We heard from our mother shortly after Bersaba’s arrival. The messenger had taken letters to the farm and finding it destroyed had come on to Flamstead. I was so glad that I received those letters because I could imagine my mother’s distress if the messenger had gone back and told her what he had seen at the farm.

The West Country was fairly quiet, she wrote. She wished that we were with her. At times like this it was good for families to be together. She wanted news of the babies. She longed to see them but she would be terrified if we attempted to cross the country at such a time. We would understand her anxieties and she knew we would seize every opportunity to send news to her.

We wrote at once telling her about the disaster at the farm. She already knew of Luke’s death. It would comfort her to know that we were together.

When the messenger had left we talked and talked about home and our parents, and when we went to our rooms I found Grace there instead of Meg.

‘Meg has a headache, my lady,’ said Grace. ‘I said I’d come in her place.’

‘Poor Meg. She must ask Mrs Cherry for something.’

‘She will, my lady, if it gets worse. It is a sorry matter for Mistress Longridge, but happy, I said to Meg, that she be here with you.’

‘Yes. I am glad that I am able to have her with me. She has suffered terribly.’

‘And it will be good for you to have her here when your time comes, my lady.’

Grace was watching me intently and I felt the colour rising to my cheeks.

‘When … my time comes …’ I repeated foolishly.

‘Well, I could be mistook but I don’t think so. I know the signs … It’s being so much with it, you might say.’

‘You … know?’

Grace nodded slowly.

So my secret was out.

I wanted to tell Bersaba first so I did that day. She was silent for a while. Then she said: ‘It was when he came home in May.’

I nodded and noticed that her mouth turned down momentarily and she looked almost angry. I was filled with sympathy, for I guessed she was thinking of Luke,

Then she smiled and said: ‘You’ll have to take care this time, Angelet.’

‘I am determined to.’

‘I wonder if it will be a boy,’ she mused. ‘He would like that.’

Then she talked about how she had waited for the births of Arabella and Lucas and it was very cosy. I was happy because I felt that my state was taking her mind off her own terrible tragedy.

Because of the war we had very few servants now. There were only the Cherrys, Jesson, Meg and Grace. Jesson managed the stables with two young boys from the village to help him. They weren’t old enough to go to the war, but if it continued I supposed when they were we should lose them.

This had made a different relationship between us. We were more intimate and Mrs Cherry had become more of a friend than a servant. It might have been because the Royalist cause was being undermined and a great many people were predicting a Parliamentary victory which would have an equalising effect on society.

She came into my room one day and said I was looking peaky and she had a good pick-me-up tonic. ‘You can’t beat herb-twopence,’ she told me. ‘I’ve always said that was a cure for every ailment under the sun.’

‘I’m afraid of taking tonics, Mrs Cherry,’ I said. ‘I want everything to be natural …’

‘My patience me,’ she cried, her cherry face wrinkling up with mirth. ‘If herb-twopence ain’t the most natural thing on God’s earth, my name’s not Emmy Cherry. A little dash of it would do you the world of good.’

‘As a matter of fact I feel very well indeed. If I look a little wan, it’s nothing.’

‘Well, we’ve got to take care of you. You’ve got your sister back again. I reckon she’ll keep her eye on you.’

‘I’m sure she will. And she’s experienced too.’

‘Then we’ve got Grace. We’re lucky, I reckon that’s what. Does the General know?’ Her eyes were sharp suddenly.

‘Not yet. It’s not possible to reach him. We don’t know where he is. This terrible war …’

‘So he don’t know yet.’ She shook her head. ‘If you was to be able to get in touch,’ she said, ‘tell him it’ll be all right, will you? Tell him that Cherry and me will see everything’s all right.’

‘I will, Mrs Cherry. You’re fond of the General, I know.’

‘Well, you might say that was putting it mild like. Cherry thinks the world of him. Served with him. Would be with him now if he was fit and well … like the rest of them. And all the time I’ve been here … well, I’ve got to look on him … more than a mere master.’

‘He is a man who inspires great respect.’

She lowered her eyes to hide her emotion, I guessed. Then she said brightly: ‘Well, if you was feeling a bit under the weather you come to me, my lady. I reckon you won’t be scorning my herb-twopence once you’ve felt its effects.’

When she left me I went to Bersaba and told her that Mrs Cherry thought I ought to try some of her cures.

‘Do you remember Mrs Cherry’s soothing mixture?’ I asked.

‘It sent you to sleep, didn’t it?’

‘I don’t sleep very well now,’ I told her. ‘Sometimes I have strange dreams. I told you how once I went to the Castle Room and saw a face there … or thought I did. I’m sure I did. It was at night and I took a candle. Mrs Cherry came and found me there. She thought I was walking in my sleep.’

‘Were you?’ asked Bersaba.

‘No. I’m sure I wasn’t. I saw a light in the castle from my room and then I went up and saw the face. I thought it was Strawberry John … a man I once saw in the woods. But they didn’t believe me any of them, and after that I lost the baby.’

Bersaba said: ‘And you think the two incidents were connected?’

‘They all said so. I had a fright, you see, and that can bring on a miscarriage, can’t it?’

‘Tell me exactly what happened,’ said Bersaba. And I told her.

‘Did Richard know?’

‘Oh yes. He thought with the rest that I’d had a nightmare.’

‘It was all connected with the castle. Did he ever talk to you about the castle?’

