‘In her own sitting-room, your grace, waiting for you to come in,’ beamed Reeth. ‘And stood the journey very well, I am happy to be able to assure your grace.’
‘I’ll go to her at once!’ Sylvester said, walking quickly to the great stair. She was alone, seated on one side of the fireplace. She looked up as Sylvester came in, and smiled mischievously.
‘Mama!’
‘Sylvester! Now, I won’t be scolded! You are to tell me that you are delighted to find me here, if you please!’
‘I don’t have to tell you that,’ he said, bending over her. ‘But to have set out without me – ! I ought never to have written to tell you what had happened! I did so only because I was afraid you might hear of it from some other source. My dear, have you been so anxious?’
‘Not a bit! I knew you would bring him back safely. But it was a little too much to expect me to stay at Chance when such stirring events were taking place in London. Now, sit down and tell me all about it! Edmund’s confidences have given rise to the wildest conjectures in my mind, and that delightful boy you have brought home with you thinks that perhaps I shall like to hear the story better from your lips. My dear, who is he?’
He had turned aside to pull forward a chair, and as he seated himself the Duchess saw him for the first time in the full light of the candles burning near her chair. Like Reeth, she suffered a shock; like Reeth, she recognised the look on Sylvester’s face. He had worn it for many months after Harry’s death; and she had prayed she might never see it again. She was obliged to clasp her hands together in her lap, so urgent was her impulse to stretch them out to him.
‘Thomas Orde,’ he replied, smiling, as it seemed to her, with an effort. ‘A nice lad, isn’t he? I’ve invited him to stay here for as long as he cares to: his father thinks it time he acquired a little town bronze.’ He hesitated, and then said: ‘I daresay he may have told you – or Edmund has – that he is a friend of Miss Marlow’s. An adopted brother, as it were.’
‘Oh, Edmund was very full of Tom and Phoebe! But how they came to be mixed up in that imbroglio I can’t imagine! Phoebe seems to have been very kind to Edmund.’
‘Most kind. It is rather a long story, Mama.’
‘And you are tired, and would rather tell it to me presently. I won’t tease you, then. But tell me about Phoebe! You know I have a particular interest in her. To own the truth, it was to see her that I came to London.’
He looked up quickly. ‘To see her? I don’t understand, Mama! Why should you – ?’
‘Well, Louisa wrote to tell me that everyone believed her to be the author of that absurd novel, and that she was having a very unhappy time, poor child. I hoped I might be able to put a stop to such nonsense, but I reached London only to discover that Lady Ingham had taken her to Paris. I can’t think why she shouldn’t have written to me, for she must have known I would help Verena’s daughter.’
‘It’s too late!’ he said. ‘I could have scotched the scandal! Instead –’ He broke off, and looked keenly at her. ‘I can’t recall. Was my busy aunt Louisa at the Castlereaghs’ ball?’
‘Yes, dearest.’
‘I see.’ He got up jerkily, and moved to the fireplace, standing with his head turned a little away from the Duchess. ‘I am sure she told you what happened there.’
‘An unfortunate affair,’ said the Duchess calmly. ‘You were naturally very angry.’
‘There was no excuse for what I did. I knew her dread of – I can see her face now!’
‘What is she like, Sylvester?’ She waited, and then prompted: ‘Is she pretty?’
He shook his head. ‘No. Not a beauty, Mama. When she is animated, I believe you would consider her taking.’
‘I collect, from all I have heard, that she is unusual?’
‘Oh, yes, she’s unusual!’ he said bitterly. ‘She blurts out whatever may come into her head; she tumbles from one outrageous escapade into another; she’s happier grooming horses and hobnobbing with stable-hands than going to parties; she’s impertinent; you daren’t catch her eye for fear she should start to giggle; she hasn’t any accomplishments; I never saw anyone with less dignity; she’s abominable, and damnably hot at hand, frank to a fault, and – a darling!’
‘Should I like her, Sylvester?’ said the Duchess her eyes on his profile.
