Standing in the shadows on the landing, Kyla heard the old butler shuffling over the hall to the front door.
She had been waiting for some time.
Now at last the bell had rung and he had come as raidly as he could from the pantry.
She knew that he could not move quickly because he had arthritis in his ankles.
He had hoped when her father died that he would be retired on a pension. He was in fact provided for in her father’s will, but her stepmother had insisted that old Dawkins stay on.
It was not that she had any affection for him but she knew well that she would not find another butler as well up in his duties so cheaply.
Stumbling a little because the hall was only dimly lit, Dawkins opened the front door and let in a man.
“You have been a long time,” he said in a disagreeable voice.
“I’m sorry, sir,” Dawkins replied, “but it is quite a way from the pantry and I’m not as young as I used to be.”
George Hunter, who Kyla knew was always rude to the servants, did not answer him.
He merely threw his hat down on a chair and walked without being announced into the sitting room.
He closed the door sharply behind him and, as Dawkins went back to the pantry, Kyla tiptoed down the stairs in her stockinged feet.
She crossed the hall without making a sound and, reaching the door of the sitting room, she bent down to listen intently at the keyhole.
Lady Shenley had also been waiting but much more comfortably in an armchair with a glass of brandy beside her.
When the door opened and George Hunter came in, she sprang to her feet with a cry.
“How could you have been so long?”
“I am sorry, Sybil,” George Hunter replied, “but the man I wanted to see was in Court and then I had to take him out to dinner and fill him up with wine before he would tell me what I wanted to know.”
“That is what I am waiting for, George,” Sybil Shenley said, “and, of course, you.”
She put her arms round his neck and he kissed her rather roughly.
Then, putting her aside, he went to the grog table in a corner of the room and poured himself out a large brandy.
Sybil Shenley was watching him closely.
It was obvious that she was impatient for him to come back to her side to tell her what she so wanted to know.
George Hunter, however, drank quite a lot of the brandy before he finally threw himself down in a chair.
It was on the other side of the fireplace and he stretched out his legs.
“I am damned tired, if you want to know,” he said. “Hanging about a Law Court, where there is nowhere to sit, is not exactly a picnic.”
“I was afraid you would be delayed,” Sybil said. “But now you have seen this Counsel, who is supposed to be so clever. What did he say?”
George Hunter took another gulp of brandy and then he started slowly,
“He told me that there was no chance in Hell of your breaking the Will and, as long as there is a Lord Shenley in existence, the money is his for life.”
He paused for a moment and then went on,
“In the event of his death, without leaving an heir, everything goes to the girl.”
Sybil Shenley gave a cry of horror.
“Is that true? Is there really no way out?”
George Hunter shook his head.
“None at all, unless the boy dies and the girl is disposed of.”
There was a long poignant silence.
The silence seemed almost to vibrate round and round the room.
Then Sybil Shenley muttered,
“I suppose, although it is unpleasant, that is what we shall have to do.”
George Hunter sat up in his chair.
“What are you talking about, Sybil, or are you joking?”
“I am not joking,” Sybil Shenley replied, “for I have no intention of being a pauper or living on the charity of my stepchildren.”
“You are their legal Guardian until they reach the age of twenty-one, which, where Terry is concerned, will not be for many years.”
“You have not read the Will as carefully as I have,” Sybil Shenley snapped. “There are Trustees to interfere, all tiresome men whom my husband trusted. One of those, as you well know, is the Solicitor.”
There was silence and then George Hunter asked,
“And what do you intend to do about it?”
“What you have already told me,” Sybil Shenley said. “The boy will have an unfortunate accident and we can marry the girl off. What is the name of that Lord you told me about who has a passion for virgins?”
“He could not marry her,” George Hunter pointed out. “He has a wife.”
Sybil Shenley shrugged her shoulders.
“Then she can be his mistress.”
“I should imagine that, seeing that Lord Frome is such a very unpleasant chap, she will refuse.”
Sybil Shenley laughed.
“Really, George, you are so naїve. You don’t suppose that I shall ask the girl’s approval to marry her to anyone who I think is suitable?”
She paused and, as George Hunter did not speak, she carried on,
“You always underrate my intelligence. I know where Madam Bassett, who keeps that ‘House of Pleasure’ at the corner of Leicester Square, buys the drugs that she gives the girls when they first enter her establishment.”
“How the hell did you find that out?” George Hunter asked in an amused voice.
