Kirkland Revels (27 page)

Read Kirkland Revels Online

Authors: Victoria Holt

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical

BOOK: Kirkland Revels
12.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

I was to discover the meaning of this through Sarah, and the discovery was more alarming than anything which had gone before.

 

I went to her apartments one day and found her stitching at the christening robe.

 

” I’m glad you’ve come,” she greeted me. ” You used to be interested in my tapestry.”

 

“I still am.” I assured her.

 

“I think it’s lovely. What have you been doing lately?”

 

She looked at me archly. ” You would really like to see?”

 

” Of course.”

 

She giggled, put aside the christening robe, and standing up, took my hand. Then she paused and her face puckered.

 

“I’m keeping it a secret,” she whispered. Then she added:

 

” Until it’s finished.”

 

” Then I mustn’t pry. When will it be finished?”

 

I thought she was going to burst into tears as she said:

 

” How can I finish it when I don’t know! I thought you would help me.

 

You said he didn’t kill himself. You said . “

 

I waited tensely for her to go on but her mind had wandered. ” There was a tear in me christening robe,” she said quietly.

 

” Was there? But tell me about the tapestry.”

 

” I didn’t, want to show it to anyone until it was finished. It was Luke….”

 

” Luke?” I cried, my heart beating faster.

 

” Such a lovely baby. He cried when he was at the font, and he tore the robe. All that time it hasn’t been mended But why should it be, until there’s a new baby waiting for it?”

 

” You’ll mend it beautifully, I’m sure,” I told hter, and she brightened.

 

” It’s you 1” she murmured. ” I don’t know where to put you. That’s why …”

 

” You don’t know where to put me,” I repeated, puzzled.

 

” I’ve got Gabriel … and the dog. He was a dear little dog.

 

Friday! It was a queer sort of name. “

 

“Aunt Sarah.” I demanded, “what do you know about Friday?”

 

“Poor Friday 1 Such a good little dog. Such a. faithful dog. I suppose that was why … Oh dear, I wonder if your baby will be good at the christening. But Rockwell babies are never good babies. I shall wash the robe myself.”

 

” What were you saying about Friday, Aunt Sarah? Please tell me.”

 

She looked at me with a certain concern. ” He was your dog,” she said.

 

” You should know. But I ^shan’t allow anyone to touch it. It’s very difficult to iron. It has to be gophered in places. I did it for Luke’s christening. I did it for Gabriel’s.”

 

“Aunt Sarah,” I said impulsively, “show me the tapestry you’re working on.”

 

A light of mischief came into her eyes. ” But it isn’t finished, and I didn’t want to show it to anyone … until it is.”

 

” Why not? I saw you working on one before you’d finished it.”

 

” That was different. Then I knew …”

 

“You knew?”

 

She nodded. ” I don’t know where to put you, you see.”

 

” But I’m here.”

 

She put her head on one side so that she looked like a bright-eyed bird.

 

“To-day … to-morrow … next week, perhaps. After that where will you be?”

 

I was determined to see the picture. ” Please,” I wheedled, ” do show me.”

 

She was delighted by my interest which she knew was genuine.

 

” Well, perhaps you,” she said. ” No one else.”

 

” I’ll not tell anyone,” I promised.

 

” All right.” She was like an eager child. ” Come on.”

 

She went to the cupboard and brought out a canvas, and held the picture close to her body so that I couldn’t see it.

 

” Do let me see,” I pleaded.

 

Then she reversed it, still holding it against her. Depicted on the canvas was the south facade of the house; and lying on the stones in front of it was Gabriel’s body. It was so vivid, so real, that I felt a sudden nausea as I looked at it. I stared, for there was something else. Lying beside Gabriel was my dog Friday, his little body stiff as it could only be in death. , It was horrible.

 

I must have given a startled gasp, for Sarah chuckled. My horror was the best compliment I could have given her.

 

S stammered: “It looks so … real.” 166 “Oh, it’s real enough … in a way,” she said dreamily. ” i saw him lying there, and that was how he looked. I went down before they could take him away, and saw him.”

