Song of the Siren

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Song of the Siren Page 38

by Philippa Carr


  ‘It’s a real English tree,’ he said. ‘It has been here since history began. Did you know that the Druids had a very special respect for it? They used to perform their religious rites under it and courts of justice were held beneath its branches.’

  ‘I believe,’ said Anita, ‘that some of these trees live for two thousand years.’

  ‘That’s so,’ answered Benjie. ‘And our ships are made from the rough timber of these trees. Hearts of oak, they say our ships have.’

  I was sure that while he talked of the trees he loved he forgot his sorrow.

  Anita wondered why the willow wept and told us that the aspen shivered because from its wood Christ’s cross had been made and it had never been able to rest in peace since. She talked of the mistletoe, which was the only tree which had not promised not to harm Baldur, the most beautiful of all the Northern Gods, so that the mischievous Loki had been able to slay him with it.

  ‘I can see, Miss Harley,’ said Benjie, ‘that you have a romantic approach to nature.’

  ‘And I can see no harm in that replied Anita.

  Benjie laughed, I think for the first time since the accident.

  We stopped at inns and drank cider and ate hot bread with ripe cheeses, and pies straight from the oven. Benjie talked about the estate, which was his sole responsibility now. I could see that he was seeking something which would absorb his interest and help him to get over his bereavement.

  I talked about him to Anita.

  ‘He’s different from Jeremy,’ I said. ‘Jeremy nurses his troubles and although he is happy about being married to Damaris, it isn’t enough to make him forget that he was wounded in the war.’

  ‘The pain is always there to remind him of that,’ replied Anita.

  ‘Yes, whereas Benjie’s pain is in remembering and seeing the rooms where they used to live. People can get away from things like that. Whereas Jeremy can’t get away from the pain in his leg. It’s always there.’

  I thought then that we ought to get back because poor Jeremy would be very unhappy without Damaris. I wanted to see him, to give him the comfort my presence brought to him. I knew it did, for I often saw him look at me, remembering, I was sure, his adventure with Damaris when they had brought me out of Jeanne’s cellar. Damaris could never have done that without his help and every time Jeremy remembered that it lifted his spirits.

  ‘Benjie,’ I said, ‘why don’t you come back to Enderby with us?’

  ‘I would enjoy coming,’ he replied, ‘but you see, there is the estate.’ I knew he meant it was no use to run away. He had to stay and face his lonely life.

  We went back and arrived at the end of September when the leaves were turning to bronze and the fruit was ripening on the trees. Anita and I went to the orchards and climbed ladders to gather it while Smith helped us load the barrows and Damon sat watching us with his head on one side, bounding about now and then to show his joy because we were all together.

  Priscilla came over and she and Damaris made jam and preserves. It was a normal autumn apart from the lingering sadness. Arabella missed Harriet so much, which was strange because she had often been sharp with her in their encounters and I had always had the impression that there was a great deal she resented about Harriet.

  Even Great-Grandfather Carleton seemed to regret her loss and he had always openly disliked her. As for Priscilla, she was very sad. I learned later how Harriet had helped her when Carlotta was born.

  ‘We all have to go in time,’ said Arabella. ‘Sooner or later, and sooner for some of us.’

  Damaris hated to hear her talk like that. She said it was nonsense and she was going to see that her grandmother lived as long as Methuselah.

  Another year passed. I was now ten years old and there was a great deal of talk about the armistice which was going to put an end to the war.

  Priscilla said it was about time too. Why we should concern ourselves with who sat on the throne of Spain was past her understanding.

  Great-Grandfather Carleton just looked at her and, shaking his head, uttered his favourite condemnation, which was: ‘Women!’

  ‘If they really come to peace,’ said Damaris, ‘there will be free traffic between England and France.’ She looked at Jeremy. ‘I should like to go to Paris. I’d like to retrace our footsteps.’

