Authors: Alison Rattle
It is night now, dense, black, muffled night. Beth blew the candle out an age ago, but I cannot sleep. I lie here next to her in the scratchy nightgown that she found for me, and although every part of me feels like a dead weight, sleep just won't come.
I listen for a while to Beth's shallow breaths, envious that she could drift away like that, as soon as her head touched the pillow. It is a strange sensation to have someone lying next to me in bed. I dare not move, in case I wake her. I think it is almost as bad as being tethered to the bed with Mama's leather straps.
I try listening to the night. But here in the thick of the countryside, there is nothing. Just heavy silence. Not even a wind to rattle the windows. At Lions House something always made my ears prick: a late-night carriage rumbling down the street, the whistle of the lamp-lighter, the distant hum of the mill. I try to picture Eli and Mama tucked into their beds. Eli, still reading a book by candlelight, perhaps, Mama in the depths of sleep, her face and lashes shining with a slick of castor oil. Are they wondering where I am? For surely they know I never made it to the asylum. I think of Papa's bed, empty and cold. I think of my bed too, cold and empty. Has Sarah stripped it of sheets? Has she washed the smell of me from them? Has she covered the furniture in my chamber with dust sheets? I think of my gowns hanging in the wardrobe. Will Sarah remember to check for moths? Or has Mama already ordered them to be sent to the poorhouse? Is my journal still lying open on my desk? Has Mama read my most private words?
Questions slither through my mind. Endless questions, slipping and sliding in and out of my thoughts. I feel as though my head might burst.
Beth stirs in her sleep. She turns on her side and her arm flips across my chest. I let it lie there. It is comforting. I wonder where she came from. How did Beth end up here? I realise that despite all her chatter, I have not learned a thing about her.
I decide that I have two choices. I can carry on fighting the night, or I can wake Beth and ask her. I lift her arm away from me and turn onto my side. We are face to face now. Her steady breath warms my cheek. âBeth,' I whisper. âBeth. Wake up.'
She stirs again and mumbles. I touch her shoulder and gently shake it.
âWhat  â¦Â what?' Her voice is thick with sleep.
âI'm sorry, Beth,' I say. âI'm sorry for waking you.'
âWhat is it?' she says. âWhat's the matter?'
âI can't sleep,' I tell her. âWould you mind  â¦Â would you mind if we talk for a while?'
She groans. âSeeing as it's your first night. But I'm telling you, you'd best not be making a habit of this.' She yawns loudly. âSo, what do you want to talk about then?'
âTell me about you, Beth,' I whisper. âHow did you come to be here?'
She tugs the blanket over her shoulder and wriggles her head into the pillow. âNothing much to tell,' she says. âWhat went before doesn't matter now.'
âBut you must have come from somewhere,' I say. âWhere are your parents?'
She is silent for a while. âWe have no need of parents here, Alice,' she says eventually. âOnly of Our Beloved. He is father to us all.'
âBut your real parents,' I press. âYou must have a mother somewhere, who gave birth to you. And a father.'
âI told you,' she says, impatiently. âOur Beloved is my father. My true father. I don't need any other.' She turns over, onto her back, and yawns again. âWhat else did you want to talk about?'
I am sorry that I woke her now, but I try again, nonetheless. âGlory,' I say. âTell me about Glory. She is Our Beloved's wife?'
âNo,' says Beth, her voice heavy with sleep now. âOur Beloved has no need of a wife. Not a mortal wife. Glory is his new spirit bride.'
âNew?' I exclaim. âHave there been others then?'
âMany others,' she says. âBut please don't ask me to remember them all.'
âBut I don't understand,' I say. âGlory must be his wife if she is with child.'
Beth laughs softly. âYou have to learn not to question so much, Alice. You'll see in time how it is here. Our Beloved is God Himself made flesh and you are lucky to be one of the chosen.' She turns over again, and this time she has her back to me. âSleep now,' she says. âYou will be glad of it come morning.'