 

” Gabriel …” I heard myself murmur, for the sight of the tapestry had brought back so many tender memories, and I could picture him more clearly than I had since the first days of my bereavement.

 

” I said to myself,” Aunt Sarah continued, ” that must be my next picture … and it was.”

 

” And Friday?” I cried. ” You saw him … too?”

 

She seemed as though she were trying to remember.

 

” Did you. Aunt Sarah?” I persisted.

 

” He was a faithful dog,” she said. ” He died for his faithfulness

 

” Did you see him, dead … as you saw Gabriel?”

 

Again that puckered look came into her face. ” It’s there on the picture,” she said at length.

 

” But he’s lying there beside Gabriel. It wasn’t like that.”

 

“Wasn’t it?” she asked.

 

“They took him away, didn’t they?”

 

” Who took him away?”

 

She looked at me questioningly. ” Who did?” It was as though she were pleading with me to give her the answer.

 

“You know, don’t you. Aunt Sarah?”

 

” Oh yes, I know,” she answered blithely.

 

” Then please … please tell me. It’s very important.”

 

“But you know too.”

 

” How I wish I did! You must tell me. Aunt Sarah. You see, it would help me.”

 

” I can’t remember.”

 

” But you remember so much. You must remember some thing so important.”

 

Her face brightened.

 

“I know, Catherine. It was the monk.”

 

She looked so innocent that I knew she would have helped if she could.

 

I could not understand how much she had discovered. I was sure that she lived in two worlds that of reality and that of the imagination; and that the two became intermingled so that she could not be sure which was which. People in this house underrated her; they spoke their secrets before her, not understanding that she had a mind like a jackdaw, which seized on bright and glittering pieces of information and stored them away.

 

I turned my attention to the canvas and. now that the 167 shock of seeing Gabriel and Friday lying dead was less acute, I noticed that the work had taken up only one side of the picture. The rest was blank.

 

She read my thoughts immediately, which was a reminder that her speculations—if speculations they were were those of a woman who could be astute.

 

” That’s for you,” she said; and in that moment she was like a seer from whom the future, of which the rest of us were utterly ignorant, was only separated by a semitransparent veil.

 

As I did not speak she came close to me and gripped my arm; I could feel her hot fingers burning through my sleeve.

 

” I can’t finish,” she said peevishly. ” I don’t know where to put you that’s why.” She turned the canvas round so that I could not see the picture and hugged it to herself. ” You don’t know. I don’t know.

 

But the monk knows. ” She sighed. ” Oh dear, we shall have to wait.

Such a nuisance. I I can’t start another until I finish this one. “

;

 

She went to the cupboard,” and put the canvas away. Then she came back to peer into my face.

 

” You don’t look well,” she said. ” Come and sit down. You’U be all right, won’t you? Poor Claire! She died, you know. Having Gabriel killed her, you might say.”

 

I was trying to shake off the effects of seeing that picture, and I said absently: ” But she had a weak heart. I’m strong and healthy.”

 

She put her head on one side and looked quizzically at me.

 

“Perhaps it’s why we’re friends …” she began.

 

” What is. Aunt Sarah?”

 

“We are. friends. I felt it from the first. As soon as you came I said,” I like Catherine. She understands Hie. ” Now I suppose they say that’s why …”

 

” Aunt Sarah, do tell me what you mean. Why should you and I understand each other better than other people in the house?”

 

” They always said I am in my second childhood.”

 

A wild fear came into my mind. ” And what do they say about me?”

 

She was silent for a while, then she said: “I’ve always liked the minstrels’ gallery.”

 

I felt impatient in my eagerness to discover what was going on in her muddled mind; then I saw that she was telling me and that the minstrels’ gallery was connected with her discovery.

 

” You were in the minstrels’ gallery,” I said quickly, ” and you overheard someone talking.”

 

She nodded, her eyes wide, and she glanced over her shoulder as though she expected to find someone behind her. ” You heard something about me?” She nodded; then shook her head.

