The Frozen Lake: A gripping novel of family and wartime secrets. Elizabeth Edmondson

The Frozen Lake: A gripping novel of family and wartime secrets - Elizabeth Edmondson


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      His landlady found him there when she came back hours later. ‘Look at him, sleeping like a baby,’ she said to the cat. ‘I’ll make him a nice cup of cocoa and then wake him up so’s he can take himself off to bed.’ She looked at his face, interesting even in sleep; she liked a proper man, and his sort made you remember what it was like to be young. Pity he spent so much time at his precious work, what chance had he to meet a nice young lady when he worked all the time?

      She poured the gooey brew into a cup, and shook him gently by the shoulder. ‘Wake up, Mr Wrexham, it’s bedtime, and I made you a nice cup of cocoa.’

      He blinked and shook himself awake. ‘I must have dropped off. Good heavens, is that the time? Oh, thank you, how kind.’ He looked doubtfully into the cup, he loathed cocoa. ‘I’ll take it upstairs with me, if that’s all right.’

      Where he took it with him into the bathroom, and tipped it down the basin.

       EIGHT

       York

      Where was Perdita?

      There were so many girls in the vast nave of York Minster, rows and rows of grey flannel overcoats, a sea of grey hats, each with its purple band. True, they weren’t identical, they came in many different heights and sizes, but then, at that age, girls shot up so, his sister could be inches taller by now.

      Craning his neck in his efforts to scan the congregation, he lost his place in the hymn sheet, earning a scornful look from the tall woman in a sensible felt hat who was sitting in the seat next to him as he came in several ‘Noels’ too late. Lord, these were the same carols he’d sung at his school a thousand years ago, did nothing ever change? The carol ended, an invisible choir sang some incomprehensible verses in mediaeval English, a woman with rigid grey hair and a tight mouth, wearing a Cambridge MA gown, ascended the pulpit and began to read the story of the Annunciation.

      The service wound to a close, the jolly-looking bishop in gold and pink raised his crook to give the blessing, the organist crashed into the opening chords of Adeste fideles, and the stately procession of senior and lesser clergy, headmistress, servers and choir made its way down the central aisle.

      There was Perdita. One of the choir, wearing a white surplice that looked too short for her, her dark brown hair scraped back from her face in a pair of straggling plaits, her face pale and unrevealing as she sang the soaring final descant. He turned his head to watch the retreating backs of the choir. How quickly could he make a getaway? He stuffed the order of service into the rack at the back of the seat in front of him, beside the hymnal and the prayer book, and began to edge his way past his more devout neighbours who were kneeling or sitting with bowed heads in attitudes of prayer.

      Dark-overcoated fathers looked at him with scorn, disapproval of his brown tweed overcoat and corduroy trousers written all over their faces. Their wives screwed up their mouths and made little mutterings of dismay at his unmannerly attempts to escape. Then he was at the end of the row and in the aisle, free to make a dash for the action end of the cathedral before he was completely swamped in the wave of schoolgirls pouring out of the front rows.

      Polished brown shoes of every size trod on his feet, hockey-trained muscles shoved him out of the way, firm elbows dug into his sides; what a relief to reach a place of safety in front of the choir screen and tuck himself in beside a huge urn of festive greenery. He had kept an eye on the choir as it disappeared into the far reaches of the north aisle; surely all the girls from the choir would pass this way sooner or later.

      They did, looking like chesspieces in their purple cassocks, with white surplices now draped over arms or shoulders.

      ‘Edwin, oh, good, I am so pleased to see you. I wasn’t sure if anyone was coming for me.’ Perdita gestured to her cassock and surplice. ‘I have to put these in the hamper and get my coat and hat. Will you wait here?’

      ‘I shan’t budge,’ he said. ‘I never saw so many girls in my life, they’re terrifying.’

      She smiled her wide smile at him and bounded away.

      A giant grey crocodile was forming in the south aisle, with gowned mistresses running up and down like sheepdogs, lining the girls up in pairs and rounding up stragglers. ‘Come along, girls, we have a train to catch. Fiona, put your hat straight. Mathilda, where are your gloves? Deirdre, how many times do I have to tell you not to stand on one leg?’

      ‘My stockings make me itch,’ said the unfortunate Deirdre, who had been rubbing her shin violently with the edge of her sensible brown leather shoe.

      ‘Deirdre! Mentioning underwear in public, whatever are you thinking of?’

      His breath was visible in the cold air; it hadn’t seemed so very cold at first, but the chill had struck up through the ancient stones, and now his feet were growing numb. His nose was no doubt pink; the parents and girls milling around him nearly all had glowing noses and cheeks.

      However warm the overcoats and furs, nothing could subdue the arctic chill of York Minster on a December day. The weather had been unusually bitter, even for the north of England, but he could never remember a time when he had been in the Minster and not felt cold.

      Cold as charity. The words mocked him as he looked down the immense length of the nave to where the great west doors stood open and the congregation streamed out into the pale wintry sunlight. Then Perdita was beside him. ‘I’m glad you came to collect me, it’s a gruesome journey by train. Five hours in a stuffy compartment, or sitting on freezing platforms, and I hate having to change trains here, there and everywhere.’

      Another of the iron-grey regiment of teachers – grey as to hair and expression rather than in what she wore – was bearing down on them. ‘Perdita Richardson!’

      Perdita hastily unwound her arm from his. ‘This is my brother, Edwin, Miss Hartness.’

      Eyes sharp with disbelief raked him from head to toe. ‘He looks very old to be your brother.’

      He was amused. ‘I think my grandmother let you know I would be coming.’

      ‘The headmistress received a telegram from Lady Richardson to that effect, I believe. We don’t usually let our girls leave with their brothers. You girls without parents do make difficulties for the school.’

      He turned to Perdita. ‘Do you have any luggage?’

      The mistress answered for her. ‘The girls’ trunks and boxes were sent by railway two days ago. Perdita has an overnight case.’

      Miss Hartness still looked suspicious; did she think he was a fraudster planning to abduct the girl? He was fond of his sister, but the woman should realize that if he had such intentions, he’d pick a dazzler, not a gawky girl like Perdita.

      The woman was still talking. ‘Now, I really do think …’

      He was spared her probably unflattering thoughts, since at that moment a bird-like figure, elegantly clad in a scarlet coat with a modish hat perched on her sleek head, darted out of the throng. ‘Edwin, darling, are you here to pick up Perdita? This is my Grace, only a baby, her first term at the Ladies College, isn’t it, darling?’

      A diminutive girl with her fair hair tied in two tight plaits looked up at her mother with calm grey eyes. ‘Oh, Mummy, don’t call me a baby.’

      Edwin kissed the woman, shook hands with the solemn child, who gave him a cool look and then skipped aside to talk to a friend.

      ‘Hello, Lucy,’ he said. ‘Is Rollo with you?’

      ‘He’s gone to see where Watkins has got to, it’s always such a mêlée here after the end of term service.’ She leant up to peck him on the cheek. ‘Lovely to see you, darling, they say the lake may freeze from shore to shore, if so, nothing will stop us coming over after New Year. Give my love to Caroline and Henry, won’t you? Goodbye,


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