âOne grows used to it. Here, let me show you the shape of it, in case you get lost.' He led her to a point on the riverbank where there was a view. â
That
,' he pointed across the bridge, âis the borough of Southwark, which is reckoned almost a separate city. That tower there, that's St Mary Overie â see it, the great church?
This
,' he waved at the shore about them, âis the City of London. Now
that
,' he pointed west and a little north to a tower which rose above the crowding roofs, âthere, that is London's cathedral, St Paul's. If ever you are lost, look for the towers of Paul's or St Mary's, and then you can find Southwark. Downriver yonder â see the ships? That's the Pool of London, the port where all our merchandise comes and goes. That great fortress above it, that's the Tower.'
âWhere prisoners are kept, sir?' asked Lucy, remembering what Susan had said, that the author of Mr Browne's pamphlets, a friend of Thomas's, was imprisoned there.
âAye, where men whom the state fears are kept prisoner, but also where all the coin of the realm is minted. There's a menagerie there, too, with lions and other strange beasts, well worth three farthings to view. But today we are bound north, to Moorgate.'
At first Thomas continued to point out the sights: Lombard Street, where the rich bankers had their offices; the fine shops on Cheapside; the merchants' Exchange on Cornhill. After that, however, he trudged in silence. Lucy was wondering what the matter was, when suddenly he burst out, âLucy, my girl, I confess I am having doubts whether you should take up this place. In fact, IâI should never have agreed to it!'
Her heart gave a jolt: the prospect of returning to the house
now
, and resigning herself to becoming Aunt Agnes's maidservant, was utterly abhorrent. âI like the notion of it very well, Uncle,' she said quickly. âShouldn't we at least make trial of it?'
He frowned. âThere's a matter. I should have spoken of it last night, but . . . well, Will was eager, and your aunt was pressing me.'
This, Lucy suspected, was going to be about the
seditiousness
of the pamphlets and ending up in Bridewell. âYes, Uncle?'
âThe printing press is unlicensed,' said Uncle Thomas. He peered at her anxiously. âDo you know what that means, child?'
âNo,' she admitted, taken aback. âDo most printing presses have licences?'
âNow, that I'm unsure of,' Thomas said with a nervous smile. âThere's no doubt, though, that they're
supposed
to. The Stationers' Company is responsible for licensing them, and every printer in England is required to get his name on the Stationers' register, and afterwards submit all he wishes to publish to the licensors before he prints it. But since the war began, regulation has been all at sixes and sevens, and there are many unlicensed presses in London. The Stationers' men strain every sinew to find them out, but London is a very great city, and they've no more hope of finding every unlicensed press than of catching every pickpocket at Bartholomew Fair. However, when they do find an illegal press it . . . it's better if they don't catch the people who were working it. Particularly if those people were printing something the Parliament-men dislike. In January our other press was found, and those who were printing on it were used very ill. Poor Mary Overton, who was stitching the pamphlets, was barbarously dragged through the mire and over the stones to Bridewell, even with her infant crying in her arms. She's still there, poor brave woman! Now, they might not treat a stranger so inhumanly â but, still, the more I think of it, the less I like the risk of exposing you to such danger. What would I say to your father? No, in good conscience I must disappoint my friend William!'
Lucy took several steps on along the road, imagining a woman with a baby in her arms being dragged along the street to prison â for stitching a pamphlet! So, it seemed that Aunt Agnes hadn't just been trying to scare her.
She felt, though, that if she went back now she would be trapped for ever. She would become her aunt's unpaid serving-maid, and everyone around her would gradually forget that she might ever have been anything else.
I don't
care
if it's dangerous
, she thought fiercely:
I want to do it. At least I'd eventually be released from Bridewell!
âIs it against the law for me to stitch your friend's pamphlets?' she asked cautiously.