‘I don’t know,’ he said, a suggestion of impatience in his voice. ‘I daresay – I hope so – but you might not. How can I possibly tell? It’s of no consequence: she won’t have me.’ He paused and then said, as though the words were wrung out of him: ‘O God, Mama, I’ve made such a mull of it! What am I to do?’
Twenty-eight
After a troubled night, during which she was haunted, waking or dreaming, by all the appalling events of the previous day, which had culminated in a shattering scene with Lady Ingham, Phoebe awoke to find the second housemaid pulling back the blinds, and learning from her that the letter lying on her breakfast-tray had been brought round by hand from Salford House not ten minutes earlier. The housemaid was naturally agog with curiosity, but any expectation she had of being made the recipient of an interesting confidence faded before the seeming apathy with which Miss Phoebe greeted her disclosure. All Miss Phoebe wanted was a cup of tea; and the housemaid, after lingering with diminishing hope for a few minutes, left her sitting up in bed, and sipping this restorative.
Once alone, Phoebe snatched up the letter, and tore it open. She looked first at the signature. Elizabeth Salford was what met her eyes, and drew from her a gasp of fright.
But there was nothing in the letter to make her tremble. It was quite short, and it contained no hint of menace. The Duchess wished very much not only to make the acquaintance of a loved friend’s daughter, but also to thank her for the care she had taken of her grandson. She hoped that Phoebe would be able, perhaps, to visit her that day, at noon, when she would be quite alone, and they could talk without fear of interruption.
Rather a gratifying letter for a modest damsel to receive, one would have supposed, but the expression on Phoebe’s face might have led an observer to conclude that she was reading a tale of horror. Having perused it three times, and failing to detect in it any hidden threat, Phoebe fixed her attention on the words: I shall be quite alone, and carefully considered them. If they were meant to convey a message it was hard to see how this could be anything but one of reassurance; but if this were so, Sylvester must have told his mother – what?
Thrusting back the bedclothes Phoebe scrambled out of bed and into her dressing-gown, and pattered down the stairs to her grandmother’s room. She found the afflicted Dowager alone, and held out the letter to her, asking her in a tense voice to read it.
The Dowager had viewed her unceremonious entrance with disfavour, and she at once said in feeble accents: ‘Oh, heaven! What now?’ But this ejaculation was not wholly devoid of hope, since she too had been told whence had come Miss Phoebe’s letter. Poor Lady Ingham had slept quite as badly as her granddaughter, for she had had much to puzzle her. At first determined to send Phoebe packing back to Somerset, she had been considerably mollified by the interesting intelligence conveyed to her (as Sylvester had known it would be) by Horwich. She had thought it promising, but further reflection had sent her spirits down again: whatever might be Sylvester’s sentiments, Phoebe bore none of the appearance of a young female who had either received, or expected to receive, a flattering offer for her hand. Hope reared its head again when a letter from Salford House was thrust upon her; like Phoebe, she looked first at the signature, and was at once dashed down. ‘Elizabeth!’ she exclaimed, in a flattened voice. ‘Extraordinary! She must have come on the child’s account, I suppose. I only trust it may not be the death of her!’
Phoebe watched her anxiously while she mastered the contents of the letter, and when it was given back to her said imploringly: ‘What must I do, ma’am?’
The Dowager did
not answer for a moment. There was food for deep thought in the Duchess’s letter. She gazed inscrutably before her, and the question had to be repeated before she said, with a slight start: ‘Do? You will do as you are bid, of course! A very pretty letter the Duchess has writ you, and why she should have done so – but she hasn’t, one must assume, read that abominable book!’
‘She has read it, ma’am,’ Phoebe said. ‘It was she who gave it to Salford. He told me so himself.’
‘Then he cannot have told her who wrote it,’ said the Dowager. ‘That you may depend on, for she dotes on Sylvester! If only she could be persuaded to take you up – But someone is bound to tell her!’
‘Grandmama, I must tell her myself!’ Phoebe said.