“I patronise the chemist where she goes for a reason of my own,” Sybil Shenley replied. “And while I was talking to him, Madam came in. She asked him for what she wanted in a whisper, but I am very sharp of hearing.”
“I must admit, Sybil, that you never miss a trick,” George Hunter declared.
“A nice mess we would both be in if I did,” Sybil Shenley sneered.
She thought for a moment before she added,
“That tiresome girl, Kyla, will take enough of the drug to make her amenable and when she does not know if it is Christmas or Easter, you can take her to Lord Frome.”
“It is certainly a good idea,” George Hunter said, “and I will see to it that Frome pays up handsomely for the privilege.”
“Of course” Sybil Shenley agreed, “and that leaves us with the boy.”
“I am not doing anything,” George Hunter stipulated firmly, “that could mean ending up on the gallows.”
“Of course not,” Sybil Shenley agreed. “You know, dearest, that I have no wish to lose you.”
“Then just be very careful in what you are planning where the boy is concerned,” George Hunter said sternly. “Remember he is now Lord Shenley and people have a nasty habit of keeping their eyes on a young Lord even if he is only eight years old.”
“That is exactly what makes it very much easier,” Sybil Shenley explained. “Small boys climb up on roofs and it is very easy to slip over a parapet. They also swim in lakes or fall into them from leaky canoes. Really, George, you should learn to use your imagination.”
“It is not as active as yours,” George Hunter admitted, “and, quite frankly, you make me nervous.”
He finished his brandy, rose from the chair and walked over to the table to refill his glass.
Then he stood in front of the fireplace. There was no fire, but it was filled with flowers because it was summer.
Slowly, as if he was thinking everything through, he said again,
“You are making me feel nervous and we must consider it all very carefully before we do anything.”
He drew in his breath before he went on,
“Quite a number of people will think it damned strange if Terry has an accident and Kyla takes up a life of sin with that dissolute Frome.”
“Really, George, you are being positively ridiculous,” Sybil Shenley exclaimed. “You don’t suppose I have not thought of that?”
She gave a haughty laugh before she went on,
“Of course you will have to suggest to Frome when you hand the girl over to him and God knows, she is very much more attractive than the Cyprians and milkmaids with whom he usually spends his time that he must take her to France or some other place where no one will ask questions.”
“You are making it sound easy,” George Hunter said in an irritated tone. “But Kyla has a will of her own as I learnt when she slapped my face.”
“As I will slap it if I find you playing about with her again,” Sybil Shenley said sharply.
“I was only giving her a fatherly kiss because she was unhappy about the death of the old man,” George Hunter said defensively.
“There is nothing fatherly about you,” Sybil Shenley retorted. “You keep your hands and your lips to yourself or rather for me. Otherwise I will not pay your debts and the duns will be after you.”
“All right, all right,” George Hunter said. “I have the message and I will do what you tell me about the girl. But I warn you, the boy is going to be much more difficult.”
“Not if we are sensible, George,” Sybil Shenley said. “We will go to the country at the end of the week and by that time I shall have decided whether I shall buy a horse, which is guaranteed to kick him off or whether, as I have already suggested, he explores the roof and accidentally falls off it.”
She appeared to be thinking before she continued,
“Alternatively he can drown in the lake. There is no reason for you to be involved in any of that.”
“Thank Heavens for small mercies,” George Hunter said. “But, if you ask me, I think it is too soon. Let’s wait for a month or two and see what we can sell in the meantime.”
Sybil Shenley gave a shriek.
“Sell?” she said. “There is nothing worth selling that is not entailed to that tiresome little boy. I have gone through the inventory word by word. The only things that are exempt are not worth a five shilling piece.”
“Are you sure of that?” George Hunter asked. “I was going to ask you tonight for some money.”
“I remembered that,” Sybil Shenley answered. “I have fifty pounds for you upstairs, but it may be difficult to get much more for a week or so.”
George Hunter scratched the side of his face.
“Fifty quid is better than nothing,” he sighed. “The tradesmen are being most unpleasant and so is my landlord for that matter. Why the hell cannot I move in here?”
“Because I don’t want to be talked about,” she explained. “You know as well as I do that the Beau Ton would be horrified at my taking a lover so soon after poor old Arthur’s death.”
She spoke in an affected tone and George Hunter laughed.
“Poor Arthur! He never had the slightest idea of what was going on under his very nose.”