He sighed. âOf that, I'm not sure. It's against the law to print them or sell them, but is it against the law to
stitch
them? A lawyer could argue not. But, ah, the present government is most grievously offended by our pamphlets. They very much wish to silence us.' He hesitated, then went on, âI doubt that Will would have been so eager to take you on if he'd properly understood how little you know of all this. He's been managing this press for us since poor Mr Tew was imprisoned and he finds it hard, or he would have asked more about you.'
âManaging it?' repeated Lucy, confused again.
âIt's Nicholas Tew's press,' said Thomas. He peered at her. âThe petition Will brought me last night â remember? Will's run back and forth between the press and his own bookshop ever since Tew was cast in prison, and that's dangerous, since Will's known to the authorities and might be followed. That was one reason why he was so eager to have you there instead. You're unknown in the city, and yet, as my niece, you're trustworthy.'
Lucy wondered if he would have assumed a
nephew
was trustworthy, just because an uncle was: men never seemed to get lumped in with their relatives the way women did. âSir,' she said, âWho is “us”?'
âEh?'
â
Our
pamphlets, you said; the government wishes to silence
us
,' she pointed out. âWho's “us”?'
âOh! I see. Well.' Thomas drew a deep breath, then showed her over to the side of the road and stopped in a doorway, out of the traffic.
âWhen this war began,' he said, speaking suddenly with clarity and fervour, âwe were told that we must support Parliament to secure our liberties from an oppressive tyranny. We believed it â at least,
I
believed it! â and we spent our treasure, and shed our blood, and lost â God
knows
how I loved my sweet boy; I would rather have lost my own life! And now that we've given Parliament the victory, what do we find? A persecuting prelacy is to be replaced with a persecuting presbytery, and we are to have no more rights than we did before! Still it goes on: imprisonment without charge, monopolies and corruption, punishment for those who complain, privilege for the rich and misery for everyone else. Aye, and this present everlasting Parliament, that was elected nigh on eight years ago and has waded through so much blood â when will it
stand down
and call fresh elections?
âThere should be reform. We should get what we fought for! There should be an election and a new settlement of the government! As our victory is stolen, more and more of us have come to believe that we must fight again â not with swords, this time, but with petitions and the law. We've banded together to demand a settlement that secures our liberties as freeborn Englishmen.' Thomas frowned at Lucy and added, âAgnes calls it “sedition” because this present corrupt Parliament does â but the king called it “sedition” when Parliament set itself against his will, and who believes that now? There
are
honest men in Parliament; we
do
have support in the Commons, for all the arrogance of the majority, and in the Army there are many who agree with us. I hope and pray that our opponents have the good sense to realize that they must make concessions. Then this so-called sedition will become the new foundation of our commonwealth, and England's liberty will be the glory of the world!' He paused, cleared his throat, and added unhappily, âIn the meantime, though, I fear that working on our pamphlets is dangerous.'
Lucy tried to digest all this. She had never really cared about the claims of Parliament or King: the âliberties of freeborn Englishmen' had very little to do with English
women
. For her the war had meant ruin and suffering, without sense or reason, and the thought that anybody might be stupid and wicked enough to start it up again appalled her.
On the other hand, she still wanted the job.
âI'm not afraid, Uncle,' she said. Inspiration struck. âI would be ashamed if you disappointed your friend on my behalf, particularly as he might think you did so only from fear of my aunt.'
She'd won: she saw that at once.
âWe should make trial of it,' she coaxed. âThen, if I think it too dangerous, I can tell Mr Browne as much, and the blame will rest on me.'
Mr Browne's bookshop was on Coleman Street, near to Moorgate. When they arrived he was perched on a joint-stool outside the shop, but he jumped up, beaming, as soon as he saw them.
âThere you are!' he said, shaking hands with Uncle Thomas. âAnd your pretty niece from the country! What was her name again, Tom?'
âLucy Wentnor,' Thomas informed him. âMy sister Elizabeth's child. I've told her of the dangers she faces, Will, but she swears she's not afraid.'
âExcellent! Brave girl!Liza!' Browne called the last back into the shop.
