I COULD NOT BELIEVE that this dreadful thing had happened. It had come so suddenly, so unexpectedly, shattering our lives.
Charles had died a hero’s death. He had died rescuing women and children from his hospital. He had saved several lives and that would be the greatest compensation to him. I could only hope that he was happy now.
The Forsters took me back to Enderby. We mourned together. Everything forgotten but our loss. I think they had known how it was with Charles and me and they were pleased because I had brought some happiness into his life.
The mothers and children who had been rescued that night were taken to another hospital some miles away, for Charles’s building was a complete wreck.
Life was ironical, for the hero of the hour was Dickon. He had mustered a fire-fighting force and had several times plunged into the inferno and rescued women and children. His heroic deeds were talked of everywhere.
I was unable to think of anything during the days that followed except that I had lost Charles. There would never be that life together which we had planned. Perhaps it would never have been idyllic because there would have been too many memories to overcome.
I went back to Eversleigh and thought: What shall I do now?
I had lost my lover but my problem remained. I must stand and face it alone.
I need not worry about Charles now. Nothing could harm him. But Dickon was still in a position to blackmail me, to have me accused of murder.
I felt numb … sometimes not caring what he did. … Only wishing to save Lottie.
But how could I save Lottie? If I stood convicted as a murderess would that make her turn even more to Dickon?
There was another tragedy. We discovered on the morning after the fire that Miss Carter was missing. Several people had seen her in the hospital and no one had seen her afterward; it could only be assumed that she must have been one of the victims. Lottie was very upset. She had been fond of Miss Carter for all that she had poked gentle fun at her.
Life had to go on. I was alone now.
I thought: And Dickon is here … in this house. And what will happen when he comes face to face with James Fenton, as he decidedly must?
Will James want to leave?
Trivial problems, perhaps, compared with the great one which stared me in the face.
Lottie’s future … with Dickon. I could not bear to think of that.
He sought me out, as he said, for a little chat. … He was as suave and nonchalant as ever.
“A great tragedy this fire. All the doctor’s good work gone up in smoke.”
“His career, which you were planning to ruin … over.”
“I was only planning to ruin it if you would not be sensible. I did give you the chance, didn’t I?”
“Oh, Dickon … life is so tragic … can’t you just try to let us be at peace for a while.”
“My dearest cousin, it is what I wish more than anything. We will all be happy here at Eversleigh.”
“Do you want it as much as all that, Dickon?”
“I want it completely and absolutely. I always made up my mind it would be mine. And it should be, Zipporah. I’m one of the family. I am the man of the family. It was crazy of Uncle Carl to leave it to you when I was there. I know my father was a damned Jacobite … but so was your grandfather … the most damned and mighty of them all. It’s madness. It belongs to me and I intend to have it.”
“Using Lottie as the means to get it.”
“And at the same time making a very good husband to Lottie.”
“I know what you’re like. You’d never be faithful to her.”
He cocked an eyebrow and looked at me quizzically. “Infidelity … what does it matter if the wronged doesn’t know, eh? And it happens where you’d least expect it.”
He had silenced me, as he knew he would.
“But to marry like this … so calculatedly.”
“One should always calculate on important matters. Lottie wants it. I couldn’t achieve it otherwise, could I?”
“You have taken advantage of her youth to present yourself as some sort of hero.”
“I’m a buccaneer by nature. Lottie was a challenge. … I could never resist them. I’m sorry you’ve lost your doctor.”
“His death makes your blackmailing less effective. I have only myself to think of now. I do not care very much what happens to me. I am going to tell Lottie everything. I am going to tell her that you are blackmailing me … that you want to marry her solely because she is the heiress to Eversleigh. I could cut her out of my will.”
“To whom would you leave Eversleigh then? You couldn’t leave it outside the family, could you? Uncle Carl couldn’t, although he wanted it for his housekeeper-mistress. No … I’m the rightful heir. All the Eversleighs would rise up in their graves and tell you so. A bit of a rogue … but then most of us are. We are all sinners, even those who seem most virtuous. I’ll tell you something. It was your Miss Carter who started the fire at the hospital.”
“I don’t believe it.”
“It’s true. I could have saved her … but she wouldn’t be saved. She was a challenge, wasn’t she? The prim virtuous spinster. It was wrong, I know … but I couldn’t resist.”
“You mean “that you … ?”
“Yes … you’ve guessed it. The lady lost her virginity at Clavering. I have a good line in seduction for earnest spinsters.”
