‘It is simple enough. Eliza and Harry are now married, and as they have embarked on their wedding tour, your father feels it is safe for you to return to the house.’
‘But this is impossible,’ I said, wondering what game my father was playing.
‘I cannot see why you are so surprised,’ she remarked, looking at me as though I were a half-wit. ‘You knew they were to marry.’
‘But Eliza would not marry my brother. She does not love him. She does not like him. She has given me her word that she will not consent to the match.’
‘A word like that means nothing. No young woman can give her word to a young man without her guardian’s approval. Come, come, now, you must have known how it would be; that, with time, her own conscience and common sense would show her that she was in the wrong. It would have been nonsensical for her to refuse a good marriage on nothing more than a whim.’
‘A whim, you call it? Love is a vast deal more than a whim,’ I said, still not knowing whether to believe it or not.
‘Whatever the case, she is now married; and you, I might remind you, are as good as engaged to Miss Heath.’
I gave an exclamation of disgust.
‘I mean nothing to Miss Heath and she means nothing to me.’
My aunt raised her thin eyebrows and looked at me again through her lorgnette.
‘You cannot mean to say you have been making love to her all this time without any serious intentions? Such conduct is unbecoming for a gentleman.’
‘She knows my intentions, and I know hers,’ I remarked.
‘And you know hers?’ demanded my aunt sharply. ‘Pray, what do you mean by that?’
I regretted my hasty words, for I was not willing to give her away.
‘Nothing,’ I said.
But my aunt was not so easily satisfied.
‘I will not be trifled with. You have declared that you know Miss Heath’s intentions, and you will be so good as to tell me what you mean.’
‘I mean nothing, Aunt.’
‘You have been a considerable disappointment to your family all your life, James. I suggest you make amends for it by being frank with me now.’
‘I have nothing further to say to you. Since my father has given me leave to return home, that is what I intend to do. I will leave at once.’
‘You will leave when I say you may go.’
‘No, Aunt, I will leave now,’ I said.
And without waiting for further argument, I left the room.
I packed my things myself, not wishing to involve any of my aunt’s servants in case they incurred my aunt’s wrath, and ran down the stairs.
‘Where are you going in such a hurry?’ asked my sister, coming out of the drawing room.
‘Home.’
‘But you have been forbidden — ’
‘My father has changed his mind.’
‘But what am I to say to Miss Heath?’
‘Pray tell her that I wish her happy,’ I said.
She attempted to argue further, but I ran on through the hall and out the front door, arriving in the stables where I had a horse saddled and, accompanied by a groom, rode to the stage. There I dismounted, and telling the groom to lead my mount back to the stables, I waited for the coach.
How different were my feelings from the last time I had taken a stagecoach. Then, I had been full of happiness, for I had been going to see Eliza. Now, I was full of apprehension, for I did not know what I would find at home.
Tuesday 28 July
I travelled overnight and arrived at Delaford before dawn, when the birds were just beginning to wake and the air was full of promise. But what did it promise for me? Good or ill?
Good, surely. Eliza could not have married Harry. She would never have agreed to it, and my father could not have forced her to the altar if she had refused. He did not have so much influence in the neighbourhood that he could compel Mr Liddle to perform the ceremony when the bride was unwilling, and Eliza did not lack the courage to tell him that she was being coerced.
Then, too, there were the neighbours. My father did not court their company, but he had too much family pride to turn them against him by committing such a monstrous act.
But why, then, did my aunt say that Eliza had married? To persuade me that the case was hopeless, and so encourage me to offer for Miss Heath? Perhaps. But why, then, was I allowed to go home, where I would discover the truth for myself?
Unless my father had sent her to London and had lured me home so that, when I found her missing, I would believe the evidence of my own eyes, as I would not necessarily believe his assertions, and believe that all was lost.
It seemed only too likely.
With a lighter heart I shouldered my bag and completed the last part of my journey on foot.
The early morning mist was covering the lake, like a quilt covering a sleeper who had not yet awoken. There was a hush in the air, a sense of expectancy, and I lingered there, unwilling to go on, for I knew that the morning would either bring me the fulfilment of my dreams or else dash my hopes for ever.
The birds began to sing more lustily and the mist began to rise from the lake. Morning was coming in earnest and I could delay no longer.
I went in to the house through a side door and I went upstairs, calling for Eliza, softly at first and then more rousingly, until I had reached the door of her room. Throwing decorum aside, I went in and found it empty. Her hair brush was not on the dressing table. There was an air of abandonment everywhere.
This only tells me that she has left the house, I reminded myself.
I went downstairs, and then, deciding there was only one way to know for sure, I began to walk, then run, to the village and to the church. The venerable building, with its Norman spire, was serene in the early morning light. The low sun was casting long shadows from the tombstones in the graveyard, and from the body of the church itself.
I approached from the east, with the sun on my back, and went in. I felt the cold as soon as I stepped through the door, and I shivered.
I looked around me for the register and saw it on the lectern. I went over to it and opened it with trembling hands. And there was recorded the marriage of Eliza Williams and Henry Brandon, concluded three days before.
I reeled. It could not be.
But it was.
I went outside and sank down amongst the gravestones, feeling I belonged there, amongst the dead.
How had it happened? How had she been induced to marry?
I let out a wail, and my cry was heard.
Mrs Upland, an elderly widow, came to my side and looked at me pityingly. She put a hand on my shoulder.
‘You are the Brandon boy? ’ she asked me.
I turned my face to hers.
‘Ah,’ she said, recognizing me, for she had often seen me out walking or riding with Eliza.
I sat up, ashamed of my tears.
‘You are mourning Miss Williams?’
‘You know what happened?’ I asked, wiping my eyes on my sleeve. Then I remembered that she had a granddaughter who had just started as a maid at the house. ‘How did they persuade her to marry my brother? There must have been some trickery involved.’
‘There was no trickery, but there was great unkindness,’ she said.
I began to grow angry. What had my father done to her?
I listened as she told me that Eliza had been confined to her room. She had not been allowed any society, and her virtual imprisonment had been the talk of the neighbourhood.
I was angry with myself. Why had I not returned sooner? Why had I not guessed what they would do? With no one to turn to, she had been ground down, until at last, in a moment of weakness, she had given her consent to the union, and had then been married by special licence before she could take it back.
I thanked Mrs Upland for her kind words and left her to lay her flowers on her husband’s grave, for though he had died ten years earlier, she still placed fresh flowers there every day.