Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
In another moment I had left Evenwood, and Miss Emily Carteret, behind.
After a cold, damp ride, I turned into the High Street in Stamford at a little before
nine o’clock. I returned my nag to the ostler at the George, and then arranged with the
hall-porter for my bags to be carried across to the Town Station in time for the next train
to Peterborough. The ride had cleared my head, lightened my mood, and sharpened my
appetite; and so, having an hour in hand, I cheerily ordered up chops, bacon, and eggs,
and a pot of strong coffee, and settled myself in a box by the fire in one of the public
rooms to read the daily news-papers until it was time to stroll over to the station.
It wanted ten minutes to the time the train was due to arrive when, as I was
walking into the first-class waiting-room, something Dr Daunt had said in passing came
back to me. He had been speaking of an early ambition of his son’s to follow the Law, in
emulation of his closest friend at Cambridge. I had given no further thought to the
Rector’s words; but now, standing in the waiting-room of the Town Station in Stamford,
they returned with a strange force.
Now I am a great believer in the instinctive powers – the ability to reach at truth
without the aid of reason or deliberation. Mine are particularly acute: they have served
me well, and I have learned to trust them whenever they have manifested their presence.
You never know where they may lead you. Here was a case in point. I cannot say why,
but I was instantly seized with the notion that I must find out the name of this companion
of Daunt’s at the University. Acting on this impulse, therefore, I immediately changed
my plans and, after consulting my Bradshaw,? resolved upon a diversion to Cambridge.
By now the train for Yarmouth, which I was to take as far as Ely, had arrived. I
was on the point of picking up my bag, when one of the tap-room servants from the
George came puffing up to me and thrust a thick envelope, almost a small package, into
my hand.
‘What is this?
‘Beg pardon, sir, hall-porter says this has been directed to you.’
Ah, I thought, these are the proofs of Dr Daunt’s translation of Iamblichus,
forwarded to me, as arranged, by Professor Slake, and which I had quite forgotten about.
As it was necessary for me to board the train immediately, I had no time to
reprimand the stupid red-faced fellow for the hotel’s failure to give me the package
earlier; and so I brushed him aside without a word, stuffed the proofs into my great-coat
pocket, and managed to take my seat just as the station-master was blowing his whistle.
To my consternation, the carriage I had chosen was crowded almost to capacity,
and I spent a most uncomfortable two and a quarter hours wedged between a stout, and
exceedingly truculent lady, on one side, a basket containing a spaniel puppy set
precariously on her knees, and a fidgeting boy of about thirteen (much interested in the
puppy) on the other, with my bag between my feet on account of the racks being full.
I disembarked, to my great relief, in Ely, and managed to catch a connecting train
to Cambridge with seconds to spare. Arriving at my destination at last, I took a cab into
the town and was set down before the gates of St Catharine’s College.
28:
Spectemur agendo?
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In the year 1846, through the good offices of my former travelling companion, Mr
Bryce Furnivall, of the British Museum, I had begun a correspondence with Dr Simeon
Shakeshaft, a Fellow of St Catharine’s College, who was an authority on the literature of
alchemy, in which I had developed a strong interest while studying at Heidelberg. We
had continued to correspond, and Dr Shakeshaft had been instrumental in helping me
assemble a good library of alchemical and hermetic texts. This gentleman, like the Rector
of Evenwood, was a member of the Roxburghe Club, and I’d recalled Dr Daunt
mentioning that this mutual acquaintance had known his son during the latter’s time at
King’s College.? Dr Shakeshaft had recently written to me on the subject of Barrett’s
Magus,? a curious compendium of occult lore which I’d wished to acquire; and so, as we
had not yet had occasion to meet face to face, I would have the satisfaction of killing two
birds with one stone.
Dr Shakeshaft’s set was at the far end of the charming three-sided red-brick court
which forms the principal feature of St Catharine’s. Having ascended a narrow stair-case
to the first floor, I was welcomed most cordially into Dr Shakeshaft’s book-lined study.
