River Daughter. Jane Hardstaff

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River Daughter - Jane Hardstaff Executioner's Daughter

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half an eye open in case of trouble. But since coming to live in the forge he’d slept like a boy who’d been turned to stone.

      Moss pulled on her dress and boots. She patted her pocket. The little bird was there. Then she laid out her blanket. On it she placed a knife, a wooden mug, half a loaf of bread, some cheese and her tinderbox. Reaching under her pallet, she pulled out her winter shawl, given to her by Mrs Bailey last year when the frost came. If nothing else, she could sell it to buy food. Folding the blanket over these few possessions, she tied the ends together and slung it over her back.

      Even in boots, her steps were soft on the earth floor. She knew Pa would not wake. There could be no goodbye of course, stealing away in the middle of the night. But at least she could let him know she was coming back. As quietly as she could, she opened a shutter and plucked a sprig of red-berried hawthorn from the bush that grew outside their window. Tiptoeing to the table, she removed the hazel from the jug and replaced it with the hawthorn. Then she tweaked the curtain to Pa’s pallet and took a last look at her sleeping father.

      The great bear-frame of his body rose and fell. A frown creased his face and Moss wondered where he went in his dreams. She was sorry that he’d wake up and find her gone. But Salter was there to help in the forge and pick the skirrets, and in any case, she hoped she would return soon enough.

      Outside, the fields were pink-orange in the glow of the harvest moon. Moss heaved her bundle over the fence and clambered after it. The grass, damp with night dew, brushed her legs. She crossed the fields quickly and then she was at the river.

      She didn’t feel good about taking Salter’s boat. He’d made it himself from pieces of old timber he’d found on the Baileys’ farm. It lay upturned on the bank. She heaved it over, half-expecting it to cry out for its master, but the only sound was the slap of wood against water as she slid it into the river. She tethered it to a tree stump and threw her bundle in.

      ‘Goin somewhere?’

      ‘Oh!’ Moss jerked round. ‘What are you doing here?’

      ‘I could ask you the same thing, Leatherboots. Sneakin off in the night. Takin me boat and whatever else you got in that bundle.’

      ‘It’s just food and a few things for the journey.’

      ‘Journey, eh? Goin far?’

      ‘Down the river.’ There was no point lying. Though she didn’t have to tell him the whole truth.

      ‘Is that right? All by yerself ? This river ain’t no gentle row. You may be able to manage up here, but downriver it’ll whip along fast and furious.’

      ‘I know. You don’t have to tell me.’

      ‘Then what’s this all about, shore girl? And why creep off in the night, not a word to me nor yer Pa?’

      ‘You wouldn’t understand.’

      ‘Try me.’

      ‘I don’t even understand it myself. It’s just a feeling.’

      ‘Well I got a feelin. A bad feelin. You been funny ever since yesterday in the river. And whatever it is that you ain’t tellin me, it’s makin you do a stupid thing.’

      ‘It’s not stupid. And anyway, even if it was, you’re not my keeper. I can do what I like, Salter. Go where I like.’

      Salter considered this. ‘All right then.’ He threw his leather bag into the boat.

      ‘What are you doing?’

      ‘Comin with you.’

      ‘You are not.’

      ‘Try and stop me. Anyway, that’s my boat yer in.’

      ‘Fine. Suit yourself.’

      She watched him push off from the bank and hop on board. They wobbled into the current. Moss took the oars and began to row. Salter sat back.

      ‘Cheer up, Leatherboots! It’ll be good to see that old city again.’

      ‘Who said anything about London?’

      ‘Call it a feelin.’

      ‘Good or bad?’

      Salter looked at Moss. She waited for the crinkle in his eyes, but none came.

      ‘Too early to say,’ he said.

       CHAPTER FIVE

       Bonfires and Cannons

      There was something unreal about the day that followed. Ignored by the creatures that swam and nested and bobbed, Salter’s boat was as quiet as the river and Moss was glad of the silence. When she wasn’t rowing, she leant over the side, staring into the clear water.

      She hadn’t told Salter about the Riverwitch. Though he’d been there through it all and had seen the Witch for himself, once they’d left London, Salter had been as keen as Moss to start their new life and bury those memories deep. He’d never wanted to talk about it. And Moss, who’d never really forgiven herself for putting her friend in such terrible danger, had vowed never to risk Salter’s life again. Despite his stubbornness, following her and jumping into the boat, she would do everything in her power to keep him away from the Riverwitch.

      That evening they struck camp well before dusk, dragging the boat into a field. Moss gathered stout branches to prop underneath the upturned boat. It would be good shelter that night from the cold and rain. Grudgingly she accepted Salter’s offer to fish for their supper. It turned out he’d brought many things in his bag. His hooks and line, a hatchet, a pan to cook with and even some onions from her storebox. And before she knew it, they began to fall into familiar ways. Moss gathered wood and by the time Salter had a fish wriggling on the end of his line, the fire was lit and the pan was hot. That night they slept curled under the boat in their blankets.

      When the birds woke them at daybreak, Moss insisted they pack up and move on straight away. They launched the boat back on to the river and Salter took the oars, while Moss settled back in her place at the front. Though she never took her eyes from the water, she saw nothing but riverweed and trout.

      Before long the river grew wider. If there were coots or moorhens on this stretch, they didn’t show themselves. Once or twice Moss saw places where the grassy banks seemed to shrink from the water’s edge, pushed back by an oozing sludge. She caught glimpses of dead fish, slits of tarnished silver in the mud. And there was a smell. A rotten smell. Of dead things and fly-blown meat. A smell that had no place in a fresh, cold river.

      They rowed all day, taking turns, sharing half a loaf of bread and some cheese, until their boat was gathered by the tug of the big river Thames as it swept past villages and towns towards London.

      ‘Can’t

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