It was a fine spring morning, and Emily was convinced shed stumbled upon a rolled-up ruguntil she heard muffled groans coming from inside.
The weather had turned unexpectedly warm, so Emily decided to air out her makeshift bedding. Her “pillows” were burlap sacks stuffed with hay, and her “blanket” was an old Persian-style rug with a faded floral pattern. She draped it over a washing line strung between two trees and arranged her lumpy pillows on a rickety wooden bench nearby.
Emily had been living rough for over a year. Her dream was simple: scrape together enough cash to replace her lost documents and get back homesomewhere in the Midlands, where memories of her family and a proper life still lingered. For now, though, she was stuck in an abandoned gamekeepers cottage on the edge of what used to be woodland. These days, the place was little more than a sprawling rubbish heap.
At first, the smell hadnt been so bad, but the piles of waste grew faster than weeds. Everything ended up here: broken furniture, old clothes, chipped crockery. Thats how Emily had furnished her shacka wobbly side table, a threadbare armchair, even a battered trunk filled with clothes someone had tossed out.
Supermarket vans arrived regularly, dumping expired food. With careful sorting, she sometimes found edible vegetables, slightly bruised fruit, even the odd frozen ready-meal. Water was harder to come byshe had to fetch it from a murky stream, straining it through rags and charcoal salvaged from the dump.
Firewood wasnt a problem. Fallen branches lay everywhere, so keeping the stove lit was easy. The days blurred into one long slog, and saving money was nearly impossible. The odd coin in a discarded coat pocket was a rare find; a wallet was like winning the lottery.
One night, the sound of an engine jolted her awake. People usually dumped their rubbish under cover of darkness, but this was different. The car was posha hulking SUV, gleaming under the moonlight like some sort of mechanical beast.
A man stepped out, heaved a bulky roll from the boot, and dragged it deeper into the dump.
“Roofing felt?” Emily wondered. “Could patch up the cottage before the autumn rains.” She willed him to hurry up and leave.
The man dumped the roll in a hollow between the piles, hesitated, then turned on his heel and drove off.
“Finally,” Emily muttered, pulling on her wellies and stepping outside.
Dawn was breaking, the air crisp with the scent of damp earth. She remembered a spot over the hill where wild mushrooms sometimes sproutedworth a look later.
Approaching the roll, she expected to find tarpaulin or plastic sheeting. Instead, it was a carpeta proper one, the kind rich people had in their parlours.
“Handsome bit of weaving,” she noted, disappointed. “Not much use for roofing, though. Maybe Ill keep it? Better than sleeping on hay.”
She tugged at the edge, trying to unroll itand froze. Someone inside was moaning.
Emily, whod seen her fair share of oddities, felt her knees wobble for the first time in ages. She edged closer.
“Whos there?”
Silence. Then another groan, followed by a thin, shaky voice:
“Its me Margaret Fitzwilliam”
With a heave, Emily yanked the carpet open. A woman tumbled outsmall, frail, and well-dressed, with a nasty bruise on her temple. She blinked dazedly at the rubbish-strewn landscape.
“He brought me here? To a dump? The absolute nerve”
Without a word, Emily helped her up and guided her to the cottage. Settling her into the armchair, she put the kettle on and rummaged for tea leaves.
“Im Emily Whitaker,” she introduced herself. “Used to teach English literature.”
“Youre a girl?” Margaret asked, eyeing Emilys cropped hair and mens trousers.
“Life happened,” Emily sighed. “Came to London for a nanny job. Got robbed at the stationbag, money, passport, the lot.”
“Why not go to the police?”
“I did. They said Id have to sort it through the embassy. Which costs money. And I havent got any.”
Margaret studied her with sudden interest. “No charities? No help?”
“Not that I know of,” Emily admitted. “But never mind thathowd you end up in a carpet?”
At that, Margarets composure cracked. She clutched her teacup like a lifeline.
“Oh, the shame of it! My own son-in-law! Wanted me out of the way so he could get his hands on the family estate.”
Emily winced. “Shouldnt have asked.”
Margaret straightened up, her voice turning sharp. “Why should I help you? Do you even know who I am? Once Im out of here, Ill make sure that wretched man regrets the day he crossed me. And youliving like this! Its not right.”
