by Edward Cline
The surgeon lit a pipe and settled back in his chair. “That Kenrick chap has a bit of Jack in him, don’t you think?”
“A bit,” agreed Ramshaw.
* * *
Hugh had wanted very much to ask Ramshaw about his copy of Hyperborea, but no opportunity had presented itself. So he had to satisfy himself with the thought that it was somehow right for Ramshaw to have it. He liked the man, and would have even had he not noticed the novel in the bookcase. He wondered for a moment about the mysterious exchange about “lobster pots” and his father, but this was a fleeting thought and he forgot it as he climbed down the rope ladder to the waiting lighterman.
After Hugh was seated in the wherry, the lighterman maneuvered alongside and out of the way of a succession of ferries and barges wending their way through the still hulks of the merchantmen. The wherry tread water beneath the bowsprit and figurehead of the Sparrowhawk. Both Hugh and the lighterman looked up. A platform had been rigged under the figurehead, and was lit by several lanterns; two crewmen were renewing the blue, red, and yellow colors of the wooden bird, a stylized and very regal sparrowhawk. Its menacing yellow beak was less foreboding than the baleful, intent eyes. The head stared west, pointing to the future.
Hugh reported to Mr. Worley, then took a hackney back to Whitehall to pick up the essay he had copied for the Society of the Pippin, and rode the same hackney to Ranelagh Gardens. He paid the admission and hunted through the vast pleasure palace for Glorious Swain. Half an hour later he spotted him in a group of other liveried waiters, carrying a tray of steaming hot dishes. Swain broke off from the group. “No time to talk, my friend!” he said. “We’ve been assigned to some important guests. Is that your essay?” he asked, nodding to what Hugh held in his hands.
“Yes.” Hugh tucked the rolled sheaf beneath one of Swain’s arms.
“It’s the Duke of Cumberland and his party we’re serving. If you want to see him, there are vacant tables opposite his box.”
Hugh shook his head. “We met, many years ago.” He paused. “I’ll be going home for the holidays in two weeks, Mr. Swain. I hope to hear from you before then.”
“You will, sir.” Swain bowed slightly, and turned to catch up with the other waiters.
Hugh purchased a glass of claret from another waiter and wandered around the Rotunda, not wanting to leave so soon for the chilly hackney ride back to Windridge Court. He stood at the main entrance and observed the crowds. The orchestra was playing a lively Rameau rondeau, and some guests were actually dancing to it in front of the stand. The great cylindrical fireplace in the center blazed away, warming the whole vast space. A pleasant memory came to him when he noticed the table near it at which he and his family had suppered many years ago, and he had clutched the top in his pocket following his battle for it with John Hamlyn.
The Duke of Cumberland and his party occupied some boxes across from it. He could see the man, who seemed to have grown more portly. And he remembered the Duke’s visit to Danvers, and the dull eyes, and the whipping, and that whole day.
But instead of a bitter memory, a realization dawned on him, like a theater curtain drawn open to reveal a magnificent opera setting. How far I have traveled! he thought to himself. The man caused me pain, and dissension in my family—but I was right! Right to fight for my top…right not to apologize…right to do everything that I have done… And that day in Danvers, and so many like it before and since, were recast in his mind to become the consecutive scenes of a great tapestry, and it seemed that he was an observer in some quiet chapel, strolling leisurely along its length, recounting the epic of his own life. I shall do splendid things, great things, he thought, and the fireworks of celebration beyond the chapel exploded and flashed through its windows and lit up each episode. Splendid and great—but to whom? he asked himself. To me, in my capacity as a man. I have been true to that day in the park… And Hugh, unconscious of the act, because his mind and body were electrified by this personal vision, smiled with contented pride and joy.
He saw the Duke lift a fork and wag it in the air to say something, then rise from his table and laugh merrily, and glance around with jerky nods to his companions, who in turn laughed as if on cue. The Duke sat down again, and plunged his fork into a golden partridge on the plate before him.
And who is the happiest man in this place—in this city? Hugh thought to himself. I am. For I have a self—or is it a soul?—and it is of my own making.