We talked for some time about a number of subjects of common interest, and my host
brought out several superb items from his own collection of hermetic writings for my
inspection. This was most pleasant, and it was a relief to expend mental energy on topics
of such absorbing fascination after the difficult events of the past few days.
It was with some unwillingness, therefore, that I wrenched myself back to my
purpose and introduced the subject of Phoebus Daunt.
‘Did Mr Daunt have a wide circle of acquaintance in his College?’ I asked.
Dr Shakeshaft pursed his lips in an effort to remember.
‘Hmm. I would not say wide. He was not popular amongst the sporting men, and,
as I remember, most of his friends, such as they were, came from other Houses.’
‘Was there any particular friend or companion that you can recall?’ was my next
question. This time the response was instantaneous.
‘Indeed there was. A Trinity man. They were very close, always going about
together. I entertained them both myself – young Daunt’s father and I, you know, are old
friends. But wait a moment.’ He thought for a moment. ‘Yes, now I remember. There was
some trouble.’
‘Trouble?’
‘Not involving Daunt. The other gentleman. Young Pettingale.’
I remembered the name from the accounts given to me by John and Lizzie Brine
of the dinner given by Lord Tansor, following which Mr Carteret had accused his
daughter of secretly encouraging the attentions of Phoebus Daunt. He had been Daunt’s
guest on that occasion, and they had been driven to Evenwood by Josiah Pluckrose.
‘May I ask, if you are able to tell me, the nature of the trouble you speak of?’
‘Ah,’ replied Shakeshaft, ‘you’d best talk to Maunder.’
And so I did.
Jacob Maunder, D.D., of Trinity College, occupied a splendid ground-floor set in
Great Court, with a fine view of Nevile’s fountain. Tall and stooping, with a lazy curling
smile and a sardonic eye, he had occupied the position of Senior Proctor in the University
for a period that coincided with Phoebus Daunt’s time at King’s College. The duties of a
Proctor are of a disciplinary nature, and consequently expose the holders of this office to
the more sordid and unpleasant propensities of those in statu pupillari.? ‘When you
perambulate the streets at night,’ as the Provost of King’s, Dr Okes, once memorably
remarked to one of their number, ‘you rarely see the constellation Virgo.’ The post also
required a stout heart, as the unfortunate Wale had famously discovered when he was
pursued by a mob of undergraduates from the Senate House to the gates of his College.?
I could not imagine Jacob Maunder fleeing in the face of intimidation. He
appeared to me fully to deserve his reputation, described to me in brief by Dr Shakeshaft,
as a stern and unyielding upholder of University statute and procedure, and a less than
merciful judge of the follies of youth. Did he, I asked, handing him a note of
recommendation from Shakeshaft, recollect a gentleman by the name of Pettingale?
‘This is a little irregular, Mr — ’
‘Glapthorn.’
‘Quite. I see here that Dr Shakeshaft speaks highly of you, and says you are also
acquainted with my old friend Achilles Daunt.’
‘I have that honour.’
‘Were you up at the University yourself?’
I told him that I had done my studying in Germany. He looked up from his
perusal of Shakeshaft’s note.
‘Heidelberg? Why, then, you will know Professor Pfannnenschmidt, I dare say.’
Of course I knew Johannes Pfannnenschmidt, with whom I had spent many a
wonderful hour in deep conversation concerning the religious mysteries of the Ancients.
This acknowledgement of an acquaintance with the Herr Professor produced a visible
mitigation of Dr Maunder’s raptorial demeanour, and appeared to remove any lingering
scruples he had concerning the propriety of answering my enquiry.
‘Pettingale. Yes, I recollect that gentleman. And his friend.’
‘Mr Phoebus Daunt?’
‘The same. My old friend’s son.’
‘Dr Shakeshaft mentioned some trouble concerning Mr Pettingale. It would assist
me greatly, in the prosecution of a highly confidential matter, if you were able to inform
me, in a little more detail, of its nature and consequences.’
