DURING THAT WEEK and the next Mrs Moore and Mrs Green warned their staff against Roger in every way possible, because they were not going to have any girl of theirs getting to know ‘that snake in a suit’ any better on his return. Mrs Moore was concerned for Evie. ‘I’m not a fool, I know perfectly well who the fox in the henhouse was,’ she snapped at Evie, and her outrage seemed to energise her. Within days the swelling and pain subsided and there was no gin top-up in her tea. So, good things come out of hiccups, Evie told herself.
The atmosphere in the servants’ hall was lighter without Roger, much as the weather now that they were into May. ‘Can’t believe it’s just little more than a month since I arrived,’ Evie said as she started on the salt-bake mix which she would wrap around the roasting veal, and ten days since Roger had attacked her. ‘Aye, it seems to have galloped along,’ Mrs Moore murmured as they worked together preparing dinner on Wednesday afternoon. ‘It’ll all calm down a bit now with Lord Brampton gone, and I daresay we won’t have to fiddle about with tea for his young ones for a while. They won’t need the succour, and it’s grand he won’t be laying hands on Mr Auberon for a while.’
Evie stopped in her mixing. The flour was up to her elbows. She grated in more salt. Mrs Moore looked through the windows into the passageway and whispered, ‘I shouldn’t have said that. We have to be careful. Just think, someone repeated to someone else, which set off a right to-do, that the Bramptons were to buy Froggett’s houses, or so the gossip goes.’
Evie snatched a look at her and then concentrated fully on rolling out the salt bake. ‘I can’t imagine who that could be.’
Mrs Moore laughed quietly. ‘Strange, isn’t it, Miss Evie Anston? Now, it’s your afternoon off, so away with the apron. I’ll finish that.’ She was studying her recipe book, running her finger down the page and tutting. ‘They’ve requested ice cream. It’s such a nuisance.’
Evie removed her apron and hung it on the peg, passing behind Mrs Moore who said quietly, ‘I’ll unlatch the pantry window, just in case, and you give my wishes to Miss Manton.’
Evie sped down the back paths to the bothy, intent on the time, and on her bicycle and the glory of the cowslips in the wild area, and the primroses. Soon the bluebells would be out and the air filled with their fragrance. Everything seemed good, and it was only in flashes that she felt Roger’s mouth and tongue again, and his hands tearing at her.
As she approached the bothy she could see Simon inside whittling a long thin branch into a walking stick, waiting for her. She hesitated, knowing that she had avoided him for well over a week, since Roger’s attack, to the point where Millie had said as they lay in bed one night, ‘Gone off him, have you? Poor lad, he likes you. You don’t know how lucky you are, Evie. You have so much more than I will ever have.’ Her voice was harsh and angry. Evie had pretended sleep, wishing yet again that Annie hadn’t asked to share with Sarah, leaving her with the dubious pleasure of Millie’s company.
Simon looked up, his mouth pursed in a silent whistle. ‘Hello there, Evie Anston. I wondered if I had grown two heads or something?’ He smiled but his eyes were bruised beneath, as though he hadn’t slept. She knew hers were the same.
She stopped for a moment, wanting to run away, but Miss Manton was waiting for her, and she wasn’t another Millie, for heaven’s sake. She pushed back her shoulders and laughed. Even to her own ears it sounded false. ‘You have one head still, bonny lad, and a grand one it is too.’ Yes, that struck the right note.
She entered the bothy but couldn’t reach her bicycle because she’d have to go through Simon to get there, and he clearly wasn’t about to move. He folded up his knife and put it in his pocket. He blew on the walking stick. Shreds of wood flew into the air, spiralling to the ground like sycamore seeds. He held up his handiwork, eyeing it up and down. ‘I’ve been working on this as I’ve waited for you in the storeroom, but it’s been Millie. I don’t want to see Millie.’ His voice was firm. ‘See how much I’ve done when I could have been snatching words with you instead.’
He dropped the walking stick and removed his cap, running his hand through his red hair. He did not move towards her but waited, and she knew that he’d wait all day if he had to. He was like Jack, solid, fierce, strong, kind, understanding.
