‘Surely Muriel must have made enquiries?’ said the earl, dragging himself out of his private hell to attend to his mother.
‘Well, she should have gone herself to see it, Rupert. You can’t imagine how much harm this will do below stairs. They’re upset enough about Anna’s going, and though it’s noble of her it’s quite unnecessary because Minna asked her to stay and the Rabinovitches also—’
‘Noble?’ Rupert’s voice tore at the dowager’s raw nerves like sandpaper. ‘That’s rich! That’s very rich! Anna hasn’t gone alone, I assure you. She’s eloped. I found her in the garden carrying on like a guttersnipe with one of the chauffeurs.’
‘The chauffeurs?’ The dowager’s brow cleared. She smiled. ‘Oh, yes, I forgot you weren’t there when that came out. It seems that the Nettlefords’ chauffeur was her Cousin Sergei, the one she’s so fond of! You can imagine how Honoria carried on when she found she’d let a perfectly good prince get away.’
‘I see. That explains it.’ Rupert’s voice was grimmer than ever. ‘Well, they should make a very handsome couple – and at least we’re spared the strain of having our coals carried upstairs by a princess.’
‘No dear, I’m sure Anna—’
Rupert swung round and the dowager stepped back a pace. Never in all her life had she seen him look like that.
‘You will not mention Anna to me again, please,’ he said. ‘Not ever.’
By the time Rupert came to find her, Muriel was in a very nasty temper. Louise, sent for to replace Anna, had refused to wait on her and Muriel had been compelled, on a morning on which she particularly wished to dazzle, to dress herself.
‘She’ll have to be sent away, Rupert,’ she said now, angrily recounting her tale of woe.
‘There is not the slightest question of Louise being sent away,’ said Rupert levelly. He had just spent half an hour cross-examining his butler. Proom’s attempts at honourable evasion had withered before the tactics that Rupert had perfected in four years of dealing with his men. The earl was now fully informed of the situation below stairs and his anger, though perfectly contained, far outstripped Muriel’s own. ‘Louise was upset because of your treatment of Win, which, I don’t scruple to tell you, Muriel, was monstrous! As far as I can see, you virtually had the girl kidnapped on her day off.’
‘How dare you, Rupert. How dare you speak to me like that!’
‘I won’t humiliate you by countermanding the orders you have already given,’ continued Rupert as though she had not spoken, ‘but there must be no further interference with Proom’s arrangements. As for Mrs Proom, Mersham is her home and will be until the day she dies.’
‘Mersham!’ hissed Muriel. ‘Don’t talk to me about Mersham. Your precious Mersham would be under the hammer now if it wasn’t for me.’
‘Yes,’ said Rupert quietly. ‘And better it should be than that it should be destroyed by the kind of ideas perpetrated by your friend Dr Lightbody. If George were alive he’d think that too.’
‘Oh? What’s wrong with Dr Lightbody’s ideas? I happen to be about to invite him to come and work down here.’
Rupert looked at her in amazement. ‘You can’t imagine I would allow that?’ he said.
‘Allow?’ shouted Muriel, her chest heaving with operatic rage. ‘Allow! Who do you think you are?’
Rupert’s next words were spoken very softly.
‘The owner of Mersham, Muriel,’ he said.
And in the stunned silence which followed he went on more gently: ‘Surely you didn’t imagine that your wealth would allow you to bully me? As for Dr Lightbody, you are, of course, perfectly free to choose your own friends, but that I should allow a man whose ideas are wholly repugnant to me to set up shop at Mersham is quite ridiculous.’ His face creased into a smile. ‘On the other hand your relations are quite another matter.’
‘My . . . relations,’ faltered Muriel.
Rupert nodded. ‘Your grandmother, for example, would be perfectly welcome to make her home with us,’ he went on silkily, ‘or your Uncle Nat. I’ve always wanted to meet a rat-catcher – especially one with such original ideas about what to do with the skins.’
‘You . . . wouldn’t,’ said Muriel, who had turned quite white.
