"You happen to have some records of your family's action if they have only been handed down by word of mouth. It may well be that if we could all trace our family history back so far, we should find skeletons in cupboards."
"That's a kindly thought. It is pleasant to contemplate that we are not the only villains."
There was a sound from above. I turned and saw Teresa standing on the slope which led down to the ponds.
"Are you looking for me, Teresa?" I asked.
"Yes, Miss Grant," she answered. "Miss Barston has a headache and she wants you to sit with her class this afternoon if you are free. She says all you will have to do is watch them. She has set them work."
"Yes, certainly. I'll come back at once. Goodbye, Sir Jason."
He took my hand and kissed it after bowing to Teresa. "It has been a very pleasant afternoon for me," he said.
I joined Teresa. She said: "I saw you hadn't gone riding so I guessed you were walking in the ruins."
"I went down to the ponds and happened to meet Sir Jason there."
Teresa said: "I had to interrupt you. Miss Barston said ..."
"Of course you did, Teresa." "I hope you didn't mind."
"Of course not. As a matter of fact I was trying to get away."
She nodded and looked rather pleased.
His pursuit of me was becoming obvious and people were noticing. He had the temerity to call at the school and suggest to Miss Hetherington that I call at the Hall to inspect the costumes. She told me that when she reminded him that that was a task for Miss Barston he replied that he thought the girls who would wear the costumes should be taught to carry them off with dignity, and that with the special training I had had I should be the one to inspect them.
"It was so blatant," said Daisy. "He knew it and he knew I knew it too. I couldn't help laughing ... at which he joined in. I said firmly: `No. It must be Miss Barston', and he said he would let me know when it would be convenient. I fancy we are not going to hear any more about that. I don't know what to say to you, Cordelia. He has obviously got some interest in you. You are young and good looking and to put it frankly he is a rake. But he really should provide his own women and not look for them in respectable quarters. He has set that woman up at Rooks' Rest and, surely he knows, that in itself- if he were not who he is - should be enough to exclude him from our premises. Unfortunately he is our landlord. He could turn us out at a moment's notice if the whim took him. Moreover we have two pupils from the Hall. They take all the extras and are most profitable. It's a teasing situation. Do you think you can handle it? You are a sensible young woman."
"I think I can. He sometimes waylays me when I ride and the other day I came upon him at the fish ponds."
"Oh dear ... Of course he has every right to be here. We can't ban him from his own property."
I felt myself glowing with excitement. It was rather like a battle and I was deeply involved. I could not, with honesty, say that I deplored his pursuit of me. It was flattering in the extreme and I should be a very unusual woman if I were averse to flattery.
When I next went into the town Mrs. Baddicombe cornered me.
"Oh. I do reckon it'll be wedding bells pretty soon," she told me confidentially. "I do hear there be preparations up at Rooks' Rest. Mrs. Gittings were in here yesterday ... going today she is, taking the little 'un to her sister's place down on the moors. Real pleased she was. There's nothing she likes better and you can see why. It must be a very odd sort of household up there at the Rest."
"I know Mrs. Gittings always enjoys visiting her sister."
"I reckon if it wasn't for the little 'un she wouldn't be working at the Rest. She do live for that child. Poor little mite. 'Tis a mercy someone has a little thought for her. Reckon they want her out of the way for the wedding. Stands to reason the likes of she... well she should be putting in an appearance after the ceremony ... not before."
"So you think the fact that Mrs. Gittings is going away with the child means ..."
"Of course it does, me dear. There'll be a wedding, no mistake. Parson won't like performing the ceremony likely as not, but what can he do? Don't want to lose his living, do he?"
"You can't be sure this is because of the wedding," I began.
"What else? And if it ain't time now, when is it? 'Tis a year since that poor saint went. He's waited his year, and remember there be no male heir for the Verringers as yet. That's got to be thought on. You mark my words, that's what it all means."
I came out of the shop feeling depressed. Could Mrs. Baddicombe be right? Surely if he were on the brink of marriage he would not show such obvious interest in me?
A few days later Miss Hetherington sent for me.
"Here is a note from Sir Jason," she said. "He said he wants you to go to the Hall to discuss the progress of Fiona and Eugenie."
"Go to the Hall ... me! Surely he would want to speak to you about that."
"So I thought, but he goes on to say that he is concerned about Fiona's being launched into society, which will be next year when she is due to leave us, and he_ thinks that with your Schaffenbrucken training he can talk to you about these matters and the special coaching she needs."
"But I know nothing of the launching of girls into English society."
"He was defeated over the monks' costumes, but he never gives up. I am wondering what to tell him."
"I suppose I could go to the Hall."
"My dear Cordelia, I do wonder if it would be wise."
"I think it will be all right. I gather that his wedding is imminent."
"Is it?"
"According to Mrs. Baddicombe."
"She is an excellent news agency," said Daisy, "but I believe she does not always send out true messages."
"According to her, Mrs. Gittings has departed with the child who might prove an embarrassment in the circumstances."
Daisy shrugged her shoulders. "I do wish he would behave more reputably. But as long as it has no adverse effect on the school I suppose it is no concern of ours."
"I can't see how the school can be affected by his conduct. Suppose I went and took the girls with me. They would be there as chaperones."
