Chapter 34
Lydia woke to reality that morning after a dream that was both beautiful and terrible. In it she had been with her son. They were walking, hand in hand, in the sunny orchard at Boughton, talking and laughing. She had bent down and kissed him on the forehead. His eyes were large and brown and his hair tumbled in curls around his moon face. He was just looking up at her when a great shadow blocked out the sun and when they both lifted their gaze a man was standing there, dressed in black. She did not recognize him, but he opened his arms and snatched Richard away. The child screamed. She screamed, too, and her screams woke her. She sat up suddenly and realized that she was in her own bedchamber. Eliza rushed in to find her mistress panting and distressed.
“Your ladyship!” she cried, hurrying over to the bed.
Lydia waved her hand. “A dream, Eliza. A nightmare. All is well.”
The maid looked at her mistress knowingly, aware she had endured the same nightmare at least once every week since her return from London. Although Lydia had not confided in Eliza, she was sure the dream involved Richard. The maid, too, had been suffering since finding her sister dead by the Thames. The image of Agnes lying drowned in Thomas’s arms would remain with her forever. It was another thread of tragedy that seemed to be drawing the two women closer together.
Remembering that Reverend Lightfoot was due to visit the caves that day, Lydia dressed hurriedly. These days she kept her garb as simple as possible. She dispensed with panniers in favor of just a simple underskirt, stays, and a chemise. On her feet she wore her overshoes. The caves were slippery as lard underfoot and her heels could easily get caught in the cracks and crevices in the rock. She had also taken to carrying a fabric bag with a drawstring around its neck. In it she kept items she found essential for her work: a flint for lighting candles, a phial of smelling salts, and sundry other items that were proving so useful to have at hand when caring for the sick.
She found Thomas waiting for her in the hallway and together they walked outside where Lovelock was ready with the carriage. The sun was still blocked out by the veil of fog that hung over the hills and valleys. The fields were now all brown and the carcasses of dead sheep were dotted around. The grain had withered on the stalks and the fruit on the bough.
Lydia frowned. “When will this cloud lift?” she asked, not expecting a reply. “It has been almost seven weeks now.”
“We need the wind to change direction,” replied Thomas. “We need an easterly to blow the fog clear of Europe and out over the Atlantic.”
Half an hour later they arrived at the mouth of the caves. The Reverend Lightfoot was already waiting for them. Cordial greetings were exchanged and after each of them had been given their own lantern, Thomas led the party—Lydia and the vicar, together with two servants—into the rocky passageway. The air was cool but fresh, and they all found themselves eager to fill their lungs.
“Watch your step now,” advised Thomas. “There is an outcrop here.” The vicar was carrying his cane as usual, which was of great service to him, but he failed to duck quickly in time and scraped his head on the rock. He let out a stifled cry.
“I hope you are not hurt, sir?” asked Lydia, rushing to his side.
He managed a dazed smile. “Oh no, indeed. Just a bump,” he replied, rubbing his temple, but Lydia could see his skin had been grazed. His forehead was flecked with blood. “It is indeed narrow in parts,” he remarked, rubbing his forehead. “What if, God forbid, there was a rockfall? There must be another way out in such an event?” There was a note of anxiety in his question.
“There is an escape route,” Thomas replied. “Just beyond the river, on the farther shore. There are steps that lead up to the surface there.”
The Reverend Lightfoot looked satisfied with the answer. “That is good to know,” he said.
They continued to pick their way along the passage, stepping over puddles and loose boulders, until they came to the first chamber. Several oil lamps burned brightly in recesses in the rock, green moss springing up in the pools of light they cast. Wooden screens had been erected across two of the recesses to afford a degree of privacy and a narrow set of shelves contained various medicaments and potions for use by the nurses.
Around the walls, ranged on two neat rows of mattresses, lay a dozen women and children. Most were propped up on pillows or sacks to help their breathing. They were all swathed in thick blankets. A baby was crying in its mother’s arms. An old woman in the middle of a coughing spasm struggled for breath. In the corner a plump nurse was administering physick to a young girl. The constant sound of wheezing and sniffling, punctuated by rasping coughs, filled the chamber.
The clergyman surveyed the scene. “These poor souls must take great comfort from your care, your ladyship,” he told Lydia. “How long do they stay?”
“Until their coughs are sufficiently diminished, sir,” she replied. She did not tell him that only three women and a boy had been discharged so far, even though she knew they should have remained. The truth was that there was not enough space to take all those in need of a refuge from the fog. Only when there was a death could another patient be admitted.
They progressed to the farthest chamber, crossing the water in the rowing boat.
“As you see, sir, there is a constant supply of fresh water,” Thomas pointed out, as the boatman rowed them to the opposite bank.
From there it was just a few more yards to the final chamber, the Inner Temple. The visitor seemed equally impressed with the space that accommodated the men and boys. Here the hacking coughs of the patients reverberated around the smaller space. Another nurse was rubbing an unguent into a man’s chest.
“Oil of camphor,” explained Lydia. “The vapors soothe the airways.”
An elderly man lay groaning in a far corner and a young boy rose from his own palliasse and went over to comfort him. Thomas recognized him immediately by his carrot-colored hair. He smiled at the sight of Will Lovelock, looking much stronger than before.
“You are to be commended, your ladyship,” said the Reverend Lightfoot.
Lydia acknowledged his praise. “It has not been an easy task, but it has certainly saved lives, sir.”
The party returned the way they had come. The Reverend Lightfoot had seemed a little nervous about entering the caves at first, inquiring as he did about procedures in the event of a rockfall. Thomas suspected that he suffered from some sort of phobia when confined in an enclosed space. He had read of such conditions before. Yet as they made their way toward the light at the end of the tunnel, he appeared much more relaxed.
The reverend extended his hand to Thomas. “A most enlightening tour, Dr. Silkstone,” he said.
“I am glad you found it of interest, sir,” replied Thomas.
Lydia, too, received great praise. “The Lord will surely reward you for your good works, your ladyship,” he told her. Perhaps he might even hold a service when he next visited, he suggested. She agreed it would lift spirits and they all parted on amicable terms.
The clergyman returned to his dogcart and Thomas and Lydia watched him drive off.
“You have worked wonders here,” Thomas told Lydia.
She smiled. “It is good to be of use to others.”
He knew that her service to the sick helped her forget her own pain and longing for her missing son, as well as alleviate his own burden. As well as caring for the sick, he had other work to do. Two murders had been committed and, at the moment, it seemed he was the only person in authority anxious to discover the perpetrator.