Two men, one slim, almost effeminate, and fashionably dressed, the other stocky, plainly dressed, and with a twitch in his hands and a tic in one eye, came from behind Hugh and stood beside him, waiting to be seated inside the Rotunda. “I don’t see why we should be subsidizing German princes and kissing Elizabeth’s ample Russian prat,” whined the slim gentleman in a high voice, “when we could be spending the money on shoring up the colonies, or relieving the poor, or improving our awful turnpikes!”
“Well, if you approve of thievery, sir,” said the older, plainly dressed man in a deeper, boisterous voice, “there’s little point to moralizing about what the rogues purchase with their plunder! Your outrage is misapplied!”
Galvanized by some law of fastidiousness that impatiently rejected the intrusion, Hugh abruptly turned to the older gentleman. “True enough, sir!” he said to the startled man, and handed him his claret glass, then turned and left. The exchange between the two men did nothing to diminish the glow he felt inside himself. He simply did not want anyone or anything else near it.
Chapter 18: The Member for Onyxcombe
THIS VISION IS SELFISH, EXCLUSIVE, AN ISLAND UNTO ITSELF. ONCE REALIZED, it cannot be regulated, debased, or mitigated to accommodate the churlish, the banal, or the commonplace. It occurs on but one scale—the magnificent—and is proof against all schemes to amend it or render it palatable to the mundane. No median is possible to it; it exists in its natural state, encompassing one’s whole being, or it does not exist. The light that illumines it, and reveals to a man the cathedral of his soul, can be of many strengths—from a candle to a sun—but it burns on one fuel only: his integrity. The vision contains an element of eternity that has nothing to do with time, but everything to do with the width and breadth of his life. It is measurable, but indivisible.
Betrayed, it will avenge itself. The action would contradict both it and a man’s ineradicable knowledge of it, leaving him, should he survive the cataclysm, a mechanical, insensate manqué, drained of all future capacity for sublime and earthly joy. Betrayed, it will become his worst nemesis, and he the impotent enemy of the implacable justice of its memory.
Animate, it can make him maddeningly intolerant and insufferably imperial, together contemptuous of lesser souls and indifferent to them. It could cause him to say to others, should he be provoked to speak to them in his thoughts: You think in terms of nooks and crannies, of niches and pigeonholes, of ruffles and fringes; I think in terms of vistas and frescoes, of oceans and continents, peopled by gods, heroes, and myself.
This vision is unassailable by others, whether they be foul-mouthed fishwives, glib-tongued wits, or icy earls; impregnable to blasts of malice, disdainful of attempts by humor to demean it, deaf to the silent salvos of others in whom the light does not burn or has been extinguished, one of ostensible boredom or regal ennui. They see in his features either a stressed courtesy, or a reproachful innocence of their own corruption or vices, and a knowledge of them.
Such a man is newly struck by the meanness of most men he encounters, and tired of it at the same time. Such a man is usually startled by evidence that others do not know him, or are wary of him, or are meekly tentative in their dealings with him. He is quietly astonished that they do not cherish things as passionately as he cherishes things—or even themselves—or are ignorant of the fundamental laws of life he takes as given or self-evident. Such a man cannot be merely dismissed with a pat on the back. He can only be loved or hated: the love requiring a courage to know him by accepting the flashes of the vision t
hat arc from him to other men and their affairs; the hatred requiring a rejection of that vision and a fear of him, a fear difficult to disguise. Such a man has for society few or no friends, an array of dedicated enemies, amidst an army of insensible strangers.
This vision is the most private possession a man can claim, not to be flaunted, or traded on, or spoken of lightly—and woe to the careless casuist who ascribes to this reticence the absurd orthodox virtue of modesty or humility! For then, in some hard, memorable way, he will learn never to accuse a hero of cowardice. This vision is the foundation of a man’s pride. It allows him to live and think and act in a universe wider and greater than the dim, minikin one of the solely scrupulous man; in one denied by, and so denied to, the man who permits the vision to sputter out; and in a universe invisible to the man in whom the vision had never dawned.
