A week or so later there was news from Lyon Court. My grandmother was ailing and it seemed long to her since she had seen me.
My father said I might go to see her and for once Senara did not insist on accompanying me. I believed this was due to the fact that if she did she would not be able to pay her now regular visits to Leyden House and so miss seeing Dickon.
I found my grandmother frail but she seemed to revive a great deal when she saw me.
Spring often comes early to Devon and we were able to sit in the gardens. I was happy to be with her but sad to remember how my mother had loved to feed the peacocks and how they used to come to her with a sort of disdainful air to take the peas she offered them.
My grandmother wanted to hear about life at the castle and I happily told her of how I had found the lanterns unlit in the tower and my action had saved the ship. She thought that was a wonderful story and made me repeat it many times. She asked about my father and my stepmother and whether they seemed happy together.
I supposed they were. My father was not the kind to suffer in silence and my stepmother was difficult to know but she was as she had always been.
And Senara?
“Senara is interested in a puritan family who have come to live nearby.”
“Senara and puritans! That’s incongruous.”
“Senara is so strange. Sometimes I feel I don’t know her.”
“Yet you are fond of each other.”
“Yes, as sisters.”
“You are closer to her than you are to Connell.”
“I suppose it is because Connell is a boy. He and I have never had anything in common.”
“And Melanie?”
“I am growing fond of her. She is so kind and gentle always. I hope Connell will be good to her.”
“Is he not?”
“They are rarely together. Connell hunts and is with my father a great deal.”
“And is there any sign of a child?”
“I have not heard.”
“I expect Melanie is hoping. And what of Fenn Landor?”
I was silent.
“Has he not been to the castle?”
I looked beyond my grandmother to the tall hedge which shut in her pond garden.
“No,” I said, “he has not been to the castle.”
She was frowning. “There must be a reason.”
“Oh, I think there was some speculation. He did not like it perhaps.”
“Speculation?”
“Yes,” I said boldly, “about me. It seemed to be in everyone’s mind that we should marry … everyone’s except Fenn’s.”
“Something must have happened,” said my grandmother. “I’ll swear he was in love with you.”
I shook my head.
“Let us not speak of it, Grandmother,” I said. “I would rather not.”
“No good comes of brushing something aside because it is hurtful to look at.”
“What is this?” I cried. “It has happened so many times. Two people become friendly and those around them think they must be going to marry.”
“Did you think it, Tamsyn?”
I could not find the words to explain and it was so hard not to betray my emotion.
My grandmother went on: “I wanted it to happen. To me it would have meant such compensation. I wanted your mother to marry his father and when young Fenn appeared and you and he seemed so suited …”
I said in a cool voice, “He went away to sea without letting me know. He has come back without seeing me. It’s clear, is it not?”
“No,” said my grandmother firmly. “There must be a reason.”
“It is all clear to me,” I said. “Fenn has been deterred by all the hints of marriage.”
“I shall send a message to ask him to come to see me,” she said.
“If you do,” I retorted, “it will be necessary for me to go back to the castle before he arrives here.”
She could see I meant that. So we sat and talked of old times. She spoke of my mother when she was a little girl, and when she was very tired she would doze off. She liked me to sit beside her so that I was there when she woke up and often in those first moments when she was coming out of her sleep I knew that she confused me with my mother.
I think during my stay she tried to make me interested in other young people. She gave several dinner parties to which she invited eligible young men. One or two of them were engaged in the Trading Company and knew Fenn. His name was mentioned more than once. It was very clear to me that he was a highly respected member of the company, as I would expect him to be.
There were several older men there, seamen mostly who had worked for my grandfather in his various ships in the days before he had become a trader.
I was amazed how these people enjoyed talking of the old days.
“Life has become tame,” said one of them who was seated next to me at dinner. “The days of the old Queen was the time to be alive.”
Another of his age put in: “And that was the days before the Defeat of the Armada.”
“We were in a very dangerous position then.”
“That was good for us. Every man ready to do his best to ward off the foe. People are not like that now. They’re selfish, looking for their own gain.”
I could not help commenting that they had always been like that.
They talked with great affection of the old Queen, of her vanities, her temper, her injustice and her greatness.
“There has never been so shrewd a monarch and there never will be,” was the verdict.
It was true that they had not the same respect for our reigning king. He was dirty in his habits; unkempt in his appearance and ill-mannered at the table. He had the disadvantage of having been brought up by Scotsmen, they said.
“Though his mother,” said my old gentleman, “was said to be one of the most elegant and beautiful women the world has ever known.”
Then they started to talk of old times and how the Queen of Scotland had been the centre of plots to put her on the throne and our Queen had always been one step ahead of the scheming Mary.
“Mary was an adulteress,” said one.
“And a murderess,” said the other.
