Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
pocket.
‘And am I truly wrong, then, my dear?’ The question was asked quietly, almost
plaintively.
‘Wrong, father?’
‘Wrong to think you cherish a secret regard for Mr Phoebus Daunt.’
‘Have I not said so? Dearest father . . .’ Here she reached forward and took his
hand in hers. ‘How can you think I could deceive you? I cherish no particular regard for
Mr Daunt, other than what is due to a neighbour and a childhood friend. If you believe
otherwise, than you are mistaken. And if you force me to be frank, then I will confess that
I do not like Mr Daunt, though I will always be civil to him, for his father’s sake. If you
have mistaken civility for affection, then I am sorry, but I really cannot be blamed.’
She was smiling now, and what father could have resisted such a smile? And so
Mr Carteret kissed his daughter and said he was a foolish old man to think she could ever
go against him. Then a thought seemed to strike him.
‘But, my dear,’ he asked anxiously, ‘you will want to get married, I suppose,
some not very distant day?’
‘Perhaps I shall,’ she said gently. ‘But not yet papa, not yet.’
‘And not to him, my dear.’
‘No, papa. Not to him.’
He nodded, kissed her again, and wished her good-night. As he turned the corner
of the passage that led to his bedchamber, Mrs Rowthorn, with Lizzie Brine in tow,
quietly returned to the kitchen.
This, then, is a true and accurate record, or as true and accurate as I am able to
make it, of what passed that night between Mr Paul Carteret and his daughter.
But was anything left unsaid? And were there secrets in each heart that neither
could tell to the other?
27:
Ad idem?
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Entering the house by the kitchen door, I came upon Susan Rowthorn deep in
conversation with the cook, Mrs Barnes.
‘Will you take some food in your room, sir?’ asked the housekeeper.
‘I’ll take some food, certainly,’ I replied, ‘but I’ll take it here with you, if I may.’
My gallantry having produced its desired affect, I left the two women to their
preparations while I returned to my room to replenish the supply of cigars I usually keep
about my person.
At the foot of the staircase, I stopped.
Just inside the front door stood a black leather imperial,? together with three or
four smaller bags. Someone leaving? Or someone visiting? I noted the initials on the lid
of the trunk: ‘M-MB’. A visitor, I concluded. Another question for Mrs Rowthorn.
Having resupplied myself with cigars from my bag, I returned to the kitchen,
noticing en route that the drawing-room door, which had been shut when I was
examining the trunk, was now open. Naturally I peeped inside, but the room was empty,
although my nose, which is sensitive to such things, caught a faint and intriguing scent of
lavender lingering on the air.
The meal prepared by Mrs Barnes was a hearty one and, after my excursion to the
Temple and the ride back in the landau with Miss Carteret, most welcome. I sat by the
fire, allowing Mrs Rowthorn full rein, for an hour or more. What she told me, as I tucked
in to a chop with two broiled kidneys, lubricated with a generous go of gin-punch and
followed up by a slice of most excellent apple pie, I have incorporated into the preceding
account. One question only remained.
‘I suppose Miss Carteret is engaged with her visitors?’
‘Oh, only one visitor, sir,’ offered Mrs Rowthorn. ‘Miss Buisson.’
‘Ah, yes. A relative, perhaps?’
‘No, sir, a friend. From her Paris days. John Brine has just gone to take her things
up to her room. What a shock for her, poor lamb, to get here at last and find us all in such
a state.’
I asked whether Miss Buisson had known Mr Carteret, to which Mrs Rowthorn
replied that Miss Buisson had paid many visits to England, and that she had been a
particular favourite of her late master’s.
‘I suppose Miss Carteret must have many friends of her own sex in the
neighbourhood,’ I ventured.
‘Friends?’ came the answer. ‘Well, yes, you could say so. Miss Langham, and Sir
Hyde Teasedale’s girl; but, strange to say, no one like Miss Buisson.’
‘How so?’
