The Weeping Tree

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The Weeping Tree Page 7

by Audrey Reimann


  Quickly Andrew shoved the girl towards Greg. 'Watch her,' he ordered. He had seen that Pearce's left hand was low, weakened by the chop and in a poor starting point for a return blow, but he did not see Pearce's right fist arriving with a mighty crack, square on to his ear. He staggered back against the wall of sailors, who pushed him upright again and, laughing and spoiling for a fight, urged him on: 'Go for him!'

  Only Greg had the sense to urge, 'Leave him. Let's get out!'

  Andrew shook his head. Pearce was coming at him, his arms swinging wildly, teeth bared. It was an automatic reaction for Andrew to put his own fists up, to aim accurately. He felt the painful jarring contact of his knuckles under Pearce's chin, saw Pearce shake his head as if to wake himself up, then totter backwards against the bar.

  Greg yelled, 'That's enough! You're even now. Pack it in!' as Pearce, still leaning on the bar, grabbed wildly for the brass rail. His hand fastened on to a beer bottle.

  Andrew came forward, fists curled, 'Stand up, Pearce, you bastard!'

  Pearce stood, swaying drunkenly, spittle dripping from his lower lip as he hit the bottle against the brass rail. It bounced off. The music stopped. The crush moved back. There was nothing, no shouting, just air being drawn in and exhaled fast and greedily by the sailors at the front of the crowd. Andrew lunged with his right fist, caught Pearce a glancing blow on the jaw and felt the sharp stab in his wrist. And now the little crowd was starting to shift, to join in, calling out here and there, 'Go on, sailor! Give it to him!'

  He heard the splintering sound at Pearce's second attempt to break the bottle but he did not feel the jagged broken glass lacerating his neck and throat. He was wild with anger, unaware of the blood that was pouring down his neck and chest. He landed another right hook under Pearce's jaw and heard, behind him, shouts of encouragement. There was a coppery taste of blood in his mouth. Sweat, or tears, blinded him as he landed another hook under Pearce's jaw and felt another shock go juddering down his arm.

  Pearce was short of breath, his face purple and red, mouth hanging open with saliva dripping from his loose lips. He growled like an old bear every time he received one of Andrew's blows. But Andrew knew he had youth and strength and stamina on his side, and he had drunk only enough to make himself merry, not drunk like the steaming, sweating Pearce. Andrew moved in fast, landing another blow on Pearce's jaw.

  The crowd moved back. Someone, probably the barman, called out, 'Send for the police. They're fighting like ruddy tigers!'

  Andrew heard all this commotion at the same moment he felt the low thud in his stomach. His breath was being punched out of his lungs and he tottered, slipping on the bloody, wet dance floor. He did not feel Pearce's boot cracking into the back of his head; he did not see Greg and half a dozen other sailors tackling his opponent to the deck before Pearce could land the second kick that probably would have killed him.

  What he next knew was white light spinning in blackness and gradually, fuzzily, his eyes focused on the faces above him and he heard, 'Call an ambulance. Take him to the Royal Naval hospital.'

  'Get him to the ship!’ Pearce's voice ‘before the provost marshal’s police arrive. He's not hurt.'

  Then Greg: 'You'll be court-martialled, Pearce. If he dies.'

  'He won't die. But if he squeals, he's as good as dead.'

  Andrew came to on the operating table of the Rutland. His throat was tight. His neck was a ring of pain and the medical officer, a surgeon lieutenant, annoyed that his own first leave in weeks had been held back while he stitched up a brawling stoker's wounds, was impatient. 'Sit up!' he ordered.

  'Aye aye, sir.' Andrew heaved himself awkwardly into a sitting position. The tiny room circled round him. He grabbed the edge of the table and held fast. He put his hand to his bandaged neck and said, 'What happened?'

  'You fought. You'll be charged. Drunk and disorderly. Causing an affray. Stand up.'

  Andrew stood to attention. On the floor was his blood-soaked tunic. His white bell-bottoms were splashed and streaked red.

  The medical officer said, 'Get yourself cleaned up. The duty regulating petty officer will escort you to the captain.'

  'Aye aye, sir,' Andrew said as he was gripped and steered towards the door, his head heavy, hot and bursting with pain even as a cold chill ran down his back. The captain was Sir Gordon Campbell.

