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Jane and the Stillroom Maid jam-5

Page 25

by Stephanie Barron


  This is a very rich tincture of Poppies. A glass of it drunk at any time is conducive to health, particularly when a person fears a cold, or suffers an oppression of the stomach. It will also throw out the Measles, or Small Pox, or any other scrofulous marks, with small doses oft repeated.

  — From the Stillroom Book

  of Tess Arnold,

  Penfolds Hall, Derbyshire, 1802–1806

  Chapter 25

  Playing Truant with Purpose

  31 August 1806, cont.

  WE DINED EARLY AND HEAVILY AFTER THE SERVICE, though I possessed little appetite. Mr. Davies, the landlord, sent a message by Sally, among the covered dishes and the rolls, to inform me that my urgent letter to Dr. Bascomb had been carried into Buxton. I could expect an answer during the course of the day, did the messenger discover the physician to be at home; or at the very latest, that evening. I hoped that Bascomb was the sort of gentleman to take an unknown lady’s anxiety to heart, rather than to disregard it as the product of an over-active mind; I should know, I reasoned, from the form of his reply.

  The dishes had not been very long cleared away, and the Bakewell clocks were tolling the hour of one, when the noise of a carriage in the street below drew me to the window. I peered out — saw the Devonshire livery — exclaimed aloud at the thought of its being possible that Lady Harriot should drive into Bakewell — and was in time to observe a black silk hat emerge from the crane-necked coach. Lord Harold Trowbridge. This should be fuel for my sister’s speculation, did she require anything further.

  “Visiting on Sunday?” enquired my cousin Mr. Cooper, in a voice of signal disdain. He had not yet learned to forgive Lord Harold’s biting remarks as to hymns, though he should never be so absurd as to demand satisfaction.

  “It must be something particular that brings him here,” Cassandra said. “It cannot be a social call. Should you like us to walk out into the town, Jane, while he speaks to you?”

  “I do not expect a declaration, Cassandra — I think I may meet him with equanimity, and in the company of my whole family.”

  She took up her needlework and said nothing more; but my mother was not so easily satisfied.

  “Lord, Jane — and you would put off your new gown after church,” she exclaimed in dismay. “How you expect to see that man in a turned muslin, three years behind the fashion and faded with washing, I cannot think. You should not have purchased those ten yards of pink stuff so cheaply; pink never became you as it does your sister, and if I had been consulted, I should have advised most strenuously against it. A lady with a reddened complexion cannot support the colour.”

  “But being at present so grossly tanned,” I returned with some complaisance, “I cannot be anxious on that account. Provided I am decently clothed and tidy, it cannot matter to Lord Harold what I wear.”

  A knock upon the parlour door forestalled her reply; the door swung open, and revealed the Gentleman Rogue himself, with an expression of haste and concern upon his countenance.

  “How very kind of you to pay a call, Lord Harold!” my mother cried. “I am afraid, however, that we were all of us just walking out. Were we not, Mr. Cooper? To visit your friend, Mr. Hemming, at the gaol? I cannot consider it a pleasant duty, but one very well suited to a Sunday morning, provided one has first partaken of a hearty meal. Come along, Cassandra! Fetch your bonnet!”

  “My bonnet?” Cassandra repeated, as one dazed by events.

  “Naturally! Would you grow as tanned as your sister? I have no hope for Jane — her skin is become so coarse and brown — but I will not have your complexion ruined. Make haste, my love!”

  Cassandra stared at me beseechingly; I raised an impervious brow; and so the offending headgear was retrieved from her chamber.

  “Do not hurry yourself away, my lord, on our account. I am sure that Jane will be vastly happy to oblige you with a little conversation — or perhaps some of Mr. Davies’s beer.” And with the most deferential air, my mother nodded and smiled her way out of the room, one hand gripped fiercely on Mr. Cooper, and the other on my sister.

  “A formidable will animates that woman,” his lordship observed, “however much she would affect a decline. Having learned to know her a little better, I perceive the wellspring of your own resolve, Jane.”