“You are a fiend.”
“Yes, I am indeed. I was rather sorry afterwards, but you see, she was so pious. I just had to see if it worked. Of course she believed she was destined for hell fire afterwards. She was a little mad, you know. … Once when the gardeners at Clavering were burning leaves … she tried to leap into the fire. I saved her then … I talked to her … but she was bent on self-destruction. She need not have taken so many with her, but you see, in her eyes they were all wicked too, fallen women the lot of them … and the doctor … well, he had fallen from grace too, hadn’t he? I set her to spy on you. She knew that you and the doctor were lovers. She knew that there was something odd about the laudanum because when he was dead she saw the bottle on the table. All this she told me. … She was very loquacious on the subject of sin. Everybody around us was a sinner. I think she reveled in the sins of others because she believed herself to have sinned heinously and that she was lost to glory forever. She was a fanatic. I saw her standing on a ledge with a piece of burning wood, like a flaming torch, in her hand. She was waving it about and calling on God to witness her repentance. ‘Give me your hand,’ I said. ‘I can take you to safety’ and she answered: ‘Leave me alone. I may be saving my soul. I am expiating my sin by dying in this fire and taking other sinners with me.’”
“What a dreadful story.”
“It’s true. As for your Charles, I might have saved him too. But he was like the captain who won’t leave the sinking ship. Very noble, he was. … But then he was a sinner like the rest of us, wasn’t he? And like poor Madeleine he had some notion that he was expiating his sins. Dear Zipporah. We’re all sinners. Don’t condemn one because his sins are a little different from yours.”
“Oh, Dickon,” I said, “I’m so tired of you and your talk and your ways. All I want is for you to leave me in peace … with my daughter.”
“Be reasonable, dear Zipporah. Be sensible … and we shall all live happily ever after.”
It is hard to remember those days now. They seem so long ago. Each morning I awoke I thought: Charles is dead. I am alone now.
Dickon went back to Clavering. He held my hands almost tenderly as he said good-bye.
“Don’t forget,” he said, “you hold your doctor’s good name in these hands. Your own too. Don’t throw it away. And don’t forget I want to please you.”
“You can do that by going away and never coming back.”
“You will feel differently one day. Now I must go and find my sweet Lottie. I will say au revoir to her and assure her of my undying devotion.”
How I hated him—handsome, debonair, so devastatingly attractive, the hero now to whom so many owed their lives. He had been so modest about his achievements—shrugging them aside as though saving life and playing the hero was commonplace with him.
With what relief I watched him ride away.
Now the days were long and meaningless. I felt that my visits to Isabel and Derek only saddened them because I reminded them of Charles.
Evalina came to see me to show me her bonny baby, of which she was very proud.
“The image of his dad,” she said. She regarded me with sympathetic eyes. “I was sorry about the doctor,” she said. “He was such a good man … a lovely man … but I always thought he was too serious for you. You want someone to make you laugh because you can be a bit too serious yourself. You want someone like that Frenchman … you remember?”
I wanted to shout to her to get out; but I knew she was only trying to cheer me up.
James Fenton was a very sad man. He had been genuinely fond of Jean-Louis. Sometimes he looked a little wistful and I wondered why.
I sounded Hetty and she told me that he had always wanted a farm of his own. Farming was his first love really. He just hadn’t wanted to share with anyone.
“Of course,” she said, “he has the money now.”
I said: “Does he want to go?”
Hetty answered firmly: “We’d never go as long as you needed us.”
I felt I should tell them to go and find their farm. I was sure it was what they wanted. Yet how could I manage without James?
Everything had changed now. I was alone.
I felt desolate. I had lost Jean-Louis and Charles, and even Lottie preferred to be with Dickon and was indeed planning the day when she would marry him—although so far in the future, and even she accepted that in view of her extreme youth.
My mother had been close to me in my childhood but when I married Jean-Louis and her lover Dickon came back—although he married Sabrina instead of her—I seemed to move into the background of her life. And on the birth of Sabrina’s son it was Dickon who claimed first place in her attentions.
I had been so loved … so wanted … and now I was a lonely woman.
I tried to look into the future. What was I going to do? Was I going to stand by and see Lottie marry Dickon? Or was I going to refuse my consent to the marriage, cut Lottie out of my will … and lose her forever. Although, of course, without Eversleigh she would not be so attractive to Dickon.
Whichever way I looked I was faced by a mighty dilemma. And there was no one to advise me.
