Read Black Hearts in Battersea Online
Authors: Joan Aiken
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Orphans, #Humorous Stories, #Great Britain, #London (England)
This was true; Simon saw no point in disputing it.
"And that's another reason why Pa was cagging at her," Dido went on. "Acos she'd spent all the housekeeping on Penny's duds and a load of Pictclobbers."
"What are Pictclobbers?" Simon asked, pricking up his ears.
"
I
dunno." Dido was not interested. "They put 'em in the cellar. And now there won't be nothing to eat but lentil bread and fish porridge till Friday fortnit and I can't go to the Fair."
"Would your ma let you go if you had something to wear?"
"She said yes. But she knew I hadn't got nothing, so it was a lot of Habbakuk."
"Oh," said Simon. He reflected. "Well, look, don't be too miserable—I've a friend who might be able to help, she's very clever at making dresses, and perhaps she'd have something of hers that she could alter. I'll ask her tomorrow. So cheer up."
Dido's skinny arms came around his neck in a throttling hug. "
Would
she? Simon, you're a proper nob. I'm sorry I ever put jam on your hair. I think you're a bang-up—
slumdinger!
"
"All right, well, don't get your hopes up too high," he said hastily. "Your ma may not agree, even if I can get something."
"Oh, it's dibs to dumplings she will, if she gets summat for nix," said Dido shrewdly.
"Now you'd better nip back to bed before you get a dusting for being out of your room."
"It's all rug. They're out; Pa's playing his hoboy at Drury Lane and he got tickets for Ma and Aunt Tinty to go tonight."
"Still I expect they'll be in soon; anyway
I
want my sleep."
"Oh, all right, toll-loll," said Dido, whose spirits had risen amazingly. "But I'm nibblish hungry.
I'm fed up
with fish porridge—hateful stuff."
"There's a bit of cheese on the table."
"I've et it."
"Oh, you have, have you? Well, here, take this sausage, and be off, brat, and don't take things that don't belong to you another time."
"Slumguzzle," said Dido impertinently, but she gave him another hug (thereby anointing his hair with sausage) and condescended to leave him in peace.
Just before he went to sleep a drowsy thought flickered through his mind. Dido had said that Mr. Twite was playing his hoboy at Drury Lane.
Drury Lane.
Was not that where the Duke and Duchess and Sophie had met with their misadventure? Was there any connection between the two events?
Next morning, as he ran down the front steps, he saw a small pale face at the downstairs window directing at him a look full of silent appeal. He waved reassuringly but did not stop to speak, as he was late, and, moreover, saw Mrs. Twite approaching with a basket of herrings, presumably for the fish porridge. She gave him a chilly nod, scowled reprovingly at Dido, and passed within. Simon wondered what she would say if she knew Dido had told him that the housekeeping money had been spent on Pictclobbers. What were Pictclobbers, anyway? He was pretty sure they were not coal. Pistols or muskets seemed more likely.
It was a cold, gray November morning, but presently
the sun rose, dispersing the river mists and gilding the last leaves on the trees. Dr. Furrneaux ordered his students outside to "paint hay while ze sun shines," as he put it.
Simon was sitting on the riverbank not far from the academy, hard at work on a water-color sketch of Chelsea Bridge with the dreamlike pink towers of Battersea Castle behind it, when a handsome pleasure barge swept under the bridge, traveling upstream with the tide. It passed close to Simon so that he was able to see the Battersea Arms (two squirrels respecting each other, vert, and az., eating mince pies or) embroidered on the sail.
"Good morning, Simon!" a voice called, and he noticed Sophie leaning over the forward rail. She wore a white dress with red ribbons and carried the usual assortment of needments for the Duchess—a basket of shrimps to feed the gulls, a book, a parasol, a battledore and shuttlecock, and a large bundle of embroidery.
Simon waved back and called, "What time shall you be home? Can I see you this evening?"
"We shan't be late," Sophie answered. "His Grace and my lady are off to Hampton Court to take luncheon with his Majesty, but we shall return directly afterwards because my lady is still tired from last night's adventure. I'll come round to Mr. Cobb's at nine—will you be there?"
"That will do famously" Simon called. The Duke, who, dressed in full court regalia, was steering in the stern, saw him and waved so enthusiastically that he nearly dropped his pocket handkerchief overboard.
