Lady Catherine's Necklace (17 page)

BOOK: Lady Catherine's Necklace
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Still yours, on the edge of the abyss,

L.

Entry on a scrap of paper found in Sir Lewis de

Bourgh's diary

She was brought to bed of a boy on this 23rd day of April 18—. She did not survive the birth. The boy, christened Barnabas Joscelyn by Mr Godwin, was put out to nurse in the village. I did not see the child.

Entry on another scrap of paper in Sir Lewis de

Bourgh's diary

My wife, distressed at an outbreak of typhus fever in the village, ordered little Eadred to be fetched home from the foster mother's cottage. I made inquiry of Godwin as to his infant, likewise fostered out, but he informed me, without any signs of distress or anxiety, that it was lost; that the wet-nurse, a woman named Smith, a connection of the Hurst family, had left the village with the hop-pickers when they returned to their winter quarters in London (or wherever they hail from), taking little Barney along with her, as it seems she had developed a great fondness for the child. Godwin seemed relieved to be quit of the charge, an obligation to pay for the child's maintenance. He is a strange man. Has he always suspected? Or known? Is he glad to be rid of it? I found myself greatly distressed by the discovery of this loss – the more so as little Eadred does not thrive – C. is terrified that he has caught the fever from the village children. She herself is again in a promising way, so cannot devote herself to the child as much as she might wish.

I am not well – my head aches; my heart aches – I think more than I should do of L.

Little Eadred has left this world. Poor child! I should feel more grief than I do; sadly, he took after his mother, and I found it hard to love him as I ought; he was too fond of his own way and paid little heed to others.
I
had always wished for a girl child, and cannot help hoping that C.'s next will be a child of the female sex.

Oh, if
that
child were not lost, how happy should I be!

I have taken the fever – I suppose from Eadred, or from my rambles about the village while making discreet inquiries about little B.J. I suppose I am come by my deserts. I did wrong by C. to marry her without love. And in my intrigue with L., I wronged both her and her husband, a harmless, God-fearing man (though of a gloomy puritanical turn of mind).

I must try to put my affairs in order. My mind turns much on that child. How I wonder what has become of him.

*   *   *

‘Have you read it through?' said Anne to Joss.

‘Ay, and a right struggle it were. Why do he have to make his g's like p's and his s's like f's? I never in all my born days saw such a scrambly hand.'

‘Never mind that! Don't you see what it means?'

‘It means your dad and Mrs Godwin did what they ought not. And they got punished for it.'

‘I don't see that. Lady Catherine got punished too – her child died. And she and that child hadn't done anything wrong. It's queer – I never felt sorry for my mother before, but now I think I do. My father sounds rather a selfish man.'

‘Seems they should never ha' got married. Him and Lady Catherine.'

‘But never mind that,' Anne said again. ‘Don't you see what this means?'

‘Well…' Joss said slowly, ‘mebbe I do and mebbe I don't.'

‘That little garden book your mother left you – with notes written in the margin – don't you see, it is the same handwriting as the writing in those four letters from L. She must have given the book to Mrs Smith.
You
were that baby – Barnabas Joscelyn Godwin. The – the person that you believed to be your mother was really your foster mother. She took you off to London – perhaps when the money stopped coming from Mr Godwin. Or because she wanted to keep you. Mrs Smith, was that her name?'

‘Ay,' said Joss, pondering. ‘Petronella were her given name. Petronella Smith. She kept house for the old boy, Sir Felix, a-many years. And he learned me Latin and she learned me how to live by my wits. But she always did say, true enow, that I'd have good luck did I come back to Hunsford. Or, at least, find out a secret.'

Joss sighed, pulled up a long stalk of grass and chewed on the tender end, then added:

‘But what good luck is there in finding out that I'm Mrs Lucy Godwin's bastard? I
loved
my mam – Petronella. She done her best for me. What do I know about this Mrs Lucy, except that she picked up her skirts for his lordship?'

‘Poor thing,' said Anne, pulling out another stalk of grass. ‘I feel sorry for her. She sounds as if she had a lonely life. But anyway, don't you
see,
' she repeated, ‘it means that you and I have the same father!'

