Part 16 (2/2)
”I imagine the newspapers are still writing about it?” she went on, more to fill the silence than because it mattered.
He sat down on the arm of the chair near her. ”Every day,'' he said ruefully. ”The better ones are castigating the police, which is unfair; they are no doubt doing all they can. They can hardly subject us to a Spanish Inquisition and torture us until someone confesses-” He laughed jerkily, betraying all his raw pain. ”And the press would be the first to complain if they did. In fact it seems they are caught either way in a situation like this. If they are harsh with us they will be accused of forgetting their place and victimizing the gentry, and if they are lenient they will be charged with indifference and incompetence.” He drew in his breath and let it out in a sigh. ”I should imagine the poor devil curses the day he was clever enough to prove it had to be someone in the house. But he doesn't look like a man who takes the easy path-”
”No, indeed,” Hester agreed with more memory and heart than Cyprian could know.
”And the sensational ones are speculating on every sordid possibility they can think up,” he went on with distaste puckering his mouth and bringing a look of hurt to his eyes.
Suddenly Hester caught a glimpse of how deeply the whole intrusion was affecting him, the ugliness of it all pervading his life like a foul smell. He was keeping the pain within, as he had been taught since the nursery. Little boys are expected to be brave, never to complain, and above all never, never to cry. That was effeminate and a sign of weakness to be despised.
”I'm so sorry,” she said gently. She reached out her hand and put it over his, closing her fingers, before she remembered she was not a nurse comforting a wounded man in hospital, she was a servant and a woman, putting her hand over her employer's in the privacy of his own library.
But if she withdrew it and apologized now she would only draw attention to the act and make it necessary for him to respond. They would both be embarra.s.sed, and it would rob the moment of its understanding and create of it a lie.
Instead she sat back slowly with a very slight smile.
She was prevented from having to think what to say next by the library door opening and Romola coming in. She glanced at them together and instantly her face darkened.
”Should you not be with Lady Moidore?'' she said sharply.
Her tone stung Hester, who kept her temper with an effort. Had she been free to, she would have replied with equal acerbity.
”No, Mrs. Moidore, her ladys.h.i.+p said I might have the evening to do as I chose. She decided to retire early.”
”Then she must be unwell,” Romola returned immediately. ”You should be where she can call you if she needs you. Perhaps you could read in your bedroom, or write letters. Don't you have friends or family who will be expecting to hear from you?”
Cyprian stood up. ”I'm sure Miss Latterly is quite capable of organizing her own correspondence, Romola. And she cannot read without first coming to the library to choose a book.''
Romola's eyebrows rose sarcastically. ”Is that what you were doing, Miss Latterly? Forgive me, that was not what appearances suggested.”
”I was answering Mr. Moidore's questions concerning his mother's health,” Hester said very levelly.
”Indeed? Well if he is now satisfied you may return to your room and do whatever it is you wish.”
Cyprian drew breath to reply, but his father came in, glanced at their faces, and looked inquiringly at his son.
”Miss Latterly believes that Mama is not seriously ill,” Cyprian said with embarra.s.sment, obviously fis.h.i.+ng for a palatable excuse.
”Did anyone imagine she was?” Basil asked dryly, coming into the middle of the room.
”I did not,” Romola said quickly. ”She is suffering, of course-but so are we all. I know I haven't slept properly since it happened.”
”Perhaps Miss Latterly would give you something that would help?” Cyprian suggested with a glance at Hester-and the shadow of a smile.
”Thank you, I shall manage by myself,” Romola snapped. ”And I intend to go and visit Lady Killin tomorrow afternoon.”
”It is too soon,” Basil said before Cyprian could speak. ”I think you should remain at home for another month at least. By all means receive her if she calls here.''
”She won't call,” Romola said angrily. ”She will certainly feel uncomfortable and uncertain what to say-and one can hardly blame her for that.”
”That is not material.” Basil had already dismissed the matter.