‘Inseparable, sir. That is the word I should use. Like sisters, they are when
together, though of course so unlike in looks.’ She shook her head. ‘No. Miss has no
other friend like Miss Buisson.’
As I was about to leave, John Brine came down the hall stairs. He coloured
slightly on seeing me, but I quickly diverted the ladies’ attention by knocking over my
third (or was it fourth?) glass of gin-punch. Apologizing for my clumsiness, I made good
my escape.
Back in my room, I lit another cigar, kicked off my boots, and lay down on my
bed.
I felt sick and uneasy. A surfeit of gin-punch and too many cigars, no doubt.
Though I was exhausted, my mind was unquiet, harassed with commotion, and sleep
seemed impossible.
I began to think of Bella, and what she would be doing. Tonight, I knew, there
was to have been a dinner at Blithe Lodge for one of the most distinguished members of
The Academy, the Earl of B—. The best silver would be out, and Mrs D. would be
resplendent in garnet and ormolu, and sporting the remarkable peacock-feathered
headdress that she always wore on such occasions, as signifying her elevated position in
the body politic of The Academy. I imagined Bella wearing her blue silk dress, her
favourite Castellani necklace? encircling her wonderful neck, a wreath of white artificial
rose-buds nestling in her abundant black hair. The company would ask her to play and
sing, and of course she would charm every man there – some would even half believe
they were in love with her.
Tomorrow I would return to London, no wiser concerning the nature of Mr
Carteret’s discovery than when I came to Northamptonshire, but certain that it had
brought about his death. And if the Tansor succession was at the heart of the business,
then this could mean that I, too, was caught up in the web that had so fatally ensnared
him.
I closed my eyes, but still the sleep I craved for eluded me. I remained in this state
for perhaps an hour, half awake, half dozing, until the striking of the gate-house clock
roused me. Now fully alert, and as far from sleep as ever, I was considering what to do
with myself when my ears caught a strange sound. I thought perhaps it might be the wind,
but on looking out of the window again I could see that the branches of the trees in the
Plantation were barely moving. Silence descended once more, but in a few moments it
came again – an urgent whimpering, such as I have heard dogs make in their sleep.
I rose and put my boots on. Candle in hand, I opened the door.
The passage outside my room was dark, the house deathly silent. To my right was
the main staircase leading down to the vestibule; ahead, the passage ran almost the length
of the house. On my left I made out two doors, leading I presumed to rooms that, like
mine, overlooked the front lawn; another room opposite – which I later learned was Mr
Carteret’s study – clearly gave onto the gardens at the rear. As I proceeded slowly down
the passage I saw that, at the far end, it made a turn to the right, towards the back of the
house. The walls, between the candle sconces, were lined with family portraits and a
handsome armorial map of the county, by Valk and Schenk after Janssonius.?
For a few moments I stood listening intently, but there was no sound to be heard,
and so I began to retrace my steps a little more rapidly. To prevent the flickering flame
from being extinguished, I cupped my hand around the candle, which immediately
produced huge shadow-fingers that slid silently across the walls and doors on either side
as I passed. Then, as I reached the second of the doors on the front side of the house, I
heard it again: like a soft, involuntary moan. Placing the candle-holder on the floor I knelt
down, my boots creaking slightly. The key-hole had a little brass cover but it was fixed
fast; and so I put my ear to the door.
Silence. I waited, hardly daring to draw breath. What was that? A rustling noise,
like a silken garment falling to the floor; a moment later, I began to catch what sounded
like fragments of a whispered conversation. I strained to hear what was being said,
pressing my ear closer to the door, and squinting my eyes in concentration; but I could
make nothing out until —
‘Mais il est mort. Mort! Il brise mon coeur!’
No longer a whisper, but an anguished cry – her cry! Then, tenderly urgent, came
the reply from another voice:
‘Soyez calme, mon ange! Personne sait.’
