Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
here at Evenwood, the last place in the world that Daunt would think to look for them?
And so it was arranged that I would return to London the next day to collect up
the papers and bring them back to Evenwood.
‘Where will you put them?’ I asked.
‘Here,’ she replied, walking over to a small oval portrait by Kneller? of Anthony
Duport, younger brother of the twenty-first Baron, as a boy. Taking down the portrait she
opened a small cupboard concealed in the panelling.
‘Will this do?’
I inspected the interior of the cupboard and pronounced it ideally suited.
‘Then that is settled,’ she said, closing the cupboard and putting back the portrait.
‘And now, dearest, I must attend his Lordship. The Earl of Clarendon is dining with us
tonight.’?
‘My sweet angel,’ I whispered as I kissed her good-bye. ‘Are you sure you wish
to become the custodian of these documents? Perhaps I should remove them to the bank.
If Daunt should —’
She placed her forefinger against my lips to prevent me from saying any more.
‘Dear Edward, how sweet you are to be concerned about me. But you need have
no fears on that score. Phoebus will never come here. The papers will be quite safe, and
so will I. And if there is any other way I can assist you, then I beg you, dearest, to tell me.
I would do anything – anything – for the man I love.’
I left, unseen, by the new way, down the little winding staircase and out onto the
path by Hamnet’s Tower.
At the South Gates of the Park, I stopped. The Dower House could just be
glimpsed through the Plantation: lamps were burning in the drawing-room and in one of
the upstairs rooms. On a sudden impulse, I took the track round into the stable yard. My
luck was in: the door to the tack-room stood open, throwing a pale rectangle of light onto
the cobbles.
‘Good evening, Brine.’
He’d been binding the head of a besom broom when I’d entered and looked round
in surprise at the sound of my voice.
‘Mr Glapthorn, sir! I – we did not expect you.’
‘And you have not seen me,’ I said, closing the door behind me. ‘Have you the
duplicate key I asked for?’
‘Yes, sir.’ He opened a drawer in an old dresser and handed the key to me.
‘I shall need some tools. Can you get me some?’
‘Tools? Why, yes, of course, sir.’ I told him what I required and he went into an
adjoining room, returning in a few minutes with a bag of the necessary implements.
‘Remember, Brine, I was not here. You understand?’ I handed over the usual
consideration.
‘Yes, sir. Of course, sir.’
In a few moments, the bag across my back, I was walking along the gravel
bridle-way that skirts the Park wall and leads up to the Mausoleum. It was just at that
melancholy time when the taste finally goes out of the day and twilight begins to
surrender to the onset of darkness. Somewhere ahead of me a fox barked, and a cold low
wind troubled the trees that lined the path running up from the bridle-way to the clearing
in front of the Mausoleum.
It was past midnight when the slab, inscribed with the words Sursum Corda,
which closed off my mother’s burial chamber, finally yielded to my chisel. I had broken
open the protective gates of the loculus easily enough, but it took nearly an hour to cut
out the rectangular slate slab, and all my strength to support the weight of it and lay it on
the floor. But at last it was done and I turned to see, by the light of the lantern I had
brought from the tack-room, what lay within.
A plain coffin of dark oak, placed lengthways in the space, filled most of the
cavity. Lifting the lantern a little higher revealed a simple brass plate bearing the words
‘Laura Rose Duport’ affixed to the lid of the coffin. There was barely a foot between the
lid and the vaulted roof of the little chamber, and only two or three inches between the
coffin itself and the back wall of the loculus; but on either side there was a narrow gap,
perhaps eight or nine inches wide. I knelt down at the foot of the coffin and reached
forward into the darkness, but only cobwebs and fragments of mortar met my touch.
Moving across to the other side, I reached in again.
At first I could feel nothing; but then my fingers closed round something soft and
separable, almost like a lock of flattened-out hair. Quickly withdrawing my arm and
reaching for the lantern, I peered in.
Protruding from the narrow space between the back wall of the chamber and the
coffin was what I could now see was the edge of a fringed garment of some kind – a
shawl perhaps. I extended my hand behind the rear of the coffin and began to pull, but
immediately met some resistance. I pulled again, with the same result. Lying down on my
side, I stretched into the space and round the edge of the coffin as far as I could. After a
little more gentle tugging and grappling, I finally extracted my discovery from its resting
place and set it down in the yellow light of the lantern to examine it.
It was indeed a fringed shawl – a Paisley shawl, which had been rolled up and
wedged behind the coffin. It seemed of little interest at first, until I began to unroll it.
Then it soon became apparent that there were other objects wrapped inside it. I laid the
shawl out on the floor.
Within another wrapping of white linen I was astonished to find an exquisitely
embroidered christening robe, a pair of tiny silk shoes, and a small book bound in old red
morocco. This last item was quickly identified: it was the first edition of Felltham’s
Resolves, printed in duodecimo for Seile in about 1623.? It bore the bookplate of
William, twenty-third Baron Tansor. There was no doubt in my mind that it was the copy
that my mother had asked Mr Carteret to bring to her from the Library a few months
before her death in 1824. Dr Daunt’s failure to locate the copy listed by Burstall when
compiling his catalogue was now explained. But who had put it here, and why?
