Annabelle

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Annabelle Page 11

by Beaton, M. C.

Mrs. O’Harold gave tongue. “Well, I am sure that the repairs can be quickly finished and you can soon be on your way, Lady Jane. Where are you bound for?”

  “Oh, someplace,” yawned Jane. “It’s beginning to snow, and Sylvester wouldn’t turn his little Jane out on a day like this.”

  “Don’t see why not,” boomed Lady Amelia with a hearty laugh. “He puts the cats out at night. Joke,” she added in unconvincing tones.

  “He does!” said Lady Jane sweetly, raising her pencilled eyebrows in surprise. “And did you three ladies find it uncommonly cold out there?”

  Annabelle giggled and Lady Jane’s magnificent eyes rounded on her like two carriage lamps turning a sharp corner.

  “Ah, little Miss Quennell. And when are you and the Captain to tie the knot? So coy to break off your engagement and then appear holding hands on every occasion.”

  “I do not hold hands with Captain MacDonald or anyone else for that matter,” said Annabelle stiffly. “You must forgive me an’ I sound harsh, Lady Jane, but I am not used to discussing my private life at the breakfast table.”

  “Little puss,” said Lady Jane, giving Annabelle’s cheek a painful pinch. “Then we shall have a lovely coze about it all at dinner. Can you find someone to show me my rooms, Sylvester dear?”

  Lord Varleigh felt like wringing Lady Jane’s neck, but he did not wish to perpetrate a scene in front of the other guests. He bowed his head and rang for the housekeeper.

  Lady Jane rose, picked up a long fur boa, and slung it around her neck. The end of it, unfortunately, was trimmed with the paws and claws of several small animals, and it caught the Honorable Caroline full in the mouth.

  “You did that on purpose,” gasped Caroline, mottled with rage.

  “Course I didn’t, you silly goose,” drawled Jane with a patronising laugh. “It’s those teeth of yours, dear girl. They do stick out so. But I can recommend a very good dentist…”

  She trailed out of the room in the wake of the housekeeper, leaving a fulminating silence behind. Lord Varleigh excused himself. Jane must go if he had to drag her through the gates.

  “Well!” exclaimed Caroline, and the three rivals bent their heads together for the delicious task of rending Lady Jane’s character and morals to shreds.

  Annabelle suddenly felt she could not bear another minute of it The arrival of Lady Emmeline in scarlet and white striped morning dress and grotesque fur eyebrows proved to be the breaking point.

  She muttered some excuse and fled to her rooms to fetch her bonnet and cloak, From along the corridor Lady Jane Cherle’s voice rose and fell but the words were mercifully indistinguishable.

  Annabelle escaped into the grounds and then stood irresolute. She decided to return to the pimping shed, to sit peacefully among the logs and listen to Heckley’s soft Yorkshire voice which reminded her so painfully of home. She thought increasingly these days of the rectory, distance lending it an enchantment it did not possess. She had almost decided to send her savings home, but a nagging feeling of insecurity made her hold on to them. She had no idea what the journey north would cost but felt sure it would be a great deal.

  She had written a long letter to her father, telling him of her earnings and begging him to say nothing until she came to a decision. The rector had sent a kind reply. The money was Annabelle’s to spend as she wished. Her small savings would make little material difference to them. He could only beg her to be happy. Annabelle had not mentioned Lord Varleigh in her letter. Her gentle father would be shocked, she knew, to learn that his daughter had been hankering after an aristocrat whose morals—by rectory standards—were doubtful to say the least.

  Heckley was not in the shed. Bundles of faggots, neatly tied with string, bore witness to his early morning’s work. A stack of pine logs piled up in one corner exuded a pleasant aromatic smell.

  Annabelle sat down gratefully on the pile of logs, enjoying the peace and quiet of the little shed. She began to feel sleepy after her earlier exertions and the emotional upheaval of the breakfast room. Her head drooped lower on her bosom. The door suddenly crashed shut, and she jumped in alarm and then sat down again. It must have been the wind, although the day had been very cold and still when she had entered the shed.

  The pine smell brought faint memories of long-lost Christmases to mind, Christmases at the Squire’s large cheerful house with the great yule log blazing and crackling on the hearth. Sometimes the chimney did not draw properly, and the east wind racing across the moors and down the old chimney would send puffs of pine smoke billowing into the room. She could almost smell it now.