 

“I don’t think we’re going to have many Christmas decorations this year. It’s all because of Gabriel. Perhaps there’ll be a bit of holly.”

 

I felt frustrated but I knew that I must not frighten her. She had heard something which she was afraid to repeat because she knew she should not, and if she thought I was trying to find out she would be on her guard against telling me. I had to wheedle it out of her in some way, because I was sure that it was imperative that I should know.

 

I forced myself to be calm and said: ” Never mind. Next Christmas”

 

“But who knows what’ll have happened to us by next Christmas … to me to you?”

 

” I may well be here. Aunt Sarah, and my baby with me. If it’s a boy they’ll want it brought up here, won’t they?”

 

“They might take him away from you. They might put you …”

 

I pretended not to have noticed that. I said: “I should not want to be separated from my child. Aunt Sarah. Nobody could do that.”

 

” They could … if the doctor said so.” I lifted the christening robe and pretended to examine it, but to my horror my hands had begun to shake and I was afraid she would notice this. ” Did the doctor say so?” I asked. ” Oh yes. He was telling Ruth. He thought it might be necessary … if you got worse … and it might be a good idea before the baby was born.”

 

” You were in the minstrels’ gallery.”

 

” They were in the hall. They didn’t see me.”

 

” Did the doctor say I was ill?”

 

” He said Mentally disturbed.” He said something about It being a common thing to have hallucinations . and to do strange things and then think other people did them. He said it was a form of persecution mania or something like that. “

 

” I see. And he said I had this?”

 

Her lips trembled. ” Oh. Catherine,” she whispered, ” Fve 169 liked your being her . B don’t want you to go away. I don’t want you to go to Worstwhistle.”

 

The words sounded like the tolling of a funeral bell, my own funeral.

 

If I were not very careful they would bury me alive.

 

I could no longer remain in that room. I said: “Aunt Sarah, I’m supposed to be resting. You will excuse me if I go now?”

 

I did not wait for her to answer. I stooped and kissed her cheek.

Then I walked sedately to the door and, when I had closed it, ran to my own room, shut the door and stood leaning against it. I felt like an animal who sees the bars of a cage closing about him. I had to escape before I was completely shut in. But how?

 

I very quickly made up my mind as to what I would do. I would go and see Dr. Smith and ask him what he meant by talking of me in such a way to Ruth. I might have to betray the’ fact-that Sarah had overheard them, but I should do my utmost to keep her out of this. Yet it was too important a matter to consider such a trifle.

 

They were saying, ” She is mad.” The words beat in my brain like the notes of a jungle drum. They were saying that I had hallucinations, that I had imagined I had seen a vision in my room; and then I had begun to do strange things-silly unreasoning things and imagined that someone else did them.

 

They had convinced Dr. Smith of this—and I had to prove to him that he and they were wrong.

 

I put on my blue cloak—the one which had been hung over the parapet—for it was the warmest of garments and the wind had turned very cold. But I was quite unaware of the weather as I made my way to the doctor’s house.

 

I knew where it was because we had dropped Damans there on our way back from Knaresborough. I myself had never been there before. I supposed that at some time the Rockwells had visited the Smiths, and that in view of Mrs. Smith’s illness, such visits had not taken place while I was at the Revels.

 

The house was set in grounds of about an acre. It was a tall, narrow house and the Venetian blinds at the windows reminded me of Glen House.

There were fir trees in the front garden which had grown rather tall and straggly; they darkened the house considerably. 170 There was a brass plate on the door announcing that this was the doctor’s house, and when I rang the bell the door was opened by a grey-haired maid in a very well starched cap and apron.

Other books

Bizarre History by Joe Rhatigan
Lynx Loving by S. K. Yule
Abandoned but Not Alone by Theresa L. Henry
Stand By Me by Blu, Cora
A Marquess for Christmas by Vivienne Westlake
Thyme (Naughty or Nice) by K. R. Foster
Dark Alpha's Embrace by Donna Grant