“I don’t suppose that everyone else was quite so blind,” Sybil Shenley warned him. “As I have told you, George, it is sensible for us to lie low and for me to be a mourning widow until it is possible for us to be married.”
“I am damned if I am going to be barred from coming with you to the country,” George insisted.
‘That is different,” Sybil Shenley said. “Of course you will come with me to Shenley House. I have asked two other people to make it a party.”
“Who are they?” George Hunter demanded.
“The half-witted Lady Briggs, who is always fawning on me,” Sybil Shenley replied, “and her husband, who is a bore but very respectable.”
“Oh, my God!” George Hunter exclaimed. “Do we have to have them?”
“It is so essential that they should be there as eyewitnesses to the tragedy that will occur when small children have no sense and are quite incapable of looking after themselves.”
“I see the point,” George Hunter muttered.
“Of course, as we are both very devoted to dear little Terry, I shall cry on Lord Briggs’s shoulder while you weep on Violet’s.”
“I shall have to be blind drunk to do that,” he retorted.
“Well, there is plenty of good claret in the cellar,” Sybil Shenley informed him.
“That, at least, is some consolation,” George replied. “And talking of drink, let me fill up your glass.”
“There is a bottle of champagne in the ice cooler” Sybil said. “I was only calming my nerves with brandy until I knew what you had found out.”
“Which is damned all!” George growled.
He walked towards the table in the corner.
On reaching it he started to pour the champagne, which was open in the ice cooler, into two glasses.
“Now that problem is settled, George, dear,” Sybil Shenley said in a cooing voice, “we can enjoy ourselves.”
George Hunter handed her a glass of champagne.
“Let us hope this calms my nerves,” he said, “but I have an uncomfortable feeling, Sybil, that you thrive on crime.”
“That is a very unkind thing to say,” Sybil complained, but she did not sound angry.
“I have been wondering,” George replied, “if poor old Arthur really died a natural death. It certainly puzzled the doctors as to why he should pop off at sixty.”
“Then let it puzzle you too,” Sybil said. “All you have to concern yourself with is me and me and me! I love you, George. If I have ever done anything wrong, it is because I love you.”
George drank down half his glass of champagne.
“I suppose that is the truth,” he said. “All right, come here. Come here!”
He put out his left arm and Sybil Shenley moved close to him, lifting her red lips to his.
As he kissed her, Kyla, outside the door, straightened herself.
She had heard enough.
The sooner she was back in the safety of her bedroom the better.
She was, however, not so foolish as to hurry.
She now moved on tiptoe just in case by some mischance her stepmother and her lover should hear her.
She had been able to hear quite clearly everything that they had said.
Only as she crept upstairs did the horror of it sweep over her like a tidal wave.
How could anyone be so wicked, so cruel and so brutal?
How could her stepmother plan to kill her brother Terry and to force her into the arms of a ghastly old man, who she knew was a byword for debauchery?
She reached the top landing.
She was just going to her own room when she remembered that her stepmother had said that there was fifty pounds waiting for George Hunter upstairs.
She hesitated.
Then she told herself that if she was to save Terry and herself she had to have money.
Although she had been anticipating that something like this would happen, she did not have enough in her possession.
She slipped into her stepmother’s room, knowing that there would be no maid on duty.
When the champagne was finished, they would both come up the stairs and drunkenly fall into bed. It was what they had done almost every night since her father’s death.
The first time was the night when they had returned from the country after the funeral.
Kyla thought that she must be imagining the sounds that they made stumbling along the passage.
Then the door of the bedroom closed and she knew that they were both inside.
She had lain in bed awake, shocked and horrified that even her stepmother, whom she had always hated, should behave in such an outrageous fashion.
Then, before five o’clock when the housemaids came on duty, she had heard George leaving.
He was moving more quietly now because he was obviously sobering up.
He went downstairs and let himself out of the front door just as dawn was breaking.
Then she went into what had been her mother’s bedroom.
She was trying not to think that the woman who had married her father would soon be occupying it with a despicable man who was prepared to go to any lengths for money.
She guessed that the fifty pounds that her stepmother had for him would still be in her handbag.
Sybil would have gone to the Bank when she was out driving today and cashed a cheque.
It was not at all difficult to find the handbag, the lady’s maid had put it tidily away into a beautiful French chest of drawers inlaid with ivory.
Kyla opened it and saw that the money had been placed in one of the little canvas bags provided by the Bank.
