Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
I plainly saw that Lizzie would be the more useful member of the partnership, and
that she would also keep her brother in line.
‘So you do not feel the same loyalty to your mistress as you did to her father?’
She shrugged.
‘You might say that, sir, though I would not.’ Lizzie replied. ‘But it is true that,
circumstances having changed so suddenly, we must look to ourselves a little more than
we used.’
‘Tell me, Lizzie, do you like your mistress? Is she kind to you?’
The question caused her brother to look at her a little asquint, as if in anticipation
of her reply, which did not come immediately.
‘I do not complain,’ she said at last. ‘That would not be my place. I am sure, as
my mistress has often told me, that I am slow and clumsy, and that I do not have the
delicate manners of the French girl that looked after her in Paris, and who she is always
setting up as an example to me. It may be, too, that I am stupid, for of course I would not
expect a lady possessed such accomplishments as Miss Carteret to think much of a poor
girl like me.’
She glanced in a deliberate way towards the volume of poetry lying on the table.
I thanked her for her frankness and wished her a very good night.
Outside the cottage door, after a little more discussion, the arrangements were
concluded. And so it was that John Brine, formerly Mr Paul Carteret’s man, together with
his sister Lizzie, Miss Carteret’s maid, became my eyes and ears in and around the
Dower House at Evenwood.
As John Brine and I walked back to the Dower House, I had one other matter I
particularly wished to set before my new agent.
‘Brine, I wish you’d tell me about Josiah Pluckrose.’
The effect of my words was extraordinary.
‘Pluckrose!’ he roared, his face colouring, ‘what have you to do with that
murdering scoundrel? Tell me, or by God I’ll knock you down where you stand,
agreement or no!’
Naturally, under normal circumstances, I would not for a moment have tolerated
such insolence from a common fellow like John Brine; even as things were, I was within
an inch of teaching him a lesson he would not forget, for I was easily his match in height
and weight and knew, perhaps better than he, how to conduct myself in such situations.
But I drew back; for, after all, what difference of opinion could possibly exist between us
regarding Josiah Pluckrose?
‘I have only one aim in view with respect to that gentleman,’ I said, with
deliberate emphasis, ‘and that is to send him as speedily as possible, with my very best
regards, to the deepest pit of hell.’ Whereupon Brine’s face took on a more compliant
expression and he began to apologize, in a fumbling embarrassed sort of way, for his
outburst; but I stopped him and told him straight away of my conversation with the
housemaid Mary Baker, though of course I did not go so far as to divulge my prior
acquaintance with friend Pluckrose.
And then he told me, in a quiet, feeling way, which almost endeared me to the
fellow, that he had once entertained what he termed a ‘fondness’ for Agnes Baker, which
it was left to me to interpret how I would.
‘Well, Brine,’ I said, as we walked under the gate-house arch, ‘I see there is
common ground between us on the matter of Josiah Pluckrose. But what I would
particularly like to know,’ I continued, feeling the need for another cigar, but having no
more about me, ‘is how such a man came to be associated with Mr Phoebus Daunt. I
cannot be alone in observing the incompatibility of the relationship. Can you tell me, for
instance, how Mr Carteret viewed the matter?’
‘Like any right-thinking gentleman would,’ said Brine, a little evasively. ‘I know,
because I heard him telling Miss Emily.’
‘Telling him what, Brine? Speak up, if you please, for there must be no secrets
now between us.’
‘I’m sorry, sir, but it just don’t seem right, that’s all, speaking of what was said
privately.’
Damn the fellow for his scruples. A fine spy he was going to make! I reminded
him, rather pointedly, of the terms of our engagement and, after a moment or two, though
still somewhat unwillingly, he began to recount the substance of the conversation he had
overheard between Mr Carteret and his daughter.
‘His Lordship had given a dinner, and afterwards it fell to me to bring the master
and Miss Emily back from the great house in the landau. It’s an old thing that belonged to
Mr Carteret’s mother, but it gives good service and –– ’
‘Brine. The facts, if you please.’
