“Oh no. Mr. Wilson would not want that. The mill is…is—”
“Indeed he does not. But he has no choice.”
I looked away from that hard truth.
“He is more aware than you think,” Mr. Landes went on. “He doesn’t want to sell. He did not even want to hear me speak of it, but he will not improve much more than he already has. He can think; he can talk, in his fashion. He most probably will never again walk. Nor could he hold his own against another Luddite uprising. In life, one cannot depend on what has always been or, even less so, what has never been. You have your whole life in front of you, Rochester. We know that, John and I, and his life may well be drawing down. It would not be right for us—”
“It would not be right for me to leave him un—un—”
“You will not leave him unassisted. Indeed, I hope you will remain until we have sold the mill—I hope that your father will agree to that. In my letter to him, explaining our arrangement, I will tell our plans, and I hope he can allow to let you stay a bit longer. Would you be amenable to that?”
What could I say? I did not even know what my choices might have been, but Mr. Wilson had been a father to me. How could I turn my back on him? “Of course,” I said, “I will do whatever I can.”
“Fine. Then, it’s settled. Do not speak of this with Wilson, unless he broaches the subject first. It is, as you can well imagine, difficult for him to have reached this juncture, but there it is. He can do little else. And neither can either of us.” With that he left.
And I carried a lamp upstairs to my room, where I undressed and got into bed and did not sleep.
* * *
I was up and breakfasted and out of the house before Mr. Wilson awoke the next morning, so I had a slight reprieve from seeing him, now that I knew more than I wished to know. At the mill, I walked through the day in a daze: all seemed new, and yet terribly familiar. I felt a general unease among the workers, which puzzled me. Rufus Shap stared at me through the window glass of the countinghouse—his gaze black and more defiant than ever. Was I only imagining it, now that the mill was likely to be sold, or was there some sort of worker psychical perception that could read the minds of the managers?
At noon I did not go to the Crown or back to the Wilson home, but sent a boy out for a cheese pie, and though the task fell under his general duties, when he returned I gave him a whole shilling for his trouble. Landes came by late in the afternoon, full of apologies for not having come sooner, but I was so relieved to see him that I nearly hugged him in greeting. “And how was the day?” he asked.
“It was terrible,” was the best I could think to say.
He nodded and smiled kindly. “The first day after a big decision is made is usually the worst. One always thinks of what else one could or should have done. Second thoughts are the destroyers of good ideas. We are doing the best we can.”
“But how is it,” I asked, “that the workers seem to know things without being told?”
He nodded wryly. “You are young; you imagine outcomes that cannot happen. The mill workers know Wilson’s situation; they know he has little chance to recover. And, indeed, they do have a second sense. They have to, for there is nothing for them to fall back on if the mill closes. They are not like us—they have no education: most cannot even read. They have no savings, no property, and their friends and relatives are as bad off as they are. There is nothing for them but the poorhouse—or starvation. They live on the edge of hell and they know it. Before they left their country cottages, they at least had the gleanings after a harvest, or the chance of trapping a rabbit or two. Here, in a town or in the city, they have nothing. You can thank God you are not in their shoes.”
But I had remained caught on what he had said at the outset. “Might the mill really close?”
“It is one possibility,” was all he said. I had foolishly imagined that the mill would be sold as easily as selling a mince pie, but now I saw that that might not be the case. He said no more, and we walked on in silence.
Some days after that, again late in the day, Mr. Landes came to the mill to say he had received a letter from my father, who made some additional requirements in light of my changed situation. My father had also made clear that by next summer at the latest, I must leave Maysbeck, for he had other plans for me.
“Was that all he wrote?” I asked, eager for fuller news.
“Unfortunately, yes,” he responded. “Even I know by now how firm and terse your father can be.” He paused, then said, “Rochester, I know you are anxious about your future. Suppose you went to Liverpool and visited your father. Suppose, in the companionship of shared pints at an inn, you got him to talking. Perhaps he would tell you more.”
“I can’t leave the mill,” I said, impatient that he would even imagine such a thing.
“You could, for a few days. Jeremy Hardback is a good man, and I could spend part of the day here, as well.”
“I couldn’t ask that of you.”
He leveled his eyes at me. “You have borne a great deal more in the last year than one should have expected of someone your age,” he said finally. “I know Wilson thinks highly of you. He would second this, I am sure.”
I shook my head. I envisioned the companionless silence my father and I would surely share over those pints, and I knew that I felt closer to Mr. Landes—and especially closer to Mr. Wilson, even in his infirmity—and more able to talk honestly to him, than I could ever hope to feel toward my own father. I was ashamed to admit it, even to myself, but I had no particular interest in spending any more time than necessary with him. “It’s kind of you to offer, but I know it would do no good. My father is set in his ways. He tells me nothing, deals with others rather than with me if he has the least opportunity. It would be a waste of time.”
A frown creased his forehead. “You truly have no idea what he has in mind for you? And you don’t consider it prudent to visit him to ask?”
“It would make no difference. He has never let me know what he has in mind until it is about to come to fruition.”
