The Asylum (26 page)

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Authors: John Harwood

Tags: #Thrillers, #Gothic, #Suspense, #Historical, #Fiction

BOOK: The Asylum
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“I appreciate that, Mr. Lovell, but I am your client, too.”

“Yes, and it puts me in something of a quandary.” He gave me a wry smile, in which I detected a hint of encouragement.
Unless your circumstances should change . 
.
 .
Of course! How could I have been so obtuse? I had a sudden vivid recollection of Aunt Vida on her deathbed, saying, “You’re a handsome gel, not like me—you’ll have offers . . . Write to Mr. Wetherell—tell him who you’re marrying. Papers to draw up . . .”

“I have guessed the condition, Mr. Lovell. I am to have the packet if I marry—or become engaged to marry.”

Now he looked deeply uncomfortable.

“Well, yes, but—”

“But?”

“I take it, Miss Ferrars,” he said, glancing at my left hand, “that you are not engaged—or contemplating an engagement?”

“Certainly not,” I said.

“Then I fear it is absolutely impossible for me to hand over the packet.”

“But if I
were
to become engaged . . .” To an obliging young man, I thought, willing to play the part . . . or why not simply invent one?

“Then you should write and tell me, yes. But that in itself would be exceedingly unlikely—astonishingly unlikely—to fulfill the condition. And now, Miss Ferrars, I really cannot say any more . . .”

Astonishing unlikely . . . “Tell him
who
you’re marrying,” Aunt Vida had said . . .

“I am to have the packet if I become engaged to someone in particular,” I said flatly. “Mr. Lovell, you have been so helpful; will you not take the last step and tell me who it is?”

“That, Miss Ferrars, I absolutely cannot do. I have trespassed thus far because I am to blame for your receiving those letters in the first place. But carelessness is one thing; knowingly breaching a client’s trust is quite another. I should deserve to be struck off if I did any such thing.”

A small silence followed. Our eyes met, and I smiled encouragingly.

“But, Mr. Lovell, you would not be breaching my mother’s trust. It is absolutely essential, for my own peace of mind and Lu—Miss Ardent’s—that I should see what is in that packet, and if my mother were here now, she would tell you so herself.”

“Are you quite certain of that, Miss Ferrars?”

“Of course I am, Mr. Lovell. Don’t you think I know what my own mother would have wanted?”

“I meant, are you sure that seeing those papers
would
bring you peace of mind?” he said.

“You said in your letter, Mr. Lovell, that you didn’t know what the packet contained.”

“Nor do I. But—no, I am sorry; it is quite impossible. Now really, Miss Ferrars, there is nothing more I can tell you. Would you care for some tea?”

“Yes, I should, thank you.”

“Then pray excuse me one moment.” He rose with evident relief and left the room.

All I need do, I thought, is ask the right question. A man Mama did not want me to marry—or did not want me to grow up and marry without reading the rest of the papers—which
must
have to do with Rosina and Lucia, Thomas Wentworth, and Felix Mordaunt . . . Could Thomas Wentworth have remarried and had a son? Then why all the secrecy? Why had Mama, or Aunt Vida, not simply warned me against him? And why on earth would Mama have feared that, of all the eligible men in the kingdom, I would choose this particular one? She had sealed the packet at least ten years ago: he might easily have married someone else by now. Or died.

And there was something else . . . something Mr. Lovell had said in his last letter, which I had brought with me. “In the event of your death—or certain other events, which I am forbidden to disclose—the packet is to be destroyed unopened.” “Certain other events” . . . Surely the man’s death. So he must still be alive!

But Mr. Lovell had written “events.” I had just realised what it must mean when he returned to his chair.

“Tea won’t be long,” he said, glancing uneasily at the paper on my knee.

“I am sorry to plague you,” I said, “but I have divined so much that you may as well tell me the rest. You are to give me the packet only if I become engaged to marry a certain man”—his expression changed at this, in a way I could not interpret. “If he dies—or if I marry anyone
but
this man—you are to destroy it unopened. I am right so far, am I not?”

He groaned and ran his hands through his hair.

“This is my own fault, Miss Ferrars; I have dug myself a pit, and fallen into it; but I cannot answer you.”

“Then I am sorry for you, Mr. Lovell, for I have vowed not to leave Plymouth without that packet.”

