Read The Marquis of Westmarch Online

Authors: Frances Vernon

The Marquis of Westmarch (22 page)

There was almost no rage in her sobs and Auriol, who had seen little of the gentler side of her personality, was moved against his will.

“It’s not your blame,” he said grimly, leaving his place and coming over to her. “I think it was unwise in you to have told him — but at least I know that if that’s what you did, I was not mistaken in thinking — I thought that if you won your race, you’d come to me. For you would not have told him you meant to quit this place and marry me if you had not entirely decided, would you?”

“No. No.”

He lifted her on to his lap and put his arms round her, though he was still angry. Both of them had so much wanted, two hours earlier, to make love and be full of joy.

“Then I must take comfort from that, I suppose. No, whatever you have done, you have not plotted to — to kill me, as I thought
at one moment, or even to deceive me. Come, hush now Meriel, don’t be a fool!”

This morning’s sorrow could never be quite like their tearful, comforting night at the Green Garter, towards the end of Month of Showers, when they had not known each other.

*

Juxon sat alone in the ill-lit but darkly splendid closet which, in all his years as Steward, he had failed to make his own. Because Meriel had never loved him, he had never felt secure enough in his position even to choose pictures to hang on his walls. He blamed her for this, but in fact he liked the sensation of stealthily occupying another man’s place which it gave him to live like a hermit-crab in his predecessor’s unaltered rooms.

He was fingering the clay impression which he had taken, yesterday, of the seal on a letter from the Ministry of Police at Bury Winyard. It was this which he had used to stamp the red wax on the demand for Knight Auriol Wychwood’s immediate apprehension. Juxon could disguise his handwriting perfectly, and so that had been no difficulty, but he had been much afraid that either Meriel or Auriol would suspect something even so, because his imitation seal was not as clear-cut as it might have been. It seemed, however, that they were neither of them as worldly-wise as he was. They were both very young.

A danger had passed, but just what he meant to do next, he did not know. To poison Auriol was out of the question, Meriel would suspect at once, and on the whole, he believed her when she said she would stop at nothing to bring him to justice. Only if he could bring her to a full sense of her own glory as Marquis of Westmarch, and persuade her that to sacrifice her manhood and her power would be intolerable, not to him but to her, would she change her mind and hold her tongue when he took the action he thought fit. And he would have to wait.

It occurred to him suddenly that a servant, or even Meriel herself, bursting in, might find his imitation seal: a fascinating though awful thought. He paused, staring at it, then decided. The clay was only sun-dried, and he was easily able to break it into pieces and throw it out of the window.

Fragments fell among the tired roses in the flower-bed beneath. When he sat down once more at his desk, Juxon felt that he had
acted on an unfortunate impulse. He might need to fake a Southmarch letter again: but he took up his pen and dismissed this self-stricture from his mind.

Nine days passed. Meriel gave out that Auriol had been confined to his rooms on her authority to prevent his being taken off to Bury Winyard, where everyone of importance appeared to have run mad, and this careless explanation was accepted by most people. Plenty of innocent men had come under suspicion in Southmarch, and in Eastmarch too, and no one thought it sinister that Meriel should protect her friend in such a way while she fought the Island Palace bureaucracy.

It so happened that two rich sexual scandals had blown up at Castle West very soon after Auriol’s arrest; and as a result his affairs and the Marquis’s were low down on the list of suitable topics for conversation. Meriel, Auriol and Juxon were thankful for it, and their different senses of isolation increased.

*

Auriol’s rooms of which he had once been so fond quickly became repulsive to him, as might have been expected. Though they were cleaned regularly, they seemed to him always to be dirty, untidy, airless, dark, and inescapable. Often he felt claustrophobia beginning to choke him; but he had too much pride to let even Meriel see that he was sometimes close to panic only because he was forced to live in a space which seemed increasingly small, to her as well as to him. He saw no one but the chambermaid, the footmen, and Meriel herself. His dead wife’s family had gone into the country before the Marquis ran her race. If they had been at Castle West still, they would have tried to see him, and to help him, and reproach him, and he felt he could not have borne that.

One acquaintance of Auriol’s had in fact called on him soon after his arrest was made known, but Auriol had told him with sad politeness that he felt too unwell to receive anyone, ever. He knew
that this looked dubious, but although in some ways he would have been glad of any distraction from his own thoughts, he did not trust himself not to betray the truth about Meriel to any casual caller. She made him feel wretched, even desperate, but she was his obsession and he longed for her.

Meriel came to visit him every day, and Auriol noticed that for the first time in their acquaintance, she was trying to look her best for him. In his better moments, he smiled at this.

They were able now to spend as much time as they wished alone together, in comfort, but they did not make use of Auriol’s bed. Auriol believed that if they tried to make love while he was her prisoner, he would be impotent; and if he did turn out to be impotent, he might do something terrible to her. Instead, they talked, reassured each other, and though they wanted to quarrel, behaved with a propriety that made them both feel exhausted.