Again the conversation subsided to a whisper on both sides, and only
occasionally, when one or the other of the speakers raised their voice a little, was I able to
catch more than a word or two.
— Il ne devrait pas s'être produit . . .
— Qu’a-t-il dit ? . . .
— Qu’est-ce que je pourrais faire? . . . Je ne pourrais pas lui dire la vérité . . .
— Mais que fera-t-il ? . . .
–– Il dit qu'il lui trouvera . . .
— Mon Dieu, qu’est-ce que c’est que ça??
In moving my position a little way, to ease the cramp in my leg, I had knocked the
candle-holder over, putting out the flame in the process. Instantly, I heard footsteps inside
the room hurrying towards the door. There was no time to return to my own room, and
so, picking up the candle-holder, I ran as quickly as I could back down the passage,
reaching the point at the far end where it turned sharply towards the rear part of the house
just as the door opened.
I could not see them, but I imagined two frightened faces peering out and
anxiously looking up and down the passage. At length, I heard the door being closed, and
a few moments later I ventured my head round the angle of the wall to confirm that the
coast was clear.
Back in my room, I immediately sat down and wrote out as much of the
conversation between Miss Carteret and her friend as I could remember. Like a scholar
working on fragments of some ancient text, I sought to fill in the lacunae to make sense
of what I had heard, but without success: my incomplete and disconnected transcriptions
– set out above – refused to yield up their secrets. I gave it up, convinced now that I was
seeing mystery and conspiracy where there was none, then walked to the window to look
out once again on the moonlit garden.
Miss Carteret, Miss Carteret! I was completely, preposterously, bewitched by my
beautiful cousin, though I hated myself for the absurdity of it all. Two days – only two
days. It is mere infatuation, I told myself yet again. Forget her. You have Bella, who is
everything you could want or need. Why expend precious time on this cold thing, time
that ought to be given to the accomplishment of your great enterprise? But whoever heeds
the voice of reason when love whispers, softly persuasive, in the other ear? I had heard
her laugh – I had made her laugh – and I had felt her sweet breath on my face. She was a
woman, like other women. There were frailties and desires, immured from view, behind
that cold stare. Surely they could be uncovered?
I was awoken early by Mrs Rowthorn knocking at my door with a tray of
breakfast, as I had requested.
On descending to the vestibule half an hour later, I looked into the dining-room,
and then into the two reception rooms at the front of the house; but there was no sign of
either Miss Carteret or her friend, Mademoiselle Buisson. A little French clock on the
mantelpiece was chiming half-past seven o’clock as I opened the front door and stepped
out into a cold, dull morning.
I was drawing deeply on my first cigar of the day, in the hope that strong tobacco
would have the required stimulative effect on my sluggish faculties, when Brine brought
my horse round from the stable-yard. He wished me a safe journey and I asked if he had
seen Miss Carteret that morning.
‘No, sir,’ he said. ‘Not this morning. She gave orders to my sister that she would
be late coming down, and that she was not to be disturbed.’
‘Please give Miss Carteret my compliments.’
‘I will, sir.’
‘You have the address safe that I gave you?’
‘Yes, sir.’
I mounted up, and was riding off under the dark echoing arch of the Scottish
gate-house when I reined in my mount. Turning the horse, I galloped back into the Park.
Pushing on up the long incline, and through the avenue of oaks at its summit, I
pulled up and looked down across the misty river to where Evenwood lay.
It was a day of lead-grey louring cloud, with a cold east wind sighing through the
trees; yet even on such a day, my heart was captivated by the bewitching beauty of the
house – this place of desire and delights. When would the day come that I would enter it
as Master, and my feet stand secure within its gates at last?
As I passed the Rectory gates I saw Dr and Mrs Daunt, arm in arm, walking up
the lane from the church. On seeing me, the Rector stopped and raised his hat in salute,
which gesture I returned in kind. His wife, however, immediately disengaged her arm and
walked off alone towards the Rectory.