Then one day when I sat in my bedroom there was a knock at my door and one of the maids entered to tell me that there was a visitor below to see me.
When I saw him standing in the hall my heart leaped with an excitement which I had not known for a long time.
He had changed a little. He was obviously older. He wore a neat wig, very white and wavy, which made his bright eyes seem darker than I remembered them. He held his feathered hat in his hand; his sword showed beneath his loose coat which had a more elegant cut than those I was accustomed to seeing.
I came down the stairs and he hurried toward me. He took both my hands in his and kissed first one then the other.
I had forgotten how he could excite me. I felt young again … young and foolish and reckless.
“You sent for me.” he said, “at last.”
“Gerard.” I said quietly. “And you came.”
“Certainly I came. Did you think I would not? And we have a daughter.”
“Gerard,” I said, “we must talk … together … undisturbed. First I must explain. … Have you anyone with you?”
“Two servants.”
“Where are they?”
“I left them with the horses.”
“I will send word for them to be looked after, but first come in here.” I took him into the winter parlor and shut the door.
“There was a child,” he said. “Why didn’t you tell me … ?”
“How could I? My husband thought she was his. She was a great comfort to him.”
“Where is she?”
“She is here.”
“I long to see her.”
“You shall. I want you to help me.”
“What danger is she in?”
“I have to explain everything. Please, Gerard, listen to me.”
I told him as briefly as I could what had happened. Of how Jean-Louis had suffered, of how the doctor and I had become lovers; I told of the wickedness of Dickon, of his ambitions through our daughter.
That was the most difficult part for him to understand. I could see that he did not understand why Dickon was such a villain in my eyes. But he listened intently and he would help me.
I said: “I am going to tell Lottie that you are her father. But first I want her to meet you … to like you … as I know she will. Do you understand?”
“Perfectly,” he said.
“Then I want you to take her back with you. You can say you wish her to see your country … to show her your home … and then I want you to see that she is fascinated by all she sees … so that she does not believe the height of bliss is to settle down and marry Dickon. I want her to see something of the world … meet other people. … I want to get her away for a while.”
“It shall be as you say.”
“Now,” I said, “I am going to have a room made ready for you. I shall tell her that we have a visitor from France. I want you to get to know each other. How does that seem?”
He was looking at me intently as I remember he used to look at me all those years ago.
“It seems to me perfect,” he said.
Of course he fascinated Lottie. His elegance, his charm, all that had fascinated me and swept me off my feet when I was young. It was all there. It hadn’t changed very much except perhaps to become more subtle, more mature.
I felt as I never thought I would again and before a week was out I found that I could explain to Lottie.
When I told her she stared at me incredulously. Her father! This exciting, fascinating man. He had talked to her of his château, of his life at the French court, of Paris, of the French countryside … and so vividly, as he had one purpose and that to make her wish to see them, and he succeeded admirably.
I saw the look of wonder on her face which she immediately suppressed because she felt it was disloyal to Jean-Louis. She kept looking at me as though she were seeing me in a new light.
Life had been revealed to her. It was not good and bad, neatly divided into black and white. People were not always what they seemed.
She was very thoughtful. But I could see that she was excited at the thought of having such a father.
He would take her back with him for a visit. How did she feel about that?
It was just what she needed. Her horizon would be widened; she would see another world apart from the small one in which she had lived. She would meet people—perhaps as fascinating as Dickon had been. She was already very conscious of the worldly charm of her father.
She was delighted.
“But to leave you, mama,” she said. “Now that you are so sad.”
I said: “You will come back to me.”
“Yes.” she said, “I have to come back … and marry Dickon.”
It was almost as though she remembered him for the first time in several days.
I watched them go.
“I will write to you, dear mama,” said Lottie. “I will tell you all the exciting things that are happening to me.”
“I will write to you.” said Gerard, “and tell you how much we miss you.”
So they went. And how desolate I was watching them leave. His visit had brought back so vividly memories of the past. I would never forget him. Nothing would ever have effaced the memory of him. Not even Charles. I had loved Charles. I had loved Jean-Louis. But I realized that the feeling Gerard had roused in me was different from what I felt for either of them.
There was mystery about him. What did I know of him? That he lived excitingly. That he was deeply immersed in the affairs of his nation. That he had been in England on some secret mission.
He had come into my life and changed it; and if I knew little about him I had learned something about myself.
For the rest of my days I would think of him; I would relive my youth through him. I felt young when he was near. I wondered if I should ever see him again.
