1  Â
A Letter for Eliza
âNothing ever happens in London,â sighed Eliza.
She put down her needlework and looked out of the window at the wet, wind-shaken garden, where yellow leaves were swirling.
âYouâre missing your cousin, arenât you?â her governess, Mistress Perks, said. She frowned at Elizaâs crossed threads. âUnpick that and do it again.â
Eliza began pulling out stitches. She thought of Warwickshire, where her cousin Lucy lived, and where Eliza and her family had been visiting only a few months ago, in the summer. Eliza lived in a town house in Westminster, next to the House of Lords, but Lucyâs home was a big country house that had its own deer park.
âI loved seeing the hunters ride out,â Eliza said. âAnd having dancing lessons with Lucy. Oh, and meeting the Lady Elizabeth!â
To their great excitement, the girls had been presented to King Jamesâs daughter, Princess Elizabeth, who lived at Coombe Abbey, near Coventry. The princess was only nine years old, like Eliza and Lucy, yet she lived with her own household, far away from her parents and family.
Thinking about this now, Eliza asked, âWhy do the royal children not live with the King and Queen?â
âBecause of their rank,â said Mistress Perks, âand for their safety â and the safety of the realm.â
The safety of the realm. That sounded important. Eliza was about to ask more, but from somewhere in the house she heard a door opening, and voices â one of them her fatherâs. A moment later her father came into the room. He was holding a letter, and Eliza immediately recognised the deerâs head on its wax seal and knew it was from his cousin â Lucyâs father.
Mistress Perks and Eliza both rose and curtseyed.
âForgive this interruption, Mistress Perks,â Elizaâs father said, with a smile, âbut I have a letter for Eliza, and I know she will be eager to see it.â
From inside his own letter he drew another, and handed it to his daughter. It was a single folded sheet of paper, sealed with a blob of wax and marked, â
For Eliza Fenton. Most secret.
â
âOh!â exclaimed Eliza. âFrom Lucy!â
Her father left, and Eliza looked beseechingly at her governess. She longed to be alone to open the letter, but could not leave the room without permission.
Mistress Perks gave in. âYou may go to your chamber now, Eliza.â
Eliza hurried upstairs. In the small chilly bedchamber she broke the seal and opened the piece of paper.
It was blank.
Eliza smiled. She went to the fireplace and blew on the embers of last nightâs fire until little flames sprang up and began to give off heat. She held the letter above the fire. Would it be hot enough? Yes! Reddish- yellow marks appeared on the paper. As the heat increased she began to see words. It was another of Lucyâs secret letters, written in orange juice, and dated 26th October 1605.
â
Sweet cousin,
â wrote Lucy, â
Our enemies are everywhere. Burn this after reading it.
â Lucy always said that. Sometimes the two of them wrote in secret code, but they liked invisible ink better. â
My father is to attend the State Opening of Parliament in London on the fifth of November,
â Lucy continued, â
and the good news is that he will bring me with him, to your house. Mother has gone to Leicester to see Aunt Warren, who has been ill. I did fear someone had poisoned my aunt, but Mother says no, it is only her bad knee.
â The next words were paler as the orange juice ran out: â
â¦must watch for danger at everyâ¦trust no oneâ¦
â And then there was a faint signature: â
Lucy Fenton
â.
All Elizaâs boredom vanished in a moment. The fifth of November was less than a week away. Perhaps Lucy and her father had already left Warwickshire. They could be here any day.
Lucy will
Tim Lahaye, Jerry B. Jenkins