She approached. Her handlebars were almost in reach. They were rusted and would need sanding with emery paper. She would buff them until they gleamed like the fender. He crossed his arms. ‘Don’t you like me any more, Evie?’ She couldn’t bear the pain in his voice.
She shook her head and he straightened, reaching for the walking stick, slapping on his cap and striding to the door, but she called out, ‘No, I didn’t mean that. Stop, please Simon.’
He did, turning in the doorway. She couldn’t see his face against the brightness of the day, in which the last remaining petals of blossom clung to the branches, and the clouds scudded towards the Stunted Tree. ‘What did you mean then, Evie? If things have changed, then they have and that’s all there is to it, but I need to know.’
She told him then, of Roger and how she couldn’t quite get her head straight enough to be with him, Simon. It came in fits and starts and throughout it he said nothing. Finally he swung round to face the sun and as she watched he raised his walking stick and broke it across his leg, throwing away the two halves. He stayed there. So, that was how it was. Like everyone else he thought the woman was to blame. Why had she said anything? Why?
She gripped the handlebars and pulled her bicycle out from amongst the others. It would be all right. She would be fine. She would paint placards and listen to the speaker and worry about the wisdom of votes before taxes and none of this would matter at all, none of it. She would cook, and one day she’d have her hotel, and her family would be out of the pit, that was what was important. She wheeled her bicycle towards the entrance but still he stood there with his back towards her. She said, ‘Please excuse me.’
He shook his head, then stood aside, half in and out of the bothy. She pushed past but suddenly his arm came up, creating a barrier. His voice was hoarse as he shouted, ‘You never ask me to excuse you, Evie Anston, do you hear me? You never have to ask anyone to excuse you. You ask for help, that’s what you do. You could have called, I would have come. How dare anyone hurt you? How dare he lay his hands on you?’ Then his arms were round her, at last they were round her, and he was speaking into her hair. ‘I’ll kill him, I’ll bloody well kill him if he ever comes near you again.’
Her bicycle fell against her and slid to the ground as she lifted her arms and held him, feeling safe for the first time since Roger. Simon kissed her then, on her forehead and cheek but not her mouth, and she was glad because even though it was Simon, all she saw was Roger.
The meeting was under way by the time Evie and Grace Manton arrived, and by then they were on first-name terms. The doors were unlocked to their coded knock. Rat-a-tat. Rat-a-tat. It was locked after them, ‘To repel boarders,’ the doorkeeper whispered, grinning. They tiptoed to the back row. A young woman was onstage talking of the strength of the female sex, the need for their vote in order to help shape the country, and annotating the price women had so far paid. They heard how the speaker had been arrested and imprisoned along with many others, after heckling and throwing bricks through shop windows. They heard how one of her friends had even put a burning rag into a post-office letter box. She paced the stage and told how though the Pankhursts’ campaign of damage had created harsher sentences it had also driven Asquith to reconsider the question of votes for women.
Grace murmured, ‘How pleasant to have such a smart hat. Ostrich feathers, eh? I suspect it cost more than a worker would pay to keep his family for a month.’ The woman next to her swung round, surprise showing on her lined and weary face. ‘More, I reckon. It’s said that unlike her sister and mother Sylvia Pankhurst is on the side of the workers. She’s got her priorities right.’
The applause was polite, and their chairwoman took the stage and announced that a member of the Liberal Party would be talking in Newcastle to support the People’s Budget. ‘We must go, we must heckle and disrupt. We must insist on the vote before taxes. I have chalked on the board the time of the train we will take and we need as many of you as possible. I know all the excuses – you would lose your jobs, your husbands, your children, but think of the cause, think of the women coming after you.’ Some women were stamping their feet, cheering, clapping.
Some of those towards the back were not, including Grace and Evie, and their new friend, Betty Clark. Grace muttered, ‘I daresay she doesn’t need to work, never has, never will. What’s going wrong here, we’re losing our way aren’t we?’
Mrs Dale, the newly appointed chairwoman, waved the hall to silence. ‘I invite comments from the audience.’
