Chapter 26

The telegram arrived the next day. Rupert had already set out for Belair in his hired chaise with a picnic basket packed by the inn, in the hope of tempting Hélène out for a drive. He wanted to talk to her alone about what Annette had been asked to do. Of course Annette would be with them, but it was clear to Rupert that she was special for some reason and he decided it was time he got to know her better.

When the post boy arrived at Le Coq d’Argent, Joseph Fermont directed him to Parker, who was outside in the yard, cleaning his master’s boots.

Parker took the telegram and saw that it came from England. How important is it? he wondered. Will it keep until Mr Rupert returns, whenever that is, or should I take it at once and hope to catch him before he sets out from Belair on his picnic?

Telegrams usually brought bad news, he thought. Why spoil the day? Surely another few hours would make no difference. He put the envelope into his pocket and got on with polishing the boots, but as the day wore on, he became more and more conscious of the telegram, rustling in his pocket, and at last he got to his feet and set off to walk to Belair.

As he arrived in the stable yard, the chaise was returning along the drive. It drew up in front of the house, and Henri the stable lad ran to take the horse’s head while Rupert handed Hélène down. He looked surprised as he saw Parker coming round the side of the house.

‘Parker?’ he said. ‘What’s up?’

‘Telegram for you, sir,’ Parker said, handing him the envelope.

For a moment Rupert looked at it, premonition flooding his mind, then he ripped it open and read the message…

JUSTIN KILLED IN ACCIDENT STOP COME HOME IMMEDIATELY STOP CHALFONT

… and the colour drained from his face.

‘Rupert?’ Hélène put her hand on his arm. ‘Rupert? What is it?’

‘My brother,’ Rupert said. ‘My brother!’ And he crumpled the telegram in his hand.

‘Let’s go indoors,’ Hélène said, and taking him by the hand as she would a child, she led him into the house.

Annette had climbed out of the chaise and turned to Parker.

‘You’re Mr Rupert’s man?’

‘Yes,’ he replied, and as he spoke he knew he should have brought the telegram straight away. He didn’t know what it actually said, but it was clear there was something wrong with Mr Justin.

Hélène had taken Rupert into the morning room where, when she had closed the door, they could be private. Once inside, she turned to face him and took both his hands in hers. His face was as pale as it had been the day before, but this time she saw tears in his eyes.

‘Tell me,’ she said softly.

‘It’s Justin,’ Rupert murmured. ‘Justin, my brother. There’s been an accident.’ His voice broke on a sob. ‘He’s dead.’

Without further thought Hélène gathered him into her arms, pressing her cheek against his, wet with tears. She said nothing. There were no words that she could say that would be of any use. She just held him close as his tears slid silently down his face. She had never seen a grown man cry, but he was her Rupert and she held him tightly to offer him comfort.

She could hear voices outside in the hall, but she did not let him go. She never wanted to let him go again. She knew he loved her and she loved him. He was hers and there would never be anyone else.

At last he put her gently away from him, saying, ‘I’m sorry.’

‘Don’t be,’ she said. ‘Just remember I’ll always be here.’

Rupert looked down into her eyes and despite his great sorrow found he was smiling, smiling through his tears. ‘I love you, Hélène,’ he said.

‘And I love you, Rupert.’

He pulled her back into his arms, holding her close against him. ‘It’s not the time to ask,’ he said into her hair, ‘but will you marry me?’

She reached up a hand and touched his cheek. ‘Of course I will.’

At that moment the door opened and Rosalie came into the room. ‘Hélène,’ she said, ‘what are you doing in here?’ As she saw her daughter still standing within the circle of Rupert’s arms, she went on, ‘Well, I can see, but it is most unseemly of you.’

Hélène stayed where she was, safe with Rupert, and said, ‘Rupert has just learned that his brother has been killed in an accident, Maman.’

‘That is very sad news,’ replied her mother, ‘but it is a good thing that it was I and not one of the servants who found you like this. You should not be shut away, alone, with an unmarried man. If there was news of this, your reputation—’

‘My reputation is quite safe, Maman,’ Hélène interrupted. ‘Rupert and I have just become engaged, so it must be perfectly proper for me to comfort him in his distress at this dreadful news.’

‘Engaged!’ Rosalie latched on to that word, hearing little of the others. ‘With no reference to your father… or to me?’

‘Papa has already given Rupert permission to address me…’

‘But not for a formal betrothal…’

‘It is quite decided between us, Maman,’ Hélène said, glancing up at Rupert with a shy smile. ‘Is it not, Rupert?’

‘Quite decided,’ echoed Rupert. He stepped away from Hélène and said, ‘I hope you do not completely disapprove, madame.’