A girl of twelve or thirteen came into the doorway, regarded Lucy a moment with curiosity, then smiled. âGood health!' she said. âMy da told me you were going to stitch Freeborn John's pamphlet. You're from the country, aren't you?'
âAye,' said Lucy, smiling back. She felt safer with Browne, knowing he had a young daughter.
âI could tell!' said Liza. âFrom the waistcoat. I don't know why nobody in London wears one; it's pretty. Will you come back here for your dinner?'
âAye, I expect so,' said Browne before Lucy could answer. âMind the shop, chick, while I show Mistress Wentnor the press.' He turned to Uncle Thomas. âI'm much obliged to you, Tom. We need it done as soon as possible.'
âAye,' agreed Thomas, looking serious. âI'll let you get to work. Lucy, sweet, I'll see you this evening!' And with that he set off back to Southwark. Lucy watched him go, frightened, despite herself, at being left with strangers in this huge city.
âWell, then!' said Mr Browne. He started off down the street, gesturing for Lucy to follow him. She took a deep breath, steeled herself, and trotted after him, with only one apologetic wave at the girl Liza. She would have liked to talk to Browne's daughter and perhaps ask the sort of questions she didn't dare ask Browne. She wished, too, that she could have had a look at the bookshop. She'd never set foot in a bookshop.
They went up one lane, down another and into the yard of a tavern. Two great curved white beams framed its door; Lucy took them to be wood until she saw the inn-sign naming the place as The Whalebone. She stared at the white beams, impressed, trying to imagine a whale and wondering what part of the animal the bones came from. They looked a bit like a wishbone.
Browne, however, ignored the relic and turned right to unlock one of the stable buildings. Lucy thought it might be a carriage house, but there were no carriages inside. Instead it was festooned with sheets of paper, hung up like laundry on lines that criss-crossed the room in fluttering ranks. In the centre of the laundry lines stood a wooden construction which looked like the bastard offspring of a poster bed and a cider press. Lucy stared at it curiously. So that was a printing press! She'd never seen one before: there was no such machine in the whole of Leicestershire.
âHere we are,' said Mr Browne with satisfaction. âNow, the first thing is safety.' He walked over to the far wall, where there was a table set under a dusty window. âIf ever you hear any disturbance out in the yard, you climb up on this and go directly out of the window. If the alarm turns out to be for nothing, well, there's no harm done; if it's the Stationers' men, then at least you're safe. Do you understand?'
âAye, sir.' With a nervous glance at Browne, she climbed up on to the table. She opened the window and looked out. It stood over a coal-cellar, and she saw that it was an easy step from the window to the roof of the cellar, and another easy step down into the yard. She closed the window and climbed back down from the table, reassured that if she did have to go out of the window, she wouldn't break her ankle.
âOnce you're out of the window, you should be well,' said Browne. âJust walk off. Don't run. If anyone questions you, say that you had business with the keeper of The Whalebone. He's one of us and will back you up. I'll tell him you're here, and he'll likely come by this morning and make himself known to you. His name's Trebet, Ned Trebet.'
The name
Ned
was an unpleasant reminder of the man who'd rejected her â but it was a common enough name. She settled her nerves by picturing an old, fat innkeeper in an apron, bustling about, giving orders to his wife and children: a man who'd be no threat. âAye, sir.'
âYou must take care, though, not to let any stranger know what you're doing here, even if they seem well-meaning: London's as full of informers as a dung-heap is of worms! When you're on your way here, if ever you think someone is following after you, don't go in. Walk on by and come back when you're content that no one is watching to see where you go.'
Lucy swallowed. She'd never imagined that
bookish
people engaged in such behaviour. This was like poaching, or levelling a hedge to let your cattle graze on land a lord had enclosed for his own private use. Her father and her brothers had done both, and she knew how carefully they went about it: the checks to see that no one was watching, the excuse made ready beforehand in case someone was. She supposed, though, that what Mr Browne was doing was similar to levelling a hedge: he was breaking down the fence the Stationers and Parliament had put around the printed word. She ducked her head and uttered another subdued âAye, sir'.