‘Not if you don’t wish it. But remember what I have said.’ Suddenly he reached out, took her hand: ‘Look, Muriel, you don’t love me, do you? You’re beautiful and capable and rich; you could marry anyone. It’s not too late to free yourself. Think hard, my dear – there are a lot of years ahead of us. Could you really be happy with a man who dislikes everything you hold most dear?’
Panic overwhelmed Muriel. Two days to go: literally the day after tomorrow she would be a countess! Was it possible that this glittering prize could still be snatched from her? On this very morning she had meant to tell Rupert at what times he might physically approach her. That he might find it in himself not to approach her at all had never even crossed her mind. And, squeezing her eyelids together, she managed a perfectly authentic tear.
‘Please don’t talk like that, dearest,’ she said, and for the first time he saw her genuinely afraid. ‘I’m extremely . . . devoted to you.’ And as he remained silent, ‘You wouldn’t . . . jilt me?’
Rupert shook his head.
‘No, Muriel,’ he said, trying to keep the weariness out of his voice: ‘I wouldn’t do that.’
Crossing the hall on his way out with his dog, the earl came upon a cluster of servants grouped round the library door, which had been left slightly ajar. Peggy with a feather duster, James with his stepladder . . . Sid.
Moving closer, he heard a voice issuing forth: high-pitched, well-modulated, self-assured . . .
‘. . . Can anyone seriously doubt, ladies and gentlemen, that the elimination of all that is sick and maimed and displeasing in our society can – and indeed must – be the aim of every thinking . . .’
The servants, seeing his lordship, scuttled for cover. Rupert pushed open the door. On the dais at the far end of the empty library, one hand resting on the bust of Hercules which had given Anna so much trouble, stood Dr Lightbody, testing the acoustics of his new home.
Rupert entered, Baskerville at his heels. The door shut behind him. The servants crept slowly forward again. Till the door flew open and a dishevelled, blond-haired man shot out into the hallway and collapsed in a heap on to the mosaic tiles . . .
Very late that night, Proom, on his last rounds, found a light still burning in the gold salon and went to investigate.
Lying sprawled on a sofa, his head thrown back against the cushions, one arm flung out – was his lordship. His breathing was stertorous; the decanter of whisky on the low table beside him was empty.
For a long moment, Proom stood looking down at his master. Something about the pose of the body, both taut and abandoned and the weariness of the slightly parted lips, half-recalled an entry he had seen in one of his encyclopaedias . . . Something about ‘Early Christian Martyrs’, he thought. Then suddenly it came to him: Botticelli’s altarpiece of St Barnabas in the Uffizi.
He leant forward to shake his lordship by the shoulder. Whereupon the earl opened an unfocused eye, pronounced, with perfect clarity, a single word – and at once passed out again.
‘Tut,’ said the butler, expressing in the only way he knew, his deep compassion.
Then he went downstairs to order James to come and help him carry his lordship to his bed.
On the following day, the last before the wedding, Mr Proom received a telephone call. It was from the station master at Maidens Over and informed him that a family by the name of Herring had been apprehended while trying to cheat the Great Western Railway of two fares.
‘Where are they now?’ asked Proom when he had digested this piece of information.
‘They are locked in my office, Mr Proom, pending further investigations. What would you wish me to do with them?’
‘If you would be so kind as to keep them there, Mr Fernby,’ said Mr Proom. ‘Just kee
p them there. On no account let them out till I arrive.’
‘It will be a pleasure, Mr Proom,’ said the station master.
But when he had replaced the receiver, Proom did not go to find the earl or the dowager. Instead he stood for a long time lost in thought. Mr Proom remembered Melvyn Herring. He remembered him very well . . .
‘It is impossible,’ said Mr Proom to himself after a while. And then: ‘It is absurd. I must be losing my reason even to think of such a thing.’
He continued to stand by the telephone, the light reflecting off his high, domed forehead. ‘Quite absurd,’ he repeated, ‘and in the worst possible taste. Yet could anything be worse than things as they are now?’
They could not. And presently Proom went first to find James to tell him that he would have to deputize for a few hours, and then to Mr Potter to ask if he could spare one of the cars.
