Christophe stamped through the curtained doorway. Dick ran at his heels, and Cartarette followed him, holding his arm as the curtain was thrown aside.
Gislane sat on her chair, facing them. The room was as gloomy as ever, the candles burned low.
'You have betrayed me,' Christophe shouted, his voice echoing. 'I will have you flogged.'
The woman did not reply.
'Oh, my God,' Cartarette said.
Christophe crossed the floor, slowly. He stretched out his hand, and then withdrew it again.
'Even she,' he said, 'has deserted me.'
'Or she waits for you,' Dick said. 'In her own heaven.'
Christophe glanced at him, and looked back at the woman. Once again his arm extended. This time he took the mamaloi's hand, and raised it to his lips, before letting it fall again. Then he turned on his heel and left the room.
Cartarette went closer. 'She is not marked,' she said.
'Gislane must have had sufficient poisons,' Dick said.
'She has told me she had been your father's lover,' Cartarette said. 'That she had been one of the leaders of the revolution here. That she had made you what you are.'
'All true,' Dick said. 'All true.'
'And now she is dead.' Cartarette sighed. 'She must have been very lonely, at the end. Will you bury her?'
'Aye. There are spades in the armoury.' He turned, and checked at the explosion.
'Oh, my God,' Cartarette said again.
Dick ran from the room, thrust the curtain aside, pounded across the courtyard into the commandant's house. He paused in the front room, inhaling the smell of cordite, gazed at the table; the covers were still set, Christophe's half-eaten meal still scattered. But in the centre of the table, there was a canvas sack, and to the sack was attached a note.
He pulled it free, opened it. 'Take your woman and leave this place,' Christophe had written. 'The money is for you. And remember me.'
He released the cord securing the bag, looked at the gold coin, heard Cartarette.
'There must be a thousand pounds,' she whispered.
'Ten thousand, more like.' He pulled open the door to the inner room, looked at the Emperor. Christophe lay on his side, the pistol still in his hand, his head a gaping wound. His jacket was open, the snapped cord he had worn around his neck trailed onto his lap, but there was no sign of the silver bullet. No doubt it was still lodged in his brain.
13
The Crisis
The music ballooned the length of the great withdrawing room on Hilltop, escaped the opened windows to cascade across the verandahs, flooded down the hill to the town and the slave village beyond, caressing the logies with its dying cadence. At the bottom of the hill the triple time was almost restful, lulling many a piccaninny to sleep.
Inside the Great House it drowned thought, obscured decency, left manners exposed, without reason, without objective. The ladies whirled, skirts held high in their right hands, left arms tight on their partners' waists, bodices sagging as shoulders and breasts glistened with perspiration, hair rapidly uncoiling itself in the frenzy of the gyrations. Men were no less abandoned, white-gloved fingers biting into taffeta waists, or naked arms, seeking every opportunity to let thigh brush thigh in the frenzy of the dance, smiling their sexual adoration into the equally smiling faces only inches away from their own.
The entire room became a vast emotional storm; it communicated itself even to those not dancing, seated in the chairs which had been pushed against the walls this night, or lounging beside them, the women with heads close together, fans fluttering, destroying reputations with effortless envy, the men, also mouth to ear, shrouded in tobacco smoke, building hopes and creating fantasies, exchanging experiences and perpetuating scandals. Even the servants seemed part of the evening, for the white-gowned girls waited in a cluster in the arch to the hall, trays laden with sangaree, ready to dart forward and refresh the overheated white people the moment the music stopped, conscious always of being under the disapproving scrutiny of Boscawen should they falter or slacken their efforts; his cane waited in the kitchens for any maid who caught his eye, for whatever reason.
'Eighteen thousand pounds?' Phyllis Kendrick gaped at Tony Hilton's smiling face. 'Why, 'tis a fortune.'
'Money, my dear Phyllis.' Tony brought her close to prevent her shoulder cannoning into a fellow dancer, held her there for a moment. 'Money is for spending.'
'But now . . . Toby says cane will never recover.'