  In his cabin, Captain Sir Gordon Campbell read the hastily written charge sheet. Andrew, the boy both he and Elizabeth had helped, would have to be punished. No excuses could be made for bar fighting with the local Maltese, using broken bottles. Andrew Stewart knew the ropes. He had been in the service for a year and a half.

  While he contemplated Andrew's punishment it gave him a shock to realise that two years had passed since the day he had taken the young lad out on to the Forth. He glanced at the silver-framed picture of Elizabeth that was attached to the wall and thought of how his own life had changed so drastically since that afternoon. He remembered the night of her birthday in January 1937, when he had gone home to Ingersley from Rosyth, the River Forth base.

  After a successful tour of protection duty in the Med, where General Franco had ordered the shelling of a British steamer off the coast of northern Spain, Gordon had been given his first command: the Rutland, a bigger ship than he had ever commanded - a three-funnelled county-class vessel with Pearson General turbines and four propeller shafts. He had never had charge of so fast a ship and felt that he needed more briefing on their powerful engines. That week, his cabin was being refitted and he could take a few days' leave.

  He was anxious for Elizabeth, who seemed to be losing confidence in herself as her sight worsened. She had said, the last time they made love, 'If you ever find a healthier, more desirable woman, I should not want to live.'

  He'd been astonished and hurt, and back on board he knew he needed to reassure her of his love by seeing as much as he could of her. He rang home and spoke to Ruth, who naturally assumed he knew that a party was being arranged for Elizabeth's birthday.

  ‘Can you bring some officers home with you, Gordon?' she said. 'The balance is wrong.'

  Gordon, though not contemptuous of hierarchy and ranking, did not follow the strict social rules of naval protocol. As well as the young lieutenant-commander, he would invite the chief engineer, a non-commissioned officer who held petty officer rank. Chiefie, as the chief engineer was affectionately called, could explain the ship's mechanics to them both.

  When they arrived at Ingersley his worries vanished, for Elizabeth was her old self. Wearing a mauve crepe de Chine dress that clung to her slender, graceful figure she greeted them at the door, shaking hands with his junior officers, accepting their birthday good wishes, smiling into their faces as if she could see as well as once she had. Her beautiful face and bubbling charm had his junior officers bowled over in seconds. She took his hand and climbed the stairs ahead of the others, her voice low and soft as she said, 'Darling, I hope you don't mind. Ruth asked if she might invite the doctor and his wife as well as the minister and the two Miss Stevensons. Poor Ruth doesn't get many opportunities to shine socially.'

  She slid her fingers gently against his thumb. The scent of Chanel perfume drifted in the air about her and he felt the quick rising of desire for her. He forced his mind on to the waiting guests to avert embarrassment even as he returned the pressure of her fingers and whispered, 'Later, darling…’

  In the drawing room Ruth was obviously in good form, pink-cheeked, speaking earnestly to the doctor one moment, the next relaxing and acting the part of the lady of the manor. Ruth had social ambitions and he asked himself if he and Elizabeth were being fair to her sister, who ought to have a wider circle of friends than they could provide. He smiled to himself. The lieutenant-commander was a bachelor. Gordon took Elizabeth across the room to be near to Ruth then, since they no longer kept a butler, took upon himself the pleasant and now entertaining duty of serving drinks from a rather elaborate trolley that Ruth had given them at Christmas. />
  The guests were mingling well and the confident small talk and tinkling laughter of the ladies gave every indication of a pleasant evening ahead. Dr Scott was standing a little apart from the rest, by one of the windows where the curtains were not drawn, looking out over the frosty white park. It was as if he wanted to be out of earshot. Gordon went towards him. 'What will you have? Whisky? Sherry?' Then the doctor's solemn look made him say, 'How do you think Elizabeth is?

  The doctor gave a thin smile. 'Whisky. I have to talk to you.'

  'About Elizabeth?'

  'Yes. Could you come to my consulting room in the morning?'

  Gordon poured whisky into a crystal glass and handed it to the doctor. 'I'm afraid not. But after dinner we can talk in my study for ten minutes. It's the room directly opposite the drawing room.'