Leo Rabinovitch was working in his study. He had retired from the rag trade, but his business sense was inborn and since he and Hannah had come to the country their wealth, due to his astute investments, had trebled. Now it seemed as though his fortune would go, not as he had hoped, to further the interests of the Cohens or the Fleishmanns or the Kussevitskys, all of whom had sons whose mothers had watched Susie reach marriageable age with unconcealed interest, but to the Byrnes, whose record in matters like the burning of the synagogues in medieval York, for example, was far from impressive. Still, there it was. Tom was a nice lad and Susie’s very spectacle frames, since the ball, seemed to have turned to gold.
It was at this point that the parlourmaid, round-eyed with wonder, announced Cyril Proom. Proom had come to the front door, a gesture which had brought beads of perspiration out on his forehead, and the maid had nearly fainted. Not because she had expected him to come by the back door either. She had simply expected him to be for ever at Mersham; immaculate, planted, there.
Rabinovitch looked up – and was at once attacked by a deep, an almost ungovernable lust.
Hannah was a good housekeeper. The Towers ran well, the food was excellent, the rooms clean and cared for. But Hannah, sensibly knowing her limitations, stuck to women servants, and these she treated in the traditions that prevailed in the village homesteads of her youth. In the servants’ quarters of The Towers nothing was secret, nothing, felt Leo Rabinovitch, was spared. The Rabinovitches’ maids got the shingles and the piles and were nursed by Hannah. They were crossed in love and their sobs floated up to the study where Rabinovitch was trying to read his company reports. They dreamt about nesting crows and royal babies and fire engines and told him so while serving breakfast. They walked in their sleep, their aunts fell off bicycles, poltergeists infested their cousins’ cottages – and every disaster, minutely chronicled, reverberated through the rooms and corridors of his house.
But if Proom had come to offer his services . . . If Proom were to take over the running of The Towers . . . Leo’s eyes momentarily closed and a series of dizzying vignettes flashed through his mind. Himself sitting at dinner while a totally silent footman, an English footman, inscrutable and powdered, approached with the lebernockerl and sauerkraut. Himself arriving after a day in the city, handing his hat and coat to Proom himself and receiving only a pleasant: ‘I trust you had a successful day, sir?’
But as he looked at Proom, standing respectfully before him in his unaccustomed lounge suit, Leo knew that all this could not – should not, even – be. For Proom belonged to Mersham. Proom was Mersham.
‘You will sit down, Mr Proom?’
‘No, thank you, sir.’ The mere idea had made Proom flinch. He was extremely embarrassed now, wondering why he had come, and putting off the moment when he would have to make his request, he said, ‘May I be permitted to felicitate you on the news of Miss Rabinovitch’s engagement? The event gave great satisfaction below stairs.’
‘Thank you. How are things at Mersham?’ enquired Rabinovitch.
Proom, in pursuit of his plan, made no attempt at polite evasion.
‘Bad, sir,’ he said with finality.
Rabinovitch nodded. ‘You know we shall not be visiting any longer?’
‘I had heard, sir. There will be a number of changes – and none of them for the better.’
Rabinovitch waited. ‘I can help you, perhaps?’
Proom cleared his throat. ‘A long time ago, sir, you said that if I ever needed help, I had only to come to you.’
Leo nodded. ‘I said it and it is true. Never shall I forget what you did for Susie.’
The incident to which Rabinovitch referred had taken place shortly after they came to The Towers. They had all gone in a party to a local race meeting, taking along the twelve-year-old Susie. Susie had patiently watched three races, after which she had drawn a book out of her pocket and settled herself on a folding stool to read. She was deep in her story when a Bugatti coupé, incompetently parked on a slope, began to roll towards her and it was Proom, standing guard over the picnic hampers, who had seen what was happening and pulled her to safety.
Proom plunged. ‘I need a considerable sum of money, sir. Immediately. And in cash.’
He mentioned it and Rabinovitch’s bushy eyebrows shot up in surprise. The sum was one which would keep a man and his family in comfort for a year.
