Holiday in Bath

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Holiday in Bath Page 9

by Laura Matthews


  Her mother smiled. “Your color is better now, I think,’ love. You’ll get used to sleeping in strange beds and eating in strange places. It’s all a part of traveling.”

  “Yes.” The tea tray was set on her lap and she busied herself in adding milk and sugar. “But you say you slept well, Mama? Nothing disturbed your rest?”

  “Not a thing, dearest. Could you hear noise from the public rooms? I feared this inn would attract a rowdy bunch of men of an evening. Cranford didn’t really want us to stay here, I think, but I hated to be at a different inn from his. Tonight we will find a more peaceful spot so that you can get your proper rest.”

  “Oh, I shall sleep in the carriage, no doubt. Don’t give a thought to me.”

  But Trelenny’s own thoughts were scurrying frantically to and fro as she sipped at her tea. Cranford had undressed her! He must have, for she would never have undone her own hair. No, perhaps Miss Moreby had done it. Obviously her mother knew nothing of the previous night’s adventures, and there was no sign that Alice was hiding some deep secret as she went about laying out their clothing for the day. Oh, please, please, let it have been Miss Moreby. But how was she to ask her? Even if they saw her she could not let on that they had met, since that would require an explanation to her mother. And could she possibly ask Cranford? Her heart sank at the very thought.

  As it turned out, it was unnecessary to ask him. From the very way he avoided her eyes, she knew, as certainly as though she had put the question directly to him. Trelenny instinctively realized that he had harmed her in no way, had taken no advantage of her indisposed condition. He would not have been Cranford if he could do such a thing. But there could have been no way for him to avoid seeing her naked. She was unable to eat more than a slice of toast, and that only because of her mother’s concerned eyes.

  Unaware of any tension between her two companions, Mrs. Storwood chatted cheerfully to Cranford, detailing her delight in having spent a restful night. “I fear Trelenny did not fare so well, however. Another time I will not insist on staying at the same inn, if it means our staying where there are disturbances to keep her awake.”

  At Cranford’s inquiring look, she continued, “The public rooms, you know. I think the noise made sleep difficult for her.”

  “I’m sure it was just the strange bed,” her daughter protested, unable to meet Cranford’s eyes. “Tonight I’ll have no trouble at all, I promise you.”

  “I hope that will prove to be the case,” he returned blandly as be ushered the ladies to the waiting carriage.

  When Cranford climbed in to sit beside her, Trelenny uneasily shifted further into the corner away from him, and he pretended not to notice. He could see not only the signs of embarrassment but of headache and mawkishness as well. “Would you like me to read some more of Evelina, Trelenny.”

  ­“No, thank you. I think I will try to sleep for a while.” So saying, she drew the carriage rug more closely about her lap and proceeded to fall asleep, undisturbed by the sway of the carriage and unconscious that her head had fallen against Cranford’s shoulder. Not until they halted at midday did she awaken, and she sat abruptly upright, casting a suspicious glance at Cranford which made him shake his head ruefully. “I feel a great deal better now, Mama. Are we stopping for luncheon? I’m famished.”

  “She must be better,” Mrs. Storwood confessed to Cran­ford. “Ever since she was small, she never had the least appetite when she was ill.”

  After doing justice to a good serving of pigeon pie, apples, and cheese, Trelenny was feeling almost normal again, until Cranford suggested that she ride for a stage with him. It seemed to her that it was more of a command than a suggestion, and she would have pleaded renewed illness except for not wishing to alarm her mother. Her fervent prayer, that they would not have two hacks available, or have no sidesad­dle, was not answered and she soon found herself riding beside Cranford some distance behind the carriage so they would not be covered by its dust.

  “You might like to know that our new friends got an early start this morning,” Cranford offered conversationally.

  “Did…you restore Mr. Laytham’s clothes?” She kept her eyes straight ahead.

  “Yes. I gave him one of my cravats to replace the soiled one. Trelenny, I’m sorry I had to undress you. I couldn’t wake your mother, and Miss Moreby was already asleep.”