'Oh, bah. Prices are affected by the uncertainty. No one knows what that pack of lunatics in Whitehall will do next. But once we have made it perfectly clear that we shall not submit to their blackmail, that we are capable of running our own affairs, that if pushed too far we will seek our own remedies, why, you'll see.'
The music was dying. He had arranged it so that they finished their last rotation in a corner by the doors to the verandah.
'But . . . eighteen thousand pounds,' she said again, allowing herself to be guided into the cool darkness. 'For an old building?'
'Cheaper than rebuilding. Most of the stand was still solid. You'll see tomorrow.'
She stood at the verandah rail, looked out at the darkness, and then at the twinkling lights of the town below them. 'A race meeting, on Hilltop. I attended one as a girl.'
'You told me.' He was behind her, leaning slightly forward so that he touched her. His hands rested on her shoulders, gently kneading the flesh.
Her breathing, which had commenced to settle after the exertions of the dance, began to quicken again. He loved to hear her become excited, to feel her become anxious.
'Do I bore you awfully?'
He smiled, into her ear as he kissed it. 'You entrance me, continuously, Phyllis. But I do not wish to be reminded of my uncle's successes, at least until I have had one of my own. I have dreamed of tomorrow since I first came to Hilltop, and that is better than twenty years ago, you know.'
'I remember.' She turned, in his arms, moved her thighs against his. 'The Hilton boys. Oh, you caused quite a stir.' She smiled at him. 'Everyone was so disappointed when you did not immediately spring to the forefront of Jamaican society.'
He kissed her nose. 'That was my brother's doing. Have I disappointed recently?'
She gazed at him, frowning. 'The music is starting again.'
'Then they are less likely to miss us.'
Her lips parted. She became anxious, so very quickly, and so very anxious, as well. Because he had never actually done anything more than flirt, although he had held her in this very place on the verandah, at least a dozen times in the past. He had always wondered if he would ever do anything more than flirt. She was the elder, if only by a year or two, but age had nothing to do with it. She was not particularly attractive, but looks had very little to do with it either. He enjoyed the sensation of awakening woman, different women, and few of them responded as readily as Phyllis Kendrick. Why, the poor woman must be quite desperate, which was not very surprising, as she was forced to five with that stuffed egg Toby Kendrick, and even worse, was forced to share Rivermouth Great House with Kendrick's mother. A mistake he had not made, once Ellen had agreed to marry him.
Oddly enough, tonight he felt like doing more than flirt. Tonight, this entire weekend, he was celebrating. It had been a dream of his for twenty years to re-establish the Hilltop race meetings. It had taken far longer than he had supposed possible. In the first place, that ghastly prig Reynolds had been against the idea, had successfully resisted the expense as long as there was a legal prospect of Dick still being alive. And even when he had been forced to admit Tony as rightful owner of Hilltop, the work had dragged, while breeding an unbeatable stable—Tony had no intention of not winning his own meetings—had taken even longer. But now, it was done, and tomorrow Hilltop would regain the very last of its former glories.
Why even Mama must surely write to congratulate him, and she had written less and less often these past few years. No doubt his name figured in the newspapers t
oo often for either her or Father. They disliked what the missionaries wrote about him, and they disliked his leadership of those planters who would carry their defiance of the British Government even as far as secession. Well, they could dislike whatever they pleased; they accepted their share of the Hilltop profits without argument.
He squeezed Phyllis Kendrick's elbow, gently turned her away from the rail. 'Shall we walk?'
'Walk? But. . .' She was already allowing herself to be guided along the verandah, gulping as they passed close to another couple, half lost in the shadows, leaning against one another. He could feel her tremble, and desperately seek for conversation. 'Your manager, James Hardy. He is not here tonight.'
'James is on holiday. Nevis. Have you been to the Grand Hotel?'
'Toby says it is far too expensive. He says the prices they charge are simply outrageous, and for what? To be smoked in a sulphur bath?'