Hugh Kenrick could not now imagine living apart from it; indeed, could not imagine a life worth living if it were a mere disembodied abstraction. That unexpected, though inevitable moment in Ranelagh Gardens had revealed to him that, rather than being a pawn of fate, or a vessel of destiny, or a product of chance, his soul—or was it his self? He would never distinguish between the two—was the sum of all his own evaluations, decisions, and actions, and that the sum was ineluctably and inexorably noble.
Hugh Kenrick was learned enough to understand that the vision had another name—honor—and wise enough to know that it was both a cause and a consequence.
He also knew that the preservation of his honor was a sacred responsibility. It was one he gladly assumed, for among many less important reasons, it helped to make living among other men bearable.
* * *
When Hugh returned to Windridge Court after school the next day, he found an inn coach sitting in the courtyard and footmen and servants unloading trunks and other baggage. His uncle had arrived. He had resigned himself to his uncle’s stay, but dreaded it all the same.
The first person he met inside the house was Alden Curle, his uncle’s butler and major domo of the Earl’s half of the mansion in Danvers. Hugh had always disliked Curle, who was obsequious and servile to a fault, so much so that some species of arrogance and presumptuousness would bubble to the surface of his manners. Curle, tall, thin, impeccable in his livery, stopped in his hurry down a hallway when he saw Hugh. In both hands he gingerly held the Earl’s crimson velvet mantle with its miniver of ermine. He bowed. “Good afternoon, milord,” he said. “It is a pleasure to see you again.”
Hugh sighed. “Good afternoon, Curle.”
“We arrived not thirty minutes ago,” Curle rushed to say. “His lordship is preparing to nap after the journey, but asked me to instruct you, when you came in, to sup with him at nine of the clock.”
“Yes, of course. Where is Hulton? He was to escort me from the school.”
“I sent him out for some fresh fish and vegetables.”
Hugh studied the waiting butler. “I hope you thought to compliment him on the state of the house and the grounds,” he said.
Curle shrugged. “I haven’t seen enough of the house yet to compliment him, milord, but be assured that I will do so when I have taken stock.”
“How is my uncle, and how was the journey?”
“His lordship is fine, but tired, milord,” replied Curle gaily. “The journey was without incident, except at Portsmouth, where a press gang almost made off with poor Claybourne whilst he was on an errand! But his lordship intervened with the captain of the vessel Claybourne was taken to, and secured his release, and with a choice of words I did not know he could make, and which was as impressive as the captain’s! His lordship is especially attached to Claybourne, as you know. And, on the Dover Road from Canterbury, our coach was ambushed by highwaymen, but we were being followed by a troop of dragoons scouring the area of smugglers, and the ambush was foiled. We were treated to a fine chase over a neighboring field, and the dragoons shot two of the rogues on the gallop! His lordship, out of gratitude, presented their captain with five guineas! How generous of him!”
“Yes, he is capable of that, on occasion,” remarked Hugh. “How long does my uncle expect to stay?”
Curle’s face went blank and he shrugged lightly again. “As long as he may, milord,” he answered. “Why do you ask?”
Hugh frowned. “I ask such questions, Curle.”
The butler’s face shot red at the rebuke in a mixture of embarrassment and anger. “I beg your pardon, milord,” he said, moving back a step and bowing.
“What are you doing with that?” asked Hugh, nodding to the robe draped over the man’s hands.
“It needs brushing, and some repair to the lining, milord,” said Curle. “It is some time since his lordship has donned it.” He added, in a hushed tone, “His lordship will sit with his peers tomorrow, or the day after, milord.”
“All right,” said Hugh. “Get on with it.” He turned and mounted the great staircase to his room, two steps at a time.
The butler watched him ascend. Wrestling for control of his expression were surprise at his master’s words, regret for his own, and the sting of the curt dismissal.