‘You shall have it, Mr Proom. But I wonder whether you are wise to take it in this way. If you are considering the purchase of a cottage for Mrs Proom, for example, it might be wiser—’
‘It’s not for me, sir,’ said Proom, shocked. ‘I’d never ask it for myself, sir. I can take care of myself; I’ve a bit saved.’
‘For what, then?’ asked Leo, surprised. ‘Or do you not wish to tell me?’
‘It isn’t that I don’t want to, sir. But . . . well, I have this plan and I don’t really want to involve anyone else. It’s a very . . . peculiar plan.’
‘You are trying to help someone else?’
‘You could say that.’ There was a pause. ‘Things couldn’t be worse at Mersham, sir. Lady Westerholme, well she’s at her wits’ end and Mr Rupert – his lordship, I mean – I saw him in hospital when they first brought him over from France and he looked better than he does this morning. And Anna’s gone—’
Leo smiled. ‘You heard what happened at the ball?’
Proom inclined his head. ‘Yes, sir. The account gave great pleasure to all the staff. But it was what was done to Win,’ he continued, ‘that made me think anything was worth trying.’
‘Win? Who is Win?’ enquired Leo.
Proom told him the story, while Leo made Central European noises of sympathy.
‘If I tell you what I mean to do, sir,’ said Proom, realizing how unfair it was to ask for help without giving his confidence, ‘I’m afraid you’ll think I’ve taken leave of my senses.’
Carefully, much embarrassed by its theatricality, he explained his plan. When he had finished, Leo looked at him incredulously.
‘Your plan will not succeed, I think; there are too many people who will fail to act as you hope. But if it does, don’t you see, you are destroying also yourself? The financial consequences to Mersham would be disastrous.’
‘I know, sir. But . . . well, I taught Mr Rupert to ride a bicycle. There wasn’t the fuss made of him there was of Lord George, but there’s no doubt who was the finer gentleman. And seeing him like this . . .’
There was a pause. Then Leo nodded. ‘You shall have the money, Mr Proom. Immediately. And in cash.’
Anna, meanwhile, was fine. She was very well. She had, as she frequently informed Pinny, never felt better in her life.
‘I don’t doubt it, dear,’ said Pinny. ‘All I said was that I wish you’d eat something. You’ve been home twenty-four hours and you haven’t touched a thing.’
Anna gazed obediently at the breakfast table set out in the little parlour, took hold of a piece of toast and conveyed it to her mouth.
‘It doesn’t go down,’ she said in a puzzled voice, exactly as she had done when she was five years ol
d and sickening for quinsy.
Pinny’s heart contracted with pity and helplessness. From Anna’s account of Mersham, which seemed to be inhabited by absolutely everyone except its owner, she had drawn her own conclusions.
‘I have been thinking,’ said Anna, ‘and I believe it would be best if I went to Paris. Kira has said she can find work for me in her salon – selling perfumes and such things. It would,’ she added bleakly, ‘be very interesting.’
Since none of them had the fare to Pimlico, let alone to Paris, Pinny felt free to agree that it did indeed sound a fascinating way of life.
‘Ah, no, my little flea,’ said the countess, patting her daughter’s hand. ‘Paris is so far! Something will come along soon, you see. Dounia has a new plan,’ she continued, referring to her irrepressible sister-in-law, the Princess Chirkovsky. ‘We are to make very much kvass in Miss King’s kitchen – she has permitted it – and sell it to the teashops of the Lyons because nobody in England knows at all about kvass—’
‘Luckily for them,’ said Pinny under her breath.
Anna tried to smile. But added to the ceaseless, searing pain about Rupert, there was another anxiety now about Sergei. If she could not find suitable work soon and help her family, Sergei might well sacrifice himself and marry Larissa Rakov and a loveless marriage seemed to Anna, in her present state, to be a hell like no other.
‘There are always good things happening,’ said the countess, determined to divert her daughter. ‘For example, have you heard about Pupsik?’
‘No?’ This time Anna’s smile was not assumed. The troubles of the Baroness de Wodzka were very close to her heart. ‘Has he . . . ?’