Emily looked away, suddenly self-conscious about her ragged clothes, her ramshackle home.
Margaret finished her tea with a decisive clink. “Right. Emily, do you know the way to the main road?”
“Course I do.”
“Then escort me.” It wasnt a request.
Outside, the morning chill bit through Margarets thin tweed suit.
“Take a jumper,” Emily offered.
“Ill manage. Just get me to the road.”
It wasnt far. At the tarmac, Margaret released Emilys arm with a brisk nod.
“Thatll do. And Ill see what I can do for you.”
Emily watched her go, thinking, *Posh accent, walks like she owns the place. Bet shes someone important. Not that it matters nowif she helps, its more than Ive had in a year.*
Back at the cottage, she stoked the fire and mixed flour with water to make flatbreads. Just as they started browning, the door burst open.
Margaret stood there, shivering violently, her face ashen.
“Emilyhelp”
She collapsed onto the bench, clutching her side. “Not one taxi would stop! One driver had the gall to ask how Id pay! Me! Like some common beggar!”
Emily handed her warm bread.
“Is this from the bins?” Margaret wrinkled her nose.
“Flour gets weevils sometimes, but boiling water kills em. Tastes alright.”
Margaret chewed thoughtfully. “Resourceful, arent you? Havent seen the like since the war.”
“Youre what, eighty?”
“Near enough. And now Ive nowhere to go. That villains taken my house, my accountseverything.”
A familiar engine growled outside. Emily peeked through the grimy windowthe SUV was back.
“Margaret, hush! Hes here!”
She shoved the older woman into the root cellar just as a knock rattled the door. A tall, expensively dressed man stood there, his expression dripping with disdain.
“You live here?”
“Suppose so.”
“Seen anything odd? A woman, perhaps?”
Emily blinked innocently. “Lost someone?”
He scowled. “Never mind.” With a last suspicious glance, he left.
Margaret emerged, furious. “Came back to finish the job, the brute! But you, Emilyyouve saved me twice now.”
“Who is he?”
“My son-in-law, Edmund. My daughter passed, leaving everything to my grandson, Henry. Edmund wanted controlso he tried to bury me alive!”
Emily listened, wide-eyed, as Margaret spun a tale of country estates, boardroom battles, and a fortune worth millions.
“Well fix this,” Margaret declared. “Give me Henrys addressIll get word to him.”
“Hell have security. Theyll never let me near him.”
“Then well switch places. Youll go as me.”
An hour later, Emilynow in Margarets tweed suit and sensible shoeshitched a ride with a kindly lorry driver. At the grand estate gates, she pressed the intercom.
“Whos there?”
“Emily Whitaker. Message from Margaret Fitzwilliam.”
The gates swung open. A young man in a cashmere jumper hurried out.
“Wheres Grandmother? Why isnt she calling?”
“Shes alive. But Edmund tried to kill her.”
Henry paled. Within minutes, they were speeding back to the dumpjust in time to see flames licking the cottage roof.
Emily sank to her knees. Henry stared, stricken. Then
“Emily! Henry! Over here!”
Margarets voice came from a hidden cellar hatch. Shed escaped just before Edmund torched the place.
“You clever old bird,” Henry choked out, pulling her free.
Margaret gripped Emilys hand. “Youre coming with us. I owe you my lifetwice.”
At the estate, Margaret made calls. By afternoon, Emily had a temp passport and a voucher for proper clothes.
“Cant go to the embassy looking like a scarecrow,” Margaret sniffed.
Two weeks later, with papers sorted, Emily prepared to return homeuntil Margaret asked her to stay as a witness at Edmunds trial. His face when he saw them alive was priceless.
After the sentencing, Henry took Emilys hand at the celebration.
“Dance with me?”
She did.
“Ive booked Grandmothers cottage in Cornwall,” he said softly. “Come with us?”
She hesitated. “I should go home. My parents”
“Well visit them. Then Cornwall. Then wherever you like.”
She met his gazeand for the first time in years, hope flared bright.
A month later, in a quiet Midlands village, a joyful wedding took place. Before their honeymoon, Emily and Henry presented Margaret with a giftthe very rug that started it all.
Margaret laughed. “Suppose I ought to thank Edmund. If he hadnt tried to bury me, Id never have found you two.”





