‘Riding alone?’ he said. ‘That won’t do.’
‘I was finding it very pleasant.’
‘But so much more so with an interesting and charming companion who knows the countryside well.’
‘Your assessment of your character is your own, of course, and the countryside is not altogether unfamiliar to me. Remember I lived here once.’
‘Don’t remind me, Lottie. My life took the wrong turning when you went away.’
‘The wrong one? To Eversleigh, to the Bank, is it? … the life at Court, the fingers in pies? Oh, Dickon, how can you be so ungrateful to the fate which brought you all these good things!’
‘I am not ungrateful. I am just telling you that the very thing which would have made my happiness complete was denied me.’
‘You look contented with life, Dickon. I would forget the extra flavouring and thank God for your good fortune.’
‘I missed you, Lottie.’
‘One does miss people sometimes when they go away.’
‘You went to France for a holiday and stayed there.’
‘And you came to Eversleigh. It was yours; the dream of your life—or the chief one at that time—come true. What more could you ask?’
‘You, Lottie, with it.’
‘But there was a choice, wasn’t there? One or the other.’
‘You were a child. I didn’t know then … ’
‘It is strange to hear you admit ignorance. Shall we talk of something more interesting.’
‘This is of the utmost interest to me.’
‘But not to me and it takes two to make a conversation. Tell me about affairs in London. There is a great deal of talk in France about the American Colonies.’
‘Talk!’ he said. ‘There is more than talk. The wretched French are helping the rebels.’
‘I believe some people even over here think they are right.’
‘There is no reason why foreigners should interfere.’
‘My husband is a staunch supporter of the colonists and thinks those in France who are seeking to help them are doing what is right.’
‘And you can live with such a traitor?’
‘Traitor? He is no traitor. He is a man of opinions.’
‘Are you in love with him?’
I hesitated for a moment and then replied almost defiantly: ‘Yes.’
‘A convincing negative,’ he said. ‘Lottie, don’t go back. Stay here.’
‘You must be mad. I have two children over there.’
‘We could send for them.’
‘You’re joking, of course. You have a most extraordinary high opinion of yourself. I suppose that comes of living your life with two adoring females.’
‘I think I see myself as I am.’
I laughed. ‘Tall, handsome, commanding, irresistible to all women, chivalrous—in conversation—honourable, never betraying anyone unless the price is high enough … ’
‘You are hard on me.’
‘I see you as you are.’
‘And if you were honest with yourself you would admit you like what you see.’
I pressed my horse to a gallop, for at that moment we had come into open country.
He was beside me and I enjoyed the sheer exhilaration of the ride.
We came back past Enderby. It looked gloomy now. I remembered it as it had been when the Forsters had been there. They had cut away the shrubs which grew in profusion round the house; now they were overgrown again. I could see why it had a reputation for being haunted.
‘Would you like to look round it?’ asked Dickon. ‘We can get in easily through one of the ground-floor windows. It has a broken latch. The place is very overrun. It has been empty for two years.’
I wanted to go inside and yet on the other hand I was aware of warning within me. No, I must not go into that house. My mother had gone there with my father. Very possibly I had been conceived in that house. There was something about it which was apparent even from the outside. My mother, when she had told me about my birth, had felt that there was some spirit there … something which had the power to change people who entered.
Fanciful thinking, perhaps, but I would not go into that house with Dickon.
‘Not now,’ I said. ‘It’s getting too late.’
And turning our horses away we rode back to Eversleigh.
A groom was coming round by the house as we approached, and Dickon called to him to take our horses to the stables. Dickon leaped down before I could to help me. He took me in his arms and lifted me up as he had when I arrived. A gesture, I think, which was meant to be symbolic. He was strong. I was at his mercy.
‘Thank you,’ I said coolly. ‘Put me down.’
But for a few moments he held me, and I did not want to meet his eyes. I saw someone at a window looking down at us. Even as I looked up, whoever it was stepped back.
As Dickon put me on the ground I said: ‘Who is up there?’
‘Where?’ he asked idly.
‘That window … right at the top.’ I nodded in the direction and he looked up.
‘That would be old Grissel’s place.’
‘Old Grissel?’
‘One of the servants. Griselda. The boys call her Grissel. It fits.’
I went into the house, my thoughts full of Dickon and his implications so that I forgot about old Grissel until later.
I wanted to get to know something about Dickon’s sons and one morning, when I knew it was time for their break from lessons, I went up to the schoolroom.
The boys were seated at a table with Mr Raine their tutor drinking glasses of milk.
‘I hope I’m not intruding on lessons,’ I said.
‘Come in,’ called Jonathan.
Mr Raine assured me that this was the morning break and that the boys would not resume lessons for another fifteen minutes.
‘Then may I sit down and talk. I want to get to know you.’
Jonathan grinned at me; David looked interested.
‘I have a boy of my own in France,’ I said. ‘He must be about three years younger than you.’
‘Three years!’ said Jonathan with a look of contempt.
‘You were three years younger once,’ David reminded him.
‘That was a long time ago.’
