recited poems with her usual dramatic embellishment.
âJust like a real theatre,' Mrs Busby said, after one spirited performance, wiping the tears from her eyes.
The icicles began to drip, the snow melted. Frozen wheel ruts in the mud patches gradually became mire. The sturdy forest ponies shed their winter coats, and buds appeared on the trees.
Celia was restless and said to Johnny, âIt's spring, we must leave soon.'
He begged, âJust another week or so, Celia. Let's allow March to pass.'
As it was, they had no choice because Mrs Busby sprained her wrist just when there was a trickle of travellers. Celia couldn't do any less than help the woman out, in view of her kindness to them. Johnny helped Busby tend the charcoal burner.
Then Lottie came down with a fever. Celia woke one morning to discover that her sister had taken ill. Lottie gazed at her through fever-bright eyes and gave a little whimper. Rosy patches adorned her cheeks; her nose was thick and clogged and her appetite gone.
âYou'll soon be better,' Celia tried to reassure Lottie, though she was far from convinced herself. She called Mrs Busby.
âI reckon we'll have to wait and see what develops,' Mrs Busby said.
For three days Lottie was a lethargic and grizzly creature who shook and shivered even while her temperature raged, and it was hard put even to get her to swallow liquid.
âShe's not going to die, is she?' Celia said to her host, so desperate that she burst into tears.
Mrs Busby took her in a comforting hug. âThere, there, my love. I can't say she will and I can't say she won't, but there's a strong feeling inside me that she will survive, and when she does I'll eat young Johnny's top hat in celebration.'
The thought of which made Celia giggle.
âThat's better,' Mrs Busby said. âThat Lottie of yours is a strong little girl, and she'll get better . . . you'll see.'
On the fourth morning Lottie was covered in spots.
âMeasles, I reckon. She would have caught it from that traveller a couple of weeks ago. He had spots on his face, though I didn't think nothing of it at the time. Now the spots are out she'll soon get better.'
And Lottie did, but she'd lost the weight she'd gained at the inn.
âWe must go soon, Johnny,' Celia said one day, when Lottie seemed stronger.
She sensed the reluctance in Johnny to leave. He found excuses . . . He needed to clean the windows, or he went back and forth with Mr Busby, with whom he'd formed an attachment . . . making himself useful.
The days passed and the trees in the orchard were covered in pastel blossoms that attracted an industrious army of bees to the pollens.
Busby sensed the need in her to move on, and returned one day with Johnny, who was wearing a new set of warm clothes. âHis trousers were so old his arse was hanging out and freezing in the wind,' Busby said, âand the buttons on his shirt didn't do up. I thought he needed something more hard-wearing to travel in. I bought them from Ellie Green in the village. They belonged to her lad who went off to war and never came back.'
âAnd right smart he looks too. You should have bought him a new hat; he looks like an undertaker in that'n,' Mrs Busby said with a sigh.
Still they lingered on, like hibernating squirrels. It was almost the end of April before they left, when Celia took it upon herself to pack their belongings in the cart.
They had tears in their eyes as they hugged each other.
âYou've been so kind to us, thank you,' Celia told them.
Busby gazed at his wife, and when she nodded he cleared his throat. âMrs Busby and I have been thinking. We were once blessed with a son and he'd be about Johnny's age now if the good Lord hadn't taken him for his own. It doesn't seem right, you youngsters being on your own in the world.'