Read The Flame and the Flower Online

Authors: Kathleen E. Woodiwiss

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Love Stories, #Historical, #Historical Fiction, #London (England) - Social Life and Customs - 19th Century, #Sagas

The Flame and the Flower (37 page)

BOOK: The Flame and the Flower
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While she breakfasted, her bath was readied in the master bedroom and as she drank the last of her tea and set the cup down, Mary was there with brush and comb to quickly coil her hair in a large knot upon her head. Soon she was enjoying a steaming bath.

 

The grooming was completed and Hatti returned to inspect Mary's handiwork, which seemed without fault. She nodded as she viewed the coiffure.

 

"You did just fine, child," she said, yet she picked up the comb and lightly touched the hair and smoothed a curl. "But for Miss Heather it's got to be perfect," she added, lightly admonishing the girl.

 

The routine of the day began with Hatti's invitation to look over the menu for that day. Heather followed the woman downstairs and out to the cookhouse to meet Aunt Ruth, who reigned supreme over the building and the preparation of the food for Harthaven. The interior was spacious and spotless, dominated by a large slab table which stood in its center and two huge fireplaces which bracketed it. Four young Negresses with clean white smocks covering their dresses were chopping greens, preparing, meat and tending various brews on the fires. Heather was awed by the cleanliness and flawless routine maintained by Hatti and Aunt Ruth. Both women were experts in their respective arts.

 

Hatti guided her back to the house amid a torrent of detail and explanation. As they passed each bush or tree or structure there was some comment to be made about it. They entered the house and the old woman bustled about, painstakingly inspecting the immaculate neatness which the house staff had bestowed upon each room while her mistress struggled to stay beside her. It was some time later when they paused in the drawing room and Heather, with a laugh, sank into a chair.

 

"Oh, Hatti, I simply must rest. I'm afraid the long voyage did not prepare me for this activity."

 

Hatti gestured to Mary who had remained close at hand and the young girl left to return shortly with a tall, cool pitcher of lemonade. She poured her mistress a glass and it was gratefully accepted. Heather insisted the other women have some.

 

"And, Hatti, please do sit down."

 

Murmuring her thanks, the old woman accepted the glass from Mary and seated herself cautiously upon the edge of a chair. Heather leaned her head back and closed her eyes for a moment and sighed.

 

"Hatti, when I first met Brandon, I never dreamed that because of him I would be living in a house like this." She opened her eyes and raised her head to look at the woman, a soft, thoughtful smile curving her lips. "And even when we were married I only knew him as a sea captain and thought I would spend the rest of my life in dingy waterfront rooms, but never this, never anything like this."

 

Hatti chuckled. "Yes, ma'm, that's Master Bran, he always likes to tease the people he loves the most."

 

Heather grew restless after lunch and decided to explore the house for herself. Intrigued by the beauty of the ballroom, she returned again to it and paced once more the glistening oak floor and caressed the white silk moire that covered the walls. She admired the gilt trim and stood beneath one of the crystal chandeliers, looking up at it, dazzled by the myriad twinkling rainbows. When she opened the crystal-paned doors to the garden, the winter breeze set the chandeliers tinkling with a soft and gentle music. She stood for a long while listening to it, lost in thought. Sighing softly, she closed the doors and left the sweetly chiming room behind her. Seeking Brandon's presence, she went to his study and found it in the heavy chair that sat before his massive walnut desk. Testing the chair, she found it hard and uncomfortable, as if it resented her imposing upon its masculine stature. She rose and gazed about the room and despite its lack of order, sensed that here was where the Birmingham men sought their ease. The room was neat and clean, yet the huge chairs seemed to stand where they had been last used and where they would again serve a manly mood. Books arrayed great shelves in no apparent order, simply replaced as they had been read. A tall rack held a score of guns whose well worn sheen spoke of common usage, and a great roebuck stared silently from above the fireplace. The only hint of a woman's touch in the room was a large portrait of Catherine Birmingham hanging where the sunlight fell upon it, seeming to set the gentle figure aglow.

 

Her reverie was broken by a child's voice shouting from the front. "The drummer's come! The drummer's come! He wants to speak to the mistress of the house."

