little girl. âWe are indebted to the childâs mother for the fish we are eating,â she said. âShe wanted to thank me and that was all she had to give.â
âSo there really is some kind of strange creature on the beach,â Mrs Barry said.
âYes, but it was not described to me as a mermaid or a merman, simply as a monsterâ¦â
âProbably a whale,â Major Mancroft said.
âBut surely there are no whales off our coast and, if there were, would it not be too big for the fishermanâs nets?â Anne asked. âThey would never be able to haul it aboard their vessel.â
âOnly one thing for it,â Captain Gosforth said. âWe shall have to pay our tuppence to have our curiosity satisfied.â
âItâs a trick,â Lady Mancroft said, wrinkling her long nose in distaste. âA few hundred gullible people at tuppence each would line the pockets of those chawbacons very nicely, donât you think?â
âThey are very poor,â Anne said mildly. âWho can blame them for wanting to supplement their income?â
âWhy not make an outing of it?â the Captain suggested. âI shall be delighted to pay for everyone here to see it.â
âThen could we not take a picnic with us?â Annabelle suggested. âWe could find a quiet situation on the cliffs and the gentlemen could light a fire. It would be such fun.â
Everyone agreed enthusiastically. Mrs Bartrum, who was still wondering how to use up all the fish she had been given, offered to bring shrimps and herrings to be cooked over the fire, and that led Lady Mancroft to donate slices of cold roast beef and a side of ham and Mrs Barry to offer to bring orange jelly and her special biscuits, the recipe for which was a closely guarded family secret. âAnd I will bring wine,â Major Mancroft offered. âThe mess has a particularly fine selection.â He paused. âIn case the Regent should arrive unexpectedly, you understand.â
âI will put my chaise at your disposal to convey the servants and hampers ahead of us,â Lord Mancroft added. âThen, if any of the ladies feels disinclined to walk back, they may ride.â
And so it was settled, and all because of Mr Smith and his monster catch. Anne had taken no part in making the arrangements, she was happy to agree to whatever they decided; her thoughts were elsewhere. Talking of the fisherman and little Tildy had reminded her of Dr Tremayne, working away in his consulting rooms, dishevelled, hard up, caring and proud. Oh, she knew he was proud all right. In spite of his shabby room, his untidy clothes, his lack of proper equipment and medicines, he was a man who stood upright and looked you in the eye, even when admitting that he begged. He did not beg on his own behalf, but for those poor souls who had no one else to help them. He said he had been a shipâs surgeon, but why had he gone to sea in the first place? Treating seamenwounded by war was very different from mending the heads of little girls and giving an old man medicine for a chronic cough. She had to see him again and learn more.
The rest of the meal passed in small talk: the doings of the Regent, hardly seen in public since he was so badly received at the victory celebrations earlier in the year: the peace talks going on in Vienna where the allies were carving Europe up between them; the fate of Napoleon, now banished to the remote island of St Helena, and the fear of riots and insurrection as the soldiers returned home to find there was no work for them. Anne wanted to hear more about that, but her aunt quickly suggested it was time for the ladies to withdraw and instead she found herself talking about the latest fashions over the teacups in the withdrawing room.
When the gentlemen joined them, the older members of the company sat down to whist while the younger ones were prevailed upon to sing or play. Walter