  “How may I account for the honour of seeing you here, my lord?”

  “I bear tidings, Jane, that I would not have you know of any other.”

  My heart sank at his sombre aspect. “Lady Harriot is to marry Andrew Danforth, then?”

  Lord Harold stared. “Good God, no! It has always been Charles she admired. Although I suspect there is more of pity, and less of love, in her affections than she understands. But to marry Andrew — how could you conceive of such an idea?”

  “Last evening, it appeared that he petitioned for her hand — when he led Lady Harriot out onto the balcony, just before she retired.”

  “I am sure that he did,” Lord Harold replied with thinly veiled contempt. “He is always dogging the girl’s footsteps — enquiring whether he may have cause to hope, whenever she affords him a spare moment! He has requested the honour of her hand in the Orangery, and in the stableyard, after a morning’s ride; he has popped the question around the potted plants, and while taking her into dinner. To my certain knowledge, Jane, this is the second application the gentleman has made this week — for on Monday evening, he tarried barely five minutes in the dining parlour after the ladies had retired, before excusing himself.”

  “Did he, indeed?” I cried, much struck.

  “No doubt Hary-O refused the scrub on that occasion, too, as she has certainly refused him now. His Grace was quite put out at Danforth’s desertion of the gentlemen; but his absence did not prevent the Duke from embarking upon a discussion of Fox’s program, and the Whig strategy once Parliament sits, that any young fool with a heart for politics should never have missed. But I did not come to speak of that young cub’s pretensions. I came to allay what fears I could.”

  “Fears?”

  “From your expression, I perceive that you are as yet in ignorance of events that have animated all Chatsworth for the past several hours.”

  He spoke too gently, as though he would protect me from hurt. I thought of Lady Swithin and her unborn child — and in the fear of sudden death, sat down hard upon a vacant chair. “What has happened?”

  “Lord Hartington has not yet returned home, and being absent now nearly a day, must be regarded with considerable suspense. His Grace’s servants have stood watch for the better part of the night, in both the stables and the main house; but Hart has not appeared, and nothing is known of his intended direction.”

  “But I espied his lordship myself last evening,” I cried, “above the Baslow road, not much past Manners Wood.”

  “So near the house as that.” Lord Harold declined the offer of a chair; he had no intention of stopping very long. “I must inform the Duke. Such a direction had not entered into His Grace’s calculations, it being expressly forbidden.”

  “Because the Duke did not wish Lord Hartington to ride towards Tideswell?”

  “Exactly.” He smiled at me faintly. “You overlistened my conversation with Lady Elizabeth last evening; I suspected as much.”

  “While his lordship was yet under my gaze, he spurred his mount to the west, and vanished into a fold of the landscape,” I said quickly. “Moreover, I have learned from Tess Arnold’s stillroom book that he was much in the habit of meeting her — in the rocks above Miller’s Dale, where she was later murdered.”

  “That is unfortunate,” Lord Harold muttered, “for Tideswell is some distance from the village of Hartington itself, whence His Grace directed the search party.”

  “Search party! The Marquess will not thank you for it. I understand he is much given to playing the truant. And knowing the country so well as he does — surely he can have come to no harm!”

  “I should have said the same — until this morning, just after eight o�
�clock, when the boy’s black horse limped into the yard. The beast bore bruised knees, and had obviously been down. Of Hart’s fate, we remain in doubt.”

  “Dear God! I had no notion it was so bad as this! But what has been done — what is being attempted, to recover him?”

  “A stable lad detected limestone in the horse’s hooves, such as is prevalent upon the White Moor, not far from the village of Hartington. The Duke has organised a body of men to work over the ground.”

  I studied his lordship’s countenance; he had held somewhat in reserve. “What is it that troubles you? What do you fail to say?”

  He hesitated; then bowed his head in submission. “The limestone of the White Moor has long been quarried, Jane, for a legion of purposes. There are, as a result, any number of pits and eroded cliffs that might do mischief to a wandering lad — particularly if he were not entirely himself, and darkness were coming on. Melancholy — rage — even a guilty conscience, Jane — might drive Hart to recklessness.”

