The Lady's Second-Chance Suitor by Scott, Regina (best 7 inch ereader txt) π
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waters of our beautiful Western Sea. The house suggested riches:
good food, wax candles, soft cloth, flowers, fruit and wine. The sort
of folk who lived here might travel to Rhom ary city, hire yachts,
race parmels from their own stable, and employ musicians. It was a
far cry from the wild red waves and the tattoo parlor. In fact no servant opened the door, only a handsome fellow about my own age; he had pressed curls, a knotted lace vest, grey leather boots.
βYouβre out of time,β he said, looking me up and down, βthe
homecoming was yesterday.β
Oh he was a sailor-girlβs dream, a spoiled silverwing, back from
the city. Homecoming parties for these schoolers, back for the summer holidays, had been raging on in the houses of Moon Lane and Connor Crescent for eight days now. I had worked at four of them.
I even had a name for this party-goer who stood before me: Rayner
Mack, son of the house.
βI came about another . . . homecoming,β I said, smiling. βMay
it please you if I speak to M am Ruby Mack?β
βCome in,β he said. βMy mother will be down soon.β
I had not been in the spacious house a third of an hour when 1
The ballad o f H ilo H ill
115
knew something better than he seemed to do. The Widow Mack
had less money than most in this street. There was one servant, a
gaunt woman left over from better days. I could see gaps on the
walls where tapestries, paintings or plate had been taken down.
Sold, I guessed, to pay for Raynerβs fancy education at one of the
M erchantsβ schools in Rhomary, and for his boots, his hair-do and
his homecoming party with hired musicians.
βSince youβre here,β he said, βyouβd better play me a tune, little
balladmaker!β
We stood in a fine room, rundown and dusty in the corners. I
saw myself in a m irror of polished bronze . . . that wouldnβt last
long . . . and was not too pleased with the sight. I am short, thin,
dark; my red cloak looked tawdry, my guitar lacked ribbons, I was
dusty from the streets of Derry. I hated my profession at that
moment.
βW hatβll it be, young sir?β I said cheerfully. βA love song? A racing
ballad? O r what about a great song of the sea?β
I wondered where they had stashed their granddad. Was it a false
alarm?
βPlay Devil Dance!β said his lordship.
It was the latest snapper; I had played it ten times over at the
homecoming parties. As I played he tapped his boots on the tiles; it
pleased him to have a musician all to himself. W hen the dreary
acrobatic piece was done he fumbled at his plaited sporran for a
coin but I held up a hand.
βNo need,β I said. βYou can do me a greater service. Is there an old
man come to stay in your house?β
Rayner Mack looked puzzled. Then he smiled and sighed,
swinging one booted leg over the arm of his carved chair.
βThank our stars!β he said. βAre you some family of that stinking
old critter that M a keeps in the warden house? Youβre welcome to
him!β
βSorry to disappoint,β I said. βI just want to have a word with him.β
A word?β said Rayner. βOld Billy is mad, you know, as well as
unwashed. But Ma has a strong sense of duty . . . she thinks he
might be a former servant of our stable. Why would you be
interested? We had a seafaring man here to visit him, but now a
balladmaker? At least youβre prettier than Cap Raam . . . β
I kept smiling but the situation made me queasy.
βRoutine visit,β I said. βWe interview these old persons in hope of a
sailorβs yarn or a melody. May I see him?β
116
Cherry W ilder
He shrugged and led the way through the quiet house. We
crossed the kitchen where the old housekeeper dozed by the big un lit range, and went out into the garden. It was wild and beautiful, with blossoming fruit trees and gnarled sea pines. We came to
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