errand for him.â
He left, roaring the name of his assistant. I heard the thunder of feet down the stairs and a hurried conversation in whispers before a door slammed.
How had I come to this? I wondered, looking at my sordid surroundings. It was only a week agothat I had been sipping sherbet in Grosvenor Square; now I was to scrape every foul thing known to mankind off the floor of a windowless kitchen. My bedroom was no more than a cupboard with a straw mattress. I propped the door open to let in some fresh air. The backyard went nowhere â just a square of bricks barricaded by high walls. You could look up to the heavens to see some colour and movement, but everything else was sooty and barren. It felt like a prison exercise ground with me as the only inmate.
Well, I was here by choice. I could walk out if I wished. My job was to make the best of it as so many had had to do before me. I rolled up my sleeves and started working the pump handle.
After several hours of work I felt quite pleased by the impact I had made on the kitchen. You could now at least see the flagstones on the floor and the table was scrubbed clean. I had lit a fire in the old stove and was just contemplating making myself a cup of tea when the door from the passageway burst open and a young man with a crop of greasy mud-brownhair clattered into the room carrying a basket.
ââEre you go, skivvy,â he said, dumping it on to the floor. I could tell at a glance that he was a poor shopper: the vegetables were old, the meat scraggy and tough. He then parked his bony bottom on my clean table and stared at me.
âWhat you looking at?â I asked sharply, quelling the urge to poke him off with a toasting fork applied to his rear.
âPleased to meet you too, Copperknob.â He put his big dusty boots on the chair, elbows on his knees, and continued to gaze at me. ââOpe youâre a better cook than the last one. She nearly poisoned us, she did, buying off-meat so she could keep the change.â
âIâll try not to.â Little chance of that if I wasnât allowed out to market.
âIâm Nokes.â
âI would never have guessed.â I began sorting through his purchases.
âFriendly soul, ainât you?â
I said nothing.
âWell, wise up, Copperknob, Iâm either yer bestfriend in this âouse, or yer worst enemy. Treat me nice and Iâll be nice to you; go all superior on me and youâll regret it. Just âcause you can read and write donât mean youâre better than me.â
So he knew about my writing, did he?
âI donât think Iâm better than you,â I said quietly, wishing he would leave me in peace.
Nokes picked his nose and ate the contents with relish. âToo right, girl. Youâre not better than anyone now, are yer? Old Tweadie said your âpatronâ was Mr La-di-dah Sheridan â we all know what that means, donât we? âAd flash friends once, âe says.â
His thin face was lit up by a malicious smile. In my anger, I snapped a carrot in two â but at least it wasnât his neck â you should give me some credit for that, Reader.
âBut youâre âere now â and donât you forget it. At our beck anâ call.â
I didnât think this speech deserved an answer so I took out a knife and began vigorously chopping vegetables for a stew.
âYou know what?â he said loudly.
I shook my head.
âI donât think I like you.â
âIâm so sorry,â I said sardonically, throwing some meat in the pot. âSee, your cruel words have made me weep.â Tears caused by chopping onions were trickling down my face. âI am devastated by your penetrating character assessment and will forever be labouring under the burden of your displeasure.â
Nokes scratched the back of his head, confused by this last speech. âYou talk funny, you
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