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- West, Nicole Leigh
Gypsy Trail
Gypsy Trail Read online
First published by Lodestone Books, 2014
Lodestone Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., Laurel House, Station Approach, Alresford, Hants, SO24 9JH, UK
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Text copyright: Nicole Leigh West 2013
ISBN: 978 1 78279 691 6
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publishers.
The rights of Nicole Leigh West as author have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Design: Stuart Davies
Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
1. Ghost Hollow
2. Little Lady of the Glass House
3. Good Luck Tears
4. Moon Shadows
5. Shattered Silence
6. In to the Flames
7. The Promise of a Hug
8. The Butterfly Queen
9. The Gatekeeper in the Guise of a God
10. The Fallen
11. Smoke and Mirrors
12. Paralysis
13. Lost
14. A Wash of Red
15. Take it Back
16. The Treasure Trove
About the Author
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Shelley, Desney, Vince, my family and fairy friends for their magical contributions to The Gypsy Trail adventure.
Chapter One
Ghost Hollow
The smell of stale sweat lingered as Claudia rolled on her back and pushed the sheet away. She inhaled, searching for the cool, antiseptic touch of morning air. Her fingers twitched as she touched her thighs and she opened her eyes to look at her legs.
One…two…three…four…five…ten. Ten bruises — violent handprints locked in blue. She tried to imagine what it was like to grip someone’s flesh so hard that bruises formed. Impossible. She couldn’t even squash the spiders that lived in her wardrobe, even though they held her clothes hostage with sticky webs.
She glanced away, towards the window and the grey sky crying misty tears. Rooftop gargoyles loomed over the grass, their shadows released by the rising sun. Ready for flight, batlike wings stretched towards the valley and open beaks whispered of escape.
Tears slipped down her neck as her feet touched the floor. Turning to face the mirror, she rubbed at purple smudges under her eyes. Her hair was a dark mass of knots and she imagined Margaret’s voice echoing down the halls. “For heaven’s sakes, Claudia, brush your hair!”
She groaned and raked her hands through the tangles, just as the smell of bacon rose from the kitchen below. Her nose lifted and her stomach rumbled, competing with the pain of her throbbing legs. She took a deep breath and looked in the mirror again.
At least the tangled hair hid her red, puffy eyes.
“Good morning, Miss Claudia,” Margaret said, as Claudia ran into the dining room. Dust motes floated by the wooden panels on the walls, glinting in the light from the bay window, and her shoulders relaxed.
“Good morning, Margaret.” She sat on an oversized antique chair and dangled her feet, trying to scrape the floor with a big toe.
Margaret put a bowl of porridge on the table and fussed about, placing the spoon and napkin just so. Claudia stifled a groan. Of course the bacon wasn’t for her, Margaret would probably eat all of it. Rubbing wrinkled, chubby hands on her apron, the housekeeper hurried back to the kitchen, back to the delicious, sizzling pan of breakfast heaven.
“Oh well, you must eat this too.” She pretended to scoop porridge into two imaginary bowls. Snow-White and Rose-Red nibbled on the gluggy oats, talking to each other in their musical language.
Gibberish really. Considering they only lived in her head.
Didn’t they?
They weren’t real friends like other teenagers had anyway, but they smiled at her and ate with her at the lonely table and sometimes they slept in her bed, like two little kittens at her feet. They even looked like her, with straight, black eyebrows and large, almond-shaped eyes like Arabian princesses.
Except, theirs were green and hers were ugly old brown.
She wasn’t jealous of their green eyes, not really. After all, she’d be so lonely without them. Stuck in a tiny town in the Czech Republic. Has anyone even heard of Lednice? Doubtful. Maybe it’s just a secret dumping ground for unwanted children. She rested her forehead on the cool surface of the table. She sensed decay in her bones. Is it possible to rot at the age of fifteen? The old people in the old house invaded her cells until she felt ancient and shrivelled.
She dragged her head up from the table and spotted old man gardener outside, raking the leaves into a pile next to his shiny ride-on lawn mower.
Just like he did every day.
Plucking an imaginary rake from the air — pink and purple with gold prongs rather than rusty metal — she swished back and forth, scattering the dust.
“Miss Claudia, you mustn’t behave so.” Margaret stood at the door, staring with round, faded blue eyes. “Go at once to the schoolroom. You know Mr Campbell is waiting.” Two hair curlers poked through the housekeeper’s floral headscarf, bouncing as she spoke.
Why didn’t the miserable old woman just go back to England? Surely she wasn’t trapped here as well; she was an adult. As Margaret turned to go, Claudia stifled a half snort, half giggle at the sight of the woman’s large backside wobbling under her skirt, drawing the material further into the crevices with each step.
Her need to laugh didn’t last long. She stood still for a moment to study the long walk down the corridor to the schoolroom. Stag heads lined the walls, their antlers casting harsh shadows. As always, she ran straight down the middle, scared they’d leap out at her, terrified by the fixed stare of their dead eyes.
At the end, she stopped, ready tears close to spilling down her nose at the thought of another sunless day in the glass-walled conservatory.