How long the days seemed. I missed Lottie very much.
Almost two weeks passed before I heard from them.
Lottie was ecstatic. She had been to Versailles. She had been presented to the aging king, who had spoken very kindly to her; she had met the young dauphin. I should see the gown her father had bought for her to go to court. There had never been such a gown.
I scanned the letter. There was no mention of Dickon. There was a letter from Gerard. It was not long but it was of such significance that I did not believe what I read and read three times before I really accepted those words.
He had seen me again. He had thought of me over the years. So often he had wanted to come to see me. It was not easy. When we met he had been married. He was married when he was very young, after the custom of families such as his. It was no love match; and he had made no secret of his amours. Yes, there had been others. But it was different with us. His wife had died five years ago. He was free. He was enchanted with his daughter. He could never let her go and it occurred to him that the parents of such a daughter should be together. We knew each other well. We knew we were ideally suited. Would I consider uprooting myself … giving up my home in England and becoming Madame la Comtesse d’Aubigné?
“Dear Zipporah,” he wrote, “It is not because of Lottie. Though I like her very much. It is because of you … and of what we were to each other … which I have learned through the years is something that comes rarely and when it does is to be cherished. It never died with me. Did it with you? If it did not … then we should be together. I await your answer.”
I was in a daze of delight.
I don’t think I hesitated for a moment. I was young again, I was the girl who ran out to meet her lover so eagerly all those years ago.
Then I thought of Eversleigh. Of my responsibilities.
Well, the estate could go on. James Fenton … But James wanted a farm of his own.
Then I knew what I would do.
I wrote to Dickon. I asked him to come and see me immediately as I had come to a decision. I knew that would bring him.
Then I went to see James and Hetty.
I said: “James, I know you want a farm of your own.”
“We would never leave you,” said Hetty quickly.
“Suppose it was possible for you to do so?”
“Do you mean you have got someone else?”
I said: “Just suppose it were possible. Would you go?”
They looked at me in amazement.
“But James knows the estate.”
“There might be changes. Please, I don’t want to say anything yet. I just want you to answer a simple question. If it were easy … if I were suited … would you prefer to get your own farm? You could do that easily now, James. You know you could.”
“Well,” said James, “if you put it like that … naturally, most men like to be their own masters.”
“That’s what I wanted to know.”
I went to them and kissed them. “You have been good friends to me,” I said.
“What has happened?” asked Hetty. “You look as if you’ve seen some miracle.”
“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps I have. Be patient with me. If it works … you’ll know soon enough.”
Dickon arrived confident and certain of himself, sure, I knew, that I would have by now, what he would call, come to my senses.
I said to him: “Dickon. What would you say if I told you I was passing Eversleigh over to you?”
I had rarely seen him taken off his guard, but he was then. He looked at me suspiciously.
“I mean it,” I said. “After all, it is Eversleigh you want. You’d be ready to forego Lottie for Eversleigh, wouldn’t you?”
“Dear Zipporah, you talk most amusingly but somewhat obscurely. This is one of the few matters about which I do not care to joke.”
I said: “Lottie is in France with her father.”
His face clouded. “What is your game, Zipporah?”
“Very simple. You wanted to marry Lottie for Eversleigh. Eversleigh is what you want. You would manage it perfectly, I know. The ancestors would rise up and sing Hallelujah, I am sure. They never liked the idea of its being in the hands of a woman … although I had a husband to help me. Could you forget Lottie if you already had Eversleigh?”
“Do you mean could I be persuaded to forego my courtship?”
“I mean would you stop writing to her, talking to her of marriage … for Eversleigh?”
“Please, please explain.”
I said: “James Fenton will buy a farm. He wouldn’t stay here with you around. There will be many things to be worked out. I have had an offer of marriage from Lottie’s father. I have decided to accept. I shall live in France after I’m married … and so will Lottie. Dickon, I am going to make over Eversleigh to you now. You are, after all, the male heir.”
He stared at me. Then a slow smile spread across his face.
“Eversleigh!” he murmured and I had never seen him look so tender. I saw then that he loved the place as he could never love anything else.
I said: “You will have to put a manager in at Clavering. You will have to come to Eversleigh with Clarissa and Sabrina … your courtiers, as it were, and you will reign supreme … as you schemed so basely to do.” I laughed suddenly. “It’s virtue rewarded … in reverse.”
Dickon looked at me admiringly.
“I do love you, Zipporah,” he said.