She drew the notes out, each one ten pounds in value.
She put the money down and then went over to the French secrétaire in the corner of the bedroom.
It was where her stepmother sometimes wrote her letters.
Kyla took from it several pieces of writing paper, which was engraved with her father’s crest.
She folded them neatly to the same size as the banknotes and put them into the bag.
With any luck, she thought, George Hunter would be too tired when he was ready to leave to examine very closely what he had been given.
It would be later in the day that the bomb would go off and by that time she and Terry must be far away.
She closed the drawer, picked up the five banknotes and crossed the passage to her own bedroom.
There she began to pack one of her suitcases.
She had suspected several days earlier that her stepmother would somehow contrive to be rid of her and she could not imagine how it could be done.
She had had the idea that she might be flung out of the house and sent to a Nunnery or even shipped abroad.
Now she realised in all its gory what her stepmother really intended.
She realised that she would rather die than be touched by Lord Frome whether she was drugged or not.
His outrageous behaviour had shocked even the lax and raffish Society that was centred round the King.
George IV might be a rake and continuously obsessed by one mistress after another but at least he was known as ‘the First Gentleman of Europe’.
Lord Frome was a very different proposition.
Although he was usually spoken about in whispers, Kyla, without really listening, knew that he had committed unforgivable crimes.
He had pursued young women, whether they were milkmaids on his estate or very young girls who were brought from the country by the procurers of the Houses of Pleasure.
They deceived the poor girls, who were in reality little more than children and they came to London believing that there was an excellent job for them in the house of a member of the Nobility.
That was the only true part of the story. Once they were in the clutches of Lord Frome, there was no going back to the country or anywhere else except for the River Thames.
‘How could anybody be as wicked as my stepmother,’ Kyla often asked herself, ‘and yet clever enough to have managed to take Mama’s place?’
Her father had been broken-hearted when her mother had died.
Yet he had been beguiled, allured and finally possessed by Sybil.
Admittedly she was very attractive, there was no doubt about that.
Now, after what she had heard her say downstairs, Kyla was deeply suspicious.
She had not only encouraged her father to drink much more than he ever had before but perhaps she had also used drugs.
She had certainly made him seem as weak as water in her hands.
Maybe it was the drugs that George Hunter had referred to when he said that the doctors were astonished that her father had died when he was so comparatively young.
‘She murdered him!’ Kyla cried in her heart and wanted to confront her stepmother with the devastating truth.
Then she knew that she must not think of anything else but saving Terry.
She quickly began to pack a light bag as well as her suitcase
It was little more than a strong basket which she had brought down from the attics two days earlier.
She put into it some light easy to carry dresses that were simple.
They were not in the least like the gowns she had bought the previous year in which to make her debut.
When she had finished taking what she wanted from out of the wardrobe and the chest of drawers, she went to her dressing table.
She collected the jewellery that was hers and what was left of her mother’s.
There was, in fact, very little and Sybil had rifled the safe almost immediately after she was married to Kyla’s father.
She had removed the necklaces, the tiara, the bracelets, brooches and rings, which had been kept in the country.
However, when they returned to London, Kyla, by being quick-witted, had managed to get hold of what had belonged to her mother before Sybil was aware of where it was.
Sybil had expected that the jewels would be in a safe in the pantry as they had been in the country.
Kyla’s mother, however, had a small safe in her bedroom and she had kept in it all the jewels that she wore every day.
They were by no means as valuable as what she called laughingly her ‘State Jewels’.
But they were very beautiful and they had been presents for her birthday and Christmas from a husband who loved her adoringly.
Kyla had already packed them up and now she put them in her bag.
Then she hesitated.
At the back of a drawer there was a small case that had not been included with the rest.
She opened it and inside, lying against the velvet, was her mother’s Wedding ring.
She slipped it over the third finger of her left hand.
As she did so, she felt that her mother was prompting her and telling her what to do.
She looked round, thinking that there was nothing else for her to take with her.
Then she went to the door and, as she reached it, she heard the sounds of two people coming up the stairs, making a great deal of noise as they did so.
She knew that it was her stepmother and George Hunter, drunk as they usually were.
They thought that because they were not speaking, she would not be aware of what they were doing.
They reached Sybil’s bedroom and Kyla heard them closing the door.
This was a dangerous moment.
If Sybil now going to give George Hunter the money that she had procured for him, he might be aware that it was not in the little bag.
