A Victorian Christmas

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A Victorian Christmas Page 28

by Catherine Palmer


  “I’m sure that is his intention.” Rosalind pondered this information. “And this wealthy uncle . . . was he well known in London society?”

  “Not at all, for his own father had been a merchant in India, and the uncle was brought up there as well. Mick will not speak of the family at any length. He mourns his uncle so.”

  “I see.” Distressed and confused, she leaned over her father and brushed a tendril of hair from his forehead. “And their trade? Surely you must know the nature of these prosperous enterprises.”

  “We know nothing.” Caroline leaned a little closer. “Though it is thought the fortune might have been made in . . . opium.” She paused a moment.“This might explain Mick’s reticence in discussing the matter with you. I am aware you have been sequestered in the country, my dear, but surely you know of England’s recent war with China over the opening of opium trade routes with India. I believe Mick’s uncle may have been involved in the hostilities, and it is thought that he may have lost his life during—”

  A soft knock on the door put a welcome end to Lady Caroline’s speculations. A maid entered the room, bearing a silver tray on which lay a wooden box and a card addressed to Rosalind. “This was sent from the house of Sir Michael Stafford, mum, and the message boy was instructed not to delay its delivery for a moment.”

  “More pearls?” Caroline said as she took the box and handed it to Rosalind. “Mick is certainly determined to win you.”

  “I am sure it cannot be a necklace.” Rosalind opened the clasp and lifted the lid. “Indeed not; it is an ear trumpet for Papa!”

  The instrument, inlaid with mother-of-pearl and tortoiseshell, lay in a nest of finest silk. Her heart filling with gratitude, she removed the horn and set it against her father’s ear.

  “Papa!” she whispered. “Papa, can you hear me?”

  His face remained unmoving.

  “Papa,” she said more loudly, “you must wake up, for you promised Lord Remington a game of chess today at the gentlemen’s club. Sir Arthur will be looking for you this afternoon.” She paused. “His gout is much improved, Papa. Indeed, he came to the party last night, and he was much distressed to learn of your unfortunate accident. Can you not . . . will you . . .”

  “Rosalind,” Caroline said, laying a hand on her friend’s shoulder. “Come, my dear. Why don’t you walk down to the parlor with me for tea? I have ordered a currant cake, and Cook is ever so clever at baking tea cakes. I realize this seems hardly the time, but you and I must take a moment to discuss the decor for your wedding. Mick has suggested that a Christmas tree might be the most lovely—”

  “Aaah-rrry.” The growl from the bed made Caroline gasp. “Rrrorind, wha Aaah-rry?”

  “Papa?” Rosalind leapt to her father’s side. He had managed to open one eye and was definitely attempting to speak to her. “Papa, I am here with you!”

  “Rrrorind.”

  “Rosalind—yes, it is I!” She grasped Caroline’s arm. “You must summon the doctor at once! Make haste!”

  “Of course, of course!” The woman fled the room, her footsteps echoing down the long corridor.

  “Wha Aaah-ry?” Lord Buxton groaned.

  “I beg your pardon?” She shook her head in confusion. Why couldn’t her father speak? His mouth seemed to hang slack on one side, and his tongue could hardly form syllables. She took up the ear trumpet. “Papa, you must speak more clearly. What are you asking me?”

  His opened eye widened at the amplified sound. “Aaah-ry.”

  “Artie? Oh yes, he was hoping to play chess with you today, Papa. At the club. But you . . . you had an accident. You fell down the stairs. Last night.”

  Her father took Rosalind’s hand and proceeded into a lengthy discourse of words so mumbled she could not make any sense of them. But what did she care? He was alive!

  “Papa, I cannot understand you,” she said finally through the trumpet. “Do try to speak more slowly—”

  “Is it true?” Sir Michael Stafford burst through the door into the bedroom. “I was leaving my house when the footman passed me on his way to fetch the doctor. Is your father conscious?”