"H'm," snorted Daisy. "Really this is ridiculous. The annoying part about it is that he knows it and I believe he is laughing at us."
"He is teasing us, I think," I said. "After all, I suppose he will soon be married and perhaps he will change then."
"That is a statement I would challenge very strongly. They say leopards never change their spots."
"They also say that reformed rakes make the best husbands."
"Oh dear, it really is rather absurd. Do you think you can handle it, Cordelia?"
"Yes, I do. I'll take the girls with me and insist on their being present."
"I am sure he will try to outwit you in some way."
"He has dope that on one or two occasions, but I think he will get tired of it when I show him clearly that I do not want his company."
She looked at me steadily. "You do show him that, Cordelia?"
"But of course."
"They say he is a very attractive man. I don't know much about these things myself, but I do know that in some quarters rakes are said to be attractive."
"That's a romantic fiction, Miss Hetherington. It doesn't apply to real life."
"You seem very certain."
"I am about him."
"Well, then go with the girls and see what comes of it. I can't see why he can't discuss their future with me."
That was how I came to be at the Hall on that afternoon in May which was to prove so important in the future.
I set out with Fiona and Eugenie in the early afternoon and we soon covered the few miles between the school and the Hall.
Fiona was reserved but charming; Eugenie was her usual brash self- a little peevish because she was missing the afternoon ride when she would have gone off with the party of girls among whom would be Charlotte Mackay.
When we reached the Hall we went straight to the stables. Jason Verringer was there as though impatiently awaiting us.
He helped me to dismount. "Just on time," he said. "I do like punctuality and I guess Miss Grant is the same."
One of the grooms had come forward to take the horses. Eugenie patted hers and told the groom what she wanted him to do.
"I have two new horses," said Jason to Eugenie. "I'm rather proud of them. I'll show you, Eugenie, before you go."
"I'd love to see them," cried Eugenie, looking animated and pretty suddenly.
"You shall."
As I turned I saw something lying on the cobbles and stopped to pick it up. It was an earring-very large, rather bizarre with what might have been a ruby the size of a pea surrounded by diamonds.
"Look at this!" I cried.
I held it out in the palm of my hand and the girls came to peer at it.
"I know whose it is," said Eugenie. "I've seen her wearing them. It's Mrs. Martindale's."
There was something malicious in her eyes which ill became one so young. "It is hers, isn't it, Uncle Jason?"
"I suppose it could be," he said.
"She wouldn't like to lose it," said Fiona. "What use is one without the other?"
"Shall I give it to you to give to her, Uncle Jason?" said Eugenie with a smirk. "Or I could take it to her. I could easily drop it in when I ride by tomorrow."
"Do that," said Jason Verringer. "If it is really hers she'll be glad to have it."
"I don't see who else it could belong to," said Eugenie. "Do you, Miss Grant?"
"I'm sure I don't know," I said. "I certainly have never seen it before."
Eugenie put it into her pocket. "Show us the horses, Uncle Jason," she said.
He looked at me and lifted his shoulders.
"Oh, here's Mrs. Keel. Mrs. Keel, do take Miss Grant to the sitting room. Are those books from the library there?"
"Yes, Sir Jason."
"Good. We'll be there in a minute. The girls are impatient for a glimpse of the new greys."
He started to run across the yard with the two girls at his heels. I wanted to go after them but Mrs. Keel was talking to me.
"Miss Eugenie is crazy about horses. She always was. Would you come with me, Miss Grant." I felt foolish. I guessed that he had planned just this. However, the girls had only gone to look at the horses and there was only one thing I could do and that was follow Mrs. Keel into the house.
We went into the great hall through which I had passed on that memorable occasion when I had dined with him and sat afterwards in the twilit courtyard.
We went up the great staircase with its beautifully carved newel posts displaying prominently the Tudor roses and slightly less so the fleurs-de-lys, and I was shown into a panelled room with rich red carpets and heavy red velvet curtains. There was a big carved table under a latticed window and on this had been piled several volumes. On a smaller table was a silver tea tray on which were cups and saucers.
"If you'll take a seat, Miss Grant. They won't be long and I'll bring the tea when it is rung for."
"Thank you," I said, and she went out and left me. I felt uneasy. Here was I, alone in this house and only just arrived.
I looked round the room. This was his special sanctum. There were two beautiful paintings on the walls. One of a woman - a Verringer obviously. It looked like a Gainsborough. There was a certain unmistakable look about it. The other was a landscape. There was a bookcase with glass doors. I looked at the books. Some poetry. How extraordinary! I could not imagine his reading poetry. The others were mainly history.
"Assessing my reading habits?"
I had not heard him come into the room. I swung round and saw to my dismay that he was alone. "Where are the girls?" I demanded.
"You're going to be a little bit put out, I believe. Don't blame them. You know how girls are about horses."
"I thought they were coming here to discuss ..."
"It was you who were going to do that. I didn't suggest they come in the first place. In fact I think it is better that they are not here. We can talk more frankly about them. Eugenie was mad to try out the horses and she carried Fiona along with her, so I said they might take them out and ride them in the paddock for half an hour. They'll come in for tea."
He was smiling at me with just a hint of mischievous triumph in his eyes.
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