‘Ay,' Joss slowly agreed, ‘so it do…'

*   *   *

Lady Catherine had great difficulty in getting Ben Trelawny to converse. For several days he tended, from time to time, to return to his first premise and tell her that he was the Angel of Death and she, an unclean spirit sent by Kismet to tempt him from the holy course of meditation that would, in the end, put him in contact with his lost loved ones.

‘
I
have lost loved ones too!' said Lady Catherine irritably. ‘You are not the only person who has had troubles in their life.'

But she was obliged to concede that to have lost a wife, three children, his entire fortune and an unpublished volume of verse which he had hoped that some English publisher would accept and bring out – all this greatly exceeded the loss of a son in his third year and a husband whom she had never valued above half.

But during one of Trelawny's rational periods, she persuaded him to take down the flitch of bacon and hack some slices off it. These, with eggs from the store hidden in a hole in the cliff outside, made a substantial difference to their diet.

Now that she had access to the environs of Trelawny's cabin, Lady Catherine realized that, though it was not precisely on an island, it might as well be until the flood subsided. The building abutted, on the point of a steep cliff, between two converging torrents, branches of the Brin River. There was no safe way across them as yet.

‘Why do not people in the town come and rescue us?'

‘Firstly, m'dear, they don't know we're here. And second, the poor souls likely got enough trouble themselves. There's a third branch of the river runs through the town. My guess is, if it's up as high as these, half the town is washed away.'

Halfway up the opposite cliff, caught in a tree, could be seen what Trelawny told Lady Catherine was the wreckage of her carriage.

He himself had been setting out to buy bread in Brinmouth village – ‘It was afore the floods come down so bad, you could still cross by the stepping-stones' – when a crash from above made him look up, and he saw the coach come hurtling down the face of the cliff; a woman had been flung out and fell straight into the torrent, where she must have been swept out to sea. ‘But she must ha' been dead already, falling from that height.' Trelawny himself had climbed up to the carriage, in which he found another female, deeply unconscious. ‘There was no means of getting you back up on the road, m'dear, so I fetched a rope and lowered ye down.'

‘You did all this by
yourself?
But could you not procure assistance from the village?'

‘No time for that, lady. The Brin water was coming down powerful quick – as 'twas, I only just fetched ye into the cabin afore the flood had ris' up three feet, and there'd a' been no way of getting ye to dry land.'

‘So you saved my life.'

‘Did'n do so bravely then myself, did I?' said Trelawyn with a wry grin. ‘Reckon all that hoisting and dragging brought on a fit of the fever that struck me down after the wreck of the
Sweet William.
All I remember after that was lying on the floor and finding that somebody was dribbling sour-apple jam down my gullet. If it come to saving lives, ma'am, I reckon 'tis about quits betwixt us.'

And I probably saved you from drowning when the water came into the hut, also, Lady Catherine thought, but, contrary to her usual habit, she did not solicit praise for this.

‘How long do you think it will be before the flood subsides?' she asked.

Three or four days at least, Trelawny guessed.

‘You think no one will come in search of you?'

‘Nay, poor souls. The Brin River comes down powerful heavy after a day's rain, and we've had not one day, but a whole fortnight – they'll have enow to do looking after theirselves. 'Sides, I'd left this cabin for a farm on the moor – only came back for a purpose I had.' He hesitated.

‘Why
did
you dwell in this wild cabin, Trelawny?'

It had been many years since Lady Catherine had felt so much interest in another human being. But in such a small neighbourhood, comprising only
one
neighbour, it was only reasonable to avail oneself of what interest lay to hand.

‘Well, ma'am, 'tis a story that, properly, is not all mine to tell. But, seeing as you was so solicitous as to fetch me back into this vale of tears,' – he did not sound entirely grateful for this service, Lady Catherine noted – ‘I've a notion I owe it ye. 'Twas like this, d'ye see…'

He stopped and scratched his white locks with a twig picked from the firewood pile, remarking, ‘'Tis to be hoped the water do go down before too many days, or it'll be cold comfort and raw vittles for us.'