The Dowager was inclined to agree with her, but the dimming of a future which had seemed to become suddenly so much brighter vexed her so much that she said crossly: ‘You must do as you please! I cannot advise you! And I beg you won’t ask me to accompany you to Salford House, for I am quite unequal to any exertion! You may have the landaulet, and, for heaven’s sake, Phoebe, try at least to appear the thing! You must wear the fawn-coloured silk, and the pink – no, it will make you look hideously sallow! It will have to be the straw with the brown ribands.’
Thus arrayed, Miss Marlow, shortly before noon, stepped into the landaulet, as pale as if it had been a tumbrel and her destination the gallows.
Such was the state of her mind that she would not have been surprised, on arrival at Salford House, to have been confronted by a host of Raynes, all pointing fingers of condemnation at her. But the only persons immediately visible were servants, who seemed, with the exception of the butler, whose aspect was benevolent, to be perfectly uninterested. It was well for her peace of mind that she did not suspect that every member of the household who had the slightest business in the hall had contrived to be there to get a glimpse of her. Such an array of footmen seemed rather excessive, not to say pompous, but if that was the way Sylvester chose to run his house it was quite his own affair.
The benevolent butler conducted her up one pair of stairs. Her heart was thumping hard, and she felt unusually breathless, both of which disagreeable symptoms would have been much aggravated had she known how many interested persons were watching from hidden points of vantage every step of her progress. No one could have told whence had sprung the news that his grace had chosen a leg-shackle at last, and was finding his path proverbially rough; but everyone knew it, from the agent-in-chief down to the humblest kitchen-porter; and an amazing number of these persons contrived to be spectators of Miss Marlow’s arrival. Most of them were disappointed in her; but Miss Penistone and Button found nothing amiss, one of these ladies being sentimentally disposed to think any damsel of dear Sylvester’s choice a paragon, and the other regarding her in the light of a Being sent from on high to preserve her darling from death by shipwreck, surfeit, neglect, or any other of the disasters which might have been expected to strike down an infant of tender years taken to outlandish parts without his nurse.
Phoebe heard her name announced, and stepped across the threshold of the Duchess’s drawing-room. The door closed behind her, but instead of walking forward she stood rooted to the ground, staring across the room at her hostess. A look of naïve surprise was in her face, and she so far forgot herself as to utter an involuntary: ‘Oh – !’
No one had ever told her how pronounced was the resemblance between Sylvester and his mother. At first glance it was startling. At the second one perceived that the Duchess had warmer eyes than Sylvester, and a kinder curve to her lips.
Before Phoebe had assimilated these subtle differences an amused laugh escaped the Duchess, and she said: ‘Yes, Sylvester has his eyebrows from me, poor boy!’
‘Oh, I beg your pardon, ma’am!’ Phoebe stammered, much confused.
‘Come and let me look at you!’ invited the Duchess. ‘I daresay your grandmother may have told you that I have a stupid complaint that won’t let me get out of my chair.’
Phoebe stayed where she was, clasping both hands tightly on her reticule. ‘Ma’am – I am very much obliged to your grace for having – honoured me with this invitation – but I must not accept your hospitality without telling you – that it was I who wrote – that dreadful book!’
‘Oh, you do look like your mother!’ exclaimed the Duchess. ‘Yes, I know you wrote it, which is why I was so desirous of making your acquaintance. Come and give me a kiss! I kissed you in your cradle, but you can’t remember that!’
Thus adjured, Phoebe approached her chair, and bent to plant a shy kiss on the Duchess’s cheek. But the Duchess not only returned this chaste salute warmly but said: ‘You poor, foolish child! Now tell me all about it!’
To hear herself addressed so caressingly was a novel experience. Miss Battery was gruff, Mrs Orde matter-of-fact, and Lady Ingham astringent, and these were the three ladies who had Phoebe’s interests most to heart. She had never met with tenderness, and its effect was to make her tumble down on her knees beside the Duchess’s chair, and burst into tears. Such conduct would have earned her a sharp reproof from Lady Ingham, but the Duchess seemed to think well of it, since she recommended her unconventional guest to enjoy a comfortable cry, removed her hat, and patted her soothingly.