“And you are content with that? Rochester, you have shown great maturity in recent months. Surely you have a right to know what lies ahead for you.” He took his hat from the rack and put his hand on the door latch, then turned back to me. “Still, it would be good for you to get away for a time—even a short time—from what are really quite heavy responsibilities for someone of your age. If not to your father in Liverpool, might there be anywhere else you would like to go?”
I paused before responding. Thornfield-Hall came into my mind. But my father’s words came as well: Thornfield is not for you. Thornfield is Rowland’s. I could count neither on Rowland’s being absent another time, nor on his welcome if he were home. And yet—yes—the thought stole into my mind: there was another visit I longed to make. I tried my best to hesitate, as if I needed to think, but I was suddenly so excited I could not have fooled him in the least. “Indeed,” I said, “there is a place—an old school friend who lives near Napier has been urging me to visit, and it has never seemed a possibility. I could be there and back in two or three days.”
“Two or three days? Surely that isn’t enough. You would barely get there before you had to turn back.”
Of course it wasn’t enough, not nearly enough. But it was better than nothing. “I think I can manage it,” I said.
“Well, then, arrange it,” he said. “But give me warning enough that I can work out a plan to oversee both mills.”
I wrote to Carrot that very evening and posted the letter as soon as I could. A few days afterwards, the response came, brief and direct: I was to come at my earliest convenience. If I could manage to get myself to the village of Napier, Carrot would send a conveyance for me.
I would see my oldest friend again, at last—I felt as if I were suddenly living in a dream. Mrs. Wilson seemed full of trepidation over my leaving, but she still encouraged me to go. Mr. Wilson simply nodded slowly and peered up at me as if he hal
f feared that I should never return. Probably too effusively, I made a point of saying that I would be gone only two days or at the most three, and I assured him as well that Mr. Landes would be stopping by the house each day to report on work at the mill.
I managed to talk a tailor into quickly putting together a pair of pantaloons, which he assured me were all the fashion, though they felt quite uncomfortable; but I could not bring myself to order a new waistcoat as well. And there was no time to order a pair of the slim, stylish pumps that the cobbler had in his window. There was no real rush, of course, but once it became possible for me to leave, I could hardly bear to wait. Somehow, the prospect of being with Carrot again almost seemed like going home.
Chapter 12
On the stagecoach, I began having second thoughts. It had been years since I had last seen Carrot. We had been boys then, playing at soldiers in the fields and woods around Black Hill; now we were older, he an earl, no less, and I— What was I? To the world, I was the young manager of a successful worsted mill, but most days I felt like a boy still, trying to give the appearance of a man, capable and dependable—and terrified of being found out. I was convinced I was the only young man in all the world who felt like a charlatan.
More than once on that journey I thought of Touch, he with his quiet and warm presence, his prodigious imagination. Would that the three of us could be once more together, I thought, and I wondered, suddenly, if Carrot knew yet that he had passed on. I laid my head back and closed my eyes and tried to imagine what Carrot would look like, what he would be like. I did not even know what one calls an earl when he is a friend, but I was certain that it would not be “Carrot.” Still, anxious as I was, I could barely contain my excitement.
For many years after that trip, travel excited my spirits—bringing me back to that bright, early September day, the sky a cloudless blue, the fields of oats and barley blowing in the wind, the workers bending to their tasks, swinging their scythes; heather still rosy purple on the moors; and the delicious anticipation of seeing Carrot again.
We were in Napier by late afternoon—the trip as easy as it could have been; a good sign, I hoped. And Carrot’s man was already waiting for me with what seemed like a brand-new tilbury. He tipped his hat and stowed away my luggage while I climbed aboard.
Lanham-Hall was a large country house, slightly bigger than Thornfield-Hall, and more graceful in appearance. Coming up the drive, I was struck by the great gables at the front of the house, and as we arrived, I noted the delicate stonework of the pediment above the massive oak door. The scene carved there was—I recognized immediately—a stylized version of a drawing from an edition of Herodotus on the Battle of Thermopylae that had been Carrot’s favorite at Black Hill. He had always insisted on being Leonidas to my Xerxes. I smiled to myself: Carrot was, apparently, still Carrot.
His butler opened the door. “His lordship is still out riding, sir,” he told me. “He asks that you excuse him this indulgence. He will be with you immediately when he returns.”
“Of course,” I said, a bit put out at that lack of a grand welcome. When I stepped inside, I paused, taking in the blue-gray entrance hall, the gently curving staircase, the rose and white Turkey carpet. It seemed restful and pleasing to the eye, not at all what I would have expected of Carrot.
The butler, who introduced himself as Matthews, offered to show me to my chamber, and he led me up the broad stairs and down a short hallway to a room that overlooked the front of the house. From the windows, I could see the long, curved drive, lime trees arching gracefully over it, and, beyond, the rolling fields of Lanham. It reminded me something of Thornfield, though it is hard to say why. At Lanham there was no tangled wood of hawthorn approaching the house, nor was there any moor in the distance. It was no wonder that the place was decorated in pale colors: this was a thoroughly domesticated countryside.