‘Nicely put, Mr Glapthorn,’ he said. ‘I will not enquire further into your reasons
for seeking this information. But insofar as the matter, in its general outline, is one of
public record, I am willing to give you some account of the business.
‘I first came across Mr Lewis Pettingale when I apprehended him in a house of
ill-fame – a not uncommon occurrence, I am afraid to say, amongst the undergraduate
population of this University. Youth can be a little lax in point of moral resolve.’ He
smiled. ‘He was disciplined, of course, and put on notice that, if it happened again, he
would be rusticated.? But the affair Dr Shakeshaft has in mind was altogether more
serious, though its conclusion appeared to exonerate Mr Pettingale of any taint of guilt or
censure.
‘It began, from my point of view, when I was called upon, in my capacity as
Senior Proctor, by a police inspector from London who wished to question Mr Pettingale
in connexion with a serious case of forgery. It appears that the young man had gone to a
firm of London solicitors for assistance in the matter of an outstanding debt. He had taken
with him a promissory note for the amount of a hundred pounds signed by a Mr Leonard
Verdant. The solicitors undertook to write to this Mr Verdant forthwith and demand
payment of the sum in question, on pain of legal proceedings immediately being taken
out against him. Within twenty-four hours, a messenger had appeared at the solicitors’
office with the outstanding debt in cash, and a request from Mr Verdant for a signed
receipt.
‘On being informed that the debt had been paid, Mr Pettingale went again to the
solicitors to receive his money, which was paid to him with a cheque drawn on the firm’s
bankers – also my own, as it so happened, Dimsdale & Co., Cornhill. Well, the cheque
was duly presented, and the matter was concluded to the satisfaction of all parties.
‘But then, a week or so later, a clerk in the solicitors’ office noticed that three
cheques, totalling eight hundred pounds, had been drawn on the firm’s account without, it
appeared, any authorization. The alarm was duly raised and the police were contacted. A
few days later, a man by the name of Hensby was apprehended on the premises of the
firm’s bank attempting to present a further forged cheque, this time for seven hundred
pounds.
‘Suspicion immediately fell on this Mr Verdant, and so naturally the police
wished to question Mr Pettingale. I accompanied the inspector to his rooms. He could not
deny, of course, that he had sought payment of the original debt from Mr Leonard
Verdant, but vehemently denied all knowledge of the subsequent forgeries. When asked
by the inspector why the money was owed to him, he replied that he had lent the money
to this Verdant, whom he said he had met several times at the Newmarket races, for the
settlement of a debt.’
‘And was there any reason to doubt his account?’ I asked.
Dr Maunder gave me a somewhat skeptical smile.
‘None the police, or I, could uncover. Mr Pettingale was required to go with the
officers to London, and was called as a witness at the subsequent trial; but he could not
be identified by the man Hensby, who claimed he had been casually employed by a
gentleman – not Mr Pettingale – he had met in a coffee-house in Change-alley to run
various errands, one of which was to present the forged cheques at Dimsdale & Co. and
bring the proceeds back, at a pre-arranged time, to the coffee-house.’
‘This gentleman: was Hensby able to identify him?’
‘Unfortunately, no. He provided only a rather indistinct description, which
rendered identification of this person by the police virtually impossible. As for Mr
Verdant, when the police called at his address in the Minories he had vanished, and was
of course never seen again. The poor dupe Hensby, for such I deem him to have been,
was prosecuted, found guilty, and transported for life. A travesty, of course. The fellow
could hardly write his name, let alone demonstrate the skill to carry out what were, by all
accounts, most convincing forgeries of the necessary signature.’
He ceased his account and looked at me, as if in expectation of further
questioning.
‘From your most informative account, Dr Maunder, it certainly seems clear that
the perpetrator was the mysterious Mr Verdant. Mr Pettingale appears to have been a