  ‘A sentimental journey,’ said Jeremy, smiling at her in the way I loved to see him smile. I knew that the pain wasn’t troubling him when he looked like that and he was rather pleased with life temporarily and not resentful at all.

  ‘I wonder what became of Jeanne,’ mused Damaris. ‘I hope she was all right.’

  ‘She’s the sort who can look after herself,’ Jeremy reminded her.

  ‘Oh yes. I shall never forget how she looked after Clarissa.’

  ‘I am not likely to either,’ replied Jeremy.

  Damaris was very happy. She was pregnant again. ‘This time,’ she said, ‘I shall take the utmost care.’

  The doctor said she must rest a good deal and remember that her health had never been quite what it should have been ever since she had had fever years ago; and childbearing was an arduous matter even for the healthy.

  Damaris was radiant. So was Jeremy. The shadows were lifting. This baby was of the greatest importance. If they could have a baby my responsibility towards them would be lifted. Strange, that I should come to think of it as a responsibility, but I did, for I now knew that the journey to France to bring me home had been the beginning of a new relationship between them. Before that they had been two unhappy people. I was glad to have played such a part in their lives—but the deep responsibility which I felt towards them seemed to grow with every passing day. Now I felt I must look after Benjie too, for long ago I had left him—not that I had had any choice in the matter, but if I had I should have gone willingly with Hessenfield; and thus I had deprived Benjie of a daughter.

  Christmas was at hand. Arabella insisted that we should all go to Eversleigh Court. Benjie must come, she said, and he promised to do so.

  Damaris said we must do all we could to cheer him, for Christmas was a time when those who were lost were remembered with particular poignancy. I sensed that everyone was a little too bright, trying to pretend that this was going to be a Christmas like any other.

  Anita and I went into the woods to gather holly and ivy. We hunted for mistletoe and even Smith helped bring in the Yule log. Dear old Damon seemed to be extra excited about it. He had his dear ones safe—that was Jeremy, Damaris, Smith and myself—and as long as we were there he was happy.

  Arabella said we must stay at the Court and not think of going home until Twelfth Night, even though we were so close, and that applied to Priscilla and Leigh also.

  We had decorated Enderby Hall even though we were not going to be there. I heard one of the maids say: ‘What’ll the ghosts think, I wonder?’

  ‘They won’t like it’, prophesied another.

  They would not believe that there was not something malevolent lurking in Enderby.

  ‘It’s a shame to leave it,’ I said to Damaris. ‘It looks so lovely.’

  ‘Your great-grandmother wouldn’t hear of it,’ she said. ‘It’ll be nice to come home to and Smith will be here to enjoy it.’

  ‘Smith and Damon with him,’ I said. ‘I shall ride over on Christmas morning to give them their presents.’

  ‘Dear Clarissa,’ said Damaris. ‘You’re a good girl.’

  It wasn’t really goodness, I pointed out. I would want to see Smith and Damon. And I thought that the atmosphere at Eversleigh might be a little oppressive without Harriet and Gregory.

  ‘You’re getting too introspective,’ laughed Damaris. Then she ruffled my hair and went on: ‘Just think. Next Christmas, I shall have my baby. I find it hard to wait until April.’

  ‘I hope it’s a girl,’ I said. ‘I want a girl.’

  ‘Jeremy wants a boy.’

  ‘Men always want boys. They want to see themselves born again.’

/>   ‘Dear Clarissa, you have been such a joy to me and Jeremy.’

  ‘I know.’

  She laughed again. ‘You always say what you mean, don’t you?’ she said.

  I thought for a moment and answered; ‘Not always.’

  So we went to Eversleigh and there were the usual Christmas celebrations. Benjie came on Christmas Eve and was delighted to see me.

  On Christmas Eve we went as we always did to Eversleigh Church for the midnight service. That had always been to me one of the best parts of Christmas—singing the Christmas hymns and carols and then walking across the fields to the Court, where there would be hot soup and toasted bread and mulled wine and plum cake waiting for us. We would discuss the service and compare it with the previous year’s and everyone would be merry and wide awake. In the past we had all been discussing the parts we would play in Harriet’s charades. She had always arranged them and given us our parts and presided over them. We would all remember that.

