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And Hopton Cresswell was six miles away. Six miles of very indifferent road. It took Dido almost an hour to complete the journey a which was just as Catherine had foretold.
'And what am I to do while you go there?' she cried when Dido told her that she wished to drive on to Hopton Cresswell a alone.
'You can make your calls in Belston.'
'But, Aunt, I am not intimate with anyone in the village,' cried Catherine, with outraged propriety. 'It would be most ill-mannered for me to pay any visit of longer than a quarter of an hour a or twenty minutes at the very most.'
'Then I suppose you must pay a great many calls a and walk very slowly between them,' said Dido heartlessly. 'For I must go to Hopton Cresswell and there is no knowing when I might have the use of the carriage again.'
Fortunately, Catherine saw the importance of discovering more about Richard's visitor and agreed, in the end, to the arrangement with so little complaint that Dido was in hopes of only being reminded of the great kindness four or five times a day for the next week or so.
Of Hopton Cresswell's other claim upon her interest a the suspicion that the dead woman had lived there a she said nothing to her niece. The gatekeeper's words had shocked her a providing, as they did, the first hint of a connection between the murder and Mr Montague's sudden departure and, as she travelled along the narrow lanes beyond Belston, she had ample time to worry over it.
Was it possible that the young man's disappearance and the murder were part of the same mystery? The thought could not be avoided.
It would all have been so much easier, she reflected, if she knew Richard Montague. Then she might know a or at least be able to guess a what he might be guilty of. But she had never set eyes on the young man and the accounts that others gave did very little to delineate his character.
What kind of a young man was he? Was it possible a was it conceivable that he had known the woman in the shrubbery? That he had taken her life? Catherine's testimony, being that of a lover, was not to be relied upon, of course. But yesterday Dido had tried to discover what she could about him, starting first with the one who might be supposed to know him best a his mother.
When the ladies retired from the dining room after dinner, Lady Montague had immediately engrossed herself in an intricate game of Patience, which she spread out on an inlaid table by the fire. The Misses Harris, tireless in their pursuit of accomplishments, had taken themselves respectively to their instrument and drawing board, so Dido had had only to signal to Catherine with a little motion of her head to intercept the garrulous Mrs Harris, before she herself stepped over to her ladys.h.i.+p's side and began her enquiries.
It had been heavy work, standing there, almost overwhelmed by the rose-water scent of the lady and with the heat of the fire beating upon her cheek.
Her ladys.h.i.+p was, of course, properly charmed at the approaching marriage. Delighted with the prospect of having Catherine for a daughter. And as for Richard himself, yes, he was a sweet boy. And she believed he had done very well at the university. Or rather well, at least; for young men did not generally like to apply themselves, did they?
Dido had suggested that, at three and twenty, he was rather young to marry.
Her ladys.h.i.+p pulled the lace of her long, full sleeve down over her wrist and twisted a ring about on her finger. 'Yes,' she owned, 'I was a little surprised when I was told that it was all settled. But Sir Edgar says that an inclination to marry early is no bad thing in a young man.'
'Did you expect that it would be some years before Mr Montague settled?'
'Oh, no...'
For a moment her ladys.h.i.+p looked so very vacant, with a kind of milky staring in her pretty green eyes, that Dido suspected her natural languor might be receiving a little artificial aid. Laudanum perhaps? She had known several ladies to make rather free with the stuff.
She repeated her question.
'Oh no,' said her ladys.h.i.+p vaguely, 'I do not know that I expected anything, but Sir Edgar thinks the boy should marry. Sir Edgar thinks that it might serve to fix him at Belsfield and make him attend to the business of the estate. That it will prevent him from always wandering off to town a or wherever it is that he goes.'
As she spoke her ladys.h.i.+p turned up a card a one which seemed to necessitate a rearrangement of all the others on the table. She bent over the table, rapidly making her calculations and placing each card into its new position with a neat little snap.
It became impossible for Dido to draw her attention away from the increasingly complex patterns of her Patience. Reluctantly she turned away and abandoned herself to the unwelcome confidences of Mrs Harris.
Mrs Harris was a large woman with extravagant greying curls and plump red arms below the fas.h.i.+onable short sleeves of her gown. She very neatly manoeuvred across the drawing room and trapped Dido upon a corner sofa where she talked unceasingly of how the world despised her because she had once been nurse to the first Mrs Harris, until tea and the gentlemen arrived to distract her from her grievances a and to give Dido an opportunity for a change of companion.
She watched with interest as the men disposed themselves about the room. Colonel Walborough going to Miss Harris's side and Mr Tom Lomax, on seeing that, taking up his station at the instrument with Miss Sophia. Sir Edgar, she noticed was a very dutiful husband, going immediately to his wife to enquire how she felt and had she taken her physic? Though the lady was so far from appreciating his exemplary behaviour that she turned her face away and pulled the rings about on her fingers, hardly giving him two words in reply.
