Mark Dunn - Under the Harrow

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What if Charles Dickens had written a 21st century thriller? Welcome to Dingley Dell. The Encyclopedia Britannica (Ninth Edition), a King James Bible, a world atlas, and a complete set of the novels of Charles Dickens are the only books left to the orphans of Dingley Dell when the clandestine anthropological experiment begins. From these, they develop their own society, steeped in Victorian tradition and the values of a Dickensian world. For over a century Dinglians live out this semi-idyllic and anachronistic existence, aided only by minimal trade with the supposedly plague-ridden Outland. But these days are quickly coming to an end. The experiment, which has evolved into a lucrative voyeuristic peep-box for millionaires and their billionaire descendants, has run its course. Dingley Dell must be totally expunged, and with it, all trace of the thousands of neo-Victorians who live there. A few Dinglians learn the secret of both their manipulated past and their doomed future, and this small, motley crew of Dickensian innocents must race the clock to save their countrymen and themselves from mass annihilation.

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“It must not be the same with the Digglians.”

“The Digglians?”

“The ones who live in the fenced-off valley. I don’t think they’ve been exposed to the same viruses or whatever that we have. I think that’s why it hit him so hard.”

Annette took her mother to the door of the extra bedroom. She opened it slowly and quietly so as not to disturb her slumbering, febrile guest. Her mother put her head in. Glumly she said, “Yes, I see,” and gently closed the door. “What have you done, Annette?”

“I wasn’t thinking. Should we call a doctor?”

“And let it be known that one of them is in our house? Do you think that doctors are any better at keeping that kind of thing to themselves than locksmiths? Provided we can even find a doctor who makes house calls, how long do you think it would be before someone came for him — one of the others — the ones who go after these cursed people? You remember the man they killed? Right in front of this house. He was a Digglian, too. Was it only coincidence that this was when your agoraphobia took hold?

“No, ma’am, I will not have that kind of thing tugging the hell at my conscience, Annette. We’re going to have to deal with him ourselves. And if you ever let another one of these Digglian weirdos into this house, I’m going to drown you in the bathtub.”

Annette nodded, looking even more contrite and more self-deprecating than before. “I like him, Mama.”

“What?”

“I said that I like him.”

“Are you in love with him?”

“I don’t know what love is, Mama. I just know that I like him. I feel sorry for him. Especially after what I did to him.”

“You’re one piece of work, Netty.”

“I know, Mama. I know.”

Chapter the Nineteenth. Saturday, June 28, 2003

Under the Harrow - изображение 32ntonia Bocker stood in the doorway to her stationer’s shop and smiled. It was nearing noon and the doors would soon be closed, not to open again until Monday morning, and here were so many customers clamouring for the attention of her lone Saturday clerk, Miss Hexam, that Antonia could scarcely believe her eyes. Miss Abbey Hexam — a serious young woman with plain and simple features that vanished from memory once out of sight — was pulled this way and that by the determined men and women bunched about the counter, each apparently desirous of making Miss Antonia Bocker the most successful ornamental and practical stationer in the history of the Dell.

Abbey Hexam looked up from writing in her sales book to see her employeress silhouetted in the open doorway, and gave a smile. Antonia had never been one to put her salesclerks in a difficult way when it was quite easy for her to step in and don the mantle of salesclerk herself to alleviate a customer crush-and-rush. And so Miss Antonia Bocker let the door close behind her and marched with a singularity of purpose up to the crowded counter and thereupon became clerical partner to her young employee, much to Miss Hexam’s situationally-restrained delight.

“What is this?” Antonia marveled to her clerk in an underbreath. “You would think that there was a sudden shortage of ink blotters and sealing wax in the Dell.”

And clasped morocco diaries. I’ve sold three just this morning.”

“That all of our lives should be so interesting as to be documented between pebbled leather! Good morning, Mr. Meagles, I hope that you have not been kept waiting long.”

“Not long at all,” said the short balding man standing, slightly stooped, before Antonia. Mr. Meagles smiled, his mouth drooping on one side from a bout of apoplexy from which he had largely recovered save the facial wilt. Job Meagles was bailiff and clerk to the honourable Judge Price FitzMarshall, chief justice and administrative magistrate of Dingley Dell, and though quite devoted to his employer, was generally undeserving of the frequently levelled sobriquet “Mr. Toad.”

“And how is Judge Fitz-Marshall?” asked Antonia, whilst withdrawing a sales book from a shelf below the counter.

“Never better. I have my shopping list here somewhere. Ah, yes.”Meagles extracted a slip of paper from his coat pocket and presented it to Antonia.

Antonia conned the paper, then looked up. “But Mr. Meagles, this is the list of what was needed last month. Do you not have a different list for to-day?”

“Oh, dear me,” said the absent-minded bailiff, patting all of his pockets. “I do. Of course I do.” Mr. Meagles eventually produced a second list that contained only one item: red tape — for tying up paper bundles.

“How extraordinary,” said Mr. Meagles, scratching his head.

Most extraordinary,” said Antonia. “I’ve never known the judge to require so little from my stores. Has there been a recent contraction in his caseload?”

Mr. Meagles shook his head. “We’re actually quite busy. And it is not in the judge’s nature to be improvident about keeping stationery supplies on hand. But then look about you, Miss Bocker. With all the customers here to-day, I see not a single one who is affiliated with either the PetitParliament or the Inn-of-Justice.”

“I would not have taken notice if you hadn’t pointed it out, Mr. Meagles. Business continues to thrive for all of us positioned several rungs down the ladder of power and prestige in the Dell, but it has come to a standstill for those at the top. It is very curious, my good man. Quite a puzzlement. But let us not become obsessitors about it. And since you are come to buy a spool of red binding tape, at least, may I impose upon you to know if the judge has made his ruling on the death of Mrs. Pyegrave? I understood that there was to be no inquest, but what was the exact ruling of the judge?”

“It was published just this morning. The death of that poor woman was adjudged to be an accident — a terrible accident that might have been avoided had she not been drinking heavily and in a most self-abasing state.”

“But that would make a case for suicide, would it not, Mr. Meagles?”

The diminutive man gave a slight nod, worked his slanted mouth a little as if he would answer, then looked about with some nervous concern upon his brow and withheld his reply.

Antonia took the arm of the judge’s bailiff and escorted him back into her private office. “We will not be heard here, Mr. Meagles,” she said with quiet assurance as she bolted the door. “Pray tell me, as you feel inclined, why Judge Fitz-Marshall, given evidence that poor Mrs. Pyegrave was in such a dismal state of mind as to take her own life, did not rule thusly.”

Meagles put his lips near to Antonia’s ear and said in a sunken, confiding voice: “To spare the family from public humiliation, for suicide, as you know, Miss Bocker, carries a stigma with it. To think that a couple so blest as the Pyegraves could have its distaff half of the union so unbearably unhappy whilst the husband continued in his affable, hail-fellow-well-met fashion was too much for Pyegrave and his brothers to put out for public consumption, and so the fall was ruled an accident, and the cause severe intoxication.”

Antonia nodded and tossed a nugget of coal, which served upon her work desk as paperweight, back and forth between her hands. This empty occupation gave her time to think of what next to say, though she later confessed to me that the thought which proved the most impertinent within her mind at that moment was that Janet Pyegrave could not have been the depressed sort of person that Pyegrave had described, for she had given her heart to a young stableboy who most certainly put a youthful glow upon her cheeks and a spring to her step. (It only stood to reason!)

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