  In our bedrooms fires would be blazing in the grates and there would be warming-pans in our beds. Anita and I had to share a room, for although there were numerous rooms, the east wing of the house was shut up and dust-sheeted.

  We didn’t mind that in the least and we lay awake on the night of Christmas Eve, late as it was, because the day had been too stimulating to induce sleep. Anita told me of Christmases in the rectory with an old aunt who had come to stay with them and how there was so much cheeseparing that she did enjoy being in a household where there was plenty. She had been terrified when she had thought she might have to go and live with the old aunt, and had chosen to attempt to earn a living instead.

  ‘Dear Anita,’ I said, ‘you will always have a home here.’

  She replied that it was kind of me to console her, but her position was precarious, as it must necessarily be, and if she were to offend certain people she could be dismissed.

  ‘Damaris would not easily be offended,’ I reassured her, ‘And she would never turn you away if you had nowhere to go. You’re creating a situation which might never arise.’

  Anita laughed because that was what she had once told me I was doing.

  So we talked of pleasant things, but I did realize that fear was lurking in Anita’s mind and I wished there was something I could do to comfort her.

  Christmas morning was bright and sparkling with the frost glistening on the grass and branches of the beech and oak trees making it like a fairy-tale scene. The ponds were frozen but as the sun was rising that would soon be altered. The carol singers came in the morning and there was the traditional custom of inviting them in while they sang especially for us and afterwards ate plum cake and drank punch mixed for the purpose in the great punchbowl. Anita and I were set to fill goblets and it was just like other Christmases which I remembered since I came to England.

  Then there was the great Christmas dinner with various meats—turkey, chicken, ham and beef, with so many pies made in all sorts of shapes, that the table was weighed down with food. There was plum pudding and plum porridge—this last I had not seen before. It was like a soup made with raisins and spices.

  Afterwards we played all sorts of games including hide-and-seek all over the house. We did charades too, but that was a mistake because it reminded us of Harriet. Priscilla quickly suggested another game. We danced to the fiddlers and some of us sang. Several of our neighbours had joined us and we were a large party, but I was sure some of the family were greatly relieved when the day was over.

  ‘Christmases after a bereavement must necessarily be shadowed by sadness,’ said Anita.

  We lay awake again that night and I told her more about Harriet.

  ‘She was an unusual person,’ I said. ‘People like her can’t go through life without having a marked effect on others.’

  I was thinking of people like my mother and Hessenfield—the beautiful people—and I wondered if I would be one of them when I grew up.

  At last we slept and rose fairly late the next morning. The household was already astir and when we went down to breakfast it was nine o’clock.

  One of the servants told us that Damaris had gone over to Enderby. She wanted to see that all was well and she wanted to tell Smith that we had been persuaded to stay on for a while.

  Anita and I were still at breakfast when Benjie came in. We told him that we were going to ride over to Enderby that morning and that Damaris had gone already. She had walked, for she did not ride nowadays. She was taking great care. But she enjoyed walking, even though the doctor had said she must not go too far.

  Benjie chatted with us for a while and later we all rode out together to Enderby. We tethered our horses and went into the house. The door was open, but there was nothing unusual about that as we knew Damaris was inside.

  I was struck immediately by the quietness of the place. Usually when I came in Damon would bark and come bounding towards me, or Damaris would call, or Jeremy or Smith perhaps. But the silence sent a pricking horror down my spine. I couldn’t say why. The house seemed to have changed. It was as though I were seeing it as the servants saw it—a house in which evil things could happen, a house haunted by the spirits of those who had lived violently and unhappily in it.

  It was a passing feeling. Obviously Smith was out. He often was. He took Damon for long walks through the lanes and over the fields.

  ‘Aunt Damaris!’ I called.