As she listened, Kyla could hear a sudden ripple of laughter.
She thought that she heard a thump, as if too unsteady to go any farther, they had thrown themselves down on the bed.
She felt a shudder go through her and she knew at once that she must wait a little while longer until they were asleep.
She moved back into her own bedroom, opening the drawers and the cupboards silently.
She was making certain that she had forgotten nothing that she would need.
She put the fifty pounds into her own handbag and with it there was the money that she had been saving up ever since her father’s death.
She had known instinctively that the hatred that her stepmother had for her would make it impossible for them to live in the same house.
She had been desperately worried, if she was to be sent away, as to what would happen to Terry.
She had never in her wildest dreams imagined anything so appalling as her stepmother contriving to kill him.
But she had known after the funeral, when her father’s Solicitor had read the Will, that her stepmother was seething with anger.
Lord Shenley had made it very clear that everything he possessed went with the title.
It was not an old one as titles go and in fact he had been the third Lord Shenley and now Terry was the fourth.
Before that the Shenleys, who had played their patriotic part as Statesmen and soldiers, had received various honours.
Amongst them at the beginning of the last century was a Baronetcy.
It was because Kyla’s great-grandfather had been a Statesman and of personal service to King George III that he had been made a Peer so he could legislate in the House of Lords.
He had also been extremely rich, but it was most unfortunate that during the War against Napoleon, as had happened with so many families, the estate had ceased to be profitable and much money had been lost in Bank failures.
There were indeed the valuable contents of Shenley House in the country, which had been collected by the family over many centuries. But these were all entailed onto the heirs to the title.
Unfortunately, because a number of Shenleys had been killed both at sea with Nelson and on the battlefield with Wellington, there was no heir after Terry.
Sybil had been left an allowance by her father, so it had never struck Kyla for one instant that she would be greedy enough to try to obtain everything that was Terry’s by right of birth.
He was a dear little boy who had arrived when Lord Shenley and his wife had almost given up any hope of having an heir.
Kyla, whom they adored, was then ten and Lady Shenley said that it had happened only because she had prayed at a sacred place on the Continent. It was a shrine where women who desired children went.
When she had returned to England, she had become aware that, like a miracle, she was carrying a child.
As if Terry must live up to the way that he had been born, he was a beautiful quiet well-behaved baby.
Everyone loved him instinctively and he was such a sweet little boy that Kyla adored her brother.
She thought that only someone who was utterly wicked could think of murdering him.
It must have been her mother and her father protecting those they loved which made her afraid for the future.
Ever since her father fell ill, she had been turning over in her mind what would happen if he died.
When he did die, from some strange illness that the doctors could not diagnose, she had been desperately afraid.
Now she knew that she had every reason to be.
It must have been God’s protection that came from above that had prepared her for this moment of horror.
She knew that she somehow had to fend for herself and most importantly for Terry.
She waited until at least half-an-hour had passed by and then very very softly she crept along the passage.
Terry was sleeping three or four rooms away in the one that he always occupied when they came to London.
She went in to find that the curtains were pulled back.
She could see by the light of the moon and the stars that he was fast asleep in his small bed.
She did not wake him, but went to the wardrobe to take out the clothes that he should wear now. She also took from the drawers the things that she must pack for him.
They were not many, because she knew that they would have to carry their belongings.
It would be a mistake to have anything too heavy, which could hinder their movements.
For Terry she chose some shirts and a spare pair of trousers, colourful socks and a pair of comfortable shoes.
She packed them all in another convenient bag that she had hidden behind the wardrobe where the housemaids had not seen it.
Then at last she sat down on the side of the bed and said quietly,
“Wake up, Terry.”
He tinned over, as if he had no wish to open his eyes, and she said again,
“Wake up, Terry! It is important, darling.”
This roused him and he then said in a sleepy tone,
“What is the matter? Is it morning?”
“No, darling, it is still night, but we have to go away.”
Terry now woke up completely.
“Go away? What do you mean, Kyla?”
“We have to leave this house. I did not tell you before, but Stepmama is plotting terrible things against us and we have to escape.”
Terry sat up in his bed.
“How are we going to do that?” he asked.
Now there was a note of excitement in his voice and Kyla knew that he thought it was all an adventure.
“Everyone is asleep,” she said, “and so I want you to get up and put on the clothes I have laid out for you. Don’t make a noise and don’t speak. When I come back, we will creep down the stairs and be far away before Stepmama wakes up.”