They discussed the murder of her second husband, Lord Darnley.
“He was to have been blown up in Kirk o’ Fields, and we know who planned that. But it went wrong, and he was found in the grounds … dead … but without a sign on his body of how he died.”
I found I was suddenly listening attentively.
“There was nothing to show …”
I felt my heart begin to beat faster and I said: “How could that be possible?”
“Oh, it is possible,” was the answer. “There is a method and these villains knew it.”
“What method?” I asked earnestly.
“I believe that if a wet cloth is placed over the mouth and held firmly there until the victim is suffocated, there will be no signs of violence on his skin.”
I felt it hard to concentrate after that. Those words kept dancing about in my brain.
There had been no signs of violence on my mother’s body. Nor had there been on Lord Darnley’s.
I would have liked to talk to my grandmother but I dared not. She looked so old and fragile that I did not want to upset her.
I said nothing. I wanted to go back to the castle. I was certain now that my mother had feared something. On the night I had left her alone she had died … and there were no marks of violence on her body.
Someone had killed her. Moreover she had an inkling that someone was trying to.
If she was writing down the events of her days she must have written something which she considered secret since she had wanted to hide it.
I had to find those papers.
It was April when I arrived back at the castle. When I went up to our bedchamber, I found that Senara’s things were gone.
She came hurrying in and hugged me.
“So you are back. I’ll admi
t it doesn’t seem the same without you.”
“Where are your things?”
She put her head on one side and regarded me with a smile. “I thought it was time you and I had separate rooms. There are enough and to spare in the castle. It was all very well when we were little and afraid of the dark.”
I was a little hurt. I thought of the pleasant manner in which we had always chatted before we slept; and how she had clearly not been pleased if I was ever not there, as for instance when I visited my grandmother.
“I’ve gone into the Red Room,” she said.
“Why that room? There are others.”
“I had a fancy for it.”
I shrugged my shoulders.
“You’re not angry, are you?” she asked.
“No, but I wonder why you felt it necessary.”
She smiled secretly. I knew there was a reason. And why had she chosen the Red Room? I knew how daring and reckless she was. A thought had come into my mind. She was in love with Dickon. I was certain of that. The very fact that marriage with him would be so highly unsuitable would make it attractive to her. And he was going away soon, for when the Deemsters left he was going with them. He was one of them now. He would go first to Holland and join in that greater project to settle in America if it ever came to pass.
An idea came to me then. Could she have chosen the Red Room because if the servants heard strange noises there they would say it was a ghost and be afraid to enter?
Did Dickon really come to the castle to visit her at night? Not the puritan surely. But how sincere were they … either of them? And I believed that they were passionately in love.
It was a very uneasy situation. I wondered what would happen to Dickon if he were really visiting Senara and if my father or her mother discovered this.
Lord Cartonel was still paying his visits. Senara and her mother took wine with him. I was certain that he was going to ask for Senara’s hand; and if he did then I was sure that she would be obliged to take this very grand gentleman. He was just what I believed her mother had always wanted for her.
As for myself, I started my search for the papers again. But where could I look that I had not looked before?
My thoughts were diverted by the talk of witchcraft which had become rife since my departure. Merry was excited by it.
“They do say, Mistress,” she told me, “that there be a coven of ’em and ’tis not so far away. Some says some place, some another. Terrible things do happen there. ’Tis anti-Christian. There they do worship the Devil himself and he sits there in their midst in the form of a horned goat.”
“It’s a lot of nonsense, Merry,” I told her.
“’Tis not so thought to be, Mistress, pardon the contradiction. There be terrible goings on. One serving-girl were out late and she saw them there. She peeped and there they was mother-naked, dancing, wild, like … as though they was inciting each other to be criminal, like.”
“How did the serving-girl know they were acting in criminal manner?”
“Oh ’twere clear to see.”
“If she were innocent how would she recognize these criminal acts?”
“Well, ’twas moonlight and they threw off their clothes and danced together; and then when they be exhausted they lie down together and that’s the worst of it.”
“I would like to question that serving-girl.”
“Oh, she wouldn’t mind that, Mistress, only she bain’t one of ours. She be terrible upset about it for she do think they knew she was watching. They would, like, wouldn’t ’em, seeing they’m sold to the Devil and they say he be powerful … like God really but on the other side.”
“Merry,” I said severely, “you know that no good can come of this gossip.”
“’Tis saying that only good will come when every witch be hanging from a gibbet.”
I wanted to leave her, but I felt it was imperative that I knew the truth.
I said: “I think the girl imagined she saw this. What was she doing out at night in any case?”
“She’d been to visit her mother who’d been took ill and she had to wait with her till help come. She did see familiar faces there in the coven, Mistress. She knows now that some be the Devil’s own.”
“Has she said who?”
