Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
Lord Tansor, though gratified to hear this, was nonetheless inclined to think that
the lad had been prodigiously lucky. Imagine his surprise, therefore, when, at a further
interview some months later, he learned that the profit from the first venture had been
invested in a second, with similar satisfactory results. He began to think that the boy
might have a nose for these things – he had known such people; and, in the course of
time, after further demonstrations of Daunt’s financial instincts, he decided to place some
of his own money into the young man’s hands. No doubt he awaited the outcome with
not a little anxiety.
But he was not disappointed. His investment was returned to him within three
months, together with a substantial profit. There was, as Mr Tredgold had suggested, no
better way for Daunt to have recommended himself to Lord Tansor. Reading the many
laudatory reviews of his work, was one thing; but this new talent was of a different order
altogether. It impressed Lord Tansor, the consummate man of affairs, as no number of
blank-verse epics could have done. Gradually, and with due diligence, his Lordship
began to delegate little matters of business to Daunt, until by the time of which I now
write his protégé had his fingers in a number of exceedingly large Duport pies.
I made the observation that Mr Daunt must now be a man of some means.
‘It would appear so,’ Mr Tredgold replied. ‘However, he has received nothing
from Lord Tansor, as far as I know, other than the two hundred pounds I have mentioned;
nor, I think, has Dr Daunt contributed to his upkeep. Whatever he has made of that
principal sum, by way of speculation and investment, must have supported him in the life
he presently leads.’
I thought to myself that he must be a genius indeed, to make such a sum go so far.
‘Unluckily,’ said Mr Tredgold, brushing a speck from his lapel, ‘I appear to have
arranged your meeting with Mr Carteret on a day when Mr Daunt is away from
Evenwood – he is in the West Country, inspecting a property recently acquired by Lord
Tansor. But there will be other opportunities, I am sure, for you to make his
acquaintance. And so, Edward, I think I have said all I wished to say, and now I wish you
bon voyage. I shall await your report, whether written or in person, with the greatest
interest.’
We shook hands, and I turned to go; but as I did so, I felt Mr Tredgold’s hand on
my shoulder.
‘Take care, Edward,’ he said quietly.
I had expected to see his usual beaming smile. But it was not there.
That evening I went to Blithe Lodge. Bella was in captivating mood, and I was
utterly charmed by her, as we sat by the fire in Kitty Daley’s private sitting-room, talking
of this and that, and laughing at tid-bits of Academy gossip.
‘You are such a dear,’ I said, feeling a sudden uprush of affection for her as she
sat in the firelight, gazing dreamily into the flames.
‘Am I?’ she asked, smiling. Then she leaned forward, cupping my face between
her long fingers so that I felt the gentle impress of her rings on my skin, and kissing me
tenderly.
‘An absolute, utter, and complete dear.’
‘You are quite sentimental tonight,’ she said, stroking my hair. ‘It is very
pleasant. I hope you don’t have a guilty conscience.’
‘Why should I have a guilty conscience?’
‘You ask me that!’ she laughed. ‘Every man who comes here has one, whether
they admit it or not. Why shouldn’t you?’
‘That is rather hard, when all I wished to do was to pay you a compliment.’
‘Men are such martyrs,’ she said, giving my nose a mischievous little tweak. Then
she sat down at my feet, placed her head on my lap, and gazed into the fire once again.
Outside, the rain began to lash against the front windows of the house.
‘Isn’t it delicious,’ she said, looking up, ‘to hear the rain and the wind, while we
are so warm and safe?’ Then, resting her head on my lap once again, she whispered:
‘Will I always be dear to you, Mr Edward Glapthorn?’
I bent down and kissed her perfumed hair.
‘Always.’
The following afternoon I took an express train northwards to Stamford, arriving
at the George Hotel just before dark.
I awoke the next morning to find that the day had broken grey, wet, and cold.
