dismissed it from her mind with force. Cats and dogs and even a couple of pigs foraged around hopefully. It was still appallingly cold.
The door where Sutton finally stopped was narrow, with peeling paint and no windows or letter box. In some places that would indicate that it was a façade placed to hide the fact that there was a railway behind it rather than a house, but here it was that no letters were expected. None of the other doors had knockers, either.
Sutton banged with the flat of his hand and stood back.
A few minutes later it was opened by a girl of about ten. Her hair was tied with a bright length of cloth and her face was clean, but she had no shoes on. Her dress was obviously cut down from a longer one, and left with room to fit her at least another couple of years.
“ ’Allo, Essie. Yer mam in?” Sutton asked.
She smiled at him shyly and nodded, turning to lead the way to the kitchen.
Hester and Sutton followed, driven as much by the promise of warmth as anything else.
Essie led them along a narrow passage that was cold and smelled of damp and old cooking, and into the one room in the house that had heat. The warmth came from a small black stove with a hob just large enough for one cauldron and a kettle. Her mother, a rawboned woman who must have been about forty but looked far older, was scraping the eyes and the dirt from a pile of potatoes. There were onions beside her, still to be prepared.
In the corner of the room nearest the stove sat a large man with an old coat on his knees. The way the folds of it fell, it was apparent that most of his right leg was missing. Hester was startled to see from his face that he was probably no more than forty either, if that.
Sutton ordered Snoot to sit, then he turned to the woman.
“Mrs. Collard,” he said warmly, “this is Mrs. Monk, ’oo nursed some of the men in the Crimea, an’ keeps a clinic for the poor in Portpool Lane.” He did not add specifically what kind of poor. “An’ this is Andrew Collard.” He turned to the man. “ ’E used ter work in the tunnels.”
“How do you do, Mrs. Collard, Mr. Collard,” Hester said formally. She had long ago decided to speak to all people in the same way rather than distinguish between one social class and another by adopting what she felt would be their own pattern of introduction. There was no need to wonder why Andrew Collard did not work in the tunnels anymore.
Collard nodded, answering with words almost indistinguishable. He was embarrassed—that was easy to see—and perhaps ashamed because he could not stand to welcome a lady into his own home, meager as it was.
Hester had no idea how to make him at ease. She ought to have been able to call on her experience with injured and mutilated soldiers. She had seen enough of them, and enough of those wasted by disease, racked with fever, or unable even to control their body’s functions. But this was different. She was not a nurse here, and these people had no idea why she had come. For an instant she was furious with Sutton for the imposition upon them, and upon her. She did not dare meet his eyes, or he would see it in her. She might then even lash out at him in words, and be bitterly sorry afterwards. She owed him more than that, whatever she felt.
As if aware of the rage and misery in the silence, Sutton spoke. “We just bin and looked at the diggin’,” he said to Andrew Collard. “Freezin’ at the moment, and not much rain, but it’s drippin’ quite a bit, all the same. ’Ow long d’yer reckon it’ll take some o’ that wood ter rot?”
Mrs. Collard glanced from one to the other of them, then told Essie to go outside and play.
“They’re movin’ too fast for it ter matter,” Collard answered. “In’t the wood rottin’ as is the trouble, it’s them bleedin’ great machines shakin’ everythin’ ter bits. Does it even more if they in’t tied down like they should be. Only Gawd ’isself knows what’s shiftin’ around
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