“Where are we going?” Terry asked.
“I will tell you later,” Kyla replied. “Now do exactly what I say.”
She paused before she added,
“I just don’t want to frighten you, but it would be a disaster and very very dangerous if Stepmama found out what we were doing and then stopped us.”
Terry nodded as if he understood.
“I will be very quiet,” he promised.
“Then get dressed quickly,” Kyla said, “while I fetch my bag from my room.”
She knew that he would do as he was told and she bent and kissed him on the cheek.
“You will have to be very brave,” she urged, “as Papa would want you to be and, of course, you will have to look after me as I will look after you.”
“I will do that,” Terry said. “Can I have my gun?”
“I have already packed it,” she answered.
Terry smiled.
As he got out of bed, Kyla slipped out through the door and crept back to her own room.
She finished putting on the clothes that she had chosen to travel in.
Then she took out from the wardrobe a cloak that had belonged to her mother and was trimmed with sable.
It had been very expensive and she knew that her stepmother had often looked at it with envious eyes.
But she felt that what she wanted at the moment was to be able to create an impression of someone of importance.
It was too warm at the moment to wear the cloak.
Yet even to carry it would make those people think that she was a Lady of Substance.
She put on an extremely pretty bonnet on which she had added a few feathers to a rather plain trimming.
Taking up her handbag, her gloves and the bag in which she had packed her clothes, she tiptoed out of the room.
She also took the key with her and then locked the door.
Again she was afraid that the sound might be heard.
Then she put the key into her handbag and crept down the passage.
She knew that in the morning, when the maid came to call her and found the door locked, she would think that she wished to sleep late.
She would go away without making any fuss that she could not get into her room.
Her stepmother always slept late until nearly noon, which was not surprising considering how late she went to bed full of alcohol.
‘By the time they find that I am no longer in the house,’ Kyla told herself, ‘Terry and I will be far away!’
At the same time she was praying, praying that there would be no unfortunate mishaps and no unexpected disruption to the plan that was working at full speed in her mind.
She opened the door of Terry’s room and saw that he was ready.
“You have come,” he said in a whisper. “I thought perhaps I had been dreaming.”
“You have not been dreaming,” Kyla said. “Now we start a very big adventure together.”
Terry picked up his bag.
They went out of the room and then down the passage until they came to a secondary staircase that led down to the kitchen quarters.
Kyla knew exactly where the staff would be sleeping.
The only danger on the ground floor was the pantry boy, who slept in the pantry so as to guard the silver in the safe.
As he was small and rather ineffective, she had always thought that any burglar would overpower him easily.
It would have been very much better to have had a dog that barked or an older man with some strength. But it was not her business to interfere with the household.
As they crept past the pantry, they could hear the boy snoring away on his rather hard bed, which folded up into the wall in the daytime.
There was, of course, no one in the kitchen and they passed the scullery and the larder before they reached the back door.
Kyla pulled back the bolts, which made only a little noise.
They then opened the door to the basement with its iron steps that led to the pavement outside.
They were not very wide and Kyla had to carry her bag in front of her while Terry ran up quite easily.
Hill Street was empty at that hour of the morning.
The stars were just beginning to fade overhead and soon the dawn would be breaking to sweep away the sable of the night.
Taking Terry by the hand, Kyla started off at a brisk pace towards the streets that led into Piccadilly.
“Where are we going?” Terry asked her.
It was the first time that he had spoken since they had left his bedroom.
“We are going to the country,” Kyla answered.
“That is good,” Terry said, “but will not Stepmama find us there?”
“We are not going home,” Kyla replied, “that would be too dangerous. We are going to see Nanny.”
“Nanny!” Terry exclaimed. “Where is she?”
“When Nanny last wrote to me, which was at Easter, she was still at Lilliecote Castle.”
“Is it a long way away?” Terry asked.
“I am afraid it is,” Kyla answered, “but Nanny will know what we should do and where we should go. There is no one else we can trust.”
“Are we running away for ever and ever?” Terry enquired.
“We are running away from Stepmama and she must never ever be able to find us,” Kyla said positively.
“She does not like me,” Terry stated. “She said yesterday, when you were not there, that all children are tiresome and that I was one of the worst and I was also ‒ obstructive.”
He stumbled over the word.
Kyla knew exactly what her stepmother had meant by that and what she intended to do about it.