‘To be sure, sir. Well, sir, as I say, I went up to fetch the master and the young
Miss back in the landau, and I saw straight away that something was up. Black as thunder
her face was as I helped her in, and Mr Carteret looking nearly as bad.’
‘Go on.’
‘There was a fair old wind that night – I remember that very well – and we had a
rough time of it on our way back, I can tell you, especially coming up from the river,
battered and buffeted and I don’t know what. But though the wind was hard in my face,
there were times when I could still catch what Master and Miss were saying.’
‘And that’s when Mr Carteret spoke of Pluckrose?’
‘Not by name, though I knew it was him the master was speaking of. He’d driven
a carriage up that evening with Mr Phoebus Daunt and another gentleman – it was that
same cursed evening that he first spied Agnes. There’d been some trouble in the servants’
hall – Pluckrose had been given his supper there while t’other two gents were upstairs
with the quality, and he’d threatened his Lordship’s butler, Mr Cranshaw. I heard all
about the rumpus from John Hooper, a footman up at the great house, who saw it all.
Well, we got home and I handed her out – Miss Emily, I mean – and blow me she fair
stormed into the house, with her father following and calling her to stop. And so I
brought the landau round to the yard and stabled the horses, like tonight, and then went
along to the kitchen, for ’twas a rare old night, as I say, and Susan Rowthorn would
always have a little something waiting for me, in the way of refreshment, as I might say,
on such a night. “Well,” says she when I open the door, “here’s a to-do. Master and Miss
are going at it hammer and tongs.” Those were her exact words: hammer and tongs. Now
Miss has a temper – we all knows that. But Susan says she’d never heard the like, doors
slamming and I don’t know what.’
‘And what was the cause of the upset, do you suppose?’
‘Oh, I don’t suppose, sir. I had everything pat and in apple-pie order from Susan.
She’d heard everything and noted everything, just as it happened, as is her way. I don’t
know, sir, as you hadn’t ought to have brought her into your employ rather than me.’
He smiled a stupid smile, and I silently damned him and his feeble attempt at
humour.
‘Get to it, Brine, and quickly,’ I said impatiently. ‘What did the woman tell you?’
Now, to spare you any more of John Brine’s ramblings, I intend to present my
own account of what happened on that fateful evening, when Josiah Pluckrose came to
Evenwood in the company of Phoebus Daunt, and Mr Carteret and his daughter fell out
with each other for the first time in their lives. It draws directly on the recollections of the
Carterets’ housekeeper, Mrs Susan Rowthorn, and of John and Lizzie Brine.
Returned to the Dower House, having been bumped and blown all the way, Miss
Carteret ran inside, with her father calling after her, and went straight up to her room,
slamming the door behind her. She had barely had time to ring for her maid, Lizzie Brine,
when there was a short knock at the door and her father entered, still in his great-coat,
and still in an extremely agitated state.
‘Now this will not do, Emily. Really it won’t. You must tell me all, or you and I
shall never be friends again. And that’s the long and the short of it.’ With which he
removed his spectacles and began to polish them furiously.
‘How can I tell you all when there is nothing to tell?’
She was standing before the window, her travelling cloak over her arm, her hair
disarranged from the wind, which continued to howl all around the house. Dismayed and
still angered by the turn of events, and feeling that she had been humiliated by her father,
she was in no mood for conciliation.
‘Nothing to tell! You can say that? Very well. Here it is. You will have nothing
further to do with that man, do you hear? We must of course observe the decencies of
social intercourse with our neighbours, but there must be nothing more. I hope I make
myself clear.’
‘No, you do not, sir.’ Her anger was now uncontained. ‘May I ask of whom you
speak?’
‘Why, Mr Phoebus Daunt, of course, as I said before.’
‘But that is absurd! I have known Mr Phoebus Daunt since I was six years old,
and his father is one of your most valued and devoted friends. I know you do not esteem
Phoebus as others do, but I own myself amazed that you should take against him so.’
