Part 98 (1/2)
QsrQ Dy the time that a pale dawn was breaking over Dilling ham Court, an exhausted Polly had thought about her situation twenty times over and had been forced to admit that Nicholas had been right. Had she known of Tristan Dit ton's connections with Chap- man, had she been told he was a criminal, she would never have been able to treat him with the cool courtesy she had usually meted out to him. It would have been impossible to behave normally in his presence.
Nevertheless, Henry's behaviour rankled.
She had been chastising herself for lack of trust in him; it was difficult not to feel that he had shown a similar lack of faith in her.
As for Hetty's secret, it seemed to Polly that it would be best to keep silent on that score now that Dit ton was taken. There was no way of knowing if he had spoken the truth and it seemed to Polly that least said was soonest mended. She knew that it would be difficult to avoid the perceptive questions of Lucille and Lady Belling ham and the more forthright ones of the Dowager Countess, but with the wedding only five weeks away she was determined to hold her peace. Dit ton could not const.i.tute a threat any more and it would be pointlessly distressing to rake up the story. Henry was the only one to whom she had confided that she was being blackmailed through Hetty, and Polly thought rather wearily that Henry was unlikely to be able to press her on the matter since she would never be alone with him ever again.
Polly was too tired and too resigned to try to delude herself that matters could ever be the same between her and Henry. For a brief time everything had been perfect, but now it was spoiled beyond redemption.
Polly slept fitfully and woke late, going down to breakfast determined to put a brave face on matters. The fact that everyone else had eaten and the room was empty helped her gather her courage. However, she almost fell at the first hurdle when she emerged from breakfast to find Henry March night being ushered into the drawing-room. The Dowager Countess, on espying her daughter about to bolt up the stairs, seized her arm in a vice-like grip and marched her into the room.
”There you are, Polly! Lord Henry is come to tell us all about Mr Dit ton's activities! I am sure we are all agog!” She peered at her daughter's face rather critically.
”Dear me, you are as wan as a December morning, my love! The shock of it all, I suppose! Medlyn, some tea if you please!”
”Mama!” Polly began, in an agonised whisper, but the Dowager appeared to be suddenly afflicted by deafness. She took a seat on the sofa and compelled Polly to sit down beside her. The whole of the family was a.s.sembled, Peter and Hetty on the window-seat, Lucille, Nicholas and Henry in scattered armchairs set in a circle.
There was a pause whilst the tea was brought in by two footmen and placed before the Dowager Countess. Polly felt almost stifled with nerves. Even more galling, she had known before her mother spoke that she looked dreadful; it seemed that every time Henry saw her now she was looking wan and pasty, a far cry from his own careless elegance.
”Tristan Dit ton as Chapman's protector!” the Dowager Countess exclaimed, breaking the silence and pa.s.sing Henry strong tea in a china cup. She bestowed a warm smile upon him.
”It is scarcely to be believed! Why, I always found him a loathsome man, but never suspected... Nicholas!” She appealed to her elder son.
”Did you ever imagine Tristan Dit ton a criminal? Before you knew him to be so, of course!”
”No, Mama,” Nicholas Sea grave said obligingly, ”I am ashamed to admit that I had no notion! I always found him deeply offensive but had no idea that he had the ability to run a criminal operation!”
”Extraordinary!” the Dowager opined.
”Dit ton was certainly intelligent enough to appear stupid,” Henry said drily, 'but with too little self- control to resist boasting about his achievements! My suspicions were first aroused by the gloating excitement with which he spoke of Chapman in London, and kept insisting that the man had a rich protector. I soon saw that he thought himself invulnerable. But his vanity was his downfall. ” He shook his head.
”His contacts in Suffolk made this the perfect escape route for Chapman. Dit ton had been dabbling in smuggling for a number of years when he needed the money-- he even used his carriage to transport smuggled goods under the noses of the militia! And, of course he cultivated that foolish, foppish att.i.tude which led one to believe that he was nothing but a dandy.”
”No doubt you recognised that deception since you practised it yourself!”
Polly put in a little pointedly. She gave Henry a very straight look as his thoughtful gaze transferred itself to her. It was very difficult for her to swallow her resentment and hear him out courteously. She found that she felt very angry.
Everyone seemed to be looking at her and to distract attention she fiddled with her teacup and only succeeded in spilling the liquid and drawing even more attention to herself. The Dowager Countess pursed her lips and filled another cup for her daughter.
”How did you know that Dit ton intended to try to smuggle Chapman out of the country. Henry?” Lucille asked curiously when the commotion had subsided.
Henry s.h.i.+fted a little in his chair.
”I received the intelligence that Chapman was to be helped to escape abroad and then matters made perfect sense,” he said. ”Dit ton was spending a lot of time down here and Suffolk has the ideal coastline for smuggling. Goods, men...” he shrugged 'there are so many deserted beaches, mud flats, creeks.
It should have been easy for him, but I was watching him all the time and in the end, of course, he gave himself away by quarrelling with his allies and allowing the Dragoons to capture them all! ” ”That night at the House of Tides...” Polly began, drawn in despite herself.
”Yes--' Henry smiled a little '--Dit ton was certainly on the prowl that night! It was one of the nights when the tide was right to bring a boat in, but in the end the weather was against it. It was Dit ton's bad luck to be marooned at the House of Tides that night, and my good luck that he was so close by! Like me, he knew that there was a pa.s.sageway from the cellars to the sea and he decided to explore.”
Henry gave Polly an expressive look.
”The spiral staircase in your room there led directly down to the cellars. I imagine Dit ton had heard mention of that too.