One by one, women stood and agreed with Mrs Dale. Grace whispered, ‘Will you or I risk getting hung and stand up and say what we think?’
Evie smiled. ‘I will. The parson might not like me taking you home with a rope round your neck.’
But then someone from the front of the audience stood, and Mrs Dale waved for silence again. It wasn’t until she began to speak that they realised it was Lady Veronica. Evie gripped Grace’s arm. ‘She mustn’t see me, I’ll be dismissed.’ Grace said, ‘Shh.’
Lady Veronica was saying, ‘It’s irresponsible to take this attitude. How does it show that we are worthy of the vote? We need to give more to the poor, we should concentrate on that and support Lloyd George, not disrupt . . .’ The hall erupted with boos and some cheers, all of which drowned out the rest of her words. Evie stood up to see better but Lady Veronica was being pulled down by someone sitting next to her. Who? They peered but couldn’t see.
Grace pulled Evie down too, saying, ‘I saw her here once but thought she was on a fishing trip, something to tell her friends, something to laugh about. We were polite and neither of us ‘recognised’ the other. We need to get you out before she sees you, but isn’t she magnificent?’ She resumed clapping and cheering, and Evie too. In fact, all the back row were clamouring their support. Evie shouted above the melee, ‘Shouldn’t she have a chaperone? What on earth would her family say?’
Mrs Dale and the committee, ranged on chairs at the rear of the stage, were appealing for calm, hushing with their hands as though the suffragettes were a pack of rampaging hounds, and perhaps we are, Evie thought, starting to laugh at the absurdity of it all.
Grace was still clapping, her eyes alight, her face flushed. She said, ‘Perhaps she does have one, but not the sort of which Lady B would approve. A friend perhaps? I am just so surprised at her, but why, when Miss Wainton was such a supporter of women’s votes? I should have realised.’
Evie wished she’d met Miss Wainton. Easterleigh Hall must have been a happier place in her time. It was then the first brick came through a window, with a burst of sound and crashing of glass. It silenced the women. The brick had hit a woman sitting two seats away from Evie. There was a great pounding at the door, and the yelling of men. For a moment Evie couldn’t think or react, and it seemed it was the same for everyone. Then chairs scraped. Women moved. Jeers were heard. Another brick crashed through a window, this time nearer to the front. More glass, more screams. Now the women were rushing, but not to any one point. They were milling, panicking.
Mrs Dale called, ‘Back exit. Make for the back exit.’
It wasn’t the first time a meeting had been invaded, which was why the doors were always locked and no hall would be booked unless it had a rear exit. It was the first time for Evie, though, and for a moment she could do nothing but stare helplessly as the bricks came thick and fast. ‘To the rear,’ Grace shouted, then the doors cracked open and men roared in, red-faced from the booze, their scarves tied at their necks, their caps cockeyed on their heads, racing for the women who scattered, shouting now, not screaming, throwing chairs in the way of the men, and then stampeding in a body to the exit, those that could. Groups were cut off, surrounded.
Evie and Grace raced through a gap with Betty Clark but Evie saw Lady Veronica over to the left, near the stage in the path of a mob whose fists were flying. ‘Mucky buggers,’ Evie shouted above the noise. ‘We need to get her out, we need to keep her anonymous. Think if the Bastard got to hear of it.’
Grace took a moment to take in the situation while Betty kept on towards the rear, then Evie was forcing her way back against the tide. Grace joined her and together they stepped over fallen chairs, discarded bags, all the while being pushed, shoved and knocked by fleeing women and jeering men. The sound seemed almost to drown out thought and they acted by instinct. Bricks were still flying through the windows, and they dodged them as glass showered down and was crunched underfoot.
Lady Veronica was moving forward now, pulling the speaker along. Their hats were lopsided, their feathers flapping uselessly. Evie and Grace stared at one another, unable to accept that Brampton’s daughter was with this girl who’d just spoken about being imprisoned for her views. ‘If her father knew, he’d strangle her with his bare hands,’ Grace shouted against the noise.
