here at Fairbourne Hall. Except when we have more than one Mary, for example.â
Margaret nodded.
âMr. Hudson tells me you worked previously as a young ladyâs maid. And that was where?â
âLime Tree Lodge, in Summerfield.â
âAnd your employer?â
Margaret swallowed. âA Mrs. Haines.â
âNormally, I would write to your past employer to request a character reference be sent directly to me. But as Mr. Hudson has taken it upon himself to engage you, I have agreed to give you a monthâs trial. Employment after that time will depend upon how well you perform your duties, follow house rules, and get on with other members of staff. Do I make myself clear?â
âYes, maâam.â
âWell. We shall see.â The woman rose. âFrom the looks of you, youâve had a long day already. Letâs go up and get you settled.â
Taking a candlestick, Mrs. Budgeon led the way along the basement passage. Handing Margaret the lit candle, the woman unlocked a storeroom with one of the many keys hanging from her waist and extracted a set of bed linens and a hand towel. Carrying the candle in one hand and her carpetbag in the other, Margaret followed Mrs. Budgeon up a pair of narrow stairs, through a servery on the ground floor, then up two more flights of back stairs. Margaret was accustomed to climbing stairs in the Berkeley Square town house, but not at such a pace!
âYou are to use the back stairs for all your comings and goings,â the housekeeper said. âYou are only allowed on the main stairs for staff assemblies or if you are sweeping or polishing the railings.â
Margaret nodded, breathing too hard to answer.
Finally they reached the attic. âThe servantsâ rooms along this corridor are occupied or used for storage. But there is one small chamber you might use beyond the old schoolroom.â She turned the corner and added with pride, âEach of the female servants here at Fairbourne Hall has her own bedchamber. That is something you wonât find everywhere.â
Had Joan shared a room, perhaps even a bed, with one of the other maids in the Berkeley Square attic? Margaret had no idea.
Mrs. Budgeon opened the last door, and the musty chalk smell of disuse met Margaretâs nose. The chamber was small, narrow, and paneled in white. A cloudy window offered the faint glow of evening sunlight. A cast-iron bed with a bare mattress stood against one wall, a dressing chest and wooden slat chair against the other. Shifting the linens to one arm, Mrs. Budgeon laid the hand towel on the dressing chest, frowning at the empty basin where a pitcher should have been. âI shall send someone up with water.â
Margaretâs stomach grumbled a noisy complaint, and she felt her cheeks heat.
Mrs. Budgeon glanced at her. âWhen did you last eat?â
Margaret set down the candle and her carpetbag. âThis morning.â
âYouâve missed dinner, and supper isnât until nine.â She sighed. âI shall have something sent up to you. But donât get used to being waited upon.â
Too late , Margaret thought.
The woman handed Margaret the armload of bed linens. âYou are capable of making your own bed, I trust?â
âOf course,â Margaret murmured. But the truth was, she had never made a bed in her life.
âIn the morning, Betty will show you what is expected here at Fairbourne Hall. Iâll hear no excuses of âbut in my last situation things were done differently.â Understood?â
âYes, maâam,â Margaret said. No fear of that from me.
âââ
When the housekeeper left, Margaret hung her bonnet on the peg behind the door, and set about trying to make the bed. The sheets and pillowcase were of coarse cottonânothing as fine as she was used to but clean and sweet smelling. She spread the sheets and tucked them under the tick, too tired to care
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