Читаем Lament for a lost lover полностью

“There’s something about her,” said Sally quietly. “I’ve always known it. They say witches have special powers.”

“Sally, you’re not suggesting Harriet is a witch?” murmured Charlotte.

Sally said: “I’m saying nothing.”

“You just have,” I reminded her.

“I can only say what I feel. There’s something ... some special powers ... I don’t know what it is. Some call it witchcraft. I don’t like it and I never will.”

“Oh, Sally, what nonsense. She’s just a healthy and attractive woman ...”

“Who knows how to get what she wants.”

Charlotte and I exchanged glances which implied that we shouldn’t take old Sally too seriously.

It was February when Harriet gave birth to her child, and as Sally had predicted it was an easy birth. She had a son and I must admit I felt a twinge of envy. It was a week or so after the birth of the child, whom she had christened Benjamin, when Carleton came home.

He embraced me warmly and I felt a sudden thrill of happiness. I determined that in time, when I had recovered from this lassitude which had been with me since my miscarriage, I also would have a son.

Carleton noticed at once. “You’re better,” he said. And swung me up and held me against him.

“I’m glad you are home,” I said.

We walked into the house arm in arm. I said to him: “We have an addition to the household.

Harriet’s child has arrived.

He was silent for a moment and I went on: “It’s a son. Trust Harriet to have a son.”

“Yes,” he said slowly, “trust Harriet.”

I went with him to her room to see him. She was in bed, her Benjie was in his cradle and Sally hovered.

Harriet held out her hand to Carleton. He took it and it seemed to me that he held it for a long time.

She withdrew it and said: “Sally, give me Benjie. I want to show tell you this, Carleton, he is the most beautiful baby in . Sally will bear me out.” She sat there. How beautiful she was, with her magnificent hair lying about her shoulders, her face serenely happy, her lovely eyes soft as I had rarely seen them. I was deeply aware of Carleton. He was watching her intently. I thought again it was like one of those tableaux, full of meaning.

Benjie thrived. Sally said she had never seen a baby with a finer pair of lungs. When he bellowed, Priscilla watched him in wonder. He showed a determination to get what he wanted from his earliest days. He was beautiful with big blue eyes and dark tufts of hair. Priscilla liked to stand and watch Sally bathe him and to hand her the towels.

I had never seen Harriet so contented before. Her maternal instincts surprized me, but I told myself cynically that she loved her baby partly because he consolidated her position here. Of course as Toby’s widow she had a right to be in the house, but the fact that she had borne one of the heirs to lands and title made her position doubly assured.

But even so I was aware of growing tension all about me. I fancied that Harriet was alert, that she was engaged in some secret adventures. Perhaps it was my imagination, I told myself. Perhaps I could never really forget.

I sometimes wandered to the edge of the gardens to the arbour in which Edwin had died. It was such a gloomy place, and the shrubs about it were becoming more overgrown than ever. It looked eerie, ghostly, as the scene of a tragedy can become when people hate to go there and build up legends about it.

Chastity had let out that the servants said it was haunted. Haunted, I thought, by Edwin. Edwin who had been cut off suddenly with his sins upon him, caught in the act by Old Jethro the reformer. I wondered what Harriet felt when she went past it. She had participated in that death scene and must remember, but she never said anything when the arbour was mentioned. Harriet, I believed, was the sort of woman who in an adventuring life put unpleasant events right out of her memory. For the last few months there had been complaints about the pigeons and the damage they were doing to the fabric of Eversleigh Court, and the grooms and menservants were constantly taking pot-shots at them. Ellen said that everyone in the neighbourhood was getting tired of pigeon pie and pigeon stews, or roast pigeon and pigeon cooked in pots.

“I tell them,” she said, “they should be glad of good food whatever it is.” Carleton had said the boys might shoot at them. A moving target would give them good practice. I often heard them boasting together of the number they had shot. Then they would take them along to the cottage people.

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