  “He is!” She came to her feet as the young man pulled her into his arms. “I believe your trumpet somehow penetrated the confusion in his mind, for I was speaking to him about Lord Remington, and soon after he began to ask for Artie. And oh, thank you, thank you! I cannot tell you how very grateful—”

  “Say nothing. I rejoice with you, Rosalind.” He looked into her eyes. “Your prayer . . . it was answered.”

  “Of course! But not all prayers are given such a happy response.” She sank to her knees again. “Look, Papa, Sir Michael has come to see you. We must be so grateful to him for the ear trumpet he sent.”

  “And for the physician,” the doctor said as he entered the room. “Sir Michael has spared no expense in your care, Lord Buxton. I was on my way to tend to an accident when I was given the welcome news that you have awakened from your deep rest. How are you feeling, my good man?”

  Rosalind took the horn and leaned next to her father. “How are you feeling? The doctor wants to know.”

  “Taah-ba.”

  “Terrible, I think he said.” Rosalind glanced up at the two men. “He cannot speak clearly.”

  “Will you allow me a moment alone to examine your father, Miss Treadwell?” the doctor asked.

  “Of course, sir.” As Mick led her out into the corridor, she let out a deep breath. “I realize he is not completely well, but he is alive. And for that I am so grateful to God—and you.”

  Leaning one shoulder against the papered wall, he regarded her in silence for a moment. “Rosalind, I know your thoughts are with your father. But I must beg the opportunity to speak with you concerning another matter.”

  “Caroline has spoken to me about the importance of making final wedding plans, but I really cannot—”

  “It is not the wedding,” he cut in. “It is something else. It is . . .” Clearly agitated, he walked past her down the hall. Then he turned and spoke again. “Rosalind, I must talk to you about . . . about me.”

  She reached out for the support of the wall beside her. Her thoughts flew to her unanswered questions about his past. Would he confess something now? some terrible secret? something that might separate them just when she was beginning to care for him?

  “What is it?” she asked softly.

  “Last night after I left you, I returned to my own house. But I could not sleep.” He began pacing again. “In the early hours of morning, I was roaming about my bed chamber when I discovered that I had inadvertently carried William’s Bible home with me. So I began to read it. I read until dawn, backwards and forwards, sometimes understanding what I read and other times completely confused at the meaning behind the words. I have not read it all, Rosalind. But I have read enough to know that I must tell you—”

  “Miss Treadwell?” The physician stepped out into the corridor and shut the bedroom door behind him. “I beg your pardon for interrupting, Sir Michael, but I must speak at once and then be on my way. A young boy awaits me with a leg broken in two places.”

  “But of course, sir,” Rosalind said.

  “Miss Treadwell, the news is not good. Yet it is not as bad as might be feared. From my examination, I have concluded that your father suffers from apoplexy.”

  “Apoplexy?”

  “Indeed, it would appear that a clot of blood formed within his brain—whether this occurred as a result of his fall or whether it actually caused the tumble, we may never know. At any rate, the clot seems to have dulled much of the feeling in the left side of your father’s body—a common occurrence with apoplexy. Only with the most extreme effort can he move his left arm and leg, open his left eye, or speak through the left side of his mouth. Even his tongue, I fear, has been affected.”

  “But what are we to do?”

  “Nothing at the moment. I have given him a sleeping tonic to allow him to rest.” He covered her clasped hands w
ith his. “Miss Treadwell, I regret to tell you that complete recovery is unlikely. Yet it is possible that—with time—your father may regain some of his former abilities.”

  “Thank you, sir,” she said, unable to lift her head for fear he would see the tears brimming in her eyes. “I am grateful for the care you have shown my father.”

  “Take heart.” He started down the stairway. “Your father is in good hands, Miss Treadwell. With Sir Michael soon to be his son by marriage, Lord Buxton will receive every luxury and necessity available.”

  Rosalind touched her cheek with her handkerchief. “I see now how wrong I was about you,” she said softly to the man who stood beside her. “There is much good to be said for having the means to help people.”

  “Only if it is put to such use,” Mick said. “I confess I did not accumulate my wealth for that purpose . . . but only for my own satisfaction.”

