Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
‘We have been so dreadfully dull here this morning, Mr Glapthorn,’ she said,
resuming her place next to Miss Carteret and tossing her book onto a nearby table. ‘Like
two old spinsters. I declare I might have gone quite mad if you hadn’t come to see us.
Emily, of course, can sit for hours on her own and never minds it; but I must have
company. Don’t you love company, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘Only my own,’ I replied.
‘Oh, but that is terrible. You are as bad as Emily. And yet you were such a lively
companion the other day, in the Park, was he not, Emily?’
All through this exchange Miss Carteret had sat, book in hand, impassively
regarding her friend. Then, ignoring her friend’s question, she turned towards me and
took off her spectacles.
‘How is your employer, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘My employer?’
‘Yes. Mr Christopher Tredgold. I understand from Lord Tansor that he has
suffered a seizure.’
‘He was very poorly when I last saw him. I’m afraid I cannot say whether his
condition has since improved.’
Mademoiselle Buisson gave a little sigh and crossed her arms, as if she was
piqued by the suddenly serious turn of the conversation.
I had hoped for a warmer, less restrained, reception than this from her, and was
unsure of what to say next. Then, on the wall behind Miss Carteret, a well-executed
painting of a red-brick house set in pleasant gardens caught my eye.
‘The Red House at Ashby St John,’ she said, seeing my interest. ‘My
grandparents’ house, where my father grew up. When Grandfather Carteret was ruined,
the picture was bought by my maternal grandfather, Mr Charles Hunt-Graham. It passed
on his death to my aunt, Mrs Fletcher Manners.’
‘Is Mrs Manners at home?’ I said, feeling it would be polite of me to ask.
‘She is visiting a friend,’ Miss Carteret replied, ‘and will not return until this
evening.’
‘Mrs Manners is a person who likes company very much,’ Mademoiselle Buisson
observed with a toss of her head.
‘I think Mr Tredgold mentioned to me thatMrs Manners was your mother’s
youngest sister?’
‘That is correct.’
‘With whom you resided when you were in Paris?’
‘You are very curious about my family, Mr Glapthorn.’ The rebuke – if the
remark was intended as such – was spoken in a soft, almost coquettishly teasing tone,
which strongly conveyed to me the notion that she was, after all, disposed to maintain the
friendly relations we had established during the course of our afternoon in Green Park.
This encouraged me to take a little risk with my response.
‘I am curious about your family, Miss Carteret, because I am curious about you.’
‘That is a rather bold statement, and curious in itself. What possible interest can
my dull life hold for someone such as you? For I conceive, Mr Glapthorn, that you are a
person of wide experience and interests, with a certain largeness of view that I have
observed before in men of strong intellect who have lived a good deal in the world on
their own terms. You live by your wits – I am sure I am right to say this – and this gives
you, if I may say so, a kind of feral character. Yes, you are an adventurer, Mr Glapthorn.
I do not say that you can never be tamed, but I am sure you are not destined for
domesticity. Don’t you agree, Marie-Madeleine?’
Mademoiselle had been regarding Miss Carteret and I with an expression of
intense interest, her eyes darting from one to the other as each of us spoke.
‘I think,’ she said slowly, pursing her lips in concentration, ‘that Mr Glapthorn is
what I have heard called in English a dark horse. Yes, that is what I think. Tu es un
homme mystère.’
‘Well,’ I smiled, ‘I am not sure whether to be flattered or not.’
‘Oh,’ said Mademoiselle, ‘flattered, of course. A hint of mystery in a person is
always an advantageous characteristic.’
‘So you think I am mysterious?’
‘Assuredly.’
‘And what do you think, Miss Carteret?’
‘I think we are all mysterious,’ she replied, opening her eyes to their fullest
extent. ‘It is a question of degree. Everyone has things they would prefer to hide from the
view of others, even from those to whom they are close – little secret sins, frailties, fears,
even hopes that dare not be spoken; yet, on the whole, these are venial mysteries and do
not prevent those who love us best from knowing us as we essentially are, both for good
and bad. But there are those who are not at all what they seem. Such people, I think, are
wholly mysterious. Their true selves are deliberately and entirely masked, leaving only a
false aspect for others to know.’