But I am more awake than ever. For a thought has just struck me: a strange thing that I had not considered until this moment. We are all women here, women and girls. I have not seen one man, save for Henry Prince, the whole day I have been here. I think of the dozen or so children that were there in the chapel; children of all ages, from a babe in arms to a girl of about ten. Where are their fathers?
He is father to us all,
Beth said. I shiver and pull the blanket around me. Children of God, I think. Are they all children of God?
I must sleep, eventually, for the next thing I know, Beth is shaking me awake. I see by the sliver of moon framed in the window that it is barely morning, and as I pull the grey linsey frock over my head, there is a heaviness in my chest and a quiet longing for the comforts of Lions House and the tray of morning tea that always came unbidden to my chamber.
âWhere is she? You must find her!' Temperance Angel screamed. Eli stood white-faced in the doorway of her bedchamber. He had spent three days looking for Alice. Three days searching the back alleys, the lodging houses and the poorhouses of Bridgwater. He had ridden out to the place where Alice had jumped from the carriage and searched barns and ditches and village inns. But there was no sign of her. No one had seen a thing. She must have headed to Bristol, Eli decided. And if she had been swallowed up in that city, there was little chance of him ever seeing her again.
Eli had never seen his mother like this. She was shaking with rage. Her face had twisted and contorted like some demon. His beautiful, composed mother had gone, and he didn't know how to deal with the creature that had taken her place.
âI will find her, Mama,' he said. âI will keep on looking until I do.'
âThe disgrace! The disgrace! If someone should see her!' Temperance ranted.
âBut it would be good news if someone were to see her,' said Eli, trying to soothe her. âWe would know where to find her then.'
âIt would be better if she were dead!' screamed Temperance. âAlready they are shunning me. I am the woman whose daughter jumped into a grave! They only come now to mock me and to scorn and to walk away all high and mighty. They do not come to pay their respects. They come to gawp! If they knew she was walking the streets  â¦Â ' Temperance collapsed into her chair, the thought too terrible to contemplate.
Eli tried again. âIt is Alice we must think of now, Mama. She is all alone out there, and unwell. She has no money  â¦Â nothing. If you would agree to put a notice in the
Bristol Gazette
, I think we might have a chance of finding her  â¦Â '
Temperance glared at him; sinews throbbed in her neck, the skin stretched tight across her face and for a brief moment, Eli glimpsed the hard outline of her skull and the gaping holes of her eye sockets. She bent suddenly and pulled the slipper off her foot. âGet out!' she screamed. âGet out!' And the slipper flew across the room and hit Eli squarely on the jaw.
He stumbled into the corridor and stopped to catch his breath. His jaw throbbed, but his pride hurt even more. He'd always been Mama's favourite, and although he'd felt sorry for Alice, he had secretly relished being the one Mama loved. Eli rubbed his jaw. Was this what it had been like for Alice? And would Mama truly wish her dead rather than it become known that she had run away? No. Surely not. It was grief talking. That was all.
Eli made his way slowly down the stairs. What would Papa do? he wondered. The answer was easy. He would be out there now, still searching. He would be doing everything in his power to find Alice.
Eli hovered outside the study. It was time, he decided. He couldn't put it off any longer. He took a deep breath and opened the door. It was dark inside, the curtains drawn, and just as he had feared, there were shadows of his father everywhere â hovering over the leather chair, brushing against the bookshelves and whispering in the corners of the room.
Eli strode quickly to the windows and tugged the curtains open. Daylight flooded in and helped to ease the ache in his chest. It was only a room, he told himself; it was only a desk and a chair and a pile of papers.
He moved to the chair and sat down. The leather creaked and settled, adjusting itself to a new occupant. Eli placed his hands palms down on the desktop and saw how they left imprints in the dust. He picked up a glass, sticky with the remains of brandy, and put it to one side. Then he gathered the strewn papers and put them in a neat pile next to the ledgers that he knew were filled with neat rows of figures and letters. With the space in front of him clear now, he selected a clean sheet of paper and picked up his father's pen.
I'll do my best, Papa.
I'll do all that I can
.