The day passed pleasantly in the warm autumn sunshine. At noon the students lit a fire and brewed acorn coffee; later, Dr. Furrneaux came out and criticized their work. He discussed Simon's picture with ferocity, going into every point, often seizing the brush to alter some detail, until his whiskers were covered with paint.
Gus winked at Simon behind the principal's back and whispered, "Bear up, cully! The more old Fur-nose thinks of you, the more he's into you." Then his eyes widened, looking past Simon, and he exclaimed, "Stap and roast me! What the deuce is the matter with that boat?"
Simon turned to look at the river. A boat was coming from the direction of Hampton Court, but, for a moment, he did not recognize the ducal barge, so strange an appearance did it present. It was creeping along low in the water with hardly any of the hull visible, and the whole craft was curiously wrapped about in folds of material, so that it looked more like a floating parcel than a boat. Somebody had just jumped off it, and as they watched there were three more splashes, and they saw the heads of swimmers making for the shore.
"It's sinking!" exclaimed Gus.
"And the rowers have jumped clear," said Simon, recognizing the cream-and-gold livery of the swimmers. "But where's the Duke and Duchess and Sophie?"
In a moment he saw them as the barge, carried along by the outgoing tide, slowly wallowed past. They were all in the stern, the Duke and Sophie trying to persuade the Duchess to jump for it.
"Indeed you must, ma'am!" implored Sophie. "When
the ship sinks—and she will at any minute!—we shall all be sucked under."
"But I can't swim!" lamented the Duchess. "I shall certainly be drowned, and in my best court dress too—murrey velvet with gold sequins—it will be ruined and it cost over twenty thousand—"
"Hettie, you
must
jump! Never mind the perditioned dress!"
"But it weighs twenty-three pounds—it will sink me like a stone. Oh, help, help, will nobody help us?"
"All right, your Grace!" shouted Simon, pulling off his shirt. "We're coming!"
Half the students of the academy dived joyfully off the bank and swam to the rescue, delighted at such a diversion, and this was just as well, for next minute the barge filled up completely, turned on its side, and precipitated the three passengers into the water. The Duchess would undoubtedly have sunk had not, by great good fortune, her voluminous skirts and petticoats filled with air for a few moments so that she floated on the surface like a bubble while Sophie supported her.
"Dammit!" gasped the Duke. "I can't swim either, come to think! I never—aaaargh!" He disappeared in a welter of bubbles, but luckily Gus and Fothers, forging through the water like porpoises, both reached the spot at that instant and were able to dive and grab him. Meanwhile Simon, Sophie, and half a dozen other students managed to land the Duchess while others swam after the barge and steered it to a sandspit on the far side of Chelsea Bridge.
Dr. Furrneaux, meanwhile, after wringing his hands and whiskers alternately, when he saw that the rescue was safely under way, had very sensibly organized some more students into building up a fine blaze from the embers of the noon fire so that the victims of the wreck could warm themselves immediately. The setting sun and the huge bonfire threw a red light over the strange scene, steam rose in clouds from those who had been immersed, while others ran to and fro fetching more branches.
"By Jove!" said the Duke as he stood steaming and emptying water out of his diamond-buckled shoes. "What a scrape, eh? I fancied my number was up that time—so it would have been too, if it weren't for your plucky lads, Furrneaux! Much obliged to 'ee all!"
"Indeed, yes!" The Duchess smiled around warmly upon the dripping assembled students. She looked much less bedraggled than anybody, as the upper part of her body had never been submerged, thanks to the speed with which she had been towed to land. "You are a set of brave, good souls. You must all come to dinner at the castle as soon as possible."
Dr. Furrneaux beamed with pride and affection for his students. "Yes, yes," he said, "Zey are a set of brave
garçons
when it comes to a tight pinch—it is only ze hard work zey do not always enjoy!"
"What happened to the barge?" Simon asked Sophie as they stood drying themselves. "How did it come to sink?"
"Nobody knows exactly," she answered. "It was certainly all right when we reached Hampton Court. But on
the way home it seemed to move heavily in the water and when we had gone a certain way—I do not know where we were—"
"Mortlake, or thereabouts," the Duke put in.