Her fingers tightened on her brother’s.
“You are neither of those things,” she said. “It is only because Stepmama is a wicked woman that she dislikes anyone who is good and you have always been very good, Terry.”
“I have tried to be,” Terry said. “It has not been easy at school.”
He had been at a day school, which was why her stepmother had got rid of Nanny.
There had really been no excuse that Terry was too old to have a Nanny and Kyla had thought that it was actually because Nanny would not allow Sybil to say unkind things about Terry or herself.
Nanny had been with them for over ten years and she had come first to look after Kyla when her own Nanny was too old and wished to retire.
She had then been delighted and thrilled when Terry was born and she had a baby to look after.
She had loved them both and they had loved her.
Kyla had wept bitterly when her stepmother had sent Nanny away.
“Now that Terry goes to a school,” she had pronounced in a lofty tone, “he has no need for a Nanny and would doubtless be teased for having one.”
She paused a moment and had then gone on,
“Now that Kyla has a lady’s maid, it is not good for her always to be mooning about the nursery as if she was not grown up.”
Ever since Nanny had gone, she had written to them regularly and had sent them small presents.
Kyla knew well that the one person who would indeed hide them and, if necessary defy her stepmother in her plan to kill them, would be Nanny.
‘If she cannot have us,’ she told herself, ‘she will find us somewhere safe to go.’
They walked on and at last they came to the Livery stables in Piccadilly.
Kyla, holding her fur-trimmed cape tightly so that it could be seen, swept in with what she hoped was a grand air.
As it was so early in the morning, there was only a sleepy boy on duty.
“Will you please fetch the proprietor,” Kyla demanded in a commanding voice.
“’E be asleep, ma’am,” the boy replied.
“Then go and wake him up! Tell him that the Countess of Strafford wishes to speak to him immediately.”
The boy was clearly impressed with the title.
“I’ll go tell him, ma’am,” he said and hurried away into the darkness.
As they waited, dawn broke over London.
They could see a long line of stalls where the Livery horses were housed.
Carriages of different sorts and makes stood in the centre of the yard.
Nearly ten minutes passed before the proprietor, looking somewhat tousled and heavy-eyed, came hurrying towards them.
“’Tis early, my Lady, for anyone to be callin’,” he said, “and I was havin’ a bit of shut-eye.”
“I quite understand,” Kyla replied, “but I have a very urgent call to go to the country and my own coachman has unfortunately been given leave of absence to attend a funeral.”
“That be unfortunate, my Lady,” the proprietor commented.
“What I require,” Kyla continued, “is two of your best horses and a post chaise that is light and will go swiftly. My son and I have to be in Berkhamsted with all possible speed.”
“I’ll do me best, my Lady,” the proprietor said, “but it’ll cost you more than if you ’ad your own carriage.”
He said this as a joke and Kyla did not laugh but merely went on sharply,
“I want your best horses.”
“I’ll see to that,” the Proprietor answered.
He hurried away and Kyla thought that she had been very lucky.
The money that her stepmother had intended to give to George Hunter would now pay for everything she required.
After all it really belonged to Terry, but she doubted if her stepmother would appreciate that.
The two horses she saw were young and they looked fresh.
They were put between the shafts of a light up to date post-chaise.
A driver was hurriedly awakened and appeared yawning.
He announced, in a voice that Kyla could not help overhearing, that he was hungry and did not like driving before he had his breakfast.
“I daresay ’er Ladyship’ll want to stop for a snack,” the proprietor suggested.
“I ’opes so,” the driver replied.
He climbed into the driving seat and the carriage drew up in front of Kyla.
Then the proprietor asked her for what she knew was quite a large sum even for a good post-chaise.
“I certainly hope,” she said a little scathingly, “that your horses are as good as the price you value them at.”
“You can be certain of that, my Lady,” the Proprietor said confidently.
Kyla paid him the money and let him see, the roll of notes that she had taken it from.
He bowed respectfully and, after their bags had been strapped on behind, they drove off.
Only as the horses next turned into Piccadilly did Kyla think, with an elation that was irrepressible, that they had won, at least for the moment.
They had got away!
They had escaped!
Unless they were very unlucky, their stepmother would find it impossible to trace them.
‘Thank You, God, thank You,’ she said in her heart and added,
‘I hope Mama and Papa are looking after us. It is going to be very difficult to manage on our own.’