Death of a Schoolgirl: The Jane Eyre Chronicles

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Death of a Schoolgirl: The Jane Eyre Chronicles Page 24

by Joanna Campbell Slan


  In her exuberance, the old woman threw open her arms and nearly lost her balance. Slipping my hand under her elbow, I walked her to a chair and eased her down onto the seat.

  “Do you know what Selina did? That evil girl twisted the bird’s neck and fed it to the cat! She did it only to hurt Fräulein Hertzog, who loved her little pet.”

  “Why?” I asked. “Why would she do that?”

  “It was an act of revenge. Pure and simple. Fräulein caught Selina slipping out of the building. Two times. Fräulein told Mrs. Thurston—and there was a quarrel.”

  “Between Mrs. Thurston and Selina? Or between Selina and Fräulein Hertzog?”

  “Mrs. Thurston and Selina. They screamed at each other. Mrs. Thurston decided to punish the girl.”

  “Did she?”

  “Mrs. Thurston told Fräulein to make Selina copy verses from the Bible. But the girl refused. Back and forth they went.” Signora Delgatto raised a dingy handkerchief to her eyes and wiped away tears. “Then came a man in a handsome carriage to visit Mrs. Thurston. They spoke in private, and everything changed. Poof!” The woman snapped her fingers. “Like that, Selina became the favorite of Mrs. Thurston. I could not understand why. No one could.”

  “And your friend? Fräulein Hertzog?”

  “She was told to leave Selina alone. Of course, the girl understood she had this new power—and everything was worse. She could do whatever she pleased! Selina teased Fräulein about the dead bird. Putting the feathers on Fräulein’s pillow! And in her food! My poor friend went mad with grief. And what did Mrs. Thurston do to help? Nothing. Nothing at all!”

  “So Fräulein left?”

  “Home to Germany.”

  “I am sorry.” My words sounded inadequate, but I was struggling to find an explanation for this odd turn of events. Who, I wondered, was the man who visited Mrs. Thurston—and what did he say that changed the balance of power?

  Signora Delgatto grabbed my arm, her nails digging into my skin. “Listen to me. Leave this place. Leave it now. These children, they care nothing for us. Do you know what this girl did to her own governess? She pushed that woman down a well! Broke her arm! Left her there for two days while she cried for help.”

  “Oh my,” I said. “How awful.”

  “That is not all. Then Selina found a snake and dropped it on the governess just to hear her scream! Finally, someone heard the teacher and she was rescued. But a few days later, the poor girl went mad and hanged herself from a rafter in the carriage house.”

  Pulling me down to her level, the signora locked her eyes on mine. “Find another way to survive, but do not surrender your life to the children of other people! Especially children like this! They have so much and they give us nothing in return! Nothing! They do not treat us like humans. They treat us worse than the dumb animals!”

  We both heard the noise of horses stopping outside. I disentangled myself from Signora Delgatto’s grip and ran to the front window to see a carriage on the street.

  “Hurry! Someone is coming! We must go,” I said to the Italian woman, taking her by the arm and heading her toward the door. “Ah! There it is! I spy my glove. Under the coffin.”

  Leaving her in the doorframe, I ran to grab my missing glove. As she waited for me, Signora Delgatto’s narrow shoulders slumped, tenting the fabric of her mourning dress. “You do not listen. You do not understand.”

  “On the contrary, I have listened and understood you. And I share your sorrow. But Selina Biltmore will answer to a greater judge, Signora Delgatto. This I believe. Now please, we must go.”

  Leaning heavily on me, she limped into the hall. There I bid her good-bye and hurried outside, where I glimpsed the Biltmores as they were climbing out of a carriage. Fortunately, they did not see me. I hurried down the street to where the girls were still being amused by the little dog.

  “All right now, ladies. Tell the dog good-bye,” I said as I herded my charges farther from Alderton House.

  Away from the morbid atmosphere of the school, the girls giggled among themselves. After a while, Rufina added a hop to her step and skipped toward the park. In short order, the others joined in. Their gaiety did my heart good, so I chose not to admonish them to act like ladies.