"It seemed to be sinking lower and lower, and suddenly her Grace gave a scream—we were all on deck, but she looked down the companionway and saw there was nearly a foot of water in the cabin, and more coming in. There was a hole in the side! So I had the notion of passing her Grace's tapestry under the hull, over the hole, and pulling it up tight against both sides, to stop the leak. We did so, and it worked tolerably well for quite a long way—"
"Ay, my child, it was a brainwave," the Duke said. "Had it not been for your clever wits 'tis a herring to a ha'penny we'd ha' been shipwrecked at Putney or some such godforsaken spot where we would undoubtedly have perished with not a soul to hear our cries. For you could not have rescued both of us, Sophie my dear, and as for those cowardly jobberknolls of rowers, they were no more use than a fishskin fowling piece—I'll turn every last one of them out of my service, so I will. Where are they?"
The rowers, however, when they reached land, had prudently made off and did not even wait for their dismissal; they were seen at Battersea Castle no more.
"Alas for my tapestry, though," the Duchess sighed. "I fear it will be quite ruined."
"Nonsense, my dear," her husband exclaimed. "We'll have it dried and cleaned, and you'll see it will be as good as new. And even if it ain't
quite
the same, I'd as lief keep
it—do you realize that tapestry has saved our lives twice? And each time thanks to adroit little Miss Sophie here? We are much in your debt, my dear."
"Where did you learn to swim so well?" the Duchess inquired.
"Oh, it was nothing, your Graces," Sophie said shyly. "I learnt to swim at the Poor Farm; indeed we were obliged to, with the canal so close by—someone was forever falling in. But please think no more about it my lady. Look, here comes the carriage and I am persuaded your Graces should be taken home
immediately
and be put to bed with three hot bricks each to avoid all danger of an inflammation."
"Quite right, my child, quite right! Hettie! let us be off. Dr. Furrneaux, will you bring all your students along to take pot luck with us tomorrow night? Ay, and I've something famous to show you all, my big Rivière canvas which this good boy has cleaned."
Dr. Furrneaux gladly accepted on behalf of his students and expressed his eagerness to see the restored painting. Amid hurrahs and waving caps the carriage drove away toward Battersea Castle. As night was now falling fast, the students decided to abandon work and make a party of it. More acorn coffee was brewed; those who had money went and bought potatoes in Chelsea Market to roast in the embers, while those who had none fetched chestnuts from Battersea Park or merely danced minuets and quadrilles by the light of the moon.
When the chimes of the Chelsea Church clock boomed out the hour of nine, Simon recollected his appointment to
meet Sophie. He set off at a run, though wondering if the task of caring for her rescued mistress might have prevented Sophie coming out again.
She had not failed him, however. He found her sitting with the Cobb family, helping Mrs. Cobb hem pinafores for Libby while she regaled them all with a lively account of the shipwreck.
Simon asked how the Duke and Duchess did.
"Famously snug," said Sophie. "They both went to bed with hot bricks, and I gave them a dose of the poppy syrup that I made according to Mrs. Cobb's receipt."
"Ay, you can't beat my poppy syrup," said Mrs. Cobb complacently.
"And they were both very kind to me," Sophie went on. "The Duke gave me five guineas and this gold enameled watch—see, Libby, how pretty it is with the blue flowers—and her Grace gave me a week's holiday, besides two beautiful dresses and five lengths of stuff to make things for myself. But what was it you wanted to ask me, Simon?"
Simon explained the troubles of poor Dido Twite, with an unfeeling mother, a diet of fish porridge, and no dress to wear to the Clapham Fair. Sophie's kind eyes misted in sympathy as she listened, and Mrs. Cobb cried, "Well, I declare! Fancy treating a child so! She could have some of Libby's clothes, but they'd be too small, I daresay."
"It's the simplest thing in the world," Sophie said, "I can use some of the stuff her Grace gave me to make the child a dress—it will take no time at all to whip it together if you can give me some idea of her size, Simon."
"Oh no, that's a great deal too good of you," he objected. "I wondered if you'd have some old dress put by that you could cut up for her, Soph."
Sophie however declared that the Duchess had given her so many things she could easily spare some material—"The poor little thing, let her have something really pretty and new for once. There is a blue merino that might be just the thing. Is she dark or fair?"
"She is always so grubby that it is hard to tell," Simon said doubtfully. However he thought the blue merino would do very well.
"I'll make it tomorrow," Sophie promised. "As I've the day off, it's odds but I'll have it finished by the evening."