'Oh, 'tis worth a visit. You meet all the best people.' He turned her in at the side door, and the servants hastily parted. 'Who'd have thought it, eh? Little Nevis, the poorest place you could ever imagine, suddenly becoming wealthy, because of a sulphur spring.'
'Absurd.' Her voice was trembling now, as well. 'Tony . . . Mr Hilton . . .'
'The painting is in my study,' he explained, to anyone who might be listening, and paused, at the second arch to the ballroom, to smile at the dancers. And then to catch Ellen's eye. She dominated the room, as she was the tallest woman present, and the most expensively dressed; the candlelight flickered from the emeralds of her earrings, the diamond necklace which roamed her breast as she spun in her partner's arms. And because she was Ellen. There were prettier women present. But there was no one with that arrogance, that superb panache.
And there was no one present, either, with quite that glitter in her eye. Dances affected Ellen. But then, a great many things affected Ellen. She would be at her peak tonight. He doubted she would have the time for him, just as he doubted he would have the strength for her. A fact which was known to them both, and accepted by them both. So she smiled as she saw Phyllis Kendrick on his arm. But it was a contemptuous smile.
The door to the study opened, and closed. The sound of the music was slightly reduced. The study was dark, only a faint lighter darkness forming the window. Phyllis Kendrick's thigh touched the desk, and she turned, into his arms. 'Is the painting very striking?'
'I think so. It is of Ellen.'
'Who else. And you keep it in front of you, while you are working.'
He could feel her breath on his face, although he could hardly see her. He smiled, to be sure she felt his breath. 'A man should keep his wife always in mind.'
She touched his face with her tongue, tentatively, exploring, waiting. Ellen had smiled, contemptuously. Ellen even felt contempt for Judith. She feared no rival, because she did not really care. She knew his weaknesses, his inabilities, indeed, and she felt sorry for them. No doubt genuinely. But her pity was contempt. She did not love him. Ellen did not love anyone. Ellen did not even love Ellen.
But Ellen loved the mistress of Hilltop. And the mistress of Hilltop was contemptuous of her husband's weaknesses.
Phyllis Kendrick's hands were inside his coat, sliding round his waist, seeking a way into his pantaloons. 'Oh, Tony,' she whispered. 'I have wanted this, for so long. So very long.'
But he could think only of Ellen's smile. God, how he hated her.
But how he also loved the mistress of Hilltop. 'It does a woman good, to want,' he said. 'We'd best get back to the dance.'
Hooves drummed, dust kicked, the earth trembled. The twelve ponies hurtled round the bend, clinging close to the white palings, the multi-coloured silk jackets of their black riders staining dark with sweat, the horses themselves foaming and baring their teeth as they reached through the heat and the swirling dust and sweat for the front.
The people in the grandstand rose to their feet as if plucked forward by a gigantic string, all together. Hats were waved, along with parasols and kerchiefs and scarves. Screams of pleasure from the women mingled with the bellows from the men. Another noise to shake the plantation, to crowd through the air of the slave village. But this did not lull. Out in the fields the black people crouched over their cutlasses as they weeded the paths, the fields, performing their interminable, back-breaking tasks, and muttered at each other at the white man's conception of enjoyment. Perhaps they too would have enjoyed it, had they been present. The older men and women recalled that in the days of Master Robert—and how good they seemed in retrospect—a race day had meant a slave holiday, and they had all been permitted to crowd the rails of the track, and even to exchange their own bets, certainly to imbibe some of the pleasurable excitement of watching the ponies matched.
But such a relaxation of effort did not appeal to the latest Hilton. He believed slaves should work, and work, and work. Save where they were required for entertainment.
The noise began to die. The ponies were cantering to a stop, before being returned to the unsaddling enclosure. The grandstand began to subside, ladies remembering their coiffures, men wiping sweat from their faces, those who had won hurrying off to collect their bets.
'A good mare,' said the Reverend Patterson. 'Oh, indeed, a good mare. You must have made a fortune this day, Hilton.'