‘But I saw you, at dinner. He leaned towards you, in a distinctly . . . ’ He paused.
‘In a distinctly intimate manner. Ah! You say nothing. But why should you? That’s your
way, I see, to let me think one thing while you are doing another.’
‘He leaned towards me? Is that your accusation?’
‘So you deny, do you, that you have been secretly encouraging his . . . his
attentions?’
He had placed his hands in his pocket and was rocking back and forth on his
heels, as though to say, ‘There! Deny it if you can!’
But deny it she did, and with a kind of cold fury in her voice, though turning her
head away as she spoke.
‘I do not know why you treat me, so,’ she went on, angrily throwing her cloak on
the bed. ‘I have, I hope, been ever attentive to your wishes. I am of age, and you know I
could leave here tomorrow, and marry anyone I pleased.’
‘But not him, not him!’ said Mr Carteret, almost in a moan and passing his hand
through his hair as he did so.
‘Why not him, if I so chose?’
‘I beg you again to judge him by the company he keeps.’
She stood for a moment waiting to see if her father intended at last to elaborate
further on his statement. Just then came another knock at the door. It was Lizzie Brine,
who found her mistress and Mr Carteret facing each other in silence.
‘Is anything the matter, Miss?’
She looks at her mistress, then at Mr Carteret. Of course she has heard the door
slamming, and the sound of angry voices. Indeed she has been lingering in the passage
for some time before making her presence known. And she has not been alone, for the
housekeeper, Susan Rowthorn, assiduous as ever in her duties, has found a pressing
reason to climb the stairs as quickly as her short legs will carry her in order to inspect the
room adjacent to Miss Carteret’s, which contains a connecting door, the keyhole of which
Mrs Rowthorn feels obliged – no doubt for good housekeeping reasons – to place her eye
against.
‘No, nothing is the matter, Lizzie,’ said Miss Carteret. ‘I shall not need you
tonight after all. You may go home. But be here sharp in the morning.’
And so Lizzie bobs and departs, slowly closing the door behind her. But she does
not go home immediately. Instead she tip-toes into the adjacent chamber to join Mrs
Rowthorn, who, crouching down by the connecting door, turns and places a finger on her
lips as she enters.
Left alone once more (or so they think), father and daughter stand awkwardly for
a moment or two, saying nothing. It is Miss Carteret who speaks first.
‘Father, as you love me, I must ask you to be plain with me. What company is Mr
Phoebus Daunt keeping that appears to be so abhorrent to you? Surely you do not refer to
Mr Pettingale?’
‘No, not Mr Pettingale. Though I do not know that gentleman, I have no reason to
believe anything ill of him.’
‘Then whom do you mean?’
‘I mean the other . . . person. A more loathsome, villainous creature I have never
seen. And he calls himself an associate of Mr Phoebus Daunt’s! You see! This
swaggering brute, this . . . this Moloch in human form, comes here, to Evenwood, in the
company of Mr Daunt. There now: what do you say to that?’
‘What can I say?’ she asked. She was calm now, standing framed by the curtained
window in that characteristic pose of hers, hands crossed in front of her, her head tilted
slightly back and to one side, her face devoid of all expression. ‘I do not know the person
you describe. If he is indeed an associate of Mr Phoebus Daunt’s, well then that is Mr
Daunt’s affair, not ours. There may be perfectly good reasons why it is necessary for him,
perhaps temporarily, to associate himself with the person you describe. You must see that
we are not in a position to judge on this point. As for Mr Daunt himself, I can assure you,
on my dear mother’s life and before Heaven, that I can find no reason – no reason at all –
to rebuke myself for any dereliction of the duty a daughter owes to a father.’
Though she had said nothing very specific, her attitude, and the emphatic tone in
which she had delivered the words, appeared to have a composing effect on Mr Carteret,
who ceased continually removing his spectacles and replaced his handkerchief in his