  The cook had excelled herself. With the help only of the two housemaids, who also had to wait at table, Mrs Stewart had prepared a delicious game soup, which was followed by fish caught that very morning whiting in a tangy sauce made from cream and capers. Next came Gordon's favourite, roast rib of beef with vegetables from their own fields and the rich gravy that only Mrs Stewart, in all his experience, could make so well. Scotch trifle was the dessert another of his favourites. He would go downstairs to thank her before she left for the South Lodge.

  Elizabeth sat at the opposite end of the table and, watching her, Gordon had a return of his anxiety. She was overexcited, overreacting to the conversation, which had turned from the inconsequential bits of news of other families and church affairs in the little harbour town of North Berwick to highly charged talk about the Duke and Duchess of Windsor's being welcomed by Hitler to Berlin. Elizabeth saw this as treachery. The Misses Stevenson saw it as peacemaking. The doctor too was worried, for his eyes went frequently to Elizabeth down the long mahogany table.

  It was nine o'clock before Elizabeth, with dear, devoted Ruth beside her, calmed down. His fears subsiding, Gordon nodded to the doctor and slipped away to the study. There he poured two brandies and waited for the doctor to speak.

  The doctor accepted the drink and, unsmiling, came straight to the point. 'Your wife is deteriorating,' he said. 'You may not be aware of it, but Elizabeth's fits are increasing in severity and frequency. I have to advise you that marital relations should cease.'

  Gordon stared at the reflected light that shimmered, golden, in the brandy goblet. He did not look at the doctor. Later, he'd recall every word, every inflection in the doctor's voice as he continued: 'Your wife will not tell you. She is naturally very afraid of losing your affection. She asked that I observe the code of confidentiality.'

  Gordon kept his eyes on the glass, head averted as he said, 'I see. You believe that the fits are aggravated..?'

  'Absolutely. The brain's electrical balance is disturbed by the act.'

  Gordon took a deep breath, looked directly at the young man and said quietly, 'Thank: you for telling me. I will respect your confidence. My wife will not be told that you have broken yours to her.' He opened the door for the doctor.

  When he was alone, he sat at his desk in a state of appalled disbelief. How was he going to do this? If he told Elizabeth that he had sought independent medical advice she would see it as a betrayal. She herself would never speak about their married love to anyone but himself. And how could he turn away her offers of love without explanation? He must make his poor darling understand that it would be as great a sacrifice for him as for her. But he could not do it tonight, with so many people in the house. He would speak to her before he left Ingersley in the morning. He drained the last of his brandy, opened the study door and saw that Ruth was speaking to Nanny at the far end of the landing. He beckoned. She nodded acknowledgement, dismissed Nanny and came into the study.

  ‘Ruth, my dear. Has Nanny gone to her quarters?'

  'Yes. I didn't think Elizabeth would want her -with you here.'

  'Sit down, Ruth. I have to ask yet another kindness of you.'

  'Anything at all.' An expression of cool calculation seemed to lurk at the back of Ruth's wide blue eyes even as she said, hesitantly and tenderly, 'What can I do, Gordon dear?'

  Gordon glanced at the clock. It was almost ten. Everyone would understand if Elizabeth retired early -and in any case the guests were starting to shift a little, as if waiting for a signal that it was time to go. He said, 'Take Elizabeth to bed. Tell her not to wait up for me. The officers and I have a lot to talk about. I will sleep in my own room.'

  'You want me to sleep with Elizabeth?'

  'If you will.'

  'In Nanny's bed?' Nanny always slept in Elizabeth's dressing room when Gordon was away, in case she had an epileptic fit.

  'Yes.' He had no intention of telling Ruth any more than this and he saw with gratitude that it was not necessary.

  She patted his arm and said, 'There is no need for Elizabeth to come downstairs to see the guests off. I'll take her up to bed. And tell her that you and your officers will be talking all night. All right?'

  'Ruth?'

  She turned at the door. 'Yes?'

  'Gently does it. Tell her -I'm sorry.’

  'I understand, Gordon. I'll give her some sedative medicine. She may need it after all the excitement.'

  'Thank you, dear.' He watched Ruth go to Elizabeth, take her sister's arm and incline her head, smiling as she bade good night to their guests. His wife gave the sweetest smile as if she understood perfectly and all was well.