“Make yourself at home, please, sir,” Matthews said, “and when you are ready, the dining room is just at the bottom of the stairs, to the left. I’ll have something put out there for you.”
I remained there at the window, feeling even more nervous now that the reunion with Carrot was upon me. Then, as much to ease my mind as anything, I poured water from the ewer into the bowl and splashed my face and washed my hands. I thought for a moment of changing into other clothes, but I had brought too little clothing to be changing at the least excuse. When I had delayed as long as I dared, I left my room and walked down the stairs and into the dining room.
To my surprise, it was a small, intimate room lined with windows on one side and bookcases on the other three. Mr. Lincoln would have been proud. I strolled the length of one wall, gazing at the books and at the paintings above them. The cases rose only five feet or so from the floor, and above them were a series of lithographs and paintings: Columbus setting foot on the New World, a wonderfully engaging painting of Alexander at the Battle of the Granicus, and, not surprisingly, Turner’s rendition of the Battle of Trafalgar. I had been there only a few moments and was still gazing in astonishment at the books and the art when a maid brought in a plate of pork roast and potatoes and peas, which must have been quickly warmed up from last evening’s dinner. I sat down at the table, suddenly realizing how hungry I was.
I was just finishing when I heard a commotion in the reception hall right outside the dining room, and the door was flung open and Carrot appeared—older, of course, the ruddy complexion having faded somewhat, but the hair just as bright ginger as ever. “Jam!” he shouted, as if I were a mile away instead of just across the room. “Jam! At last!”
I rose and he strode forward, his arms outstretched to embrace me, and sudden tears came to my eyes as I stepped into his embrace. Then he leaned back, his eyes full upon my face. “My God,” he said, “it really is you, after all this time!”
“I’d have known you anywhere,” I said, at a loss for words, though indeed I would have known him anywhere and under any circumstances.
“But not I, you,” he said. “No, indeed. You were—what? ten? eleven?—when we last saw each other.”
“Twelve,” I said, a bit disappointed that he did not know my exact age, as I knew his.
“Twelve, yes, and now here we are! You’re a man now; no wonder you look so different!” He turned then, suddenly. “You’ll never guess who’s here.”
I turned as well toward the door, fearing who it would be even before I saw him. “Rowland,” I said, trying not to register disappointment in my voice.
Rowland nodded wordlessly. He must have known I was to arrive. I wished at the moment that I had been similarly warned.
“And if two brothers were more completely different, I could not imagine it,” Carrot said.
There was a long silence, made more uncomfortable by the fact that Carrot still had one arm around my shoulders. Then I said, lamely, “I take after our father; he, our mother.”
Carrot’s hand slipped away from me as his mind moved on. “And what’s become of the women?” he asked Rowland.
“Oh, you know,” Rowland said, gesturing vaguely.
There are women guests as well? I wondered. And, suddenly, it occurred to me: Did Carrot have a wife? “You have a houseful,” I said.
“When has he not?” Rowland said, laughing.
“Not so many, actually,” Carrot said, “but it needn’t bother the two of us. We have much to talk about, have we not?” His hand was on my arm and he guided me out of the dining room, across the reception hall, and into a drawing room that was quite different from the rest of the house: swathed in deep reds and dark blues—a man’s room. He led me to a vast maroon leather chair and saw me settled in and then asked, “What will you have?”
I did not know exactly what I should say, so I said the safest: “Whatever you are having is fine.” I watched as he stepped to a side table and decanted an amber liquid into two glasses, and cocked his head at Rowland. At Rowland’s slight nod, he poured a third. I gazed at the two of them—good friends, no doubt of it�
�and a flood of resentment swept over me. I had desperately wanted to find my same old Carrot, my closest friend, but now it seemed Rowland had taken my place.
Carrot brought me a glass and, handing it to me, said, “A toast! To the three of us, united at last. Like brothers should be.”
I rose to the toast and lifted my glass to theirs, looking from Carrot to Rowland, and back to Carrot. Brothers, I thought.
Then, surprising me, Carrot turned to Rowland. “If you don’t mind, I would like a word or two with your brother.”
“Of course,” Rowland said, not turning red as I would have done if the circumstances had been reversed. He left us promptly, closing the door behind him.
“Jam!” Carrot said, once we were alone, laying his hand on my shoulder and searching my eyes. I smiled at him but felt somewhat at a loss, still. Carrot seemed to understand. “You are wondering what to call me, I imagine,” he said.
“Yes, I am,” I responded, relieved that he had brought it up, as I had not had the slightest idea of how to approach the subject. He seemed so much exactly the same and at the same time so different that I hardly knew where I was to be in relation to him.
“Most people call me ‘my lord.’ Others call me ‘Lord Fitzcharles.’ My dearest friends call me ‘Fitzcharles,’ or ‘Thomas.’ I’m sure all of those seem strange to you, but there you are. Choose from them as you like, but, for your sake as well as mine, please do not call me ‘Carrot’ in company. I left that far behind at Black Hill. But, with the two of us…well, that’s different.”
“Yes,” I said, “of course.”
He stood staring at me a moment, until I added, “My lord.”
“Fitzcharles, perhaps,” he prompted with a grin.
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