The tenth day of Auriol’s confinement came. He was lying on the floor, wearing only his shirt and breeches, when Meriel came in at three o’clock in the afternoon.

“So,” he said, raising himself on his elbows. Meriel, neatly dressed in riding-clothes, saw that he had not shaved that morning.

“Are you very hot? It’s damnably humid, outside.”

“Yes, I am.”

“I wish we might see the sun. I detest these close, cloudy sort of summer days.”

Meriel sat down on a hard chair in front of his feet and put her hands on her knees. “You look — like a bear, sir. I’d like to — well, you know what must be on my mind.”

“It’s not on mine and never will be while I am here.”

“Very well.” The unconscious glint of desire did not leave her eyes, but she blushed a little at his rejection. She had not quite liked to make advances to him before, but she was feeling bold today.

Meriel was calmer and less worried now than either Auriol or Juxon, because she had made up her mind as to exactly what she meant to do, while they were both in confusion.

If, when Auriol’s thirty days were up, the Southmarchers were still demanding his return, she would go with him to Bury Winyard and astonish them all. They would find it impossible to
persecute him while the Marquis of Westmarch was there standing over him. Then, once she had made sure that the Conybeares’ evidence was publicly dismissed and Auriol’s name completely cleared, she would go to Wychwood with him and there finally decide, having seen the place, whether to stay or not. She meant to stay forever and marry him, but she was wise enough not to panic herself by swearing a private vow to do so. She hated to feel trapped.

In the meantime, she was not unhappy, even though Juxon worried her constantly with his prophecies of how ugly her future would be if her true sex were ever revealed. Thanks to him, she suffered from a recurrent nightmare about Castle West’s turning into a gigantic Female College, but she refused to listen to him, and made herself concentrate only on Auriol, for whom she felt a new and most disturbing kind of lust.

To have him locked up in her power was exciting. She did not quite admit this to herself, but when she saw him sitting there on the floor with his black hair in a tangle, resentment and puzzlement in his face, she wanted to leap upon him. And yet, her mental love for him in his comparative helplessness was not the same, not as great, as it had been when he was free and had agreed of his own will to let her rule him in certain ways, while always letting her know that he would not be bullied. Meriel had loved him too much then to want to bully him.

She thought: I was wise not to let it be generally known that Juxon was not acting on my orders when he arrested you, wise to claim the action as my own. Pride matters a great deal.

He thought: she is destroying me.

“Well,” said Auriol proudly, “how does the great world go on? What have you been doing, Meriel?”

“Trying to persuade the Citizens that the Western Guard is in need of more funds. Waiting for the reply from Bury Winyard with regard to you. Wasting my time at ton parties I couldn’t contrive to avoid. Very much what you might have supposed.” She got up and walked over to the fireplace, which she kicked without energy or malice. “Sir, I made up my mind some few days ago as to what is to be done.”

“You did, did you?”

She explained that she would go to Southmarch with him,
and support him through his ordeal, then go with him to Wychwood.

“I am vastly obliged to you, Marquis,” said Auriol, when she had finished, getting to his feet. She saw that he was looking down at her with bitter frustration in his eyes.

“Why, no — but — is it not what you would like? Wychwood?”

“Why did you not tell me this before? You say you’ve had the notion for days past? Why did you not tell me?”

“But I explained. It was somehow not in my head.”

“You devil. You heartless, little — are you
so
impossibly
selfish?”

“No I am not! My
God
,” she said.

He put his hand on her shoulder, squeezed it till it caused her real pain, then released her with a sob.

She cried, “And I daresay I feared you would take it like this. I find the solution to our difficulties, your difficulties, and you reject it out of hand and assault me into the bargain, sir.”

Meriel waited a moment, then without thinking she took two strides, put one arm round Auriol’s heaving waist, and slid the other hand inside his breeches, aware all the while of the ache in her shoulder. “Oh, Wychwood. My love, it will all be
well.
Come. Ah, you are splendid, there’s no need to feel — caged.”

He took hold of her hand, wrenched it out, and let it drop. “Filthy,” he said.

Words came out of her shocked face with difficulty.

“I’m sorry. Yes — I am filthy, and selfish. Please forgive me. My passions are not — I did not know.”

That reassured him, it made him feel that the horrible truth which had been taking possession of his mind for the last few days might not be a truth after all. But he was still in doubt.

Many thoughts had tormented him, but worst of all had been the suspicion that Meriel’s rough, cold manners did not conceal a warm and passionately loyal heart which he had only to love and believe in to bring to the surface. He had felt sick and lost and frightened at the thought that Meriel’s misfortunes, Juxon’s influence, preyed on her deep below the surface and had made a core of unmeltable hardness inside which however hard he tried he could never reach. If that were true, she would have abolished
him as a man despite the fact that for four months she had made him feel more alive and more virile than he had ever felt in his life.