  There was no answer. She must be upstairs and could not hear, I told myself.

  I said: ‘Come on. We’ll find her.’

  I looked at the other two. It was clear that they had not felt that frisson of fear which had come to me. I started up the stairs ahead of them and saw Damaris’s shoe lying at the top of the stairs.

  ‘Something has happened,’ I said.

  Then I saw her. She was lying there in the minstrels’ gallery; her face was white and her legs twisted under her.

  Anita was on her knees first. ‘She’s breathing,’ she said.

  I knelt too, looking at my beloved Damaris. She gave a little moan.

  Benjie said: ‘We must get her out of here.’

  ‘Let’s get her to one of the rooms,’ said Anita, and Benjie picked her up. She moaned and I guessed that something had gone wrong about the baby. It was far, far too early for it to be born yet. Oh no, I prayed. Not this one too.

  Benjie carried her very gently. I opened a door and he laid her on a bed. It was the room which she had recently had refurnished, replacing the velvet with the damask.

  ‘I’ll go off at once and get the doctor,’ said Anita.

  ‘No,’ interrupted Benjie. ‘I’ll do that. You stay with her… you two. Look after her until I come back with the doctor.’

  Anita had had some experience of nursing for she had looked after her father for several years before his death. She covered Damaris up with blankets and told me to get warming-pans. I hurried down to the kitchen. A fire was burning there. Oh, where was Smith! If only he would come back he would be a great help. But I knew he walked for miles with Damon and it could be an hour before he returned.

  I took up the warming-pans and Anita laid them beside Damaris.

  Anita looked at me sadly. ‘I’m afraid she will lose the child,’ she said.

  Damaris opened her eyes. She looked bewildered. Then she saw me and Anita.

  ‘We came over and found you in the gallery,’ I said.

  ‘I fell,’ she replied; then she looked up and saw the damask hangings round the bed.

  ‘Oh no, no,’ she moaned. ‘Not… here… Never… never…’

  Anita touched her forehead and although she closed her eyes her expression was disturbed.

  It seemed a long time before Benjie came back with the doctor.

  When he saw her he said: ‘She will lose the child.’

  Those were sad days at Enderby. Damaris recovered but she was in despair.

  ‘It seems I shall never have my own child,’ she said.

  Priscilla came over constantly to see
her but it was Anita who nursed her and made herself indispensable in the household. Benjie stayed on. He would not go until he knew that Damaris was out of danger.

  I heard the servants whispering.

  ‘It’s this house,’ they said. ‘It’s full of ghosts. How did the mistress come to fall? I reckon it was someone, something—that pushed her.’

  ‘There’s never going to be no luck in this house. There’s tales about it that go right back into the past.’

  I began to wonder whether there was anything in it. When it was quiet in the house I would stand below the minstrels’ gallery and fancy that the shadows up there took shape and turned into people who had lived long ago.

  Benjie rode over often during that spring and summer, and during one of his “visits Anita came to me in the schoolroom looking radiant.

  ‘I have news for you, Clarissa,’ she told me. ‘I’m going to be married.’

  I stared at her in amazement and then suddenly the truth dawned on me. ‘Benjie!’ I cried.

  She nodded. ‘He has asked me and I have said yes. Oh, most joyously have I said it. He is the kindest man I ever knew. In fact, he is a wonderful man and I can’t believe my good luck.’

  I hugged her. ‘I am so pleased… so happy. You and Benjie. It’s obvious… and absolutely right.’

  I felt that a great responsibility had been lifted from my shoulders. This concentration on responsibility was becoming an obsession. Benjie was no longer someone to whom I owed something. He had lost Carlotta and myself—well, now he would have Anita.

  Arabella’s comment was: ‘Harriet would have been pleased.’

  They all agreed that it was the best thing possible for the pair of them.

  ‘Of course,’ said Priscilla, ‘we shall have to think of getting a new governess for Clarissa.’

 

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