  She asked in a strangled voice, “Will I have to marry you?”

  “For God’s sake, you don’t think I touched you!”

  “No. I know you never would, but... am I not compro­mised?”

  “I suppose so, technically, but only the two of us know, so it cannot matter. I thought of telling you that Miss Moreby had done it, but I couldn’t lie to you. You were so overtaken that it was impassible to wake you. I had hoped you might think you’d done it yourself in your intoxica­tion.”

  “I don’t loosen my hair at night.”

  “Did your mother notice?”

  “No, she was only concerned with my feeling unwell.” Trelenny agitatedly thumped a hand down on her thigh. “I can’t bear to think of your seeing me!”

  “Discard it from your mind, as I have from mine,” he suggested with more gallantry than truth.

  “Oh, I believe you could, you unfeeling bookworm! Don’t you see that makes it all the worse? Treating me like some cold marble statue of a Roman maiden, probably calculating my imperfections in comparison! I can see your wretched detachment now. No, she would not make a good tombstone, even with a concealing toga.”

  “God help me, Trelenny, what do you want? Are you disappointed that I didn’t rape you?”

  “Oh, shut up. You shouldn’t have done it.”

  “I had no choice. You put yourself in an awkward position and I felt it my duty to extricate you by the only means at hand.” He studied her seriously for a moment. “If I hadn’t done it, Trelenny, you might have been forced to marry me. Your mother would not see the incident as lightly as you do. Her mortification at your wandering around town in men’s clothes, and being seen by me in them would likely have urged immediate action on her. She has a fine sense of propriety and could only consider you compromised by such behavior. Let’s have no more of your missish rantings, my girl; they ill suit you.”

  His harsh words, carefully calculated to sting her out of her embarrassment, accomplished their purpose only too well. With flashing eyes but a grimly set face, she retorted, “You have done everything for my good! How very thoughtful of you, you great brute. You surprise me, Cranford. I should have thought you would welcome the opportunity to force me into marriage with you. Did you not do so with poor Clare to your best friend? Do you think I don’t know she had fallen in love with someone else?” Trelenny clamped a horrified hand over her mouth. The secret had slipped from her without thought in her anger and she urged her horse to gallop to avoid his startled eyes. Not even to her mother had she so much as hinted at her knowledge, the cause of her anxiety over her friend’s marriage. She had been sworn to secrecy by Clare’s letter, and she had honored that pledge for the last year and more without fail. To have let it slip in a moment of unguarded hostility chastened and alarmed her.

  Before she had time to collect her thoughts she found Cranford alongside her, intent on hearing more of her knowl­edge. “What did you mean just now, Trelenny?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Don’t be absurd. What fairy tale have you concocted in your mind to account for your imperfect understanding of Clare’s situation?”

  Trelenny rode in silence for several minutes before answering. Then, with a resolution which cost her a great deal of courage, she looked Cranford directly in the eye and said, “If you will forget what I said, I will forgive you for…undressing me.”

  Although Cranford did not feel the need for her forgive­ness, being convinced that he had acted from the purest of motives, he understood what she was saying, and he realized that it cost her a great deal to say it. She would will herself to act with him as she
had before the incident, not shunning his company or seething with indignation, and he respected her determination. There was also the matter of her obvious regret that she had allowed her wayward tongue to let escape a drop of sacred intelligence which she wished she could recall. Despite his very real desire to learn what she knew of his sister’s situation and what she surmised, he said gently, “Very well, Trelenny. Both matters are closed.”

  “Thank you, Cranford.” She extended her hand and he shook it solemnly. “I’m sorry if I called you names. You’re not such a bad fellow after all.”

  “You flatter me,” he returned wryly.

  ~ ~ ~

  “’I have time for no more; the chaise now waits which is to conduct me to dear Berry Hill, and to the arms of the best of men. Evelina.’ Well, Trelenny, what did you think of it?” Cranford asked.

