Maisie Dobbs

Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear

Book: Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jacqueline Winspear
Ads: Link
she had finished lighting fires in each of the rooms, it was time to fill the scuttles again and feed the fires so that the rooms were ready to warm those who had time to sit by a fire-people who had the time to be warmed by something other than hard work.
    Throughout the day Maisie cleaned, ran errands for Cook, and generally served at the bidding of anyone above her in the pecking order, which was almost everyone in the household. But the duties of her waking hours brought a calm to Maisie's life that she had not known since before her mother became ill. She had only to follow the direction of others, and in the rhythm of her daily round, whether blacking the fireplaces, sweeping the stairs, or polishing furniture, there was room for thought-thought of what might be.
    Maisie's "day off" was Sunday afternoon. As soon as the heavy clock on the mantelpiece over the kitchen stove struck a single chime at half past eleven, Maisie waited for Cook to look up at her and nod toward the door.
    "All right, lass, off you go. And mind you're back by a decent hour!"
    It was a feigned warning, because Maisie had nowhere to be at an indecent hour.
    Untying her pinafore as she hurried from the kitchen and up the back stairs toward the servants' quarters, Maisie thought that her legs would never carry her as fast as her mind wanted to travel. She quickly changed into a long black skirt that had belonged to her mother, and a clean cotton blouse. She checked her reflection in the mirror just once, pushed her hat onto her head, and reached for her coat and coin purse before rushing through the bedroom door again. She was off to see her father, knowing that at twelve noon he would pull the fob watch from his waistcoat pocket and smile to himself. Frankie Dobbs couldn't wait for his girl to come home so they could spend a few hours together, a precious respite from a work-weary week.
    On Sundays, Frankie was always to be found at the stable where he kept his mare, under the dry arches that were part of the Southern construction of Waterloo Bridge. Sunday was the day to clean the horse from head to hoof, to oil the leather traces, polish the brasses, and make sure the cart was ready for another week's work. It was an easy morning, a morning made sweeter by the knowledge that soon Maisie's footsteps would clatter against the cobblestone street leading to the stables.
    "Love, you are a sight for sore eyes. How are you, my girl?"
    "Well enough, Dad. I'm well enough"
    "Let me just finish this, then we'll go home for a cuppa"
    Together they worked in the stable, finally leaving the horse to the remainder of her day at rest. After a cup of tea, Frankie would dress in his Sunday best, and father and daughter would catch a bus to Brockwell Park, where they walked together before stopping to eat a packed lunch.
    "You should see the library, Dad! I've never seen so many books. Walls of them. About everything"
    "You and your books, girl.You keeping up with your reading?"
    "Yes, Dad. I go to the public library every week on a Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Crawford sends me with a list for her and Mr. Carter, and I get books for myself as well. Mind you, Enid says she can't sleep with the light on, so I can't read for long."
    "You watch your eyes, my girl, you only get one pair, you know"
    "Dad!"
    "I know, I'm naggin'. So, what about the other folk downstairs, what're they like, then?"
    Father and daughter sat down on a wooden bench overlooking a flowerbed. "Well, you know Mr. Carter and Mrs. Crawford."
    "That I do. Good people, both of them"
    "Well, anyway, Mrs. Crawford is called `Cook' and `Mrs. Crawford' without any-well, without any method to it."
    "What do you mean, love?"
    I mean that sometimes she's called `Cook' or sometimes `Mrs. Crawford' and there's no rule-sometimes it's both names in one sentence"
    Frankie chewed on a sandwich, and nodded his head for Maisie to continue.
    "There's two footmen,Arthur and Cedric, and there's Her Ladyship's maid,

Similar Books

You Will Know Me

Megan Abbott

UNBREATHABLE

Hafsah Laziaf

Control

William Goldman

One Wrong Move

Shannon McKenna

Uchenna's Apples

Diane Duane

Fever

V. K. Powell

PunishingPhoebe

Kit Tunstall