Mr Campbell glared at her and pointed to the singular desk in the room. His role of taskmaster was never more apparent than first thing in the morning. Claudia sat on the chair and leant her elbows on the desk, squashing the urge to put more distance between herself and her tutor.
“Why are you still in your nightgown, Claudia?”
“I didn’t think to change it.”
“Well, next time, Miss Claudia, please ensure you dress appropriately for school.” He peered at her from the top of his reading glasses. His eyes were too close to his nose.
Claudia nodded, trying hard not to groan. Why? There was no one to dress for. Stupid man.
“We will begin with geography today.” Mr Campbell put four heavy books on the table.
His monotonous voice drizzled into her ears. He was balding, with a narrow, mouse-like face and Claudia imagined him scurrying back to a neat and tidy mouse hole each day, to read the dictionary over a cup of sugarless, milk-less tea. She giggled at the thought and covered her mouth, growing tired of her own endlessly changing emotions. A loud yawn escaped.
“Please refrain from that behaviour, Claudia. Open your book to page nine. We’ll continue from yesterday.” Mr Campbell pursed his lips.
Perhaps he was so cross because he’d just returned home from one of his hunting trips, withou
t the rabbits he liked Margaret to turn into stew. Claudia always imagined fluffy, white rabbits, bounding across the fields to visit each other’s burrows when Margaret offered her that stew. She never ate it.
At least today was geography. She’d have precious moments with her window to the world; the small window that was Mr Campbell’s computer. Imagine exploring exotic places like France and Italy and Africa. She knew Snow-White and Rose-Red would love to join her on a trip overseas. She looked up at her tutor, the urge to annoy him with useless questions always too hard to resist.
A flash of colour zipped through the grey outside.
“Oh!” Claudia clapped her hand over her mouth. Leaning forward to stare out the window, she saw a long row of trucks and wagons and horse trailers snake through the field below. The very same field she’d named ‘ghost hollow’ for its haunted emptiness.
“Who are they?” She jumped up to press her nose against the glass.
“Gypsies. Carnival people. They are none of your concern whatsoever.”
Claudia let the word roll around in her mind. Gypsies.
“Good Lord, girl, close your mouth. They’re wandering thieves and nothing more. They are certainly not worthy of your attention. This country has enough economic woes without vagabonds disturbing the peace. Let that be the end of the topic.”
Claudia no longer heard him. Gypsies! Could they really be here, at this very moment, planning to stay on the grounds? She ran back through the hall and into the library with its wall-to-wall shelves. The wooden ladder was there, beckoning her nimble feet and she climbed to the top shelf where Margaret kept all the interesting books.
She’d read about travelling theatre companies before, dancers and musicians of gypsy blood, forever trekking across the land.
Where is that book?
“Miss Claudia, I will only say this once. Get down from that ladder and come back to the schoolroom.” Mr Campbell’s voice rumbled beneath her. Margaret, hands clasping her heaving chest, rushed to help her down.
Claudia’s tingling fingers grazed the smooth, leather bound books as she turned to face her jailers. She stepped down the ladder and stood in front of the angry pair, biting her thumbnail and lowering her head. Out of the corner of her eye, she noticed old man gardener sneak by, one sturdy finger held up to his mouth in a gesture of silence.
What’s he doing inside the house?
As she was thoroughly reprimanded by two stern voices, a sympathetic smile crossed the gardener’s face. Her hands flew to her cheeks and she bit her bottom lip to stop the smile she so wanted to return.
“Now now, you must not cry. Contain your emotions as befits your station, young lady,” Margaret said, assuming her most pompous tone.
Claudia scratched her head. So confusing. Not Margaret’s complete misinterpretation of her feelings — the housekeeper rarely understood her — but her reference to Claudia’s ‘station’. What is my station anyway?
She knew she was wealthy, of course, what with all the boxes of clothes, shoes and jewellery arriving monthly from London. But everything was far too adult for her and stupidly impractical. She was happiest in her nightgowns.
Can’t believe Margaret is still lecturing. The words had turned into a drone.
Just keep nodding.
“You, man, what are you doing inside?” Mr Campbell’s voice interrupted her thoughts.
“Excuse me, sir, just reporting on them gypsies to the gatekeeper.” Old man gardener kept his eyes fixed on the floor.
“On your way then.”
“Why can’t he come inside?” Claudia asked, desperate to talk to the man and, at the same time, scared to the core at the mention of the gatekeeper.
“He is a servant; it’s not his place to be in here with you, as you well know. Now, back to your books, Miss Claudia. There has been enough kerfuffle for one day.” Mr Campbell shooed her out of the library.
Kerfuffle? Surely the old tutor is quite mad. He and Margaret were servants also. So why are they allowed in the house? Claudia shook her head, shrugged and skipped up the hallway, savouring the rare excitement she felt brewing inside.
Alfred Campbell watched Claudia leave and frowned at the dark, messy hair hanging down the girl’s back. He vowed to have a word with the housekeeper for failing to uphold grooming standards. After all, they were paid well by their absent employers; they could not be seen to be negligent with their charge.