'It'll pay for her keep.' Tony Hilton was one of the few men who had not risen to see the finish. Yet he wiped his brow as hard as anyone, replaced his grey silk hat. 'If Clay will not accommodate us, then we'll go over his head.'
John Tresling frowned at him. 'Jackson?'
'Why not. He is a statesman. Clay is an ignorant Virginian cotton planter.'
'Urn.' Martin Evans, the fourth in the Hilton Box—the ladies were separately accommodated on the upper floor— scratched his nose.
'They say Jackson is a firm upholder of the Monroe Doctrine.'
'Well, then . . .'
'Oh, he accepts that there are colonies, French and British, which have a longer standing than the United States itself. His concept is that there should be no expansion of those colonies, and that there should be no excuse for sending any European armament to the Caribbean, or anywhere else for that matter.'
'So it follows,' Tresling pointed out, 'that he would be averse to any action which might involve the United States and Great Britain in a controversy. There is controversy enough, over the Oregon boundary.'
'Statesmen,' Tony remarked, 'have this habit of assuming that the world will stand still while they form doctrines and make pronunciamentos. Now, then, gentlemen, Jackson, we are told, and I believe, because he is an honest man—my God, an honest politician, there is a contradiction in terms—is utterly opposed to European intervention in American affairs. He will do anything to avoid it, such as not even considering a Jamaican appeal to be included in the United States. Very well, then, what do you think would be his reaction were we to declare independence? But first, what would be the British reaction?'
'You speak treason,' the parson muttered. 'For God's sake keep your voice down.'
'George Washington also spoke treason, until he won,' Tony pointed out.
'He's right, Reverend,' Tresling said. 'Whitehall would never stand for a Jamaica declaration of independence.'
'They'd send a fleet,' Evans said.
'Indeed they would,' Tony agreed. 'And what would your General Jackson do then, do you think?' The two planters looked at each other, and then both looked at the parson.
'A desperate step,' Patterson said.
'Yet one which will, eventually, have to be taken,' Tony said. 'Better in our own time, than in theirs.'
'You cannot know it is inevitable,' Evans objected.
'You have brains in that head of yours, Marty. Why do you think the Government has pulled back from Abolition? For the very reason that they fear an extreme reaction on our part. But all the while British public opinion is being prepared for the ultimate step. Worse, all the while our own public opinion here in Jamaica is being prepared f
or such a step. Now, seven, eight years ago, when Amelioration was first mentioned, our people dismissed the idea of British interference in our affairs, out of hand. So then Whitehall set to work. There is talk of their being no longer able to support preferential treaties for West Indian sugar. No longer able, by God. It is again, pure blackmail. They will remove the preference, unless we agree to their principles. And this is not being rejected out of hand. We three may be able to weather any economic storm. But there are those of us who cannot, who are already suggesting we had best accommodate Whitehall. And all of this, gentlemen, is under a Tory government. But my latest despatch from England says that the King is ailing. What happens when he dies, and there is an election? Suppose the Whigs gain power? The Whigs, gentlemen. The party of Wilberforce. Of my own father, bless his besotted soul. But not a party elected, or desired, by us. They talk of patriotism. Where, I would like to ask, does patriotism begin, if not in Port Royal?'
' 'Tis a difficult matter,' Evans said. 'With the price of sugar falling . . .'
'Is this a confession?' Tresling inquired.
'It is not,' Evans declared. 'I'll back you, if you'll set to it. But it's not a matter that can be resolved by secret discussions. We've had enough of those.'
'Well, then, let us stop this one.' Tony smiled at them, and got up. 'I shall be in communication with you. And shortly.' He left the box, making his way through the throng, all calling their congratulations on the prowess of his mare, slapping him on the back, shaking his hand, and waited by the steps for the ladies as they left their boxes. 'Why, good afternoon to you, Phyllis. Did you win?'
Phyllis Kendrick turned her head and ignored him, but her cheeks were pink. She would never forgive him for last night. She thought. She would never come to Hilltop again. She was determined. Until her next invitation. Poor Phyllis.
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