  I walked at a brisk pace to keep up with the students. Perhaps Miss Jones had a perfectly good reason for clipping so much of Selina’s hair. I knew nothing of funerary jewelry. Was it possible that Miss Jones needed locks of a certain length or thickness? Was that why she robbed Selina of her beauty? Or had Miss Jones intended to deal the corpse one last indignity? Was she as bent on revenge as Signora Delgatto was?

  As puzzling as these questions were, Lucy and Mr. Douglas would help me think through them. There was so much that I was eager to share! What with the footprints on the landing and all the new knowledge I had about Selina. Especially the visit from the mysterious man who had interceded on Selina’s behalf, and how his visit marked a change in the girl’s privileges.

  Taken individually, these bits of information probably meant nothing, but in the aggregate they might form a pattern. The question was, could we see it?

  Chapter 38

  Lucy and Mr. Douglas sat on the same bench, waiting for our arrival. I could tell as we approached them that Lucy fairly hummed with excitement. Today she wore a dress of maroon, trimmed with black. The girls swarmed around first her and then Mr. Douglas and Rags to say hello. They lingered to stroke the soft muslin fabric of her dress. “Thank goodness you are here,” Lucy whispered in my ear as she embraced me. “I have important news.”

  “So have I,” I said. “Let me start the girls on their lesson.”

  Taking the girls a few yards away, I lectured my students about the different shapes of birds’ beaks, and how those beaks are suited to the industry of the species. In the school’s library, I had found a copy of my old favorite Bewick’s History of British Birds, and this I showed as a reference. The girls were assigned the task of drawing and writing an essay, comparing and contrasting four or more types of birds. With my students thus involved in their work, I would be able to speak freely with my friends, taking care to act as if we were having the most casual of chats, although we were actually discussing a matter of life and death.

  “Do you feel safe, Jane? I need to know. If at any time you feel endangered, don’t hesitate to send for us. Bruce is staying at my house for the interim. Higgins and Williams might not look like much, but they both served Augie in Bombay. They are tested and true.”

  Once she was assured of my well-being, Lucy took a deep breath and said, “I have been asking questions about the Biltmores while out making my morning calls. What I have learned puts everything that has happened into a new framework—and it might well color whatever you have discovered since we talked last.”

  “Pray continue. You have my complete attention.”

  “As you know, the Biltmores are from Brighton. In fact, Mr. Biltmore sold our King the farmland on which he built his Marine Pavilion.”

  Even in secluded Ferndean, we had heard how our current King, back when he was Prince of Wales, decided to turn a simple farmhouse on the southern coast into a pavilion, a fabulous showplace for his collection of Chinese wallpaper, furnishings, and pieces of art. By 1815, the villa seemed overcrowded, so the Prince hired John Nash to transform it into a palace. While His Majesty’s trips to Brighton began as a way to improve his health, the seaside resort quickly became known for encouraging His Royal Highness to indulge in habits destructive to his well-being: gluttony, drunkenness, and carousing.

  “Seems that the Biltmores eagerly pursued an invitation to one of King George IV’s many parties. It was there that His Majesty took notice of Selina.” Lucy paused.

  I buried my face in my hands. Oh, to have such a man on our throne! But before I could regain my composure, another thought came. “Lucy, you can’t mean…that Selina and our sovereign—”

  “No,” Mr. Douglas said solemnly. “She was not his paramour. But
I have heard a rumor that her mother was.”

  “Then that means it is possible Selina was…his daughter?” I gasped as I realized the full import of this.

  By all accounts, when he was younger, the Prince of Wales was intelligent, charming, and socially precocious. But he also had a disastrous weakness: He fell head over heels in love often and indiscriminately, frequently pursuing women who spurned him. In fact, the more they rebuked him, the harder he chased them, until he went so far as to marry one woman, Maria Fitzherbert, in a wholly illegal ceremony performed by a curate sprung from debtors’ prison just for the event. Of course, his father, George III, turned a blind eye, and the powers that be protested that his marriage was but a sham. After all, our nation depended upon the heir to the throne to do his duty as a sovereign to produce his own royal heir—and for that to happen, the Prince would have to participate in a legitimate marriage to a royal princess. Caroline of Brunswick became his wife, and soon after, his enemy. When George III descended into madness, the Prince of Wales, his son George Augustus Frederick, was named Regent. Then George III died and the Regent became King George IV. Now our new sovereign and his estranged wife, Caroline, were locked in a battle playing itself out on the grand stage of the British Parliament as he accused her of committing adultery.