Then he dipped the pen in the ink pot and began to write.
Personal Notices
INFORMATION
concerning whereabouts of Alice Elizabeth Angel, missing since July 27
th
, 16 years of age, 5 feet 2 inches, dark hair, dark eyes, fair complexion, will be thankfully received. E. Angel, Lions House, Bridgwater.
He blotted the ink and blew it dry. Then he reached over and rang the servant's bell.
It is September now. I cannot believe I have been here for over a month already. The heat of the summer has passed and the days have taken on a steady pattern. Beth and I wake early, before the sun has quite risen, and we stumble down the stairs by the grey light of dawn. The first task of the day is to clear the ashes and sweep the grates clean, before we lay the fires in the cottages and the mansion. Then we fetch water from the well to fill all the coppers, and the kettles are put to boil. We lay out the breakfasts for the others, who rise much later than we do, and then, after all these things have been attended to, we go to the kitchen with the rest of the Parlour to eat our own breakfast.
I cannot imagine life without Beth now. If I had ever wished for a sister, I would have wished for one exactly like Beth. It is such a comfort to lie next to her every night and fall asleep to the sound of her steady breaths.
The work is hard and I have done things I would never have thought possible. The worst of these is the black leading of the grates. It is a task I loathe; the hours on my knees, the aches in my fingers and wrists as I rub and rub and rub. The black lead stains my hands and I have to scrub them raw to clean it off. I have hands like Beth now. They are cracked and bleeding. Sometimes I look at them, turning them over and over in wonder. It is strange to think they belong to me. But I am proud of them all the same. They make me feel even closer to Beth; it is something else for us to share. Sometimes, if a goose has been slaughtered for Our Beloved, Beth will bring some of the fat with her to our room and we will rub it into each other's hands. It soothes our chapped skin, but we have to laugh and wrinkle our noses at the terrible stink.
Of all the things I have learned to do, it is the bread making I like best. Beth has taught me well. Every evening after chapel we dust the kitchen table with flour and thump and stretch piles of billowing dough, before shaping it into loaves and pressing it into tins. I imagine the flour comes from Papa's mill, and I am glad to think that maybe Eli has kept it running. I mentioned this to Beth one evening as we clapped our hands together and sent clouds of flour flying into the air.
âYou should not think such things,' she said. âThe world outside these walls should not concern you. Everything we have in here is given to us by Our Beloved. We are the chosen ones, Alice. Have you not understood that yet? When the day of reckoning comes, we are the only ones who will be saved. Our Beloved has blessed us with this flour, no one else.'
She said all this with a smudge of flour on her nose and a smile on her lips. But I knew at once that I had done something wrong. I bit my lower lip and carried on pummelling the dough. It was the first time since coming to the Abode that I had put a foot out of place. I did not want the old Alice to come back and ruin anything. So I promised myself I would not speak of those things again. I would shut my words away in a box inside my head. I would not talk of Eli or Papa, or even Mama. They were part of before, they belonged to the outside and as Our Beloved told us every night in chapel, those who were outsiders and did not believe in him were destined for the Devil.
Beth laughed at my sullen face. âDon't look so vexed, Alice,' she said. âBe happy. We are in Paradise after all.' Then she threw a sprinkling of flour over my head and soon we were hooting and squealing and chasing each other around the kitchen table throwing handfuls of flour until we both looked like pale ghosts of ourselves.
It is a pleasant, early autumn morning, and I am happy to be sitting polishing boots on the front step of the cottage. I like it that I am able to take a muddied boot and with a few strokes of a brush and a few wipes of a cloth, I can buff the leather to such a shine that I can see the blur of my face. There is something pleasing about the work, and it feels good that I can do something well and that I can make a difference, even if it is only to a dozen pairs of dirty boots.
The children are playing in the gardens with Beth. It is her turn to mind them today and I smile as I watch how she chases them and catches them and then tumbles around on the grass without a care. She is good with them.