‘Three years to be precise,’ said Mr Raine. ‘Now, boys, stop arguing and be civil to Madame de Tourville.’
‘You’re French,’ said Jonathan, who clearly said the first thing that came into his mind.
‘She knows that and doesn’t want you to tell her,’ added David, who seemed to have an irresistible urge to irritate his brother at every turn.
‘I am French,’ I explained, ‘because my father and my husband are. But I used to live here for a while before I went to France.’
‘That was years ago.’
‘Before you were born.’
They looked at me in wonder.
‘They are still too young to grasp the fact that there was a world here before they joined it,’ said Mr Raine.
‘I also have a little girl. She is very young … little more than a baby.’
They dismissed her as of no interest.
‘What is your boy’s name?’ asked Jonathan.
‘Charles. We call him Charlot.’
‘That’s a funny name,’ commented Jonathan.
‘It’s French, silly,’ said David. ‘Why didn’t you bring them with you?’
‘We had to come quickly and my daughter is too young to travel.’
‘Charlot could have come.’
‘Yes, I suppose he could.’
‘I wish he had,’ said Jonathan. ‘I’d have shown him my falcon. I’m teaching him. Jem Logger is showing me.’
‘Jonathan spends a great deal of time in the stables with his dogs and horses,’ said Mr Raine. ‘And now we have a falcon. He is, I am afraid, far more interested in them than he is in literature and mathematics.’
David smirked and Jonathan shrugged his shoulders.
&nb
sp; ‘Does Charlot have a tutor?’ asked David.
‘Not yet. He only has a nursery governess at the moment.’
‘Like Grissel?’ asked David and the boys looked at each other and laughed.
‘Grissel?’ I said. ‘Now, I believe I saw her.’
‘She doesn’t come out much.’
‘But she is your nurse.’
Jonathan said scornfully: ‘We don’t have a nurse. We’re too old.’
‘Then Grissel … ’
‘She came with the boys’ mother,’ explained Mr Raine. ‘She keeps herself very much apart, but continues to stay here. She is…. rather strange.’
The boys exchanged glances and smiled. The subject of Grissel seemed the only one they could agree about.
‘She walks in her sleep,’ said David.
Jonathan made claws of his fingers and put on an expression of malevolence at which David laughed.
Mr Raine changed the subject and showed me some of the boys’ work. Jonathan had a talent for sketching which rather surprised me. He had done some pictures of his dogs and horses which showed that he had a really sensitive touch. I admired them, which pleased him very much.
‘Jonathan’s one talent in the schoolroom,’ said Mr Raine. ‘But he is a great sportsman. David, of course, has sharp wits. He’s the academic.’
Both boys looked very pleased with themselves and it occurred to me that Mr Raine did not have a very easy time.
I looked at their work and listened attentively, but I would rather have heard more about Grissel.
I asked Sabrina.
‘Oh, Grissel is a silly old woman,’ she said. ‘I wish she would go, but where would she go to? She came with Isabel. She had been her nurse and you know how fanatical these old nurses can be about their charges. When Isabel died I think it turned her head slightly. Sometimes she seems to believe that Isabel is still here. It is very disconcerting but what can we do? We can’t ask her to go. She is too old to take another post.’
‘I know how it is with these nannies and have often thought how sad it must be for them when their children grow up and no longer need them. Then they go on to the next … if they are young enough and it all starts again.’
‘Unfortunately poor Griselda is not young enough. Oh, she is all right here. She has her two little rooms there in the east wing. Her food is taken in to her and we forget her for the most part. The only trouble is that she seems to have a most extraordinary attitude towards the twins. She dotes on Jonathan and seems to dislike David. It is odd. David doesn’t care. They both used to play tricks on her until that was stopped. But she is quiet most of the time.’
‘I saw her looking out of one of the windows when I was coming in with Dickon.’
‘Oh yes. She watches Dickon all the time. He laughs at it and takes no notice. You know how he is. Your grandmother didn’t like it very much. She said it was uncanny. But it is just Griselda’s way.’
I didn’t think much more about Griselda until a few days later when I came into the house and saw what I can only describe as a shape looking over the banisters. It was there and gone in a flash so that I wondered whether I had imagined I saw something. It was nothing much, just one of those occurrences which, for some reason, send a shiver down one’s spine.
Then I became aware of that figure at the window watching me when I came in. I saw her once or twice before it occurred to me that she had some special interest in me.
A week had passed and we were still at Eversleigh. My mother wanted to get back but every time she suggested leaving there were protests and she was persuaded to wait another week before making plans for departure.
I was not sorry. Eversleigh was beginning to cast its spell on me—but perhaps that was Dickon. It was all very well for me to tell myself that he was making no impression on me and that I saw him clearly for what he was. Each day I awoke with a sense of excitement and it was all due to the fact that I knew I was going to be with Dickon.
Nothing had changed since those early days—except of course that I looked at him differently. I was no longer the wide-eyed innocent child. I saw him as he was, a buccaneering adventurer, determined to get the most out of life, completely self-centred, and a man whose own interests would always come first. The frightening thing was that it didn’t make any difference. I still wanted to be with him; the hours were dull when he was not there, although we spent most of the time in verbal conflict that was more exciting than the most friendly conversation with anyone else.