That it had been intended, with the other items, to convey some message or
signification was clear. Though it had been in its hiding place for over thirty years, it was
in remarkably good repair, the burial chamber being clean and dry. I examined the
title-page: Resolves: Divine, Morall, Politicall. There was no inscription of any kind, and
so I began slowly turning over the leaves one by one to scrutinize each of the hundred
numbered essays. But I could detect nothing out of the ordinary – no annotations or
marginalia, and nothing inserted between the leaves. But as I was closing the book I
observed that it did not shut quite flat. I then saw why: a sheet of paper had been
carefully pasted over the original end-leaf. On closer examination it was possible to make
out that something had been interpolated between the false and the real end-leaf.
I took out my pocket-knife and began to prise away the false leaf. It proved to
have been only lightly fixed and soon came away to reveal two folded pieces of paper.
It is true indeed that the desire accomplished is sweet to the soul.? Behold, then,
how my labours were rewarded at last. On the first piece of paper were the following
words:
To my dearest Son, —
I write this because I cannot bear to leave you without also leaving some brief
record of the truth. When you see me again it will be as a stranger. I have given you up to
the care of another, and have begged God you will never know that it was not her who
brought you into the world. And yet I am compelled by my conscience to write down
these few words, though keeping what I have written safe by me until I am called to a
better place. Perhaps this piece of paper will one day find its way into your hands, or be
discovered by strangers centuries hence, when all these things will be forever beyond
recall. Perhaps it will moulder with my bones, and you will live in ignorance of your true
identity. I leave its fate to God, to whose tender mercies I also commit the fate of my
sinful soul.
You are fast asleep in a wicker basket belonging to Madame Bertrand, a lady who
has been very kind to us here in Dinan. Today has been warm, but it is cool in the
courtyard, and pleasant to hear the water splashing in the fountain.
And so, my dear sweet little boy, though you are dreaming (of what I cannot
imagine), and though you hardly know what it is to live and breathe and think, and
though you could not understand me even if you were to open those great black eyes of
yours and hear my voice, yet I still wish to say three things to you as if you were fully
conscious and comprehending of my words.
First, the person to whom you will owe your duty as a son is my oldest and
dearest friend. I pray you will love her, and honour her; be always kind to her, never
disparage her memory or hate her for the love she bore me; and remember that faith and
friendship are never truly tried except in extremes. This was said by the author of a little
book that has often brought me comfort in past weeks, and to which I know I shall often
turn hereafter.? I pray you may find such a friend as mine. I have had many blessings in
my life; but truly, her friendship has been the greatest.
Second, the name you now bear is not your own, but do not despise it. As Edward
Glyver you must find your own way through life, using the strengths and talents God has
given you, and nothing else; as Edward Duport you would have ridden in great coaches
and dined off golden platters, not through your own merit, but for no other reason than
that you were the son of a man possessing great inherited wealth and power. Do not think
such things bring happiness, or that contentment cannot be found in honest toil and
simple pleasures. I used to think so, but I have seen my error. Fortune and plenty have
made me shallow, a weightless bubble, a floating feather. I shudder now to think what I
have been. But this is not what I wish for you – or what I now wish for myself. So be
properly proud of your adopted name, make it prosper by your own efforts, and so make
your own children properly proud of it.
Third, do not hate me. Hate only what has driven me to do this thing: inherited
pride and the corruption of privilege. And do not think I have denied you through
indifference, or worse. I have denied you because I love you too much to see you
corrupted, as your father has been corrupted by the blood he holds so dear, crippled
morally by that blind and terrible pride of race, from which, by this act, I have sought to
protect you.
Yet because I am conscious of my sin, in so depriving you of what you might
have had, and my husband of the heir for which he yearns, I have placed everything in
God’s hands. If it is His will to lead you to the truth, then I promise before I die to
provide the means for you to reclaim your true name, if that is what you desire – though I
pray to Him before Whom I must be judged that it is not what you will desire; and that
you will have the strength to disown what you were born to.
So sleep, my beautiful son. When you wake I shall be gone. You will never know
me as your mother, but I shall always know you as my son.
Ever your loving Mother,
L. R. Duport.
Dinan, June, 1820.
The sheet of paper second contained only these words, in a shaky and irregular
hand:
To my dearest Son,—
I have kept my promise to you, and have given you the keys to unlock your true
identity. If God in His wisdom and mercy should lead you to them, use them, or destroy
them, as your heart dictates.
I wept when I came to see you for the last time, playing at my feet, so strong and
so handsome, as I knew you would be. But I shall never see you more, until that day
when the earth gives up its dead, and we are reunited in eternity.
The light is fading. This is all I can write. My heart is full.
Your Mother,
L. R. Duport.
At the bottom of the page, in another hand, was written the following:
She died yesterday. The shawl she was wearing when I closed her poor eyes
encloses these letters to her lost son (the last words she ever wrote), the two mementoes
of his birth, and also the little book which comforted her so greatly and which she wished
he might one day have. She placed all her trust in God to bring these things forth from the
darkness of the grave into the light once more, if it is His will to do so. This is my last
service to her. May God rest her soul. J.E. 1824.
The hand, of course, was that of Julia Eames, who, before her own death, had
written out the two words that had been inscribed on her friend’s burial place and sent
them to Mr Carteret as a hint or clue to the secret she had kept so faithfully for so many
years. How she had contrived to place the shawl and its contents in the loculus before it
was sealed, I could not imagine; yet here they were. The Almighty, it seemed, with a little
help from Miss Julia Eames, had made His will known.
I re-read the letters from my mother, holding them close to the lantern and poring
over every word, especially the beginning of the second letter: ‘I have kept my promise to
you, and have given you the keys to unlock your true identity.’ I thought at first it was a
riddle I would never solve; then I considered again the puzzling remark that I had ‘played