Being market day, the town was full of local farmers and labourers; and by noon, the
hotel was overflowing with a noisy bustling herd of muddy-booted, red-cheeked
gentlemen, all eager to partake of the establishment’s amenities.
In the tap-room, thick clouds of pungent pipe smoke mingled with the appetizing
aromas of roast meats and strong ale. The press of burly country bodies, and waiters
rushing hither and thither, made it impossible at first to make out if anyone there
appeared to be waiting for me. After a few moments, however, a space in the mêlée
cleared temporarily and I saw a man, seated on a settle in front of the window that looked
out onto the long cobbled yard round which the hotel was built. He was occupied in
reading a newspaper, from the perusal of which he occasionally looked about him with a
slightly anxious air. I knew immediately that it was Mr Paul Carteret.
In appearance, he was a series of rounds. A round face, from which sprouted a
closely clipped black-and-silver beard, like a well-kept lawn; large round eyes behind
round spectacles; round ears, a perfectly round button nose above a cherubic round
mouth, all set upon a small round body – not corpulent, simply round. You instantly saw
a natural disposition towards goodness, his roundness seeming appropriately indicative of
a corresponding completeness of character – that enviable, unaffected integration of
feeling and temperament in which there is excess neither of preening self-regard nor
impatience with the failings of others.
‘Have I the honour of addressing Mr Paul Carteret?’
He looked up from his paper and smiled.
‘Mr Edward Glapthorn, I think. Yes. Mr Glapthorn it is, I am sure. I am very
pleased to meet you, sir.’
He rose from his seat, though his lack of height still caused him to look up at me
as he did so, and held out his hand, with which he gripped mine with remarkable
firmness.
He called over a waiter and we commenced on some pleasant preliminaries
before, at last, he looked hard at me and said:
‘Well, Mr Glapthorn, we had better start.’
After we had taken our drinks, we left the din and smoke of the tap-room and
walked over the Town Bridge and up towards the soaring spire of St Mary’s Church,
which looked back from atop its little hill towards the River Welland. Mr Carteret set a
brisk pace, turning round every now and again as if he expected to see someone
following close behind.
‘Are you a superstitious man, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘I do not believe so,’ I answered, curious as to the question, and somewhat
breathless at trying to keep up with the little man as we ascended the hill. ‘I am what I
think is termed a fatalist.’
‘Ah,’ he said, smiling, ‘Desine fata deum flecti sperere precando.’?
‘I must confess’, I replied, recognizing the quotation, ‘that prayer is not a regular
habit of mine.’
I had hardly finished saying the words when my companion suddenly stopped and
turned to me.
‘Would you be surprised, Mr Glapthorn, if I told you that I have seen you
before?’
I felt a sudden jump of my heart as he spoke the words. But they had been spoken
smilingly, and without threat; and so I replied as pleasantly as I could.
‘I do not think that can be the case. I have never been in Stamford before, and I
am sure I have not had the pleasure of meeting you in London.’
‘I did not mean in the flesh, Mr Glapthorn,’ he said, with another smile. ‘I have
seen you in my dreams.’
The course of our conversation was now beginning to unsettle me; but still he
continued to smile as he spoke, and still I felt the absence of menace.
‘In fact, I have seen you often – or, rather, someone very like you. You have a
distinctiveness, Mr Glapthorn – a very remarkable distinctiveness – about your
physiognomy that, once seen, is, I am sure, impossible to eradicate from one’s memory. I
am a connoisseur of distinctiveness: I like to know what makes a thing what it is – its
unique arrangement of particularities. For instance, why one nose, an appendage we all
share, is never exactly the same as another, even though it may appear identical to casual
observation. Why the smallest difference in the shape of position of a facial feature –
eyelids, for example – can engender unforgettable individuality. Yes, I have seen you
before, Mr Glapthorn.’
He chuckled.
‘Forgive me,’ he continued, ‘I am being mischievous. All I mean to say is, that
you bear a striking resemblance to someone I see every day of my life, though, again, not
in the flesh.’