Curle duly reported the essence of this exchange four hours later to Basil Kenrick, when the Earl had arisen from his nap, and as Claybourne and another valet flitted about the room dressing him. Curle did not actually report it, but slipped it into his chatter about the state of the house and grounds, without, however, allowing it to sound like a complaint.
But the Earl knew it was one, and his glance, with languid contempt, shifted to Curle, whom he could see standing behind him through the full-length mirror. Claybourne had been about to fit an immaculate white wig atop the sparse gray-brown hair on the Earl’s head, but stopped when the Earl held up a hand. “Is that what he said, Curle?” he asked. “‘I ask the questions’? Those were his exact words?”
“‘I ask such questions,’ your lordship,” said Curle, apology for the correction in his reply.
With some disappointment to Curle, Basil Kenrick’s eyes lit up in amusement and his mouth bent in what the butler knew was a smile. The Earl said nothing for a moment. He was pleasantly surprised. That was the proper response to a servant’s effrontery. Perhaps there was hope for his nephew after all. He wondered what accounted for the change. “What else did he say, Curle?”
“He enquired about your robe, your lordship,” said Curle with reluctance. “I happened to have it in hand, and was taking it to the tailor to be brushed and repaired. Then he bade me to continue on my errand, and went up to his room.”
“What did he say exactly?” demanded the Earl. He sensed that his nephew’s words had grated against the butler’s pride and would be humiliating for him to repeat, especially in front of other servants. And he knew that Curle would be truthful, because the man would be afraid that his employer could easily ask the nephew for the truth.
Curle knew the purpose, but managed to swallow a gulp, and said, “‘All right, get on with it,’ your lordship.” Too late, he threw a warning look at Claybourne and the other valet; they had already traded muted grins over his discomfiture.
The Earl gestured for Claybourne to continue. As the valet adjusted the wig on his master’s head, the Earl asked, “And the robe? It will be ready by tomorrow?”
“This evening, your lordship. I shall fetch it myself.”
“How are the house and grounds?”
“In a proper state, your lordship. The grounds have been swept clean, the coach has been dusted, and the coachman and footmen are this very moment making their livery presentable. The stablemaster reports that one of the team is sickly and has bare spots, and it happens to be the postilion’s mount. He does not think it is fit enough for duty, and requests that you view it yourself to decide whether or not to replace it.”
“I’ll see it before supper,” said the Earl. “And the house?”
“Again, your lordship, in a proper state. I could find nothing amiss—or missing.”
“Hulton is ma
jor domo here in your absence, is he not?”
“Yes, your lordship, ever since your brother the Baron raised him up.”
“A conscientious, honest chap, Hulton,” remarked the Earl. “My brother acquired him ages ago. Against my advice, as you know, but I suppose he was a good choice. My brother occasionally exhibits good judgment.” He snapped his fingers. “A guinea, Claybourne.”
The valet hurried to the dressing table and took a gold coin from a satin purse that bore the Kenrick coat-of-arms in silver thread. He came back and handed it to his master.
The Earl smiled and held it up. “Give this to Hulton, Curle, and also my thanks. My brother would approve.”
Curle stepped forward and took the coin. But the Earl’s eyes held his in the mirror, and he realized that the guinea was not to be given to Hulton, but was his own reward for his obedience.
And the Earl, aware that Curle detested Hulton, knew that Hulton would never see the guinea, that all the other butler would receive was Curle’s condescending thanks, and that neither he nor Curle nor the valets would break the code of silence and ever mention the guinea again.
The Earl disliked Hulton because his brother had employed the man; the valets disliked him because the Earl did, that is, because they valued their positions more than they did justice; and Curle because Hulton was a reproach and a threat. It was a cabal of malice the four men established, into which they would draw others, and enjoyed by each according to his rank and sense of power. Each party to the cabal was a rock-solid Christian.
As Curle slipped the guinea into his pocket, there was a knock on the Earl’s chamber door, and another servant entered. “Your lordship,” said the man, “there are gentlemen downstairs come to see you, among them Mr. Hillier, who comes direct from the Commons in answer to your summons to see him most urgently, he says.”