It was an overcast November morning, and Marinette Dupain-Cheng shivered as she sat next to her daughter in the clattering wagon. The vicarage, which they were gradually approaching, was beginning to look more like a castle compared with the little house where she and Luka had lived in Abbeville.
Lila had been fortunate. That had always been true. As their father's favourite, Marinette's little sister had received all manner of advantages during their childhood, and there had never been any doubt that she would find a good husband. And their father had been right. Lila had married the vicar and moved into the vicarage, while Marinette had been forced to settle for Luka the fisherman. But Marinette had no complaints. Luka might have been poor, but a kinder person could not be found on this earth.
A heavy feeling settled in her chest at the thought of Luka. But she gave herself a shake and plucked up her courage. There was no use shedding any more tears over something she could not change. God had wanted to test her, and now she and Manon would have to try to survive without Luka.
She had to admit, it had been most generous of Lila to offer her a position as a maid at the vicarage, as well as a roof over their heads. Even so, Marinette felt a great sense of unease as Max Kanté drove into the yard, their few possessions piled in the wagon. Lila had not been a particularly nice child, and Marinette doubted that age would have made her any kinder. But she could ill afford to turn down the offer. As tenants in the coastal area they had merely leased the fields.
When Luka died, the farmer had said they could stay until the end of the month, but then they would have to leave. As a poor widow without a home or any means of support, she would have to rely on the good will of others. And she had heard that Lila's husband Adrien, who was the vicar in Clermont, was a pleasant and amiable man. She had seen him only at church services.
She had not been invited to Lila's wedding, and of course she and her family had never been invited to visit the vicarage. But she recalled that he had kind eyes.
When the wagon came to a halt and Kanté muttered that they should climb down, she pulled Manon close for a moment. Everything would be fine, she told herself. But a voice inside her was saying something else entirely.