  She looked into his blue eyes and saw for the first time an openness, a vulnerability. “Perhaps the time has come for a change in more than your marital status. For that I am very warmly inclined . . . eager, in fact.”

  “Are you saying . . . Rosalind, are you saying the prospect of our union now pleases you? Do you tell me that you would come into the marriage willingly?”

  “I am saying that I liked the man I met in my father’s room last night. I liked him very much.” As she was speaking, her doubts about his past slipped back into her thoughts. “But I’m not certain I know him fully. Only that the more I do know him, the less dismay I feel over this arranged union.”

  She reached out her hand for the door to her father’s room. Then she hesitated. “You started to tell me something. Before the doctor came out to speak to me, you said you needed to talk to me about something you had read—”

  “It was nothing.” He gave her a dismissive nod, the openness in his eyes vanishing. “I am expected at my club. Good day.”

  “Good day, sir.” Rosalind’s hand closed on the icy doorknob as Mick hurried down the staircase.

  CHAPTER FOUR

  Mick could not have been more surprised to find Rosalind waiting for him in his parlor. Three days had passed since her father’s return to consciousness, and she had spent all her waking hours at his side. Her obvious lack of trust in him had silenced his yearning to confess the truth about his past. Yet he could not will himself to stay away from her. Mick stopped by the house often, but they were never permitted to speak intimately, for the room was always occupied by visitors or medical staff.

  “Rosalind?” He crossed the carpeted parlor as she rose from the settee. “Your father—is he not well?”

  “Indeed, he is very well, thank you. I did not mean to alarm you.” She was dressed in one of the gowns he had ordered for her, a soft pink skirt with a velvet jacket trimmed in French Honiton lace. A diamond collet necklace he had bought at Mappin & Webb, Ltd., on Oxford Street circled her throat. But it was neither the fabric nor the jewels that made him breathless.

  Rosalind’s gray eyes sparkled, her skin glowed with health, and her dark hair seemed alive with curl and movement. How could any woman be so lovely? And her smile! He had rarely seen her smile—but, my, what a glorious thing it was.

  “I have come to express again to you my sincerest gratitude,” she began. “The ear trumpet has made all the difference in my father’s ability to understand me. And the nurses you employed to tend him have the highest hopes that he soon may be able to walk again. Even his speech becomes clearer as the phonetician you sent instructs him. Oh, thank you so much for helping us! Your generosity—”

  “Please say no more.” He lowered his head a moment, remembering the filth and hopelessness in which his own mother had passed her last days. “I am glad to do all in my power to help your father. I understand your great love for him, Rosalind.”

  “And this is the reason for your kindness? You do it for me?” She clenched her fingers together. “I confess . . . I feared your motives were more mercenary.”

  “That your father might live long enough to see us wed and allow me to become legally entitled to his estate?”

  She flushed. “Perhaps.”

  “His death would free you from your obligation to marry me, of course. You know I have felt some concern over your lack of enthusiasm toward our union. But my assistance to your father stems from . . . Well, I have grown to like him very much. More importantly, you love him. And I love you.”

  At his words, her head snapped up, and her eyes flickered. “Love me? How can you cast such a word about so lightly?”

  “Lightly? I have never spoken of love to a woman in all my life. And I do not use the term merely in some vain attempt to win your affection.” A swell of agitation filled his chest as he faced her. He had just expressed some of the most difficult words he had ever spoken, and yet she continued to doubt and question him. With this woman, he knew he could not mince words. He took the small lamb from his pocket and knotted it in his fist.

  “Since I met you, Rosalind, I have been forced to . . . Your forthrightness and determination to know me have caused me to look into my own heart for the first time in many years. I assure you I have done all within my power to ignore the stirring of emotion I feel. My whole life has been spent striving toward a single-minded goal—the accumulation of wealth, prestige, and power. You were intended to be simply a part of the accomplishment of that goal. But you came into my life with all the force of your will and your wit . . . and your total lack of interest in the wealth, prestige, and power I have managed to accumulate.”