I still do not know if the children belong to the women of the Parlour or to the others. I have learned not to ask too many questions. It seems that the children belong to all of us, and I cannot decide whether that is a good thing or a bad thing. But I suppose it is better to have a dozen or more mothers to love you than to have only one who hates.
The children stop in their play to watch the horses and brougham as they are brought around from the stables. Every other day Our Beloved leaves the Abode and travels to nearby towns and villages to spread his teachings. Beth comes to sit next to me. âHe has not asked me to go with him today,' she says. âHe is taking Glory and Ruth.'
Her voice is flat and when I turn to look at her I am surprised to see tears glinting in her eyes.
âI think I have displeased him,' she says. âIt is weeks now since he has taken me with him.'
âI am sure you have not done anything wrong,' I say. âHow can you have?'
She doesn't answer. Instead she turns to me and grabs my wrists. âLook at me, Alice,' she pleads. âLook at me and tell me truthfully  â¦Â Am I pretty?'
It is a strange question, but before I can answer her, Our Beloved appears from the mansion. He is wearing his long black travelling cloak lined in purple silk and he looks magnificent as he sweeps along the pathway towards the carriage. I feel the familiar stirring in my stomach that happens every time I am near him. I cannot decide if it is fear, excitement, expectation or love. But I am nauseous with it, and when I stand, my legs almost betray me.
Everyone gathers to send him on his way and I am caught up in the feeling of belonging to something that is much bigger than anything I can explain. He climbs into the carriage and Glory, her face flushed and glowing, climbs in after him. Ruth climbs up to perch next to Agatha, who is holding the reins as well as any driver I have ever seen. We follow the carriage as it is pulled towards the main gates. Some of the women place their hands on the retreating rear of the brougham, needing a final touch of him. For a brief moment, I see through the open gates to the lane beyond and I am reminded how close we are to the outside. I am glad when the gates are closed and bolted. I turn back to Beth, remembering that I have not answered her question yet, but she is not behind me. I look amongst the gathered faces but I cannot see her anywhere.
I find her eventually, lying face down on our bed. âWhat is the matter?' I ask. âI thought the outside world did not concern us? Why are you upset not to have gone?' She doesn't answer, so I try again. âBeth,' I say. âPlease tell me what is wrong.' There is silence still, so I reach out my hand and stroke her hair. âYou are pretty, Beth,' I whisper. âYou are the prettiest thing.' But when she still does not answer me, I give her hair a final stroke and leave her to her woes.
Our Beloved does not return in time for chapel, so we sit around the kitchen table instead. The women of the Parlour seem at a loss without him and they fidget with their sewing and their darning. He must have travelled to Bristol or Bath, they guess. He will be tired when he returns. We must have something hot waiting for him.
I look around at them all. Because they never talk about a life before here, I have made up their stories in my head. There's Lizzie with the jutting collarbones, who I decide was once a seamstress in Bristol with a brood of children who all died, one by one, of cholera. Then there is Polly who is careworn but pretty still, and I decide she was once a painted lady that Our Beloved found on the streets and taught to change her ways. Then Esther: maybe a governess who fell on hard times and was rescued from the poorhouse. May is easy. She has coarse features, pale watery eyes and meaty arms. When she talks her voice is loud and sharp. I decide she sold fish from a barrow at Bridgwater market. I think of Agatha and Ruth who are still with Our Beloved somewhere in the outside world. Agatha is pleasantly plump but has a livid scar on her face that runs from the corner of her eye to her ear lobe. She had a wicked husband, I think, and she ran from him before he could murder her in her bed. With Ruth, I cannot make up my mind.
She is like me
, I think,
not used to hard work
. She has a way about her and she holds herself upright as though she was once tight-laced.
She has her secrets, as all the others do. The air is thick with them, all those lost sorrows and joys. But I am glad the secrets are not told. For then I would have to tell my own.
I wake in the night to the sounds of carriage wheels crunching on gravel and voices muffled by darkness. Beth is standing by the window with her face pressed to the glass. âHe is back. He is back,' she is saying over and over again. She turns from the window and by the light of her candle, I see the tears streaming down her face.