Her unwavering gaze was uncomfortable, and the ensuing silence even more so.
She was speaking generally, of course; yet there was an unmistakable pointedness to her
words that struck me very forcefully. Mademoiselle gave a sigh, indicative of impatience
with her serious friend, whilst I smiled weakly and, in an attempt to steer the
conversation in another direction, asked Miss Carteret how long she would be staying in
London.
‘Marie-Madeleine leaves for Paris tomorrow. I shall remain here for a few days
more, having little to go back to Evenwood for.’
‘Not even Mr Phoebus Daunt?’ I asked.
At this Mademoiselle Buisson gave out a little scream of laughter and rocked
back and forth on the sofa.
‘Mr Phoebus Daunt! You think she would go back for him? But you are teasing, I
think, Mr Glapthorn.’
‘But why would Miss Carteret not wish to see her old friend?’ I asked, with an
exaggeratedly innocent expression.
‘Ah, yes,’ replied Mademoiselle, smiling, ‘her old friend and playfellow.’
‘Mr Glapthorn does not share the world’s admiration of Mr Phoebus Daunt,’ said
Miss Carteret. ‘Indeed he holds quite a severe opinion of him. Isn’t that right, Mr
Glapthorn?’
‘But Mr Phoebus Daunt is so utterly charming!’ cried Mademoiselle Buisson.
‘And so clever, and so handsome! Are you jealous of him, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘By no means, I assure you.’
‘Do you know him, then?’ asked Mademoiselle, smiling.
‘Mr Glapthorn knows him only by reputation,’ said Miss Carteret, also smiling,
‘which he believes to be sufficient grounds for disliking him.’ They looked at each other
as if they were playing some sort of game, the rules of which were known only by the
two of them.
‘Do I infer, then, Miss Carteret,’ I asked, ‘that we share a similar view of Mr
Daunt’s character and talents after all? When we last spoke on this subject you appeared
inclined to defend him.’
‘As I implied then, I owe Mr Daunt the courtesy due to a long acquaintance, and
to a close neighbour. But I do not seek to defend him. He is well able to defend himself,
against your opinion, and against mine.’
‘Well,’ said Mademoiselle, ‘if you wish to have my considered opinion of Mr
Phoebus Daunt, here it is. He is insufferable. That is my opinion – the long and the short
of it, as you say in English. So you see, Mr Glapthorn, we are all of one mind on the
subject.’
I said I was glad of it.
‘But you know, Emily,’ she continued, turning to her friend, ‘I can think of an
excellent reason for you to go back to Evenwood.’
‘And what is that?’ asked Miss Carteret.
‘Why, Mr Phoebus Daunt is not there!’
Mademoiselle Buisson seemed excessively pleased by the cleverness of her
riposte. She clapped her hands together, kissed Miss Carteret on the cheek, and leapt to
her feet. Then she began to dance around the room, skiping and twirling, and singing,
‘Où est le soleil? Où est le soleil?’, until she sat down once more next to Miss Carteret,
flushed and bright-eyed.
‘And where has the sun gone?’ I asked.
‘To America,’ said Miss Carteret. As she spoke, she regarded her friend with a
quizzical uplift of her eyebrows, and again I felt an unmistakable undercurrent of
complicity. ‘He has embarked upon a lecture tour.’
‘And what is he to lecture on?’ I asked.
‘His subject, I believe, is to be “The Art of the Epic”’.
I could not stop myself from letting out a contemptuous guffaw. The Art of the
Epic! Of all things! Then I checked myself, thinking I might perhaps be reprimanded by
Miss Carteret for my discourtesy towards her old playfellow; but I was gratified to see
that both she and Mademoiselle were also laughing, Miss Carteret quietly and discreetly,
her friend more openly.
‘You see, Emily,’ said Mademoiselle at length, ‘Mr Glapthorn is a kindred spirit.
He feels things as we do. We can tell him all our secrets, and never fear that he will
betray us.’
Miss Carteret rose, walked to the window, and looked out into the street.