“You are a very determined young woman, Miss Ferrars,” he said with a rueful smile.

“You may think it unbecoming—”

“I did not say that, Miss Ferrars, nor did I mean it. On the contrary,” he said warmly, “you have every right to press me. But the fact remains: I am bound by my oath of office not to surrender that packet unless your mother’s terms are met.”

“But surely, Mr. Lovell, if her intention was to save me from marrying this man, she would want you to tell me his name—now that you have revealed so much?”

“You would make a formidable barrister,” he said, ruffling his hair again. “But all I can do—speaking from the heart, and not simply as a lawyer—is advise you to trust in your mother’s judgement. At least some good has come of my carelessness; it has brought you and your cousin together, and I can see that you are deeply attached to her. Indeed—am I right in feeling that you are here for her sake rather than your own?”

“For both our sakes,” I said, avoiding his eye as I felt my colour rising.

“All the same, Miss Ferrars, given what you have told me, I don’t see how your cousin’s happiness can possibly depend upon the contents of that packet. I do earnestly advise you to trust in your mother and leave things as they are—ah, thank you, Mr. Pritchard,” he said, springing from his chair as the elderly clerk appeared with a tray.

I was glad of the interval, for I could not decide what to do next. Instinct warned me that revealing Lucia’s secret would not be enough to sway him; I would have to divine the forbidden suitor’s name or coax Mr. Lovell into revealing it . . . and then I saw how it might be done.

“Tell me, Mr. Lovell,” I said when he was seated again, “have you always lived in Plymouth?” The look of relief on his face was almost comical, and for the next few minutes I encouraged him to talk about himself. He had indeed grown up in Plymouth, and until quite recently had lived at home with his parents—his father had also been a solicitor—and his two youngest sisters; there were two married sisters and a brother, all living within twenty miles of the town. His parents had lately retired to the village of Noss Mayo, leaving Mr. Lovell in bachelor quarters near the Hoe. He spoke of them all with great affection, and sounded entirely content with his lot.

“But, Miss Ferrars,” he said suddenly, “I am forgetting my duty; you did not come all this way to listen to my ramblings.”

“It is a pleasure to hear about your family. But yes, there is something else: a separate matter.”

“You have only to name it,” he said eagerly.

“There are two men about whom I should like some information; I should like to know if either of them is still alive, and if so, where they are living. But I don’t want either of them to know of my enquiry.”

His face, which had cleared at the words “a separate matter,” fell again.

“And their names?”

“The first,” I said, studying him closely, “is Thomas Wentworth—Rosina Wentworth’s father.”

“That,” he said uneasily, “I may be able to help you with. What else can you tell me about him?”

“Only that he was wealthy—a businessman or financier of some sort—and lived in Portland Place, at least from 1859 until 1860. And he had an elder daughter, Clarissa, who eloped in the summer of 1859; she and her lover, a man called George Harrington, were—they died together in an accident in Rome, in October of that year; there was something about it in
The Times.

“I see.” He fetched a piece of paper from his desk and scribbled a few lines on it, looking troubled, but not unduly alarmed. “And the other?”

“Felix Mordaunt, of Tregannon House, in Cornwall.”

This time the shock was palpable; he bent over his paper, writing studiously, but the rash along his jaw was suddenly livid.

I had guessed the riddle, but it made no sense. Felix Mordaunt might have been a notorious libertine, but how could Mama possibly have imagined that of all the men in the kingdom, I would meet and marry
him?
And again, even if she had, why not simply warn me herself?

“May I ask why?” he said, without raising his eyes from the page.

I was about to say,
Because he is the man my mother named,
but realised I did not actually know that for certain.

“Oh—a family connection,” I replied as coolly as I could manage. “My aunt mentioned the name once or twice; is it familiar to you, Mr. Lovell?”

His head flew up, his face reddening with anger.

“If you
knew,
Miss Ferrars, then why?—” His mouth snapped shut as realisation dawned.

“I assure you, Mr. Lovell, that when I arrived here this afternoon, I had not the faintest suspicion. If you had not led me to the answer, I should never have guessed. But now that you
have
told me—”

Once again he groaned and ran his hands through his hair, rumpling it so wildly that I feared it would come out in tufts.