 

Heather was undecided for a moment, not knowing whether she should welcome the peddler or not, but when Hatti came through the house from the back, she followed the woman out onto the porch. The drummer greeted the Negress with familiarity and she responded in kind before turning to present her mistress.

 

"And Mister Bates, this is the new Mistress of Harthaven, Master Bran's wife."

 

The man doffed his hat and bowed gallantly. "Ah, Madam Birmingham, it is my most honored pleasure. I had heard rumors of a new wife in the family and may I say, madam, you do most splendidly confirm those rumors."

 

She acknowledged his gracious comment with a smile.

 

"With your permission, Madam Birmingham, I should like to display for you my wares. I have a great many items of common need about the household and mayhaps you will find one or some of them to your liking." At her nod of approval he hastened to fold back the canvas side of the wagon and lower a shelf. "First of all, madam, I'd like to display utensils for the kitchen. And I have, of course, many spices."

 

As he said this he swung down a hinged cover with a bang, revealing a copious collection of the mentioned products. He hurried on, making a show of the sturdiness of his pots and pans and other wares. In these everyday items Heather showed little interest, but Hatti attended each display closely. He went through his hard wares and introduced them to scents purportedly from the Orient and fragrant soaps of which Hatti coyly selected several, asking her mistress if she desired any of these heady stuffs. Heather declined gently, not wishing to betray her lack of coin to the woman. Then Mr. Bates began displaying his materials and Hatti chose for herself a fine piece for Sunday wear while Heather watched, smiling. It was when the man brought out a deep green velvet that her interest grew, and she thought how handsome Brandon would look in the color. She gazed at it longingly before a sudden thought came to her. She begged a moment's absence from them and hurried into the house and up the stairs to her room where she began tearing through her wardrobes for the gown she would barter. She found it at last and pulled it out and for a moment stared at it, remembering too well the history of this beige gown she had worn the night she met her husband. Too many other memories were associated with it for her to feel any dismay at trading it off. Pushing those discomforting thoughts from her mind, she clutched the dress to her and hastened from her room and down the stairs to the front porch.

 

"Are you open to barter, Mr. Bates?" she asked the drummer.

 

He nodded. "If the piece be worthy, madam, of course."

 

She spread the gown before him and the man's eyes widened and then gleamed in anticipation. She indicated the green velvet and asked to see a display of threads, braid and some light matching satin for the lining. As he climbed into the wagon to search out the requested items, Hatti sidled close and whispered softly.

 

"Miss Heather, don't go trading that pretty dress off," she pleaded. "The Master leaves money in the house for these things. I'll show you where."

 

"Thank you, Hatti," Heather smiled. "But this is my surprise to him, and I prefer not to use his money unless he bids me so."

 

The Negress drew back with a disapproving frown but gave no further objection. Heather turned again to the man as he came to her with the items she requested.

 

"The green velvet is an expensive piece, madam," he said shrewdly. "I've carried it carefully as if it were gold, and as you can see, it is of the finest quality."

 

She nodded graciously and went on to praise her item likewise. "The gown is worth far more, sir, than your materials." She put her hand inside the gown and displayed the handiwork about the bodice, making the beading glisten in the afternoon sun. "It's not everyday you should have the good fortune to come across a gown such as this in your trading. It is the latest fashion as you can see and many a woman would desire to have it."

 

He complimented his cloth again but Heather was not to be outdone, and soon the bartering was completed with both participants content. The drummer gave Heather her goods and took the gown from her carefully and folded and wrapped it ever so gently. He put it away tenderly, then turned and doffed his hat again, and being a trader of the first cloth, spoke ruefully.

 

"My foolishness and your skilled tongue, Madam Birmingham, have no doubt ruined my profits for the entire day."

 

Heather raised an eyebrow and chuckled as if in sympathy with his feigned injury. "Good sir, you know full well the value of such a delicate piece and have indeed rooked me into accepting these simple rags in exchange."

 

They both laughed in mutual regard, and he bowed low before her.