”Then I shall call on her,” Romola repeated, watching her father-in-law, not her husband.
Cyprian turned to speak to her, remonstrate with her, but again Basil overrode him.
”You are tired,” he said coldly. ”You had better retire to your room-and spend a quiet day tomorrow.” There was no mistaking that it was an order. Romola stood as if undecided for a moment, but there was never any doubt in the issue. She would do as she was told, both tonight and tomorrow. Cyprian and his opinions were irrelevant.
Hester was acutely embarra.s.sed, not for Romola, who had behaved childishly and deserved to be reproved, but for Cyprian, who had been disregarded totally. She turned to Basil.
”If you will excuse me, sir, I will retire also. Mrs. Moidore made the suggestion that I should be in my room, in case Lady Moidore should need me.” And with a brief nod at Cyprian, hardly meeting his eyes so she did not see his humiliation, and clutching her book, Hester went out across the hall and up the stairs.
Sunday was quite unlike any other day in the Moidore house, as indeed was the case the length and breadth of England. The ordinary duties of cleaning grates and lighting and stoking fires had to be done, and of course breakfast was served. Prayers were briefer than usual because all those who could would be going to church at least once in the day.
Beatrice chose not to be well enough, and no one argued with her, but she insisted that Hester should ride with the family and attend services. It was preferable to her going in the evening with the upper servants, when Beatrice might well need her.
Luncheon was a very sober affair with little conversation, according to Dinah's report, and the afternoon was spent in letter writing, or in Basil's case, he put on his smoking jacket and retired to the smoking room to think or perhaps to doze. Books and newspapers were forbidden as unfitting the sabbath, and the children were not allowed to play with their toys or to read, except Scripture, or to indulge in any games. Even musical practice was deemed inappropriate.
Supper was to be cold, to permit Mrs. Boden and the other upper servants to attend church. Afterwards the evening would be occupied by Bible reading, presided over by Sir Basil. It was a day in which no one seemed to find pleasure.
It brought childhood flooding back to Hester, although her father at his most pompous had never been so unrelievedly joyless. Since leaving home for the Crimea, although it was not so very long ago, she had forgotten how rigorously such rules were enforced. War did not allow such indulgences, and caring for the sick did not stop even for the darkness of night, let alone a set day of the week.
Hester spent the afternoon in the study writing letters. She would have been permitted to use the ladies' maids' sitting room, had she wished, but Beatrice did not need her, having decided to sleep, and it would be easier to write away from Mary's and Gladys's chatter.
She had written to Charles and Imogen, and to several of her friends from Crimean days, when Cyprian came in. He did not seem surprised to see her, and apologized only perfunctorily for the intrusion.
”You have a large family, Miss Latterly?” he said, noticing the pile of letters.
”Oh no, only a brother,” she said. ”The rest are to friends with whom I nursed during the war.''
”You formed such friends.h.i.+ps?” he asked curiously, interest quickening in his face. ”Do you not find it difficult to settle back into life in England after such violent and disturbing experiences?”
She smiled, in mockery at herself rather than at him.
”Yes I do,” she admitted candidly. ”One had so much more responsibility; there was little time for artifice or standing upon ceremony. It was a time of so many things: terror, exhaustion, freedom, friends.h.i.+p that crossed all the normal barriers, honesty such as one cannot normally afford-”
He sat facing her, balancing on the arm of one of the easy chairs.
”I have read a little of the war in the newspapers,'' he said with a pucker between his brows. ”But one never knows how accurate the accounts are. I fear they tell us very much what they wish us to believe. I don't suppose you have read any- no, of course not.”
”Yes I have!” she contradicted immediately, forgetting in the heat of the discourse how improper it was for well-bred women to have access to anything but the social pages of a newspaper.
But he was not shocked, only the more interested.
”Indeed, one of the bravest and most admirable men I nursed was a war correspondent with one of London's best newspapers,” she went on. ”When he was too ill to write himself, he would dictate to me, and I sent his dispatches for him.”
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