Dido continued her enquiries into Richard Montague's character.
Miss Harris clearly felt that the most remarkable thing about her cousin was that he was, 'Handsome. Oh, very handsome indeed. He has beautiful eyes and he moves extremely well.'
This seemed to exhaust the ideas of Miss Harris. But Dido was almost sure that as she spoke she cast a significant look in her sister's direction. Immediately, Miss Sophia left the instrument and came to add the highly original information that 'Dear Richard' was 'sweet.' And that he was 'really the most delightful man.' And 'you can have no idea how very agreeable.'
Miss Sophia was much given to emphasis. If her conversation had been a letter, more than half the words would have been underlined. And when Dido ventured to press her further on the subject of her cousin's character, she showed an alarming propensity for the strangest, most rambling of anecdotes. Dear Richard, had, she cried, been so terribly sweet about the rats. Miss Sophia had been enchanted by the rats.
Dido was at a loss to know what to say to such an extraordinary declaration. But a and this time she was quite sure that she was not imagining it a there was a nod of encouragement from her sister and Miss Sophia continued.
You see, all the gentlemen had gone ratting in the great barn, oh, two or three days before the ball. There had been a great many rats, you see. And they were to be chased somehow with the dogs a though quite how, Miss Sophia did not know because she could not bear the thought of it. So she had been at her instrument all the morning, because there was nothing like music to put anything unpleasant quite out of her head. Well, when the gentlemen came in to dinner they were all extremely vexed with Richard for not playing his part properly. And Tom Lomax swore a great many oaths. For she made no doubt Mr Tom had bet a great deal of money on his own dogs killing more rats than anyone else's. Well, of course she knew nothing about the business of ratting, so she could not say quite what had happened, but it seemed that Richard was to have let the dogs go on a word or a signal or something; but he had not done so. Well, he said it was because he had not heard the signal. But she was quite certain that that was not the case because he was so very very distressed about it.
In short it was quite plain a at least to Miss Sophia's penetrating understanding a that Richard had been overwhelmed by compa.s.sion for the rats. She could tell that he was too soft-hearted, much too kind to let the dogs kill the rats. He had let them escape on purpose.
And that was so like dear, dear Richard. He was so very, very sweet.
All this was run through with breathless enthusiasm while Miss Harris gravely nodded approval.
'He is a dear boy.' This was the remark of Sophia's mother, who had followed Dido and now sat herself down beside her. 'And what is more, he is a true gentleman. Richard has real good manners; the kind of manners which put everyone at their ease. He does not go out of his way to make other people feel inferior.'
Fearing a renewal of Mrs Harris's grievances, Dido took the opportunity of a slight fit of coughing on that lady's part to escape to the table where Margaret was (with considerable pride) doing the honours of the tea and coffee tray, which her ladys.h.i.+p was too indolent to perform herself.
She judged this to be a good opportunity of questioning Margaret on the subject of her future son-in-law's character, since her duties prevented her from answering at any great length.
Between her pouring and her gracious smiling, Margaret gave Dido to understand that Mr Montague was a very pleasant young man. And that 'that silly girl' wasn't likely to find a better one.
Dido took her teacup and stirred thoughtfully. 'You think that he and Catherine are well matched?' she asked. 'You are sure they will be happy together?'
'Oh yes,' came Margaret's reply in a voice fit to sour the cream in the jug she was holding. 'Very well suited indeed. She has the upper hand of him already. He will do just what she tells him and that suits Miss Catherine very well indeed a spoilt madam that she is!'
The subject of whether Catherine was spoilt or not was an old argument between the sisters-in-law and Dido was about to retort with spirit when she became aware that Mr William Lomax had paused beside her in his way to returning his cup.
'I beg your pardon,' he said in his pleasant, gentle voice. 'You are enquiring about Mr Richard Montague?'
Dido replied that she was and, Mr Harris just then appearing in quest of coffee, they were able to step away from Margaret's little domain.
'It is very natural that you should wish to know about Mr Richard Montague and I am sorry that your meeting with him has been postponed,' he said gravely. 'I am sure he is as anxious to meet you as you are to meet him.' Dido smiled at this kindly fiction. 'But my dear Miss Kent, you may put your mind at rest. He is a very pleasant young man and I don't doubt he will make your niece very happy indeed.'
Dido looked into the grey, penetrating eyes. 'I confess I cannot help but worry,' she said.
