He looked at me intently. “I came to see how matters stood,” he said.
“I do not understand you, sir.”
“After such pleasure as we shared there could be results. I was anxious for your health.”
“How could you know …” I cried.
His eyebrows were raised; his eyes lighted suddenly with pleasure.
“’Tis so,” he cried. “’Tis so indeed.”
He tried to take me by the shoulders but I stepped back sharply. “By God,” he cried. “I knew it. You were meant to bear sons, I’ll swear. I sensed it that night at the inn. You and I together …” Then he threw back his head and laughed loudly. It was the laughter of triumph.
I stood back still farther. I wished that I had called my mother to come with me.
“You are sure?” he asked.
“I have told my mother.”
His eyebrows were raised again. They were thick, bushy and very arched.
“What says she?”
“You must be gone,” I said. “I never want to see you again.”
“Not see the father of your child?”
“It must be forgotten. I am going away. We have planned it.”
“Going away? Where will you go?”
“I am not prepared to tell you.”
“Going away … carrying my child!”
I cried out in despair. “Leave me alone, I beg of you. Have you not harmed me enough? Never let me see you again.”
“I came here,” he said, “to offer you marriage.”
“That is noble of you,” I said with sarcasm.
“I am a man to honour my obligations.”
“This one may pass. You could best make amends by going away and never coming into my life again.”
“And the child?”
“Will be taken care of. It shall never know that it was forced on an innocent girl who was drugged to satisfy a cruel man’s lust. If you will make amends, go away.”
“I am going to look after you and the child. We will marry without delay. Our son will be born a little prematurely for respectability mayhap but that is not a matter to cause us over much concern.”
“How could I marry you?”
“Simply. I could get a priest today. The sooner the better for the sake of our child.”
There was a scratching at the door and Jennet came in with wine and little cakes. She was dimpling as though it gave her great pleasure to serve such a fine gentleman. I noticed too that old as she was he was not unaware of her. It was that overwhelming sensuality in her, I supposed, which matched that in him.
I said: “Pray tell my mother that Squire Colum Casvellyn is here, Jennet, and beg her to come with all speed.”
He looked at me slyly as though he knew it was a cry for help.
When Jennet had gone he said reproachfully: “We did not need your mother to decide for us.”
“I do not wish to remain here alone with you.”
“We were alone, remember, all through that memorable night.”
“How dare you speak in that way. As though … I were a party to it.”
“But you were a party to it. You made no attempt to run away.”
“How could I?”
“’Twould not have been easy, I’ll grant you. But you were not in truth averse. I awakened something in you. Something you will never forget. That is why you will be wise to accept my offer, give our child a name and give me many more children. I need a wife. I want sons. I know you will be the one to provide them.”
My mother came in.
She stood on the threshold and her eyes flashed in rage.
“How dare you come here!” she demanded.
He bowed ironically. “Madam,” he said, “I came to ask for your daughter’s health and to offer her my heart and hand along with the marriage bond.”
“Marriage!” she cried.
“’Tis only seemly, since as you know we have already bedded and with results.”
“If my husband were here …” said my mother.
“Is he not? I wished to meet him.”
“It would be an ill day for you if you did.”
“Madam, are you being just? I have come to you to right a wrong. I have come to make honourable amends. I offer your daughter marriage.”
My mother was speechless. She glanced at me but I could not meet her eyes. I kept thinking of marrying him, spending my days and nights with him, and I felt a sudden wild curiosity which was almost desire.
He assumed an air of humility which was quite alien to him and gave him an unexpected charm.
“I am a sinner, Madam,” he said. “I will tell you the truth. I saw your daughter in the inn and as a young hot-blooded man must do, desired her. I behaved badly …” he shrugged his shoulders. “A sort of revenge, if you will, because I knew she was out of my reach. The next day I had the good fortune to rescue her from robbers. I tremble to think what her fate would have been had she been left to them. I rescued her; I searched for you; I could not find you; then I took her to my castle. It was there that the temptation overcame me. I deserve your contempt and hatred. But, Madam, you do not know what it means to be so deep in desire. There is no conscience, there is no thought for anything beyond the satisfying of that desire. Perhaps your husband could understand. I have heard tales of him and I think he would. My better nature was subdued. I behaved as I did because I could not stop myself doing otherwise.”
My mother said: “You behaved as no gentleman would.”
“’Tis true, alas. And having done so, your daughter has not been out of my mind since that day I brought her home to you. I determined to ask for her hand in marriage, to make amends. I knew that there was only one circumstance in which she would have me. What I hoped is now a fact and I have the temerity to offer myself. She shall be cherished all the days of her life; she shall be my honoured wife, the mother of my children; and there shall be no slur on this little one whom she now carries.”
My mother was silent. I could see the speculation in her eyes. It was a solution. He was the father of the child; he wished to marry me; I should not be so far from her if I married him. It would have been the best answer but for the fact that I must take this man for my husband.
She turned to me. “I think my daughter will refuse your offer.”
“Yes,” I said. “I refuse. I never want to see this man again.”
“You will see him in your child,” he reminded me. “And will you deny him his name?”
“We will make arrangements,” said my mother. “We are not without the power to do so.”
“I shall want my child,” he said.
“Since it was begotten in such a manner you have no right to it,” said my mother.
“A father no right to his child! Come, Madam, you are unjust.”
“What a pity you did not think of justice when you had my daughter at your mercy.”
“Your daughter was, alas, so desirable that my conscience was stilled; and you are to blame for that, Madam, for you have brought her up with a spirit and beauty to match your own.”
“Enough of this,” said my mother. “You have caused us great trouble. You can serve us best by going away from here and never crossing our paths again.”
“I have planned it well,” he said. “I will ride over with a priest and he shall marry us quietly. Then I shall let it be known that your daughter and I were so enamoured of each other, so eager for the sweets of union that we could not wait for the grand wedding you would certainly want to give us, so we married quietly in November, kept our marriage secret, and now that you know, you insist on a grand wedding if that is what you wish, Madam.”
I could see that she was thinking of my father. If he were told this story, he would accept it; and although he had hoped with my mother that I would marry Fennimore, I did not think he would be so delighted with him as a son-in-law as my mother would have been.