“Will you tell me,” he said at last, “how you arrived at that name?”

“I cannot do that, Mr. Lovell, without betraying a confidence. But I know exactly why my mother did not want me to marry this man”—again that indecipherable flicker of reaction—“and I can assure you that my happiness, and that of my cousin, depends upon your handing over that packet, as my mother would instruct you to do, if only she were here. And I promise you—I will swear on the Bible, if you wish—that no one except Lucia and I will ever know you gave it to me.”

He leant back in his chair, swirling the dregs in the bottom of his teacup.

“I confess, Miss Ferrars, that I simply don’t know what to do. Sometimes I think I am not cut out for the law . . . But the fact remains: the terms of your mother’s bequest have not been met, and again I urge you to trust in her judgement. You say that your happiness depends upon it, but you don’t know what that packet contains, any more than I do, and you may be mistaken.”

“I am sorry, Mr. Lovell, but my mind is made up.”

“I feared as much. Will you allow me twenty-four hours to think it over?”

“Might I be able to see you in the morning? I should like to be home tomorrow night.”

“I am afraid that every minute of the morning is spoken for,” he said. “But I shall be free by half past two at the latest.”

He rose and offered his hand, which was reassuringly warm and dry, to help me up, and for a moment we stood smiling at each other, our hands still clasped.

“You have been very kind,” I said as he accompanied me to the landing, “and exceedingly forbearing; far more than I deserve.”

“On the contrary, Miss Ferrars, I have nothing but admiration for you. Until tomorrow, then, at half past two.”

I had gone halfway down the stairs before I realised that I was quite unsteady on my feet, and trembling with emotion.

 

It is only nine o’clock, but the hotel is completely silent; not surprisingly, as there is only one other guest. My room is quite large, and perfectly comfortable; Mrs. Gifford, the proprietor—she has the most extraordinarily elaborate coiffure of snow-white hair—is most obliging. From my window I can see a line of gaslamps stretching away in both directions along the empty street.

After I had written down everything I could recall of the interview, I put on my cloak (or rather, Lucia’s cloak) and set out again, meaning to walk down to the Hoe and look at the sea. But the light was fading, and the evening chill had settled, so I went only as far as the telegraph office on Royal Parade—it felt very strange, addressing a telegram to myself—to let Lucia know that I hoped to be home tomorrow night. Mrs. Gifford, who was hovering in the foyer when I returned, invited me to take tea by the sitting-room fire; I was about to decline when it occurred to me that she might know something of the Mordaunt family.

The sitting room is as dismal as most of its kind; I remember half a dozen like it from my travels with my aunt: crammed with chairs and sofas in faded Regency plush, along with their attendant footstools and side tables. There are the usual heavy maroon curtains shrouding a bow-fronted window; the wallpaper, also faded and Regency, is on the verge of peeling. But the fire was crackling cheerfully, and to forestall any more questions about myself (I
must
learn to answer to “Miss Ardent” without the slightest hesitation) I asked her at once about the Mordaunts of Tregannon House.

“Mordaunt, Mordaunt . . . No, I can’t say that I do,” she replied, taking the chair beside me. “But Tregannon—now, that rings a bell. There’s an asylum at Liskeard of that name.”

So Edmund Mordaunt must have prevailed, I thought.

“I think that might be it,” I said. “Can you tell me where Liskeard is?”

“About twenty miles to the west, Miss Ardent, just this side of Bodmin Moor.”

“I think the Mordaunt family may own Tregannon Asylum,” I said, realising as I spoke that someone had entered the room.

“Ah, Mrs. Fairfax,” said my hostess, bouncing to her feet. “Would you care to join us for tea? Miss Ardent; Mrs. Fairfax.”

I had passed her on the stairs that afternoon, on my way to Mr. Lovell’s office. She had the figure of a young woman, and her hair, a few shades darker than my own, showed no trace of grey. But her face was gaunt, with deep lines scored downward from the corners of her mouth, and bruised pouches like crumpled snakeskin beneath her eyes, which were very dark and lustrous.

As we exchanged greetings, a maid came in and murmured something to Mrs. Gifford.

“I am afraid I must leave you,” she said, “but do make yourselves comfortable; Martha will bring an extra cup.”

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