  “Are you suggesting, Lord Harold,” I slowly replied, “that the Marquess of Hartington has done away with himself?”

  Lord Harold’s eyelids flickered, but he did not directly reply. “I know I may depend upon your discretion. Not a word of this has been uttered by the Duke or myself; but the thought hangs heavy in the air of the Great House. The Danforths have exchanged idleness for action at last, and are gone out on horseback; the Morpeths are disposed to be anxious, and talk overmuch; Lady Elizabeth is insensible to everything that does not directly affect her; but Hary-O is afraid, Jane. She knows Hart better than anyone in his family — and Hary-O is afraid.”

  Lord Harold looked at me, all his feeling speaking in his face. “It is this that causes me to wonder what Lady Harriot fears — and just how much in Lord Hartington’s confidence she has been.”

  “But surely, my lord, if she knew something that might assist in her brother’s recovery — surely she would speak it without reserve!”

  He turned away. “Such a thought is obvious to someone like yourself, Jane, who has never been schooled in any but the severest honesty. Deception — particularly the deceit of divided loyalty — is as foreign to you as French bread. But that is not Hary-O’s case. She was raised in a house where the most simple exchange of daily pleasantries is fraught with several meanings, and where those she should naturally trust — her closest relations — have always formed a shifting alliance. Hary-O learned from birth to guard her soul, and display nothing like its true self to the world, lest it be trampled.”

  “You believe she is protecting the Marquess? — Against whom?”

  “—the influence of Lady Elizabeth, perhaps — the violence of the Law — possibly she even protects him from me.” Lord Harold paced towards the parlour window in an agony of frustration. “I am the truest friend that Hary-O possesses, Jane, but she will not trust me with her brother’s life, if she fears him guilty of some horror. She learned the lesson of reserve from her mother — an open-hearted, laughing beauty of a woman who paid too deeply the price of innocence.”

  “Her Grace had better have taught her daughter to hold the world in contempt, than to purchase it at such a cost.”

  Lord Harold’s head lashed swiftly around, and for the first time in my life, I glimpsed the full force of his power for love and hate. “Before you would judge Georgiana too harshly, Jane, know this: at seventeen she was a Duchess, a toast, and a beauty — and wholly neglected by her husband. Whatever occurred in her life from that point, must be laid entirely at Devonshire’s account.”

  I was silenced.

  Lord Harold drew breath; he reached for his gloves and hat; he drew on the former and settled the latter over his eye. Only then did he look at me.

  “I shall end by driving my last friend away with my bitter tongue. Forgive me, Jane.”

  “That is something I should never presume to do, my lord. It might justly make you hate me.”

  He touched my chin with his gloved hand, and would have stepped out into the passage — but that I clutched at his wrist.

  “Take me with you.”

  “You cannot expect to do anything in Hart’s case.”

  I reached for the stillroom book and held it before his eyes. “But I know why his lordship exulted in the maid’s death. If you would prove he did not kill her, we must ensnare her true murderer. Nothing else will end this folly of guilt and mutual suspicion.”

  For an instant he said nothing; then he took the book from my hands.

  “Leave word for your mother where you are gone, Jane. And do not neglect of your sunbonnet. Having disappointed Mrs. Austen in so much else, I owe her this small gesture of attention.”

  A Wash for the Complexion

  Grate a quantity of horseradish into sweet milk, and allow to stand for six or eight hours. Then apply to the skin with a clean linen rag, and rinse with clear spring water.

  — From the Stillroom Book

  of Tess Arnold,

  Penfolds Hall, Derbyshire, 1802–1806

  Chapter 26

  Death Among the Rocks

  31 August 1806, cont.

  BEING A GENTLEMAN OF SOME DESPATCH, LORD HAROLD undertook to pen a note to His Grace at Chatsworth, informing the Duke of his intelligence regarding the Marquess, and instructing a party of men to turn their efforts towards Miller’s Dale. He suffered the Duke to know that we should proceed thence ourselves, in an effort to locate Lord Hartington without delay; and that if the search were unavailing, we should await assistance in the miller’s cottage.