  She could smell it now!

  Smoke!

  As Annabelle stared at the piles of faggots on the other side of the shed, little snakes of smoke wound up from them and hung motionless in the cold air.

  Poor Heckley, thought Annabelle. If I do not sound the alarm, all his work will be up in flames. She ran to the door—and found it securely locked and bolted from the outside.

  With a feeling of panic she turned towards the smoke. Little tongues of flame were now crackling round the sticks of wood. She pulled them desperately aside in order to try to stamp the flames out, but her efforts only succeeded in making the blaze spread merrily. She began to scream and cry and batter at the door. The flames were between her and the only window.

  How jolly a crackling fire sounds when a storm rages outside and the flames shoot merrily up the chimney. How terrifying, how nightmarish each crackle sounded now!

  The heat was becoming intense. The smoke was suffocating. Annabelle felt herself falling, falling, and falling. Down and down and down into an endless pit of heat and smoke and flames.

  ANNABELLE came back from a very long, long way away. “So you’re here too—in hell, I mean,” she murmured to Lady Jane whose face was staring down at her. Lady Jane let out an appropriately demonic shriek of laughter and Annabelle retreated into the pit.

  When she regained consciousness again, she was lying in her own bed and a very concerned Lady Emmeline was perched on the edge of it

  “Now, be quiet, my dear,” said Lady Emmeline. “The doctor will be here presently. You have had a very narrow escape. If Varleigh hadn’t happened to be on the spot and rushed in and dragged you clear, you would have been roasted to a cinder. I must say I’m surprised at Varleigh. His coat was charred to bits and his hands all burned. I would have thought a man like him would have waited for one of the servants.”

  There was a soft footfall, and then Lord Varleigh’s face was looking down at her. He took her hand in his own, and Annabelle noticed with surprise that her hands were bandaged as well as his. “How are you?” he said in a soft voice, smiling down at her in such a way that she felt she would faint again. “I think I am all right,” she replied shyly. “I must thank you for saving my life.”

  “Oh, I always take care of my guests,” he replied in a light mocking voice which belied the warmth of his eyes. For a long minute their eyes met and held as Lord Varleigh stared down at Annabelle in dawning surprise.

  “I have something to do,” he said abruptly. “I shall return presently to find out how you go on.”

  With that he marched to Lady Jane’s room and gave her her marching orders in no uncertain terms, turning a deaf ear to every shriek and tear.

  Lady Jane left.

  Lord Varleigh kept wondering why he had not managed to be so firm with her before. It had all been so remarkably easy…

  Chapter Ten

  Annabelle was young and healthy and recovered quickly from her shock.

  Lord Varleigh seemed more disposed to seek her company, but the Captain was constantly at her side. The fire in the pimping shed was decided to be an unfortunate accident and only Annabelle, with dark memories of Mad Meg’s prophecy, was plagued with doubts.

  Lord Varleigh’s attentions to the three young ladies grew less as he joined more and more in the masculine pursuits of his gentlemen guests. Hopes began to wither and die in three feminine breasts, and t
heir respective parents began peevishly to talk of going home.

  In order to escape the increasingly unwelcome attentions of the Captain, Annabelle had taken to going for long walks. The Captain’s heavy gallantry was laced with abject apologies for his behavior at Chiswick; he spoke so feverently of his love for Annabelle that she was half inclined to believe him and allowed him as much of her company as she felt she could bear.

  Rising early from her bed one morning, Annabelle rose and stared out of the window across the great park. A light snow had fallen during the night and was now casting its blanket of stillness over the estates. Low leaden skies were swollen with the promise of more snow to come.

  Lord Varleigh suddenly appeared just below her window. He had his gun on his shoulder and his dogs at his heels. He was alone.

  Annabelle watched as he walked with easy athletic strides across the park in the direction of the woods. She had a sudden longing to join him, to have him to herself away from the jealous eyes and chatter of the other guests.