She had made him believe that he alone of all men in the world could cope with her, that her fiercely dominant personality could never threaten him in his gentle integrity and courage. And then, when he was arrested, that marvellous sense of himself as something infinitely greater than his father, brother and wife had imagined had been taken away from him.

“Listen to me,” he said, and she raised her eyes to him. “Your action just now has made me realise that to save our attachment, our love —” the word embarrassed him at this moment — “I
must
get out of this place, out of Castle West. Immediately, I mean. If you don’t help me escape
now
it will all be at an end, Meriel, I tell you.” He stared at her, wondering whether it were possible that she still loved him. “We
cannot
survive
another fortnight of this, we’ll hate each other, no matter what happens after. I mean that. To save our affection for each other.”

“But it’s not possible!” she blurted out. “Southmarch —”

“Don’t say that to me, Meriel. I am not talking about anything except us, I don’t give a rap now for any other aspect of the case. It may prejudice my future as regards this charge if I break prison now, it may even ruin you, but I am leaving all that aside. Listen, look at me!”

She did so, having dropped her eyes when he said that it might ruin her to help him escape. She supposed he meant that she might be more likely to finish her life in a Female College if she helped him and the plan went wrong.

Auriol finished, “No affection is indestructible; ours will be destroyed if this goes on, and I want to save it, more than anything in the world. I will not allow you to take pleasure in having me at your mercy.”

She had fully understood everything he said, but instead of discussing it, cried, “You are not at my damned mercy! At any moment you might say what I am and ruin any scheme I might have for your — your — which I have not!”

“You know very well what I am talking about.” He took a breath and said, “You are not merely a — a mannish lover as I thought. I’ve just discovered there is a vastly unpleasant side to your nature and that I will never, never tolerate, Meriel, d’you
hear? You admitted it yourself. And what is more, I won’t have you manage me, my future, without consulting me, for one moment longer!”

“Oh, God damn it.” His rebellion made her eyes narrow, she bit her lip. “How do you expect me to help you
escape
? What the devil can I do when this is Juxon’s doing and I’ve told you times out of mind that I cannot, cannot,
cannot
do
anything
?”

“Don’t be a fool! You have only to tell those damned men outside to absent themselves, take a glass of heavy-wet in the porters’ lodge — do you think they will dare gainsay you, particularly when they suppose that Juxon was merely carrying out
your
order to arrest me? As you have not scrupled to let the whole world think. This is not precisely a prison, not yet!” He paused, and noticed a strange expression on her face. “I tell you, I shall make my own escape if you don’t aid me, though it will not be easy, I don’t back myself to overpower two full-sized men at the same time.”

“A little too fast for me, sir,” said Meriel, in a voice very like that she used for addressing eager place-seekers. “Don’t seek to bullock me. I — I shan’t do it.”

“You —” He took a step towards her.

“I shan’t be hurried into anything. I am not going to set up such a damned bad precedent. You are never, never going to hold your affection over my head like a whip when it is all I have in the world — you are not going to threaten to withdraw it every time I refuse to fall in absolutely with your wishes, when I am
married
to you!” Her voice had gone right up the scale.

Auriol touched her on the shoulder, remembering that his firm soft touch had always been able to calm her. But he was so desperate now that he could not hold his hand steady.

“That was not my meaning. I don’t think I am guilty of that kind of blackmail, I love you too much. I am being honest with you.” His fingers gripped her again. “Meriel, get me out of this place, no matter what. I
beg
of you, if nothing else will do for you!”

“For God’s sake, can you not
try
to endure it?” she cried, twisting away, her face ugly with strain. “Don’t you
see
that if I do that I will be ruining you, making you appear guilty? What would our future be when we told the truth, if I did that?

couldn’t protect you! I
must
go with you to Bury Winyard as soon as you’re due for release, it’s the only way I can and will help you escape!”


No
!”


Yes
! You may lose all your love for me, because I own I’m too loathsome, but I’m damned if I’ll sign your death-warrant by letting you break the law!” She picked up her hat and gloves from the table, and looked at him.

Seeing that his face was now as much troubled as angry, and was certainly less rigid than before, she seized his hand and raised it to her lips. “For God’s sake, sir, believe me when I say I will do all for the best. I’ll think about your scheme if that will comfort you, but I can promise no more!” She let go of his fingers and walked across the room, and as she opened the door into the cupboard-sized antechamber, she gave a shy inclination of the head. She had not done that since the early days of their friendship.

*

Meriel was obliged to receive the Senior Member of the Court of Citizens when she returned to Marquis’s Court, and to talk with him about a future in which she would remain exactly what she was now. He remained with her for nearly an hour and when at last he left, she had a headache throbbing over her eyes.

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