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Talk Of The Fenfolk
Samuel Loveday and the strange death of Eupham Naycroft
The mist gripped at the lowlands and slumbered across the fens. There was nothing here, nothing but the edges of reeds and the shutter of smoke and the snap of the branches. Here, in late November, the sea swept up high and the only way from Gremen Fen to Lewyck was the barrowman’s boat. By nine or so of the clock, the skies gleamed a hard white and save from the odd chimney, there was nothing but that great grey nothing.
Samuel Loveday wasn’t from this lost edge of the world. He was used to the shuddering halt of coaches and the scattered footsteps of factory children in the dark, the reek of gaslight and cracks of cloud through the twisting slums of Norwich. This wasn’t his place, this wild lonely place infested with the swarming burn of silence. The nothingness frightened him, as he stood there, staring out at the approach of that boat from the grey. At first it was a shadow, then the humped shape of a woman in a shawl, and the tall bent shape of the barrowman. Finally, faces, worn faces, faces sharp with the features of the fenfolk, that button-black gaze and that swarthy complexion and thin lipless mouth. He knew it well, by now, from the church, well enough to recognise the isolated appearance of the Gremen Fen inhabitants.