‘Proceed with your story, my good man.'

‘Well,' he said, ‘when I was fetched out of the sea after the wreck of the
Sweet William,
I lay like a corpse for a matter o' three weeks … I'd been carried to the doctor's house – there's a tolerable clever doctor in the town, Dr Lantyan – and when I began to speak and look about me and act like a human, he asked me if I'd any kin somewhere about the land who might pity my extremity and send me a few guineas. I told him of a nephew and niece in the north country, children of my dead sister, my only living connections. Whether they would come to my aid I did not know, for 'twas long enough since there'd been any word between us, but in the old days there was a kindness betwixt my sister and me. So Lantyan wrote them a letter, telling of my plight. Meantime I removed to this cabin, which was standing empty, for I'd been a charge on the doctor long enough. But a reply came, friendly enough, from my nephew, sending a sum sufficient to keep me for a few weeks. Being somewhat recovered by then, I wrote a grateful acknowledgement to him, and removed myself to a farm on the moor where I took lodgings. At this point, d'ye see, I began to take myself in hand.'

Trelawny stopped and looked hard at Lady Catherine.

‘Did ye ever dream of me, ma'am?'

‘Indeed no!' she replied, much astonished.

‘Well, I've dreamed of ye, a-many times. 'Tis like this…' He paused and reflected for a moment or two. ‘When I was lost in the sea, and all my loved ones lost, and all my goods and my fortune, not only that but the verses I had writ, those being the fruit of many years of contemplation – well, ma'am, 'twas like being stripped naked. And when I came back within myself after that calamitous loss and dispossession, I discovered a strange thing about myself. I found I had the power of foretelling events in my dreams. Some of them are trifling enough – a broken pot, a herd of cattle crossing the track, a sailor singing a shanty, a child picking a posy – but, time and again, I have dreamed of you, ma'am.'

‘How singular. How very singular!' Lady Catherine spoke with disapproval. She did not care for the supernatural; one of her prime motives for the razing and demolition of Hunsford Castle had been the extirpation of its numerous ghosts. ‘I wonder
why
you should do so?' Her tone of distaste suggested that his dreaming about her was an invasion of her privacy, which she felt to be unwarranted.

‘That I cannot say, ma'am. I would not
choose
to do so – 'tis enforced upon me. But, anyways, living at this farm I began, as I say, to take myself in hand. I wrote, again, some of the verses I had lost. I wrote a memoir of my dear wife and children. I found a few pupils and taught them mathematics – I have always had a great partiality for algebra and geometry. Thus, I made enough to pay for my lodgings. And I dreamed a great deal and found comfort in my dreams – 'tis like hearing music playing in some faraway land – I feel the assurance that I shall see my loved ones again, not in this sphere but in some other…'

‘But then,' said Lady Catherine, as he had again come to a halt, staring at the open door and the swollen river that rushed past it, ‘but then, if you were safely and industriously established at the farm, and teaching mathematics' – her tone suggested that she found this a decidedly uncongenial and peculiar way to earn a living, but each to his own taste – ‘why, what made you return to this dismal dwelling?'

‘Ah, well, I was coming to that. I had a second letter from my nephew. He wrote to me that, if I were destitute, he had the means of assisting me to earn a sum of money. 'Twas in furtherance of a trick, a prank, a stratagem that was to be played upon a certain lady of his acquaintance – a certain Lady Catherine de Bourgh. She was to be waylaid, abducted, on her journey to visit a relative. She was to be kept confined for a certain period of time…'

‘
What
are you telling me, sir?' ejaculated Lady Catherine, pale with wrath.

*   *   *

Maria Lucas, visiting Wormwood End with a pot of soup from the parsonage, found Anne de Bourgh there, arranging snowy boughs of cherry blossom in a copper jug.

‘Oh, I interrupt you! I will not stop – I just came to bring this.'

Ambrose said, ‘You are both of you more welcome than I can say. Do not think of leaving. Please stay and take a glass of cowslip wine.'

BOOK: Lady Catherine's Necklace
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