 

"Madam, your beauty hath such charm that I shall soon return again and allow you to deplete my wares for another simple token in return."

 

Hatti grunted sharply in abject displeasure, and Heather warned him gracefully.

 

"Should you, sir, I beg you sharpen your wits, for never again will I be so pliable in allowing my great treasures to so easily slip away."

 

He laughed and bid goodbye and she waved him off and began happily gathering the materials while Hatti shook her head and grumbled.

 

"I don't know what's got into you, Miss Heather, trading your pretty clothes off to that drummer. Master Brandon, he got money. He ain't no poor white trash."

 

"Hatti, don't you dare say a word about what I've done when he comes home," she warned softly. "I'm going to make him a Christmas gift out of this and I want it to be a surprise."

 

"Yas'm," Hatti mumbled and stomped along behind her into the house, thoroughly disgruntled.

 

Brandon returned from Charleston near midnight of the following night. The house was quiet and everyone asleep except for the butler, Joseph, who greeted him and George at the door. The three of them woke first Jeff, then Heather, carrying bags and chests upstairs to his room. Hearing voices from the other room and realizing her husband was home, Heather rose from bed and, donning robe and slippers, entered his bedroom to find the brothers and the two servants indulging in a midnight tipple. She smiled sleepily as Brandon came to her and leaned against him lightly as he gave her a husbandly peck upon the brow.

 

"We didn't mean to wake you, sweet," he murmured softly, slipping an arm around her.

 

"H'm," she sighed drowsily. "I would have waited up if I had known you were coming home tonight. Have you finished your business on the ship?"

 

"Until after Christmas, pet, then we must get the
Fleetwood
ready and in top condition for her buyers. I'll be taking her to New York when she's done and selling her there."

 

Heather lifted her head and met his gaze now with alert eyes. "You will be going to New York?" she asked slowly. "You will be gone a long time?"

 

He smiled down at her and smoothed her hair from her face. "Not too long, sweet. A month perhaps, a little less, a little more. I'm not certain. Now, you'd best go back to sleep. We'll be rising early to go to church in the morning."

 

He kissed her brow once more and watched her leave him and go to her room, and with a slight frown wrinkling his brow, he turned back to the other men and found both George and Jeff with their gazes fixed on him. The servant quickly averted his, but Jeff slowly shook his head as if in exasperation. Ignoring him, Brandon poured himself another brandy and drank it slowly.

 

Heather woke the next morning to find Mary poking up the fire in her room and she rose from bed shivering to go huddle before it. The wind whipped at the trees by her window and a chill possessed the room this December morning.

 

She dressed carefully for church, donning a gown of sapphire blue silk. It was the one Brandon had selected especially to compliment the color of her eyes, and when she stood arrayed in it before the mirror, the servant girl caught her breath.

 

"Oh Mrs. Birmin'ham, I ain't never seen no one as pretty as you. I sure ain't!"

 

Heather smiled at the girl then regarded her own reflection critically. She was exceedingly anxious to look her best this morning since she would be meeting many of Brandon's friends, and she wanted so very much to make a good impression. Afraid that she wouldn't, she chewed her lip nervously and left the room rather reluctantly, carrying a matching blue coat and silver fox muff. A hat of the same fur had been chosen and she worried with it as she hurried down the stairs and even thought of going back and changing it for a bonnet but time did not allow.

 

The men were waiting in the drawing room, a striking pair in their Sunday finery. As she entered their conversation stopped in mid sentence. They gazed at her in appreciation of her trim beauty until she grew uneasy under their stares. Sensing her discomfort, both brothers stepped forward at the same time and collided abruptly. With a chuckle, Jeff stood aside and allowed his brother to proceed.

 

"Am I suitably dressed?" she questioned Brandon worriedly, hoping that her appearance would do him credit with his friends and meet with his approval.

 

He smiled and helped her on with her coat. "My sweet, you needn't worry. I assure you that you'll be the loveliest to grace our church today." He bent his head near her ear as he stood behind her and let his hands rest lightly on her shoulders. "You will no doubt set the men agog and the women's tongues wagging."

BOOK: The Flame and the Flower
12.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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