'Of course not. Standing almost as a mother to Miss Kent as I understand you did for several years. And now she is engaged to a young man who you have never met. It is only natural that you should be concerned. But I don't doubt that when you become acquainted with Mr Richard Montague you will be as happy in the prospect of the union as all their friends are.' He glanced quickly at Margaret, but he was too well bred to mention the ungracious words he had overheard. 'And I am sure too,' he said in a lower voice, 'that the marriage will not divide you from your niece. It will, no doubt, give her great pleasure to have a home of her own to which she can invite you.'
This conversation, though it undoubtedly formed the pleasantest part of Dido's evening, did little to advance her enquiries, for she was left thinking less about Mr Montague than about Mr Lomax a how long he had been a widower; whether he had been too much attached to his first wife to marry again; and what a great pity it was that such a pleasant man should remain single.
From these reveries she was roused by Mr Harris, who came to her and said abruptly, 'You want to know about Mr Montague?'
'Yes,' she said in some surprise.
'Well, I shall tell you. He is not like his friend.' He nodded in the direction of the pianoforte where Sophia Harris had now reseated herself a and where Tom Lomax was ceremoniously arranging music on the stand while he smiled and whispered to her.
Mr Harris's weather-beaten face was tinged crimson with disapproval. 'Miss Kent,' he said, 'Montague is a steady, decent young man. He tells the truth and he has a sense of duty: a sense of what is proper. In short, my dear, if you imagine a gentleman as different from Tom Lomax as he possibly can be, then you will have a pretty good picture of Mr Montague.'
And with that he walked off.
Considering the results of the evening's work now as the carriage rattled into the yard of the Feathers, Dido could not help but feel that she had learnt more about the people to whom she had applied for information than she had about Mr Montague himself.
Hopton Cresswell was a pleasant village. It had a church with a lych-gate and a green with a broad, yellow-leaved chestnut tree and a fine gaggle of geese, who stretched their necks in a loud chorus of disapproval as the carriage rattled past. The Feathers itself was an old-fas.h.i.+oned house with a creaking sign, twisted chimneys and leaded cas.e.m.e.nt windows a and a bustling yard, which suited Dido's purposes very well indeed.
In just crossing the cobbles to the inn door of blackened oak, she fell easily into conversation with an elderly ostler and progressed very naturally from a discussion of his busyness ('Running about so fast, miss, I reckon I'll meet myself coming back soon') to some enquiries about the size and nature of the village ('Pretty big, miss, but all scattered about, if you know what I mean. We don't like to live in each other's pockets in Hopton Cresswell') to a few compliments about the prettiness of the place and enquiries as to whether they saw many strangers at the inn.
'Not so many, miss. We're a bit out of the way for folk driving down to Lyme and the other seaside places.'
'I see. In that case, you may be able to help me.' She took refuge on the inn's doorstep as a boy led past a skittish horse. She smiled her conspiratorial smile at the ostler a a wiry, tough-looking man who was not much taller than she was a and pitched her voice to carry over the clatter of hooves and hobnails which echoed off the walls. 'There is a man who I think may have stayed here,' she said. 'He is an acquaintance of my niece and I ought to remember his name, but it has quite escaped my memory and I do not wish to appear rude when we meet again...'
'What sort of a gent is he?'
'A very tall gentleman, with red hair.'
'Ah, would that be Mr Pollard? A thin gent with very fine white hands? A university man from Oxford?'
'Yes, indeed, that is the man!'
'Ah yes, miss, I know him. But he didn't stay here.'
'Oh? But I understood him to say that he had hired your chaise.'
'Ah, he did, miss. But he didn't take a bed here. He was Mr Blacklock's visitor. Stayed with him two or three days and left on the London coach the day before yesterday.'
'I see. And Mr Blacklock is...?'
But unfortunately the door of the inn was now opened by a maid with a very long face and the kind of nervous bobbing curtsy that made Dido feel seasick. The ostler was obliged to return to his business and Dido had to begin her pleasantries all over again. However, by the time she was seated by a coal fire in a dark, low-beamed parlour and had been supplied with tea and m.u.f.fin, she felt herself to be sufficiently well acquainted with the bobbing maid to venture upon a question or two.
'Mr Blacklock? Oh, he's out at Tudor House. That's three miles up the Great Cresswell road, miss.'
'And what sort of a gentleman is he?'
'Well, now.' The girl considered and Dido suspected that she had been fortunate enough to touch upon a favourite subject of gossip. 'Well, I wouldn't know, miss,' she said with relish, 'because you see, I never have seen him.' She nodded meaningfully. 'He never comes into the village.'
'Oh? Is he a very old gentleman?'
'Old? No, miss, I don't think he's so very old. But some kind of an invalid, I think.'
'And has no one in the village ever seen him?'
'Well now.' The girl took a step closer, and a slight flush of excitement crept up her thin face. 'Mrs Potter's Kate a she's seen him. She goes up regular with the milk and eggs. Sometimes, she says, he's sitting out in the garden when it's fine.'