  “If you wish me to say I loved it, I must disappoint you,” she said with a grin at her mother. “And I would point out to you that she got in a great deal more trouble trying to behave as she ought, than she probably would have if she had just followed her inclination."

  Mrs. Storwood sighed. “How you can so easily dispose of poor Evelina is beyond me, my dear. Doesn’t it warm your heart that all came out well for her after all the adversities she endured? Doesn’t her virtue shine through all her misad­ventures?”

  “I made most note of all the tears she shed,” Trelenny admitted sacrilegiously. “She must have filled buckets and soiled any number of handkerchiefs. What a lot of work she gave the laundry maids!”

  “You’re incorrigible,” Mrs. Storwood groaned with a doleful shake of her head. To her the journey had sped by with the reading of her beloved book, the care Cranford took of them, and the comfort of the carriage. She was not so sanguine about the relationship between her daughter and their escort; they seemed, if anything, to be further apart than ever, with Trelenny constantly teasing him about Evelina’s righteousness and Cranford berating her for her lack of proper feeling. Had she known of the contretemps between them, however, she would have been amazed by the ease with which they resettled into their former raillery, perhaps even encouraged by the lighter vein in which they pinched at one another. Their shared secret had forced an understanding between them which brought them closer and made them more dependent on one another.

  “Oh, look!” Trelenny exclaimed as her first view of Bath impressed itself on her. “Why, no drawing I have ever seen does it the least justice! What a beautiful town. Where is the Pump Room? Isn’t the Abbey magnificent? Do you suppose it will take us long to find lodgings? Shall we spend the night at the White Hart? Will Mrs. Waplington have had your letter by now, Mama? Is it too late to walk about the town a bit before dinner? Will we wait until tomorrow to send Mrs. Waplington a message? What nights are the Assemblies, Cranford?” Bombarded by her questions, and touched by her pathetic eagerness, Cranford tried patiently to answer each one before yet another escaped her.

  Accommodations had been arranged by post at the White Hart and while Mrs. Storwood settled into her delight­ful suite, Cranford agreed to walk with Trelenny until the dinner they had bespoken was prepared.

  “The ladies look so fine in their French bonnets and cornettes. Will I be out of fashion, Cranford?”

  He cocked his head to study her circular hat with its plume of quadrille feathers and satin ribbon ending in bows at her waist. “I think not. Your mother has always kept up with the latest fashions, whether you paid the least attention or not. You look presentable, but you might try to do some­thing about those freckles.”

  “I shall long for the day when you don’t pay me a backhanded compliment,” she retorted. “Why I should think you would know the first thing about fashion. . . Oh, Cran­ford, have you ever seen a shop with so many ribbons? I think they sell nothing else.”

  “Shall I give you some of your money now we are in town?”

  “No, I don’t need it, and I wish you would keep it as I asked, for if you lent money to Mr. Laytham, you’re sure to be short.”

  “Allow me to worry about my own finances, if you please,” he said coolly.

  “As you wish, Golden Ball. I’m sure I don’t care a fig if you find yourself at point non plus. Is that a sedan chair? Shall I ride in one? Won’t Mama look elegant carried about in such a way? Oh, I wish Papa could be here to see.”

  A thousand questions sprang to her lips as they retraced their direction to the hotel but Trelenny observed a bursting silence, while Cranford pointed out sights of interest in an amused voice.

  Under cover of his discourse Trelenny surrep­titiously watched the passersby, wondering if she would subsequently meet the pretty young ladies and the smart young men. She drew more than one appreciative glance from the latter, but one man in particular she noticed, for he started at the sight of her and moved as though to approach before retreating to his former position at a printshop win­dow. Not a young man (Trelenny judged him to he five and forty or so), he was distinguished looking and had an air of assurance which was only slightly marred by his puzzled expression. Obviously he found it difficult to take his eyes from her but was conscious of the impropriety of staring, and, when they had passed him, Trelenny glanced back to see that he watched as they entered the White Hart.

  “Did you know that man, Trelenny?” Cranford asked sternly.

  “No, of course not.”

