Her mind spun, craving the pieces of the puzzle she was missing.
As they neared the entry hall, the squire himself came around the corner, tall and brooding. Elsie was so involved in her own mind that he startled her, eliciting a small gasp from her lips, which she quickly shut. Decorum mandated she not speak to her
Unfortunately, Squire Hughes did not ignore her. He stopped abruptly, eyeing Elsie as if he were some bull and she a red flag. His fiery gaze flew to Mr. Parker. “What on earth are you doing with your time, Parker? Who is this woman, and why is she in my house?”
Anger burned up Elsie’s neck. She bit down so many heated retorts her teeth hurt. At least he didn’t seem to recognize her from their brief meeting in London.
“Just an aide to Mr. Ogden, who is doing fine work on your inner courtyard. I’m seeing her out now. I do believe Markson was looking for you regarding your luncheon.”
Squire Hughes’s lips curved in a most unpleasant fashion. Instead of answering, the despicable man merely pushed past the both of them and continued on his ornery way.
“My apologies.” Mr. Parker crossed the entryway and took hold of the door handle. “The squire is very . . . old fashioned.” There was a glint in his eyes Elsie couldn’t quite interpret. “Please do send my regards to young Emmeline, hmm?”
She paused a step from the door frame, taking in Mr. Parker’s aging but wise features. “You know Emmeline?”
He smoothed his cravat. “It is my business to know all things Brookley, my dear.” Did he wink, or was there perhaps something in his eye?
Did he know about her? About
Elsie nodded slowly. “Of course. Thank you.”
She walked out, listening for the door to shut behind her. She never heard it click, but when she turned back, it was closed. She paused a moment, studying the front of the house.
Was it a steward’s business to know? And what
Elsie contemplated the questions the entire way home, never once deciding on a definitive answer for any of them.
“It’s been like this a long time . . . years,” Thom Thomas, known locally as Two Thom, held up a small plaster Christus statue in aged hands that trembled ever so slightly. Part of the Christus’s robe had chipped away, and its left hand had snapped clean off. The old farmhand offered a light chuckle. “Since my boy was still at home. He’s the one knocked it off the mantel, you see. We haven’t displayed it since.”
Elsie nodded as she gingerly took the small statue and its severed hand and fit them together. She’d left the shop again that afternoon to pick up a few supplies, hoping to distract herself from overthinking her visit to the squire’s estate. Two Thom had apparently been on his way to the studio when he spied her on the street.
“Should be an easy fix.” She could probably even do the repair herself, but Ogden’s hands were far more practiced than her own. “I don’t think he’d charge more than a shilling or two, and only that because he’ll have to shape the plaster for the robe.”
Two Thom smiled, exposing two gaps in his bottom jaw. “That will do.” He fished two tarnished shillings from his pocket and handed them to her. “She’ll be so surprised. It’s our anniversary next week. Forty-three years.”
He had already mentioned the anniversary, but Elsie smiled. “It’s a very thoughtful thing to do. I’ll carry it like my own babe back to the shop. You can pick it up the day before your celebration, hmm? Or I can deliver it.”
Two Thom shook his head. “I’ll make the walk. I can get away.”
He shook her hand. Elsie took off her gloves and wrapped the plaster pieces in them before nestling them in her basket.
Turning back for home, Elsie slid the shillings into her chatelaine bag, only to have her fingertips brush a folded piece of paper there. Her first thought was that she needed to stop by the post office and post her letter. The second was that she had not written a letter to be posted.
She let the coins slip from her fingers and pinched the paper’s edge, pulling it free. It wasn’t even a full sheet of paper, but a quarter sheet with a silvery hue, folded tightly and sealed with a crescent moon and bird’s foot.
Heart leaping, Elsie whirled around so quickly she nearly swung the plaster Christus right out of her basket. Two Thom had already crossed the road back to Clunwood. But he’d never been near her chatelaine. No one had. And . . . well, he couldn’t be a Cowl himself, unless he was a fantastic actor. Two Thom had lived in Clunwood all his life and was as simple as a man could be. Yet she was certain her chatelaine had been note-free that morning! Where had she gone, besides . . .