‘It’s so stuffy in here,’ she said. ‘Shall we walk out for half an hour?’
It did not take long for the two ladies to procure shawls and bonnets, and soon we
were walking through carpets of fallen leaves in Hyde-park. We rested for a while on a
bench overlooking the Serpentine; but Mademoiselle Buisson was restless and, after a
minute or two, she wandered off a little way, leaving Miss Carteret and I alone for the
first time.
‘Miss Carteret,’ I ventured, after we’d sat for a few moments looking out over the
water, ‘may I enquire whether the police are any closer to apprehending your father’s
attackers?’
Her eyes remained fixed on some distant point as she made her reply.
‘A man from Easton – a known ruffian – was questioned, but has since been
released without charge. I have no hope at all that the police will ever identify those
responsible.’
She said this in a rather pat way, as if my question had been anticipated, and the
answer prepared. Her beautiful face looked strained, and I noticed that she was playing
with the fringes of her shawl in a distracted manner.
‘Forgive me,’ I said softly. ‘The question was insensitive.’
‘No!’ She had now turned to look at me, and I saw that her eyes were full of tears.
‘You speak out of kindness, I know that, and I am grateful for your concern, truly I am.
But my heart is so full – with grief for my father, and with uncertainty as to what I shall
do now. My father’s death has thrown everything into doubt. I have no way of earning
my living, and do not even know if I shall have a home any more.’
‘Surely Lord Tansor will be sensitive to your position, and to the duty he owes to
you as his relative?’
‘Lord Tansor will only do what serves his own interests,’ she replied, somewhat
tartly. ‘I do not complain that he has never shown me consideration in the past, but he is
certainly under no obligation to do so in the future. He gave my father employment at the
behest of his aunt, my grandmother; but he did so with some reluctance, though the
appointment proved of inestimable benefit to him. My father was his cousin, yet he was
sometimes treated no better than a servant. I do not deny that our material circumstances
provided compensation; but we owned nothing. Everything we had was in the gift of
Lord Tansor; we lived by the grace and favour of his Lordship, not as members of the
family in our own right and dignity. I could never make my father see the inequity of our
situation, but I felt the shame and injustice of it greatly. How can I, then, consider my
relationship to his Lordship to offer any guarantee of security and independence?’
‘But perhaps his Lordship will treat you generously, after all.’
‘He may. I have Duport blood in me, and that is always of the greatest
consideration to Lord Tansor. But I cannot count on things turning out to my advantage,
and do not wish to be perpetually beholden to Lord Tansor.’
I then made the observation that a lady always had another means at her disposal
to settle herself in a comfortable way of life.
‘You mean marriage, I suppose. But who would want to marry me? I have no
money of my own, and my father left little enough. I am twenty-eight years old – no, do
not say that my age is of no account. I know very well that it is. No, Mr Glapthorn, I am a
lost cause. I shall live and die a spinster.’
‘There is one person, surely, who would marry you.’
‘And who is that?’
‘Why, Mr Phoebus Daunt, of course.’
‘Really, Mr Glapthorn, you are quite obsessed by Mr Phoebus Daunt. He seems to
have become a fixed idea for you.’
‘But you admit that I am right?’
‘I admit no such thing. Any inclinations in that direction that Mr Daunt might
have harboured have long since withered away. Even if my father had approved of him,
which he did not, I could never have reciprocated his feelings. I do not love Mr Daunt;
and, for me, having had the example of my parents constantly before me, love is the only
reason for marriage.’
‘And yet he has tremendous prospects, does he not? The woman who marries Mr
Phoebus Daunt will be comfortable indeed when he inherits Lord Tansor’s fortune. Such
a consideration might mitigate the absence of love.’
‘Your knowledge of Mr Daunt’s affairs appears to be extensive.’
‘I have some professional acquaintance with them, yes.’
‘Ah, from your position at Tredgolds. I see. But I would have expected such
matters to have remained confidential.’
‘I think I am right in saying that Mr Daunt’s position with regard to Lord Tansor’s
will is public knowledge; otherwise, of course, I would have observed professional