  Gordon saw Dr Scott, his wife, the rector and the Misses Stevenson to their cars in a flurry of thanks and polite handshakes and a crunching of tyres on frost-white gravel under the black bowl of a still night that was brilliant with thousands of stars. He'd give anything to have Elizabeth on his arm, her sight restored, sharing with him the wonder of the night sky. He remained a few minutes, gazing at the constellations Orion, Ursa Major and Cassiopeia. The very same constellations had inspired the legends of gods, poets and peasants, thinkers and dreamers, since man had first pondered the universe and his own part in it. He reflected too on the fact that even today, with the wonders of modern science, sailors still navigated by the same skies that early man had regarded.

  Indoors, his officers drew up chairs in front of the drawing room fire, where the chief engineer made a splendid furnace of the logs that crackled and sparkled and threw shadows across the elaborate plaster ceiling. They talked long into the night in the otherwise silent house. It was three in the morning before the officers went to their rooms and Gordon to his old childhood bedroom that connected to his study.

  He was sound asleep when Ruth came in, white and terrified, shaking him by the shoulder, whispering, 'Gordon! Elizabeth has gone...'

  He sat up with a start. 'Gone? What are you talking about?'

  ‘I don't know. I heard something. I looked. Her bed is empty. I can't findher. Oh, Gordon, I'm afraid...'

  He shook his head, the better to clear his thoughts and waken his sensibilities, then, 'She must have gone to the bathroom. Have you-?'

  'I’ve looked everywhere.'

  He got out of bed, put on his dressing gown and went ahead of Ruth to search the house. Elizabeth did not have the confidence to venture outside alone. A cold dread came upon him as they went first to Elizabeth's bedroom, to check that Ruth was not mistaken, then to every room on the bedroom landing.

  There was no sign of her. They went carefully down the unlit staircase to the drawing room, where the electric light switches were located. They flooded the second floor with light and searched with more fear and urgency. There was nothing to be seen. Down the staircase they went again, this time joined by the officers who, hearing the commotion, had woken up.

  Gordon was sick with apprehension. Elizabeth was not an impulsive, eccentric person who might, upon a whim, do anything. Foreboding was heavy on him now, contracting the muscles in his stomach, fogging his mind with dread as the search of this last floor proved fruitless. Elizabeth would not have gone down to the servants' quarters.
She had never done so unaccompanied. She would have to have taken the lift and fumbled her way.

  It was when he began logically to try to guess Elizabeth's movements that he thought again of the lift. He ran back to the bedroom floor, found the outer gate open and lift descended. If Elizabeth had fallen, she could be unconscious, lying on top of the cage at the foot of the shaft. 'Call the police,' he cried. 'Tell them we need a mechanical engineer with an understanding of hydraulics.'

  The chief engineer said, 'I'll check the lift shaft.' And it was he who found the broken body of the love of Gordon's life. Elizabeth had fallen to her death.

  He didn’t know how he got through those last days. The police at first were not satisfied that the death was accidental. Everyone was questioned: he first, and by his distraught state they were convinced of his devotion to Elizabeth; Nanny Taylor, who had spent a restless night and was adamant that, even from two rooms away, she had heard Elizabeth sobbing; Ruth who had given Elizabeth a sedative so as not to risk one of her fits. Ruth said that Elizabeth was asleep when she left her side for half an hour to do her nightly tour of the stables. Ruth never, ever used the lift. She did not even know how to operate the gates.

  The police had been dogged in their questioning. They asked if Elizabeth had ever threatened to take her own life; Gordon said absolutely not. Ruth recalled occasions when Elizabeth had said she would rather be dead than go on living without all she held dear, but this was not held to be significant. Then they enquired who had prescribed sedative medicine, and when told that it was a common remedy that could be made up and sold by any chemist they asked, 'What would be the effect of an overdose?'

  They were told that a large overdose would make the patient disorientated. A massive overdose would be fatal but no patient could have swallowed such an amount of the bitter medicine and Elizabeth's post-mortem showed no trace in her blood of the strychnine agent which one would expect to find in an overdose. They turned their attention to the lift.

 

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