‘Indeed,’ I replied, ‘and may I ask who this person is?’
‘Was,’ he said. ‘Deceased, some years now, though her portrait hangs over my
desk and I look up at her daily. A most distinctive face – in its particularities. Most
distinctive. I often catch myself looking at her, several times a day; and of course it is
natural, as a result, that I see her in my dreams, too. And you, in turn, remind me of the
face I often dream of.’
‘You say I resemble this lady?’
‘I saw it immediately.’
‘Well, then, these particularities, as you term them, must be shared by millions of
soul across the earth.’
‘Or stamped, like a coin, on our children.’
He chuckled again.
‘Don’t look so alarmed, Mr Glapthorn. You look as if you have seen a ghost.
What a serious fellow you are! All I mean to say is, that you have the look of this lady
about you – as perhaps a good many other persons in this world do, as you rightly
observe. And as I see her often, in a manner of speaking, and hold her in affectionate
memory, I believe your resemblance to her is a sign that we shall be good friends
hereafter.’
And then he smiled, clapped me on the shoulder, and hurried me up the hill, for it
had started to rain hard once more.
‘Here,’ he said.
We had reached the top of St Mary’s Hill. Quickly ascending a short but steep
flight of steps, we ran through the cramped little graveyard into the porch, to take shelter
from the rapidly intensifying downpour.
He seated himself on one of the rough stone benches hewn out of the inside walls
on either side and signalled to me to take my place opposite. The floor of the porch was
still muddied over following a recent interment – the newly filled grave was just within
my view beyond the porch opening – and our shelter was lit by two Gothic windows; but
they were unglazed and the rain, blown in by strong gusts of wind, soon began to pound
against the back of my coat. Mr Carteret, however, seemed not to notice the discomfort
and sat smiling at me, his round hands gripping his parted knees, and looking as settled
and comfortable as if he had been sitting before a blazing fire.
‘May I ask, Mr Glapthorn,’ he asked, leaning forward a little across the wet and
muddy flagstones, ‘how my letter was received in Paternoster-row?’
‘Mr Tredgold was, of course, concerned by its implications.’
He did not reply immediately, and I noticed for the first time a look of weariness
in his large round eyes, which regarded me intently from behind his thick round
spectacles. ‘You come here, Mr Glapthorn, as I understand, with the full authority and
confidence of Mr Christopher Tredgold, whom I have had the pleasure of knowing these
many years past. I am perfectly happy, as a consequence, to put my complete trust in Mr
Tredgold in his choice of a surrogate.’
I said I appreciated his sentiments, and assured him that I had been charged with
no other task than to listen, note, and report back to my principal. Mr Carteret nodded in
approval, and thereupon I assumed the neutral manner of an unengaged intermediary,
opened my pocket-book, and proceeded to take down in shorthand what he now began to
tell me. A précis of his account, mostly in his own words, with some few interjections of
my own, follows.
‘I have been employed’, he said, ‘by my cousin, Lord Tansor, as his confidential
private secretary for over thirty years. My dear and much lamented mother was alive
then, but my father had recently died. A good man, but I fear an irresponsible one, like
his father before him. He left us with debt and discredit, the consequences of foolish and
reckless investments in concerns about which he knew nothing.
‘After my father’s death, Lord Tansor was kind enough to allow my late wife and
I, together with my mother, to take up residence with his step-mother in the Dower House
at Evenwood, which he refurbished at his own expense. He also offered me employment
as his secretary.
‘For my cousin’s treatment of me, when my brother and I were left almost
destitute, I shall always feel the deepest gratitude. While I live as his employee, I intend
to serve him as well as I can, with no other end in view than to earn my salary to the best
of my ability.
‘Mr Tredgold will, I’m sure, have told you that Lord Tansor has no heir. His only
son, Henry Hereward, died when still quite a boy. The shock to my cousin was beyond