‘No. There are some things one can’t talk about with Richard. He withdraws himself, as it were, so that you know you mustn’t talk about it any more.’

‘You should not allow yourself to be dominated, Angelet.’

‘You don’t know Richard.’

She smiled at me, rather tenderly, I thought.

Then she said: ‘Stop thinking about the castle. Stop thinking about anything but the baby. Just imagine how overjoyed Richard will be when he knows and how happy you will be when you have your little baby to care for.’

‘I do try, Bersaba, but then all sorts of thoughts come into my mind. I wonder about Richard, where he is, whether he will ever come back … whether like Luke … and so many others …’

She gripped my hand so tightly that I winced.

‘Don’t,’ she commanded. ‘He’ll come back. I tell you he’ll come back.’

That was typical of Bersaba. Sometimes she appeared to believe that she could work miracles.

Then she started to talk about babies and she said we would make the clothes ourselves as we should never have a seamstress in these days.

It is wonderful having Bersaba with me.

It was hot that August. The wasps were thick around the plum trees; the children were tanned by the sun; we could always hear Arabella’s imperious voice above the rest. When I watched them at play I would forget the war, forget my fears for Richard, forget everything but that early next year my child would be born.

For days I lived in contentment and then I awoke one night in a state of uneasiness. I couldn’t explain what it was but it was just a strong sense of warning. It was almost as though something was warning me of danger, and the first person I thought of on waking was Magdalen—Richard’s first wife.

It may have been because she had been in the house as I had expecting a child as I was; and then she had died. Deep within me I suppose there was a fear here that because it had happened to her it could happen to me. But why? It was something in the manner of Mrs Cherry and Cherry (although he was a man of very few words), of Jesson, Grace and Meg … Yes, the attitude of every one of them had changed towards me since it had become known that I was to have a child. It was almost as though they were watching me, looking for a sign of something.

I got out of bed and went to the window. I couldn’t see the castle because I was in the Blue Room. I had not wanted to go to the bedchamber I had shared with Richard; this was more cosy. Bersaba was in the Lavender Room, very close, and all the children slept in a room with Phoebe which was immediately next to hers—so we were all together. I looked out on the peaceful lawns and thought of what had happened to Longridge Farm and how at any moment soldiers could advance and lay waste my home.

But it was not such thoughts which made me uneasy. It was something that overshadowed me alone—it was a personal fear which of course is so much more frightening than those which are shared by others.

I went to the Lavender Room and, opening the door, looked in. Bersaba was asleep. She lay on her back with her hair falling on to the pillow, showing clearly the scars on her forehead. She had always tried to disguise them, but they had not prevented Luke’s falling in love with her and loving her in his Puritan way much more fervently than Richard had ever loved me. How odd that Luke, a Puritan, should love like that. But was it something in Bersaba?

I turned away and quietly opened the door of the nursery. Moonlight showed me Arabella and Lucas on their child’s pallets and Phoebe sleeping quietly with little Thomas in his crib.

All was well. Why should I have awakened with these fears on me? And as I stood there I knew that I was being watched and I felt my nerves tingling just as they had that night in the Castle Room when I had thought a ghost was behind me and had turned to find it was Mrs Cherry.

I felt limp with terror and afraid to turn round. Then I heard Bersaba laugh softly.

‘Angel, what are you doing?’

‘Oh!’ I turned and there she was, my sister, her eyes wide with something like amusement. ‘I … I couldn’t sleep,’ I stammered.

‘You’ll catch cold wandering about like that.’

‘It’s a warm night, and what of you?’

‘You came and looked at me.’

‘So you were awake?’

‘Not completely. But I looked up and there was my sister looking at me in a very odd sort of manner.’

‘What did you mean an odd sort of manner …?’

‘As if you … suspected me of something. Do you?’

‘What should I suspect you of?’

‘You tell me.’

‘You say strange things, Bersaba.’

‘Mrs Cherry is an old gossip,’ said Bersaba. ‘Has she been talking to you?’

‘Well, only to offer me herb-twopence. She seems concerned about me.’

‘Come into my room,’ said Bersaba. I went in and we sat on her bed.

‘Everyone seems concerned about me,’ I added.

‘Well, it’s because you’re in what they call an interesting condition. They want everything to go well.’

She was looking at me intently. ‘Tell me why you thought it necessary to come looking round at us.’

‘I woke up.’

‘Not that old tooth again?’ There was a faint hint of mirth in her voice which I didn’t understand.

‘No. It was withdrawn. I was just unable to sleep.’

‘You need your sleep now.’

‘Do you think I ought to take some of Mrs Cherry’s soothing cure? I always remember how you used to give it to me. You were so determined that I was going to sleep.’

‘Was I?’

‘Oh yes. You used almost to insist that I took it and pour it out yourself.’

‘It made you sleep long and deep. You didn’t go wandering about in the night when you took it, did you?’

‘Of course not.’

‘Well … it served its purpose. I think you should have a drink at night, warm milk is good for slumber. Ella used to give it to me when I was carrying Arabella and Lucas. I found it good. I’ll tell you what, I’m going to see that you have it every night.’

‘It’s nice to have you looking after me.’

‘And don’t listen to any tales the servants might tell you …’

‘Tales, Bersaba?’

‘You know what servants are. Do they ever say anything about … the castle?’

‘No. They haven’t talked of it for a long time.’

‘Servants get ideas. Don’t worry. I’ll look after you.’