From the moment of discovering that Sylvester had lost his heart to Phoebe the Duchess had been determined to like her, and to put out of her mind all thought of the book she had written; but she had expected to find it hard to do either of these things. It was one thing to nourish private doubts about her son: quite another to find him depicted as a villainous character in a novel that had taken the ton by storm. But so sooner did she see Phoebe and read the contrition in her frank eyes than her heart melted. It rejoiced too, for although Sylvester had said that Phoebe was not beautiful she had not expected to find her a thin slip of a girl, with a brown complexion and nothing to recommend her but a pair of speaking gray eyes. If Sylvester, who knew his own worth, and had coolly made out a list of the qualities he considered indispensable in his bride, had decided that only this girl would satisfy him, he had fallen more deeply in love than his mother had thought possible. She could have laughed aloud, remembering all he had once said to her, for there seemed to her to be no points of resemblance between Phoebe and that mythical wife he had described. She thought there would be some lively fights if he married Phoebe: certainly none of that calm, rather bloodless propriety which he had once considered to be the foundation of a successful alliance.
Well, the marriage might prove a failure, but the Duchess, who had conceived a profound dislike of five unknown but eligible ladies of quality, was much inclined to think that it might as easily turn out to be the making of both parties to it; and by the time the whole history of The Lost Heir had been sobbed into her lap, and a passionate apology offered to her, she was able to assure the penitent author, with perfect sincerity, that on the whole she was glad the book had been published, since she thought it had done Sylvester a great deal of good. ‘And as for Count Ugolino’s shocking conduct towards his nephew, that, my dear, is the least objectionable part of it,’ she said. ‘For as soon as you embroiled him in his dastardly plots, you know, all resemblance to Sylvester vanished. And Maximilian, I am afraid, is quite unlike my naughty grandson! From all Mr Orde told me I feel that Edmund would have very speedily put Ugolino in his place!’
Phoebe could not help giving a tiny chuckle, but she said: ‘I promise you it was coincidence, ma’am, but he – the Duke – did not think so.’
‘Oh, he knew it was, whatever he may have said! Nor did he care a button for it. Ianthe has been spreading far worse stories about him (because more credible) for years, and he has treated them with perfect indifference. What he cared for was the sketch you drew of him when you first brought Ugolino on to your stage. It is not too much to say that that almost stunned him. Oh, don’t hang your head! It was a salutary lesson to him, I believe.
You see, my dear, I have lately been a little worried about Sylvester, suspecting that he had become – to use your word for him – arrogant. Perhaps you will feel that I should have noticed it long ago, but he never shows that side of himself to me, and I don’t now go into company, so that I’ve had no opportunity to see what he is to others. I am really grateful to you for telling me what no one else has liked to mention!’
‘Oh, no, no!’ Phoebe said quickly. ‘It was a caricature, ma’am! His manners are always those of a well-bred man, and there is no appearance in him of self-consequence. It was very wrong of me: he had given me no real cause! It was only –’
‘Go on!’ the Duchess said encouragingly. ‘Don’t be afraid to tell me! I might imagine worse than the truth, you know, if you are not open with me.’
‘It – it seemed to me, ma’am, that he was polite not to honour others but himself!’ Phoebe blurted out. ‘And that the flattery he receives he – he doesn’t notice because he takes it for granted – his consequence being so large. I don’t know why it should have vexed me so. If he had seemed to hold others cheap I should only have been diverted, and that would have been a much worse fault in him. I think – it is his indifference that makes me so often want to hit him!’
The Duchess laughed. ‘Ah, yes, I understand that! Tell me: he’s not above being pleased?’
‘No, ma’am, never!’ Phoebe assured her. ‘He is always affable in company: not a bit stiff! Only – I don’t know how to express it – aloof, I think. Oh, I didn’t mean to distress you! Pray, pray, forgive me!’
The Duchess’s smile went a little awry. ‘You haven’t distressed me. It distressed me only to know that Sylvester was still living in some desolate Polar region – but it was only for a moment! I don’t think he is living there any longer.’
‘His brother, ma’am?’ Phoebe ventured to ask, looking shyly up into her face.