  “Then you shouldn’t encourage him to stare at you. If you so openly show your appreciation of a man’s interest, he will think you fast. You will have to adapt to town ways, Trelenny. This is, in effect, your come-out and girls your age are expected to show a becoming modesty and shyness. Your bold behavior of the countryside will not do here, my girl, unless you are in search of rakes and adventurers or wish to be mistaken for something your mother would blush for. You don’t go out unescorted, you listen to your mother’s advice on whom you accept as partners at the assemblies, you try for a little decorum, and, most of all, you continue to accept my authority if you don’t wish to set off immediately for Sutton Hall.”

  “You are an insufferable tyrant, Cranford. The man was old enough to be my father.”

  “His age makes not the least difference. Girls your age are married to men of his years every day, and frequently a great deal older.”

  “Well, I think that’s disgusting!"

  Cranford relaxed his severity for a moment to grin. “I do, too, my dear, but ambition makes for some very strange matches. Now don’t attempt to rescue every girl you find engaged to some old cadger; for all you know, she may be perfectly in agreement with the arrangement.”

  “I doubt I would have enough sympathy for such a lady to wish to help her,” Trelenny retorted.

  They returned to find Mrs. Storwood with a guest, and Trelenny recognized her immediately as the woman they had passed in the sedan chair, a well-dressed matron with a few extra pounds to her credit and a cheerful, beaming counte­nance. Mrs. Storwood had been informed of all the discom­fort she would suffer in searching for a lodging of her own and the distraction of choosing adequate servants, but it was mostly for her daughters s ease in being made known to Bath society that she had accepted Mrs. Waplington’s pressing offer to stay with her. By the time Trelenny arrived all that remained to be done was to introduce the newcomers and set a time for the Storwoods to present themselves in Henrietta Street the next morning. When Mrs. Waplington had hugged Trelenny to her like a long-lost daughter, she drew her wrap about her ample frame and allowed Cranford to lead her down to her waiting chair.

  “I hope I have done the right thing,” Mrs. Storwood said anxiously. “You don’t think your Papa would object, do you? Mr. Waplington himself instructed the White Hart to let them know the moment we arrived so they could invite us.”

  “Papa would want you to do just what would make you comfortable, Mama. And Cranford didn’t raise a brow, so he must consider your acceptance not the least objectionable. Of course if he had thought it wrong, we would not have done it.”


  Totally missing her daughter’s irony, Mrs. Storwood sighed. “No, of course not. We should be very grateful for Cranford’s guidance.”

  “Indeed.”

  * * *

  Chapter 10

  The Waplingtons’ house in Henrietta Street was a fine example of classic architecture, gracefully relieved by fluted pilasters and a broken pediment. Trelenny marveled at the various rooms through which they were conducted by an enthusiastic Mrs. Waplington, who seemed unconscious of the overcrowded furniture and the wall space completely taken over by family and historical paintings. There was very little room to move about in the dining room, library, or drawing room, crowded as they were with tables, chairs, desks, stands, and musical instruments of all descriptions. No surface was unrelieved by some bowl or candlestick, figurine or silver box. Where they had apparently run out of portraits or pastoral scenes, mirrors of all sizes and shapes filled in the empty spaces, as though Mrs. Waplington could not bear to see the damask wall coverings beneath. The busy designs of the Axminster carpets gave a kaleidoscopic effect which caused Trelenny to press her lips together as her mother politely proclaimed the elegance of each room in turn. When applied to for her proficiency on one of the musical instru­ments, however, Trelenny’s amusement quickly faded.

  “I fear Mama has not succeeded in teaching me to play the pianoforte passably, ma’am, and I beg you will not call on me to entertain, for I would surely disgrace myself. Years ago we ascertained that I had no talent, as I was even less successful with the harp than the pianoforte.”

  Mrs. Waplington gave vent to a rumbling chuckle. “Now there is a girl after my own heart, Maria. I cannot tell you, my dear, what agonies I used to suffer when my mother would insist on my performing. Have no fear, Trelenny; I would not inflict such a trial on anyone.”

 

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