“I walked on,” she said simply. “I told the chauffeur to follow in a quarter of an hour.”
As once before, I was speechless, but I put her hand to my lips.
I lifted my head to find her eyes upon me, and then she was close in my arms and my cheek against hers.
“My darling,” she breathed, “my Richard, if I had not seen you do it, I would not have believed it could be done.”
“It was your wish, Leonie.”
“I cried for the moon, and you gave it into my hand.”
“We were very lucky,” said I. “And Kneller—”
“Who gave him his lead? Whose courage stung him to action for very shame?”
“We will not argue it,” said I. “You were always out of my reach, and I have set a gulf between us which can never be bridged.” I let her go there and covered my eyes. “I deserve no better. That night, here, where we are standing, Fate played clean into my hands, and I was so gallant and cunning that I could not see my fortune, but threw it away.”
“Richard, dear, it would have been no fortune to take a renegade wife.”
“Not if she was to be unhappy. But, anyway, the thing is done.” I stood up and drew a deep breath. “We were to build your lodge, dear. If you will send word to Jameson, I should like to begin at once. All of us need distraction, and – and it will help me, my darling, to try to set up your home.”
“You are very sweet to remember—”
I cried out at that, as I think any man would have done. Then I put my arms about her and held her close.
“Don’t say I may not do it,” I said. “We will go about it quietly, and, if you will tell me the way there, no one in Littai need know. We will not use the village. But let me do you this service. Oh, Leonie, my darling, don’t stop me – it’s all I’ve got.”
She put up a hand there and touched my hair.
“I am going to Littai, Richard. I…”
My heart gave one mighty bound and then stood still.
Her perfume was in my nostrils, and her eager breath upon my cheek, and she was shaking a little, because my arms about her were quivering, do what I would.
“So be it,” I said hoarsely. “I will wait until you are gone.”
“Why so, my darling? In my own village—”
“Because I cannot stand it,” I cried. “Because I love you too much. Things have gone too far for me. I cannot be your neighbour…because I have kissed your lips.”
I bowed my head, and she put her arms round my neck.
“I loved you,” she said gently, “before you loved me. That day in the courtyard at Anger, when you stared, and I lost my temper, and you – you brought me low. I loved you then, Richard. And, perhaps because I am a woman, I knew that you would come to love me…”
“Well, something had to be done. Either I must see you no more – or else I must be free to come to you when you spoke. The point was how to be free. I could, of course, have turned down Paul there and then. I had only to go to the Prince and decline to marry a coward, and the Prince himself would have told me to go in peace. I say, I could have done so, and yet… I could not. I had been chosen for Princess, as you may well believe, against my will: and
the man who was to bring me that honour
stood in peril of losing his throne. His ship was sinking, Richard, and the rats were leaving it – leaving it right and left… I have my faults, my darling, but I am not a rat. More. I am Leonie of Riechtenburg. Of her it must never be breathed that she had thrown over a man
because he could not bring her the honour which she had been led to expect
.
“So, you see, there was nothing for it. Either I must see you no more, or – or
Johann had to be beaten and Paul proclaimed
.”
My ears were singing, and my darling’s face was all misty, three inches away. I tried to speak and could not. Instead, I began to tremble from head to foot.
“This day I broke off my engagement. Sully and Marya were present. The news will be made public a week from today.”
Still I could say no word. Only, for me the heaven seemed to have been opened, and the silence filled with music and the darkness with light.
“Oh, my dear, you do not blame me for keeping you in the dark? You do see that I could not tell you? I could beg you to help me, but I could not tell you the reason why Paul’s accession meant to me more than life.”
I could only cry over her name.
“Leonie, Leonie.”
“More than life, my darling. And you – you brought it about.”
Now, when she said this, and I saw by what a hair’s breadth our sorrow had been turned into joy, a thrill of fear ran through me. And that, for some strange reason, brought into focus my most astounding fortune, so that for the first time I saw it clearly and knew that I was not dreaming, but that Leonie, Grand Duchess of Riechtenburg, was to become my wife.
“I – I came to say ‘Goodbye’,” I faltered. “I thought perhaps I should never see you again. And now…”
“What now, Richard?”
“I am very happy,” I whispered. “I am so very happy that I do not think I have ever been happy before. I – I have no words, my darling. And, if I had, I could not say them, because my heart is too full.”