  Without ringing for the maid, she dressed herself quickly in a new scarlet velvet walking dress and then pulled on a thick black pelisse lined with white ermine. Then she placed a poke bonnet on her head and tying the satin ribbons, surveyed herself with some pleasure in the glass. The exaggerated poke of the bonnet shaded her face in a most becoming way. She hoped Lord Varleigh would notice.

  She ran downstairs and out into the park, her little half boots following the black imprint of Lord Varieigh’s steps.

  After about a mile of walking Annabelle began to feel ridiculous. Her outfit, which had seemed so becoming in the privacy of her bedroom, now appeared to her overdressed and fussy, more suitable for a walk down Bond Street than in these skeletal winter woods.

  And after all, what would Lord Varleigh say if she did find him? She could not plead innocence—that she was simply wandering the woods at this unearthly hour in the morning at random. Her little footsteps followed Lord Varieigh’s in a direct line. What if he should have that mocking look in his eye? What if he had gone to meet Lady Jane and Lady Jane’s noisy dismissal from his home had all been playacting?

  Doubts crowded one after the other into her mind till they seemed as gray and threatening as the lowering sky above. With a feeling of defeat, she began to retrace her steps and make the long journey back towards the great house.

  Snow began to fall lightly over the deserted park which had a brooding, waiting feeling. I’m becoming as fanciful as old Meg, thought Annabelle with a shiver.

  By the time she entered the great hall, she was feeling exhausted. Annabelle threw her hat and pelisse on a chair and went in search of Lady Emmeline. She had been avoiding her godmother of late as the old lady’s eccentricity began to teeter on the edge of madness.

  Lady Emmeline was kneeling at the prayer stool in the corner of her room. She was minus wig, and her bald pate gleamed in the livid light from the softly falling snow outside. She was wearing an old yellow nightgown with a brocade dressing gown lined with fur thrown over it. One of her frivolous high-heeled slippers had fallen off and lay on its side beside the prayer stool. Her eyes were shut and her lips were moving soundlessly.

  Annabelle turned to leave.

  “Don’t go,” said Lady Emmeline in a whisper. “Don’t.”

  Annabelle paused, irresolute, in the doorway.

  “You must join me,” said Lady Emmeline, still in that eerie whisper. “We must prepare our souls for the afterlife.”

  “I shall leave you to the privacy of your devotions, Emmeline,” said Annabelle, backing away and trying to make her own voice sound as normal as possible.

  “I insist,” said Lady Emmeline. “Come here, child.”

  So Annabelle wearily joined her. Lady Emmeline knelt at the prayer stool, and Annabelle knelt on the rug on the floor beside her. Lady Emmeline prayed for her immortal soul and poor Annabelle prayed for a normal life.

  THE Honorable Caroline Dempsey looked down from her bedroom window and saw in the far distance Lord Varleigh emerging from the woods with his gun and his dogs. Caroline decided to wait for him in the hall and waylay him.

  Despite her horsy appearance Caroline was more sensitive than her two rivals. She had been aware of a certain warmth of affection between Lord Varleigh and the pretty Annabelle and guessed that Annabelle was more of a force to be reckoned with than Lady Jane.

  She paced up and down the hall, praying that her two rivals might not descend and steal a march on her with almost the same fervor that Lady Emmeline abovestairs was praying for her immortal soul. Caroline heard Mrs. O’Harold’s laugh echoing along the corridor at the top of the stairs and the rapid sound of approaching footsteps. In the same moment she saw Annabelle’s bonnet and pelisse lying over the chair. She quickly put them on and swung open the great door of the hall.

  Powdery snow came swirling into the hall, but Caroline could still make out the figure of Lord Varleigh with his dogs at his side, still some distance away.

  The approaching sound of Mrs. O’Harold’s chattering voice spurred her to action.

  Heedless of the damage to her thin silk slippers, Caroline plunged into the snow and ran towards Lord Varleigh.

  There was a sudden report, awful to hear in all that white stillness.

  The Honorable Caroline Dempsey stopped abruptly in her tracks and then dropped like a stone.

  * * *

  THE house party was at an end. Caroline’s body had been removed for burial by her weeping parents, and searchers had combed the estate without success for signs of the marksman. It was at last decided by the local magistrate, who was tired of travelling in the wintry weather, that Caroline’s death had been the unfortunate result of a stray bullet fired by a poacher. Only Annabelle wondered if the shot had been meant for herself.