'I see. But he never leaves the grounds of the house?'
'Ah now, as to that, miss, I don't know.'
'But you say he's never seen.'
'No, miss,' said the girl with the air of one revealing a great and significant truth to an unpromising pupil, 'not in the village he isn't. But there's a carriage comes to the house from time to time and it's my belief a and Mrs Potter's too a that Mr Blacklock sometimes goes away in it.' She nodded significantly and dropped another curtsy.
'How interesting! Now, why do you and Mrs Potter think that?'
'Because of the way his servants carry on, miss. Young Kate says some days when she goes up there, there's a rare old carry-on a the boot-boy and the gardener kicking a ball about on the drive and the maid standing by laughing and shouting. Now that'd not be happening if their master was at home, would it?'
'Well, if Mr Blacklock is an invalid, perhaps they feel secure that he will not come out and see them.'
'Maybe, miss. But he'd hear them, wouldn't he? No, you mark my words, they'd only carry on like that if the house was empty.' Her voice suggested that this was a matter only a fellow servant could understand.
'I see. How very, very interesting.'
The girl smiled, bobbed about like a cork in a storm, and then seemed to decide to tell all. She glanced about the empty parlour and lowered her voice. 'It's my belief, miss,' she said in a rush, 'it's my belief a and Mrs Potter's too a that he might be a-spying for the French.'
'Indeed!' whispered Dido in return. 'And, I wonder... I don't suppose you can remember what sort of carriage it is a this one that comes to Mr Blacklock's house sometimes.'
'Why yes, miss, I can. It's a small post-chaise with yellow wheels.'
'Do you know whose carriage it is?'
The girl shook her head. 'It doesn't belong to anyone about here, miss, that I do know.'
'Well, thank you,' said Dido setting down her cup and recalling poor Catherine paying her visits in Belston. 'I have enjoyed our chat very much indeed. Now, perhaps you could direct me to the draper's shop.'
Fortunately, the shop was barely fifty yards from the inn. And before she had even climbed the three brick steps and set the merry little bell jangling on its wire behind the door, Dido knew that she had found the right establishment. For there in the small bow window, between a remarkably ugly puce bonnet and an olive green shawl, was a large roll of blue dimity dress material.
The inside of the little shop smelt of leather and newly cut cloth and it was packed from floor to ceiling with everything that the folk of Hopton Cresswell might wish to wear: from cards of ribbon to shelves full of pattens, bonnets on wire stands and parcels of gloves wrapped in brown paper, tied with hairy string and bearing labels like men's beavers and York tan.
Behind the counter, squeezed into the smallest of possible s.p.a.ces under the crowding shelves, was an elderly woman who wore an old, well-mended lace cap and an air of faded gentility. She was not, unfortunately, inclined to chat. All Dido's attempts at conversation met with short discouraging replies. And, as she took the blue cloth from the window and laid it on the counter, she scowled darkly at it as if she held a grudge against it.
Dido pulled off a glove and felt the quality of the stuff as her mother had long ago taught her to do. It surprised her. In the window it had looked like good cloth; close to it was coa.r.s.er than she had expected. Almost a but not quite a what her mother would have dismissed as 'maid's stuff'. And, she thought, as she pretended to consider buying, there was something else that was strange. The housemaid from Belsfield had seen this cloth in the window last month, so it had been on offer for at least so long. But the roll was still fat a no more than one dress length could have been cut from it.
'I do not quite know,' she said doubtingly, rubbing a corner of the blue cotton between her finger and thumb. 'It is not such good quality as I thought.'
'It is but three s.h.i.+llings a yard,' said the woman with a deep sigh. 'If you wish, I can show you some better stuff.'
'No, wait a moment.' Dido laid a hand across the roll to prevent it being removed. There was something in the woman's manner which suggested that she had heard the same complaint many times before. So this was perhaps why she disliked the blue cloth. It was too poor for gentry: too good for servants. Unsaleable.
And yet it was not quite unsaleable: one length had been sold. Yes, one length had certainly been sold. Looking closely at the end, she could see where the shears had slashed through; a long blue thread came loose upon her finger. But to whom had that length been sold?
Since the shopkeeper was clearly no gossip, strategy alone would get her the information she required.
'I wonder...' she began thoughtfully. 'A friend who is unwell has asked me to look about for stuff for the Christmas dole in her household. Now I wonder...' turning the end of the blue cloth over in her hand, 'I wonder whether this might do for the upper servants...'
The elderly woman's manner changed rapidly at the prospect of selling a great deal of an unpopular commodity.
'Why yes, madam, it might do very well.' For a moment her look of pale refinement was swallowed up in eager calculation. 'And if your friend was to buy, say, more than twenty yards of the stuff, I might be able to see my way to only charging her two and six a yard.'