Rosalie looked flustered, but at last came back to the news brought by the telegram. ‘But with this news of your brother, surely this is hardly the time…’

‘It is just the time, madame,’ Rupert asserted. ‘I shall have to return to England at once. My family needs me there, and there will be much to arrange, but I shall come back as soon as I may to claim Hélène and take her to Pilgrim’s Oak.’

‘Pilgrim’s Oak?’

‘My family home, madame.’

‘This is not at all as it should be,’ Rosalie tried again, but she recognised in her daughter’s expression the look of determination that had carried her through the dark days of the siege. ‘I don’t know what your father will say.’

‘I hope he will give me his blessing,’ Hélène said. ‘But whether he does or not, I shall consider myself engaged to Rupert and will wait for his return, however long he’s needed in England.’

*

The news of Justin’s death was quickly spread below stairs.

‘Pierre says it means that Mr Rupert is now the heir,’ Annette told Agathe. ‘He will be Sir Rupert one day, and Hélène will be Lady Chalfont.’

‘If they get married,’ interposed Agathe.

‘I’m sure they will,’ Annette said. ‘Pierre says that Mr Rupert is besotted with her.’

‘Does he now?’ commented Agathe. She had noticed recently that Annette was giving a great deal of weight to what Pierre said. She wasn’t sure whether she was pleased or not. Annette had had a dreadful experience at the hands of Father Thomas, and Agathe was afraid that it might have made her fearful of every man. She liked Pierre, he was a good steady man, but would he understand the very gentle care Annette needed if she were ever to marry? There was nothing she could say in warning – she was bound by her promise to Rosalie that no hint of Annette’s real situation should become known at Belair – but she was also afraid that Annette could be damaged further if she were to marry and her husband expect his conjugal rights without knowledge of what had gone before.

‘Well,’ she said, ‘I’m sure he isn’t thinking of that just now. He will be mourning his brother. They were twins, I believe, which probably means they were very close. I’m sure titles will be the last thing on his mind.’

In the propriety of the drawing room, with Rosalie in attendance though not within earshot, Hélène and Rupert sat in the window embrasure.

‘Does it say what happened?’ Hélène asked.

‘No, just an accident.’

‘And when?’

‘Yesterday,’ Rupert replied. ‘It must have been yesterday when I was taken ill; but I didn’t recognise it for what it was.’

‘When will you leave?’

‘First thing tomorrow. We shall take the train to Paris and then to the coast. I’ve sent Parker to the telegraph office to send a reply saying that I am on my way.’

‘Oh, Rupert! I wish I could come with you!’

Rupert flashed her the smile she had come to love. ‘So do I, my love, but we have to agree that that is impossible.’

‘We could elope?’ she suggested hopefully, and was rewarded with another smile.

‘So we could,’ he agreed, ‘but it wouldn’t answer. It would just upset everyone further still. Remember, we still have to brave your father’s anger!’

That turned out to be less of a trial than they had expected. Emile had grown to like the charming Englishman laying siege to his daughter, and he too had realised that now the elder brother was no longer in the way, Rupert would eventually inherit his father’s title. Of course he made no mention of this now, but it was in his mind as he gave his consent.

‘There can be nothing formal until you return,’ he told Rupert when he applied to him later that evening. ‘Hélène is very young, but if, after a period of mourning for your brother, perhaps in the spring, you are both of the same mind and wish to announce your betrothal, then we shall be happy to give you our blessing.’

It was almost dark when Rupert finally took his leave. Hélène’s parents gave them a few moments’ privacy to say goodbye before he climbed up into his chaise and drove back to the village. For a long moment as he held her close, she felt the warmth of his body against her own. ‘Never forget how much I love you, darling girl,’ he murmured into her hair, and then, with a gentle kiss upon her lips, he let her go.

‘It was such a lovely day,’ Hélène said with a sigh, ‘until you got the telegram.’

As he drove back to the village through the gathering gloom, he thought of the brief conversation he had managed to have with Annette, the maid.

‘Look after your mistress while I’m away,’ he’d said.

‘Of course,’ she had replied. ‘No harm will come to her. Pierre and I will see to that.’

‘Send word to me if necessary,’ Rupert had added, giving her his direction at Pilgrim’s Oak.

Once back at the inn he found Parker had packed all his belongings in readiness for the journey, and so he retired to his room, where he spent the night alone with his grief. Justin was dead, the other half of himself was missing and would never return, and having held himself together while he was at Belair, at long last he was able to give vent to his misery.

When the chaise was out of sight, Hélène had turned back into the house. She missed him already, but they had agreed to write and she would send her first letter the very next day and then wait to receive his reply. As she lay in bed, staring out into the night sky, she relived the day, the day which had been such a mixture of sadness and joy, the day she had engaged herself to marry Rupert Chalfont.