  She did not know who to confide in or who to trust. Perhaps Lord Varleigh’s handsome face masked the brain of a madman. Perhaps one of her fellow guests was a murderer. The well-bred faces and high fluting voices began to seem sinister.

  TWO days after Caroline’s funeral Annabelle was seated in the library, trying to read. Captain MacDonald came bustling in, suddenly seeming to Annabelle to appear comfortably normal with his fresh, handsome face and military side-whiskers.

  “This place is giving me the Blues,” he said robustly, placing one booted foot on the high fender and staring at Annabelle with a worried look on his face. “I don’t like that ‘accident.’ I think there was something funny about it.”

  “I am feeling blue-devilled myself,” said Annabelle. Her face was white, and she had large shadows under her eyes. She had a sudden longing to confide in somebody.

  “Jimmy,” she said. “Do sit down. I am in need of help.”

  The large Captain promptly sat down opposite her with his hands on his knees and stared at her with the affectionate expression of a large and devoted dog. “I’m the person to tell about it, Annabelle,” he said.

  Faltering at first and then with her voice growing stronger, she told the Captain of Mad Meg’s warning, of her fears that the fire in the pimping shed had been deliberately set and that Caroline had been wearing her, Annabelle’s, pelisse and bonnet when she had been shot.

  “Odd,” muttered the Captain, “Demned odd. Tell you what, Annabelle. I think it might just be coincidence, but why stay here, shaking in your shoes?”

  “Emmeline is determined to stay,” said Annabelle.

  “Oh, no she won’t. Not if I talk to her,” said Captain MacDonald. “You go up to your rooms and tell your maid to pack your things, and I’ll have us out of here in an hour. Get back to London, heh! Think of the theaters and the plays and you could come on some more drives with me if the weather ain’t too bad. What a monster you must think me, Annabelle. After my terrible behavior at Chiswick. Don’t really know why I did that. Must have been mad. Now come along…smile, that’s a girl. Jimmy will look after you!”

  Annabelle gave him a watery smile. She gratefully took his arm as
he ushered her out into the hall.

  “I say,” said the Captain, “there ain’t any hope of you and me tying the knot, is there? I mean to say,” he added gruffly, shuffling his boots, “look after you, and all that. Very fond of you.”

  “I’m sorry. I just don’t know,” said Annabelle, looking searchingly up into his face. “I’m so frightened and everything seems so strange. Give me more time.”

  “All the time you want,” said the Captain enthusiastically. “Be a good girl and give me a kiss and go off and see to your packing.”

  Annabelle shyly raised herself on tiptoe and kissed Captain Jimmy MacDonald on the cheek and scurried off upstairs.

  Lord Varleigh slowly closed the study door on this touching scene. He could not understand why he felt so unhappy.

  EVERYONE seemed to revive in the sooty London air. Lady Emmeline seemed to have become her old self again, grotesquely dressed it is true, but no longer rambling and murmuring and praying for her soul. Annabelle flirted and danced with a great number of young men and felt that she was getting over that dangerous illness of being hopelessly in love with Lord Varleigh. If ever she found herself thinking about him, she resolutely concentrated on his inhuman “marriage mart” at Varleigh Court and the suspicious death of poor Caroline.

  The Captain had not touched any liquor at all since his return, and his friends gloomily declared him to be a changed man and cast resentful glances at Annabelle.

  As party and ridotto followed ball and breakfast, and the elegant figure of Lord Varleigh did not appear, Annabelle found the memory of him growing mercifully fainter. Her godmother had written to the rector praising the Captain in no uncertain terms, and the rector had written a pleading letter to Annabelle urging her not to throw over the love of a good man for some girlish romantic nonsense.

  Annabelle became convinced that her own idea of love was wrong. Hurting and painful passion was no basis for a happy marriage, and what did one do when passion had fled? Mutual esteem and mutual interests were what mattered. And, indeed, the Captain did try. He even read books to please her and went so far as to remark that Miss Austen was a demned fine writer and Annabelle, who had caught him studying Pride and Prejudice forebore to point out that she had noticed the latest copy of the Sporting Magazine tucked between its gilt-edged pages.

 

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