I felt her clasp tighten, and I think that she understood.
Presently she drew down my head and kissed my lips…
In the distance an engine was started. Then a car began to approach.
As in a dream, I loosed her and began to walk by her side, not looking where I was going, but staring at the slim, white fingers that lay on my sleeve.
“Sully and Marya are here. They have come to say ‘Goodbye’ and to wish us good luck. And then will you drive me to Littai? My great-aunt is there. And tomorrow perhaps you and Mr Hanbury will come to stay. And if you do not mind a poor lodging and if you can – can stand me as your neighbour for two or three weeks…”
What else she said I do not know and of the meeting which followed I have no clear recollection, save that Marya Dresden was weeping and Sully was deeply moved. But they were both very cordial and spoke most handsomely, and the Countess kissed me at parting, because, I think, she did not want me to find her tears unfriendly to the choice the Grand Duchess had made.
And then we were in the Rolls and were driving for Littai as we had driven for Anger a week before.
There is little more to be told.
Though my marriage must end our alliance, that finest of friends, George Hanbury, rejoiced with me. Indeed, my splendid fortune might have been his, so gay and debonair was his company and so gracious and lively his wit.
Beneath his blithe direction the rebuilding of the lodge became a festive business. The work was after our heart, and Bell and Rowley took to the enterprise, as children let out of school.
Six weeks we played with our toy – with my darling, bright-eyed, in our midst; and Sully came twice to see us and Marya Dresden three times. Then we set our faces to England, and the future and all that it held.
My lady we left in Paris, to follow in ten days’ time, and so came back to Maintenance as we had gone. This on a beautiful evening, just as the rooks were homing and adding to the peace of sundown by their ancient and comfortable cries.
Of my parting with George I find it most hard to write.
It had always been agreed between us that he that should first marry should take the place; there was, therefore, no argument, but it shook me to see the packing and disposal of George’s things.
He had made up his mind, however, to live in Town, and so was content to leave some stuff and his hunters and, after a struggle, to promise to hunt from no other house. This meant that we should constantly see him for some five months of the year, and I do not believe a man’s word was ever more gladly given or more joyfully received.
And so it happens that we sit down to dinner as often three as two and that Bell and his old companion still clean our tops together and share their memories.
So much for the friends that did fully as much as I did to win me my beautiful wife – of whom herself I will say nothing, but that I find her, as ever, the finest lady in the world.
Our life is quiet and simple, for that is the life we love, and the tumult of those wild ten days seems to us to grow more monstrous with the passing of time. This, I think, is natural; for from first to last we were fighting a losing battle and the hopelessness of our venture rode, like a hag, upon our nerves – yet, but for our holding on, Leonie Chandos would never have graced our table or ridden to hounds in the English countryside.
When I think of this, I fall silent, as well I may, and the scenes of our great endeavour take on a significance so dreadful that I strive to put them out of my mind. Sometimes they will not be denied, but gape upon me, like the Psalmist’s bulls of Basan, until, one after another, I look them down.
I hear the slam of the tempest upon the Rolls and the shocking roar of Grieg’s pistol behind my back: I see Barabbas looming in the twilight and the bailiff’s sinister figure on the bench by the door; I smell the choking reek of
The Square of Carpet
, and I hear the clatter of the shutter which George let fall; I see the quiet Lessing Strasse and the faces of the policemen beside me and the second car storming towards us with open doors: I see the royal apartments and young Grimm watching the telltale, and I hear the sentries spring to attention a foot away: I see the Grand Duchess in the wardrobe and us all, like sheep before the shearer, dumb before the doom of her words, and I see Johann lolling and smiling and the desperate, hunted look upon Sully’s face…
As I review these matters, so surely they lose their sting and come to seem no more than the clouds which gather to wait the rising sun: and, to be honest, if I were given the chance of wiping them out of my memory, I know in my heart that I would not let them go.