‘Aye, but she spoke against her.’ Evie’s reply was lost as a man grabbed her coat, throwing her off balance, wielding a pick in his other hand. Evie felt herself being wrenched to the ground. His breath was foul in her face and heavy with beer. He was no pitman for there were no blue scars, no staining of the skin. Grace was beating his back. He loosened his grip. Evie scrambled to her feet, stamping on his boots, but they were steel-capped. He kicked at her, catching her shin. The pain took her breath away, but only for a moment, for then she went for his eyes with her nails and he swore, swinging the pick at her, but Grace grabbed his arm. Evie wrenched the pick from him. It was too heavy and whacked into the floor. She wrenched it up by the head, jabbing at his belly, taking the wind out of him. He groaned and dropped.
Grace laughed, wild and high. ‘I should offer the other cheek but instead I want to slap his.’ She gestured Evie onwards, pointing towards Lady Veronica, who had been separated from her friend by a stream of women powering towards the front entrance now; all the men were within the hall, it seemed, and heading towards the rear exit. Some women had picked up chairs and were attacking the men, who were backing towards the stage, their arms up, shielding themselves.
Lady Veronica was hatless, her fair hair awry. Evie clung to her pick, holding the head and wielding the handle, jabbing a way clear towards her. Grace had grabbed a chair and was stabbing like a lion-tamer. They seized Lady Veronica, who was now swinging a chair at the men. Grace shouted, ‘Leave it now. Come out. You mustn’t be recognised.’
Lady Veronica’s eyes were wild and she pulled free of Grace, who grabbed and shook her. ‘It’s me, Grace Manton. Come, now.’
At last the wildness cleared and the young woman nodded. ‘You’re here?’ ‘Not for long,’ Grace yelled as they were jostled by two women who were beating at the brawny hands that had captured them by their skirts. Grace led as they fought their way to the front exit, Evie keeping her face turned away. Lady Veronica was unlikely to recognise her anyway, hidden in the pantry as she’d been while the siblings scoffed cakes. One of the women in front called, ‘The journalists are here, and the police. Cover your faces.’
Lady Veronica looked half mad with excitement and fear. Evie saw her reach up to find her hat gone, and now fear won out. She hesitated. Evie snatched off her own and pulled her shawl over her head, half hiding her face. She took her hat to Lady Veronica and pulled it low over her brow. Her friend had caught up with them, also hatless, and placed herself at the front. ‘Walk behind me. I don’t mind the publicity, it helps the cause.’
Together they pushed and shoved out into the early evening air. Evie and Grace flanked Lady Veronica, jostling through the jeering crowd. Evie called out to the police, ‘You should be in there, arresting the slecky beggars, not outside where it’s canny and safe, man. It could be your mam in there.’
One laughed, and struck her with his baton. ‘My mam’s got more sense.’ Evie braced, Grace tugged her on. ‘No, we need to get away from here.’
There was a blur as a woman hurled herself at the policeman on Evie’s right. It was Lady Veronica’s friend, and she left Lady Veronica exposed. Cameras were flashing. Evie pulled the girl’s hat down harder and dragged her through the melee. An egg burst on her cheek, some man stuck out his foot. She jumped. Grace took over, charging the men, catching up with a group of women and staying in their wake. Finally they were through and out into the dark street. It seemed that silence fell. Utter silence. Evie stepped back out of sight.
Grace was asking the whereabouts of her Ladyship’s carriage. ‘The groom is waiting at the Red Lion stables. He thinks Lady Margaret and I are visiting with friends of Lady Esther.’ Lady Veronica’s voice was shaking.
Grace took her into the stables, but Evie remained on the road to avoid the groom. She wiped the egg from her face. ‘By, I could have had that for my breakfast,’ she said aloud but couldn’t smile.
The trip home was quiet except when, soft-voiced, they talked of how women were hated. How, even within the group, they disagreed.
Evie’s shin was hurting badly by the time Grace dropped her at the crossroads. She rode her bicycle back to the bothy and slowly dragged her way up the path, reaching the vegetable-garden wall, and then felt an arm around her. ‘Busy day, bonny lass.’ It was Simon and he kissed her hair as she described what had happened, but did not mention Lady Veronica. It was best that no one else knew.