“No, she be feared to. Every time she do open her mouth to say she be took with trembling. But they be going to make her say. They be meeting … all them that is going to put a stop to witches will take her and make her talk. It must be so, Mistress. Mistress Jelling have lost her baby … stillborn it were, and a terrible disease have broke out among her husband’s cows.”
I knew that whatever I said would do no good. It frightened me. I could feel the tension rising.
I knew that the servants were watching my stepmother. In their hearts they believed that she had brought witchcraft into the castle. It was some years now since she had come but the nature of her coming would never be forgotten.
A terrible thought had struck me. If the people were aroused to look for witches, as I believed they had done in other parts of the country, the first place they would look would be in the castle.
Senara seemed to be possessed by a recklessness. I sensed that she was unhappy and that it was because Dickon was going away.
Surely she could never have imagined there would be a marriage between them. She might have done so, being Senara.
Once she had said: “With me all things are possible,” and she had meant it.
She was quieter than usual. I knew that she went often to Leyden Hall; and I was almost certain that Dickon crept into the castle at night.
I overheard the servants talking about familiars. “Could be a cat or a mouse most likely. It is really the Devil in that form. He talks to the one he comes to and tells her what evil she can do.”
I wondered whether they had heard voices in the Red Room.
I loved Senara, maddening as she was at times. I did not understand her but the bond between us was there.
I deplored this recklessness in her. I wanted to implore her to take care.
That was the last thing she would do. She knew there were whisperings. She knew that as her mother’s daughter she was suspected. Yet she seemed to take a delight in whipping up their fears and suspicions.
Once she came in late. I knew she had been to Leyden Hall for she had about her that look of exultation which was often there after her visits.
I said to her: “You have just ridden in on Betsy.”
She flashed at me, “Of course. What did you expect me to ride in on? My broomstick?”
And there were servants listening.
THE DEVIL’S TEETH
IT WAS STRANGE THAT when I was not looking for them I should find my mother’s papers. I had intended to write a letter to my grandmother and in my mother’s sitting-room where I did my writing at that time I opened the sandalwood desk box which I often used. There was paper wedged into the side of the box-like cavity and as I tried to dislodge it I touched a spring. A flap of wood fell down and the papers started to spill out.
I looked at them in disbelief. I glanced at a page. I could not believe it. My heart began to thud with excitement. That for which I had searched so earnestly had fallen into my hands.
I sorted the papers; there were far more than I would have believed possible in that secret compartment of the sandalwood desk box.
I started to read. There it was—my mother’s meeting with Fenn’s father, the possibility of their marriage and then with my father at the inn and the consequences. Knowing them, it was so vivid to me and yet I said to myself as I read on, did I know them? I suppose people are different beings to different people. They change their personalities to suit their background like a chameleon on his tree.
There was the coming of my stepmother. That I knew already. She had come on Hallowe’en and been found by my mother. It was a story which had often been told.
And then … my mother’s discovery of my father’s profession.
<
br /> I could not bear that. I wished I had never found the papers. So on those nights of storm he lured ships on to the rocks. A flash of understanding came to me. The night I had lighted the lanterns in the tower they had been deliberately put out. It was for that reason that there had been a whipping in the Seaward courtyard. Someone had been blamed for lighting them on that night. Someone who should have seen that they were put out.
What can I do? I asked myself. I cannot stay here. I won’t stay here. I must get away. I must put a stop to my father’s hideous trade.
How?
I could betray him. To whom? I was so ignorant of what should be done. What if I told Fenn? I could go to him and tell him what was happening and he would stop it. And Fenn’s father was in that grave. Murdered 1600 and by my own father!
I felt inadequate, alone.
To whom could I turn?
There was my grandmother. I could go to her. She was a wise woman. She would tell me what to do.
Then I thought of her, frail and failing, and I asked myself how could I burden her with this?
I must find a way. I would make sure that always the lanterns shone out their beams on the water. They might turn them out but I would see that they were lighted. At least I could do that. I had saved a ship once. I would do it again.
They would discover, of course. What would they do to me? What would my father do if he knew that I was aware of his trade? He was a violent man; and if he was capable of letting hundreds drown for the sake of the cargo they carried, what else was he capable of?
Murdered 1600! I kept seeing that stone on my mother’s grave. I read on in fascinated horror.
She had been afraid. She had suspected something. She had been comforted by my presence and on the night I was not there she had died.
I had learned so much through those papers but not what I had set out to know.
How did my mother die?
In view of all I now knew I was convinced that she had been murdered.
My knowledge had changed me. Senara noticed it.
“What’s happened?” she demanded. “Something has.”
I shook my head. “What do you mean?”
“I can see it,” she insisted. “I’ve spoken to you twice and you haven’t answered. You’re dreaming half the time. And you’re worried, Tamsyn. What is it?”
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