  “I am sorry.”

  “No!” He rubbed the bit of carved wood under his thumb. “I have been compelled to look at my life from a new perspective, and what I have seen is emptiness. You have your love for your father, your devotion to your faith, and your utter determination to be truthful and loving in all that you do. I have this!”

  He picked up a blue platter from the Ming Dynasty of China and sent it sailing across the room. It hit the wall and shattered into a hundred pieces. “What good has it done me? None! None at all.”

  She stared at him. “Not now, at any rate.”

  “What?”

  “Well, you’ve broken it, you silly man.” She marched across the room and regarded the fragments on the carpet for a moment. Then she lifted her head. “I once lived in a home with fine china platters. And when I was taken away to live at Bridgeton Cottage, I thought about them sometimes. And here is what I discovered. A fine china platter can be useful to serve a meal. Or it can sit in a home as a lovely, calming reminder of the beauty of God’s creation. Or it can be sold to provide money when one can no longer afford to buy coal for the fire. There is nothing wrong with owning a fine china platter, sir.”

  “For the reasons you have stated, no. But I bought that platter for two hundred pounds from an elegant shop on Regent Street, and I put it in my parlor for the express purpose of causing all who might see it to think me a wealthy man.”

  “That is wrong.”

  “Indeed.”

  “Though you needn’t have hurled it against the wall.”

  Mick let out a breath and tucked the lamb back into his pocket. “I have been filled with such anger these past three days.”

  “Anger at whom?”

  “At myself.” He sank down onto the settee. “Rosalind, if you should choose not to marry me, I can understand completely. I have seen the vileness of my own soul.”

  “Because you bought a china platter?”

  “Because I am a man full of deceit and selfishness and greed, and all manner of wickedness.” He rubbed his hand over his eyes. “I have spent these days and nights reading William’s Bible, and I have come to understand that I am a man with nothing. All my wealth means nothing. My power means nothing. My status in society means nothing. I am the very worst of sinners.”

  Miserable, he stared at the carpet. He fully expected Rosalind to walk out of the parlor and never to see him again. Instead, she sat beside him on the sette
e, folded her hands, and began to speak in the softest, most beautiful voice he had ever heard.

  “My dear sir, I believe you have read only part of William’s Bible,” she said. “You have seen your sin, but you have not welcomed God’s love and forgiveness. You must read how Jesus took the punishment you deserve—all of us deserve—by allowing Himself to be crucified. Like a sacrificial lamb, He paid for our sin with His own death. And when He came back to life, He brought with Him the assurance of eternal life for us.”

  “Heaven,” Mick muttered, thinking of his mother.

  “You don’t have to spend the rest of your days on this earth smashing china platters and despising the wicked state of your soul. You have merely to accept God’s forgiveness and begin to walk in His love.”

  “Accept it?”

  “It’s very simple,” she said, taking his hand and bowing her head. “Dear God, You know all the blackness in this man’s soul. Do forgive him now and welcome him into Your kingdom. Amen.”

  “That’s it?”

  “Well, you might want to do the asking yourself.”

  Mick studied his knees. Was it really so easy? Could he rid himself of the blot of evil in his past and claim the promise of a new life?

  “Dear God,” he said, and as he spoke, he recognized a strong sense of someone listening. Someone present in the room with him and Rosalind. “I have read the Bible, though not all of it. And I have come to see that my motives and my actions are not all they should be. No, that is stating it too mildly. I have been a sinful person since the earliest days of my life. I ask You now . . . I beg You . . . to forgive me. Accept me. Love me.”

  “Amen. There you are, then,” Rosalind said. “A new man, completely forgiven of all your sin.”

  “It seems too easy.”

  “That is its beauty.” She stood. “But I assure you that the forgiven life you now lead will not be easy. Our God has a bitter enemy, and it is the enemy’s greatest delight to tempt us back into sin. You should go to church more than at Christmas and Easter, sir. Church is the place where we can worship God and gain strength and wisdom. I recommend it highly.”

 

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