  “Selina could have been one of his many illegitimate children,” Lucy corrected me.

  We three sat there silently, each lost in thought, until Rags whimpered for affection.

  “But one of the girls told me that Selina had a special friend, whose name was Prinny,” I said.

  Lucy covered her mouth and smothered a guffaw. “That’s the nickname that Mrs. Fitzherbert’s adopted daughter gave the King.”

  “That explains a lot,” I said. “Especially why Selina’s ‘friendship’ was an open secret.”

  “Yes,” Mr. Douglas agreed. “Also why Marcus Piper was reluctant to talk to me and why Mr. Waverly is involved.”

  “No wonder Mrs. Thurston stood aside and let the girl have her way. In the beginning, the superintendent must not have known about her parentage. Then Fräulein Hertzog caught the girl sneaking and tried to exact a punishment. In retribution, Selina killed the woman’s pet canary and teased the woman by scattering its feathers around.”

  “What a monstrous thing to do!” Lucy said.

  “Oh, there’s more. I learned today that Selina pushed her own governess down a well and dropped a snake on the woman. She seems to have been a truly horrid girl.” I paused. “But back to Selina’s status at the school. It seems that Mrs. Thurston rescinded the punishment for sneaking out after a man came to visit the superintendent. I surmise the man must have been a representative from the King,” I said. “But I don’t understand why Selina was enrolled at Alderton House at all. Wouldn’t the King have given her suitable lodging and an allowance?”

  “Gads, no,” Mr. Douglas said. “He is more likely to pay her to go away than to foot the bills to keep her!”

  “But to house one of the King’s children at a school?” I persisted.

  “Let me suggest a reason, based on what I’ve heard,” Lucy said. “The Biltmores are heavily in debt. A house in London is always expensive. More so during the Season. And staffing a suitable dwelling only adds to the cost. However, the cost for Selina to attend school here was, in comparison, a pittance. And this prime location kept their daughter easily accessible to His Majesty.”

  “What did her parents hope to gain?”

  “I imagine they hoped the King would find favor with her, and perhaps give her an allowance or a place at court.” Lucy frowned thoughtfully. “Any of those choices would have improved the Biltmores’ fortunes.”

  A faint smile played on Mr. Douglas’s lips. “Remember that we said Mr. Biltmore was a gambler? I believe he was gambling that his daughter could win the prize. Not a crown, not a place in line to the throne, but a settlement. It has happened before.”

  “That is the saddest part of this scheme.” Lucy shook her head. “Prinny has never acknowledged any of his illegitimate offspring. He barely paid attention to his legitimate daughter, Princess Charlotte. And then she passed on.”

  Yes, I had heard all about that. Princess Charlotte had died in childbirth. The poor girl had already miscarried twice before that third, fatal, attempt. My mouth filled with a bitter taste. “If that is how our royal family treats their children, I want no part of them! If a child is born on the wrong side of the blanket, it certainly is not the fault of the child!”

  “You must understand what is at stake here.” Mr. Douglas sighed. “It is His Majesty’s duty to provide a legitimate heir. That secures an orderly transfer of power. With the death of his only daughter, and his animosity toward his wife, he has failed—and he is keenly aware of it. One reason he would like to be rid of Queen Caroline of Brunswick is so that he might remarry and fulfill his responsibilities. Perhaps if that happens, he might be more willing to acknowledge his illegitimate offspring.”

  My disgust for our King must have been fully apparent.

  “Jane, our sovereign was forced by his father to marry a woman wholly unsuitable to be his wife. He had no choice in the matter. In fact, he was forced to give up the one woman he truly loved. Does that not sound familiar to you?” Lucy put a gentle hand on mine.