  “Now tell me all you know, Jane — or all you suspect,” he commanded, when we were settled in the Devonshire equipage.

  For this once, despite the heat of August, I must own I valued the discretion of a closed carriage; no one should overlisten my conversation with Lord Harold.

  “Lord Hartington was acquainted with the stillroom maid,” I said, “for nearly a twelvemonth. He first undertook to ride over to Penfolds Hall, in secret; and as Tess Arnold’s notations are entirely concerned with remedies for deafness, I must imagine him to have been preoccupied with these.”

  “Deafness? But surely he is not so very troubled by the impairment to his hearing?” Lord Harold remarked.

  “I suspect that few are privileged to know just how far the difficulty extends. A person such as Lord Hartington — the sole heir to a princely realm, with all the burdens of wealth and birth, all the expectations of Society placed upon him — cannot admit to infirmity. He must struggle against it from a boy; and disguise what he cannot help. From the little I observed him, I should say that he is an adept at the reading of speech. Though he cannot hear, he may often comprehend, provided the speaker’s face is turned towards him.”

  “I see. And yet he was troubled enough by infirmity that he sought help from the stillroom maid.”

  “She makes no reference to the success or failure of her remedies; but certainly his lordship continued to seek them. Whether he eventually met with Tess Arnold from other motives, I cannot say; but I presume as much, from the place of the meeting having changed.”

  “He no longer rode to Penfolds?”

  “Last winter, he began to meet his witch in the rocks above Miller’s Dale. The meetings, from this date, grow less frequent — you will recollect that he was often from Derbyshire during that period, Her Grace the Duchess having been in Town for most of the winter.”

  “Georgiana fell ill there in March,” Lord Harold said soberly. “Lord Hartington, I believe, was much by her side. He did not return to Derbyshire until she was interred at Chatsworth, in early April.”

  “He met with Tess infrequently during the course of the summer, and always in secret; though once, at least, he appears to have been accompanied by a tutor. Perhaps he could not throw that gentleman off.”

  “No tutor worth his pay would neglect the charge of his employer, nor the confidence of his pupil,” Lord Harold observed. “We may consider the gentleman present, but sworn to silence. H
e is no longer in the Duke’s employ, in any case, and may not speak against the Marquess. But I interrupt: you have obviously formed an idea of young Hartington’s purpose. Was he dallying with the maid?”

  “I do not believe so. It should be a chilly place for such a purpose, in the depths of January; and by the summer he had clearly learned to hate her. No, Lord Harold — I believe the Marquess required information. You will recollect that he must have observed his mother’s decline.”

  “Georgiana? What can she have had to do with Tess Arnold?”

  “Her Grace was being steadily dosed by the stillroom maid, for a variety of liverish complaints, from the late summer of last year up to her death.”

  Lord Harold’s expression hardened. “That book tells you so much?”

  “It records the frequent remedies sought by Lady Elizabeth, for a variety of ills she does not appear to have suffered. Lady Elizabeth would carry off the gravel, and her stomach was much indisposed; she required eyewash, and remedies for the liver — and once, it must be said, for a persistent cough. This, at least, we may impute to have been Lady Elizabeth’s own. The rest I believe were purchased on behalf of Georgiana Duchess. The remedies contained an increasing quantity of morphia, such as must relieve the most acute suffering; and the oil of bitter almonds, which I believe is poisonous over time. It is possible her London physicians were unwilling to prescribe what must certainly kill her.”

  Lord Harold reflected upon this in silence. “Bess told me that Hart certainly blamed her for Georgiana’s death.”

  “Whatever charge his mother laid upon her bosom friend — whatever Lady Elizabeth chose to take upon herself — should never have been meant for the boy’s ears. But Lord Hartington’s ears are not his only means of acquiring intelligence. I assume he observed an exchange between the two ladies that was not intended for him.”

 

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