A hot rush of heat stained his neck as his student turned back, matching his stare. The intensity of her dark, oddly-shaped eyes, tilting up, as they did, on the outer corners like a cat, always caught him off guard. Surely she was half mad. Good Lord, anyone would be, living as she had from such a young age. No contact with other children, or with normal society.
He cleared his throat, pushing his chest forward to straighten his spine. All that mattered was giving his pupil an education worthy of his wages from Edward Spencer and keeping a job far away from London. He wondered if the rain would soon clear. His fingers itched to grasp the cool, smooth surface of his new, double-barrelled shotgun.
“Mr Campbell, may we invite the gypsies inside?”
Alfred Campbell rolled his eyes at the suggestion. “Of course not,” he snapped, annoyed at the interruption to his hunting daydream.
He watched Claudia as she stole sneaky glances outside. He followed her gaze and scowled at the colourful wagons and the people rushing around, leading horses from trailers and unpacking large objects at the far end of the field.
“Whilst we can do nothing about the presence of these people, we can, and most certainly will, ignore them. Eyes back to your book.” He tried to raise his eyebrows in his most commanding manner.
“They’re staying on our land; surely we’re allowed to speak with them?”
“We, or rather you, do not own this land.”
“Well of course I don’t. But…well, surely my parents gave them permission to stay?”
“Gypsies rarely ask for permission and, I can assure you, your parents will not be happy about their arrival. However, if you must know, they are allowed to be here. Well, this land has a cursed ‘open field’ policy anyway. Lord knows why, but it means the public can camp on the lower section by the lake.” He folded his arms and turned his back to the window.
“Why haven’t you told me this before?” Claudia’s head cocked to one side, a gesture that infuriated Alfred Campbell by its simplicity.
He took a deep breath. “You haven’t asked and it’s has been quite a few years since they were last here.”
“They’ve been before?” Claudia sat on the edge of her seat, leaning towards him.
“Yes, many times. But you were in the nursery section, in the front of the house, where we could more easily shield your young eyes from such odious distractions.”
“Well, then.” Claudia frowned. “Why would my parents mind, if it’s legal?”
“Because they would. The whole community minds. Now, that’s enough. Start your reading. Please.”
“My parents don’t even care to see me, so why would they care if I see the gypsies?”
Alfred Campbell was struck by her voice. She didn’t seem to speak with anger or resentment; it was simply a statement of fact. If it were he…No. Must stay focused on the work. “At this rate you will not be finished in time for lunch. Head down, young lady.”
His student did as he asked, her head held up by thin, delicate fingers resting on her chin. She seemed to focus on her study, though Lord only knew what really went on inside the mind of an overly curious, teenage girl, until Margaret summoned them to a lunch of corn meat and vegetables with white sauce.
He ensured Claudia’s meal was served in the formal dining room before joining Margaret at the small table in the kitchen.
He whispered to the housekeeper, “You must force Claudia to dress in proper clothes. I’m sure it’s never likely to happen, but if her parents arrived unexpectedly they would be mortified by her appearance.”
/> “I’ve tried, but she won’t let me near her in the morning anymore. When I ask her to dress herself, seeing as she won’t allow me to help, she just smiles in that vague way of hers and ignores me.” Margaret waved her cutlery around in circles as she spoke.
“Well, I don’t know what must be done but it’s simply not right. She’s far too old now to be behaving in such a manner.” Alfred Campbell sat straight in his chair, elbows pulled in, carefully carving his lunch into bite-sized pieces.
“I know. It’s strange, the way she only wears those nightgowns. Perhaps she’s become shy about her…” Margaret looked up at him and her cheeks reddened. “Her approaching adulthood.”
“You must speak with her then. I can’t broach such a subject with a young girl.”
“It’s not my place either. Her mother should be here to do that. It’s one thing to look after a little girl…” Her voice trailed off as she wiped beads of sweat from her forehead. “It’s hard, after all, at her age. Maybe we could be more lenient with her schedule? Let her roam outside a bit? Her parents will never know and she might start taking an interest in more normal things, like…”
Alfred Campbell paused, dropped his fork and began to rub both temples. “That is absolutely out of the question. I’ll simply write a letter to Mr and Mrs Spencer addressing our concerns. They’ll surely tell us what to do, or perhaps Mrs Spencer will come here herself to speak with her daughter.”
“Huh, wishful thinking.” Margaret’s cutlery clattered onto her plate as she stood to clear the table.
“Any left for me then?” The gruff voice came from the door at the back of the kitchen.
Alfred Campbell narrowed his eyes and watched as Margaret turned to face the gatekeeper, her lip curling and her hand reaching to cover the small amount of cleavage peeking over her apron. The man leaned against the doorframe. A ring of keys hung from his belt, weighing his pants down at the side to reveal the white, bulging flesh of his stomach.
“Yes, yes, I’ll bring it to you at the gatehouse, just as I do every day,” Margaret said, not meeting the gatekeeper’s steady leer.