  In response, I gave hers a light squeeze. “Yes, I guess that it does,” I said, recalling my own Edward’s first marriage.

  “I imagine that the Biltmores hoped Selina would be given a settlement that would make a fine dowry,” Lucy said quietly. “Perhaps they thought that our King might make a match for her.”

  “Prinny has been known to be extraordinarily generous on occasion,” Mr. Douglas said. “And whether he acknowledged Selina or not, it’s true he adores children.”

  “But she is—was—no child,” I said, jumping in to clear up that misunderstanding by explaining how I’d seen the body of a mature and rather robust young woman.

  “No wonder she could bully her friends,” Mr. Douglas said. “Now that we’ve had our soupçon of scandal, what else do you have for us, Mrs. Rochester?”

  I told them about the Biltmores’ visit. “Selina’s father said that Caje was supposed to keep an eye on his daughter. It sounds as if they had some sort of an arrangement.”

  My students passed the copy of Bewick’s around as they talked among themselves. I could see the girls marveling, as I once had, over the vignettes describing a desolate coast far away. In that place, one could be miserably cold, but free of all painful human contact. The bleak settings both captivated and appalled me, as they predicted a sad future for those of us who were plain, obscure, and alone.

  But I never dreamed that an attractive young woman who had a loving family might also face an uncertain future.

  “After spending the past two nights in the dormitory setting, I am more and more confident that all of our students were dosed with laudanum. That is the only way that everyone would have slept through Selina’s struggle.” I explained about seeing the effects of the drug on Adèle and more recently on Parthena. “Unfortunately, it is common enough that almost anyone would have access to it.”

  Rufina ran over to show me her work. I praised it and sent her back to her schoolmates so that I could share another discovery. “There is yet another girl who has marks on her back. Rose has also been struck with a cane.”

  “Who would mar such beauty as your little Rose?” Bruce Douglas immediately looked toward the girl as she sat with her schoolmates on the grass. “That is simply unconscionable.”

  Lucy’s jaw dropped and she turned on her brother. “So it’s permissible to hit unattractive girls, but God forbid one might mar a beauty?”

  I agreed with Lucy, and I was disappointed by her brother’s comments. It is painful enough to be overlooked because one lacks regularity of features, but more painful yet to be reminded that one is thought to be of lesser value because she has not been blessed with beauty. On the other hand, Selina’s de
ath was a powerful reminder that even the most lustrous of us must finally meet decay.

  Mr. Douglas grasped his chest as if he’d been stabbed in the heart and coughed loudly. “Sister Lucy, you wound me to the core. I am only human, and as a man, a lower form of such!” He continued in a quieter voice, “I talked to my source at the medical examiner’s office. Selina Biltmore’s back was also scarred.”

  “Miss Miller claims the punishment could not have taken place. Miss Jones agrees. Adèle knows naught of it.” I pulled a face.

  “But it must have,” argued Lucy. “Otherwise why would such marks be found on more than one of the girls?”

  “There are three questions: Who administered the thrashings? Why didn’t anyone hear anything? Would such beatings have been a reason for murder?” I asked.

  “Another avenue to explore,” Mr. Douglas said with a sigh.

  I recounted for Lucy and her brother my meeting with Mr. Waverly, his interview with Adèle, and his hidden mastery of French. Mr. Douglas couldn’t keep a grin from his face, for which he apologized. “I am sorry, Mrs. Rochester, but I do admire Waverly. He never ceases to surprise me.”

  “Speaking of surprises.” I handed Mr. Douglas the sketch I’d made. “It is a rather good likeness.”

  “This could be a powerful asset in finding the thief.” He carefully folded his pocket handkerchief around the sketch. “Perhaps one of my informants will recognize him.”

  “I sincerely hope so.” For the most part, I pushed that unhappy problem from my mind. The return to teaching and the intrigues of Alderton House aided me immensely in this, but not entirely. I dreaded talking with Edward about the loss of his family heirlooms. Now a slight glimmer of hope lifted my spirits.

 

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