Our afternoon ride had become a ritual now. All the time he was trying to charm me, to lull my suspicions and to give him the opportunity of seducing me. So far I had resisted his attentions and I intended to go on doing so.
When we rode past Enderby, he said, ‘Why don’t you come and have a look over the house?’
‘Whatever for? I have no intention of buying a house so why should I want to look over it?’
‘Because it’s interesting. It is a house with a history. It’s haunted, you know, by all the ghosts of the past … those who have lived such evil lives that they can’t rest.’
‘I expect it is very dirty.’
‘Cobwebs. Dark shadows. Strange shapes looming up. I’d be there to protect you, Lottie.’
‘I would need no protection from cobwebs and shadows.’
‘Ah, but what about the ghosts?’
‘I don’t think I have anything to fear from them either. Why should they be interested in me?’
‘They are interested in any who brave their domains. But I see you are afraid.’
‘I am not afraid.’
He looked at me slyly. ‘Not of the house … but of me.’
‘Afraid of you Dickon? In Heaven’s name, why?’
‘Afraid of giving me what I want and what you so much want to give.’
‘What’s that? You have Eversleigh, you know.’
‘Yourself,’ he said. ‘Lottie, you and I were made for each other.’
‘By whom?’
‘Fate.’
‘Then Fate made a very poor job of it. I assure you I was certainly not made for you … nor you for me. You were made for Eversleigh perhaps. That’s a different matter.’
‘You do go on about Eversleigh. You attach too much importance to it.’
‘No. It was you who did that.’
‘Thy tongue is sharp as the serpent’s. Did someone say that? If they didn’t they ought to have done. In any case I’m saying it now.’
‘And I say beware of serpents.’
‘Come. Admit the truth. You are afraid to step inside Enderby with me.’
‘I assure you I am not.’
‘Back up your assurance with words.’
On an impulse I dismounted. He was laughing as he tethered our horses to the post. He took my hand as we advanced towards the house.
‘The window with the broken latch is round there. It is quite easy to get in. Someone wanted to look at it a few weeks ago and I showed him the way in. I wonder if he made an offer for the place.’
He had found the window, opened it, looked inside and helped me in. We were in the hall, at the end of which was a door. It was open and we went through it into a large stone-floored kitchen. The spits were still there. We examined the great fireplace with its fire-dogs and cauldrons. There were layers of dust on everything. I found it quite fascinating and prowled about opening cupboards and exploring.
We must have been there for about five minutes before we went back to the hall. Above us was the minstrels’ gallery.
Dickon put his fingers to his lips. ‘The gallery is the most haunted spot. Let’s explore it.’
He took my hand and I was glad of the contact as the eeriness of the house began to wrap itself about me. I could well believe that at night the ghosts came to relive their tragic lives once more in such a house.
Our footsteps rang out in silence.
‘Cold, isn’t it?’ said Dickon. ‘Are you just a little scared, Lottie?’
&nb
sp; ‘Of course not.’
‘You look a little.’ He put his arm about me. ‘There. That’s better.’ We mounted the stairs. Some of the furniture remained, though most of it had been taken away.
‘Let’s go into the gallery. Defy the ghosts. Are you game?’
‘Of course.’
‘Come then.’ We mounted the staircase and went into the gallery; we leaned over the balcony and looked down on the hall.
‘Imagine it full of people … people dancing … long-dead people … ’
‘Dickon, you know you don’t really believe in ghosts.’
‘Not when I’m outside. In here … can you feel the malevolent influence?’
I did not answer. There was certainly something strange about the place. It was uncanny, but I had the feeling that the house was waiting for my answer.
‘Let’s defy the dead,’ said Dickon. ‘Let’s show them that at least we are alive.’
He put his arms about me.
‘Don’t do that, Dickon.’
His answer was to laugh. ‘Dear Lottie, do you think I am going to let you go now that I have you again?’
I tried to hold him off. My strength, I knew, was puny against his. He would not dare to force himself on me. He would have to be careful … even he. I was no village girl to be lightly raped and no questions asked. And that was not Dickon’s way. He was too sure of his charms and he wanted to be gratefully accepted; he would not want reluctance … not from me in any case.
‘Lottie,’ he said, ‘it was always you. Never anyone else. Nor was it for you. You never forgot me any more than I forgot you. We’re together at last. Let’s take what we’ve got. Lottie … please.’
He held me fast now and I felt myself slipping away in some sort of ecstasy. I was a child again. Dickon was my lover. This was how it was always meant to be.
I was not fighting any more. I heard him laugh triumphantly.
‘No,’ I said. ‘No.’ But I did not make any other protest and Dickon would know that surrender was close.
But … just then, I heard a movement, the sound of a footstep overhead—and I was immediately brought back to sanity.
I said: ‘Someone is here … in the house.’
‘No,’ said Dickon.
‘Listen.’
There it was again. The definite sound of a footstep.
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