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. The Brother of Daphne | | 1914 |
2. The Courts of Idleness | | 1920 |
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. Berry and Co | | 1921 |
2. Jonah and Co | | 1922 |
3. Adèle and Co | | 1931 |
4. And Berry Came Too | | 1936 |
5. The House that Berry Built | | 1945 |
6. The Berry Scene | | 1947 |
7. As Berry and I were Saying | | 1952 |
8. B-Berry and I Look Back | | 1958 |
(in order of first publication)
These titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels
1. Blind Corner | | 1927 |
2. Perishable Goods | | 1928 |
3. Blood Royal | | 1929 |
4. Fire Below | alt: By Royal Command | 1930 |
5. She Fell Among Thieves | | 1935 |
6. An Eye for a Tooth | | 1943 |
7. Red in the Morning | alt: Were Death Denied | 1946 |
8. Cost Price | alt: The Laughing Bacchante | 1949 |
(in order of first publication)
1. She Painted Her Face | | 1937 |
2. Gale Warning | | 1939 |
3. Ne’er-Do-Well | | 1954 |
Published by House of Stratus
Adèle & Co This is the first full-length novel featuring Yates’ finest comic creation, Bertram ‘Berry’ Pleydell. The popular character of Adéle is based on the author’s first wife, Bettine, a highly gregarious American dancer and actress. Written in response to massive public demand for the Berry stories, this is regarded as one of Yates’ best books. Amongst the madcap escapades of the Pleydell clan as they career about the French countryside you will find ‘crime, criminals, and some of the funniest writing in the English language’. |
And Berry Came Too Eight stories in which we encounter ‘the hair-raising adventures and idiotic situations of the Pleydell family’ ( Punch ). Along with John Buchan and ‘Sapper’, Yates dominated the adventure book market of the inter-war years, and Berry is regarded as one of British comic writing’s finest creations, including Tom Sharpe amongst his fans. Read these and weep (with laughter). |
As Berry & I Were Saying Reprinted four times in three months, this semi-autobiographical novel is a humorous account of the author’s hazardous experiences in France, at the end of the World War II. Darker and less frivolous than some of Yates’ earlier books, he describes it as ‘really my own memoir put into the mouths of Berry and Boy’, and at the time of publication it already had a nostalgic feel. A great hit with the public and a ‘scrapbook of the Edwardian age as it was seen by the upper-middle classes’. |
B-Berry & I Look Back This is Yates’ final book, a semi-autobiographical novel spanning a lifetime of events from the sinking of the Titanic to the notorious Tichborne murder case. It opens with Berry, one of British comic writing’s finest creations, at his funniest, and is a companion volume to As Berry and I Were Saying . Pure, vintageYates. |
Berry & Co This collection of short stories featuring ‘Berry’ Pleydell and his chaotic entourage established Dornford Yates’ reputation as one of the best comic writers in a generation, and made him hugely popular. The German caricatures in the book carried such a sting that when France was invaded in 1939 Yates, who was living near the Pyrenées, was put on the wanted list and had to flee. |
The Berry Scene These stories, written by huge popular demand, give us classic Berry Pleydell – Yates’ finest comic character – at the top of his form. The first story sees Berry capturing a German spy at a village cricket match in 1914, and things get more bizarre from then on. A self-consciously nostalgic work harking back to more decorous days, here are tense plotting and high farce of the best kind. |
Blind Corner This is Yates’ first thriller: a tautly plotted page-turner featuring the crime-busting adventures of suave Richard Chandos. Chandos is thrown out of Oxford for ‘beating up some Communists’, and on return from vacation in Biarritz he witnesses a murder. Teaming up at his London club with friend Jonathan Mansel, a stratagem is devised to catch the killer. The novel has compelling sequels: Blood Royal , An Eye For a Tooth, Fire Below and Perishable Goods . |
Blood Royal At his chivalrous, rakish best in a story of mistaken identity, kidnapping, and old-world romance, Richard Chandos takes us on a romp through Europe in the company of a host of unforgettable characters. This fine thriller can be read alone or as part of a series with Blind Corner , An Eye For a Tooth , Fire Below and Perishable Goods . |
Brother of Daphne Daphne is ‘well-born, elegant, beautiful, and not especially bright’. In this, Yates’ earliest collection of stories, we meet the Pleydell clan and encounter their high-spirited comic adventures. It is a world of Edwardian gentility and accomplished farce that brought the author instant fame when the stories appeared in Windsor Magazine . |
Cost Price A story from Dornford Yates’ later career, of stolen treasure, set against a backdrop of World War II: adventure, a travelling circus and much more besides. Lots of favourite Yates characters are here, as well as some new ones, like the Portuguese mule in trousers, and a few striking villains. This is the legendary Chandos’ final fictional appearance. A tense, assured plot and vintage comedy from a master of the genre. |