LATER on that day they received word that Lord Hilton had died in his sleep. Rose had become fond of the couple over the last few weeks and when Jonathan broke the news she was unsurprised at how sad she felt.
Jonathan pulled her into his arms and she rested her head there. It felt so good, so safe, and she wished she could stay there for ever. With him she could face anything, except what she feared most.
‘How is Lady Hilton taking it?’ Rose asked. ‘Should I go to her?’
‘She said to tell you that she is very grateful for everything you did for them. She has friends and family around right now, but she asks if you would come to the funeral. She says Giles wanted it.’
‘Of course I’ll go,’ Rose said softly. She looked up at him. ‘You’ll be there?’
‘I’m always going to be there, Rose Taylor,’ Jonathan said firmly. ‘Don’t you know that by now?’ The look of love in his eyes made her heart shatter. ‘She’s also asked if you could back to the house with the others after the funeral. She has something to tell you.’
Rose could hardly speak. Her throat was tight. He loved her. She knew that without doubt, even if he hadn’t said the words. Little did he know they could only have these last few days to do them for the rest of their lives. She had handed in her notice in Edinburgh, effective immediately, as the operation had been scheduled for the end of the next week. But she wouldn’t tell Jonathan. For his sake, she would make him believe that she wasn’t in love with him, that she wanted to go back to her life in Edinburgh. It would be hard to convince him, and the thought of hurting him was tearing her apart, but for his sake she had to make him believe her. If the operation was a success she would come back to him and tell him everything. If not? At least he would be free to live his life.
That evening Jonathan came down to her local again. They had been a couple of times and Jonathan was surprised how relaxing he found the pub and how welcoming Rose’s friends were. Every time they had been there, Rose had taken her guitar and sung. Every day he fell deeper in love.
Tonight she took her guitar and perched on a chair on the stage. She caught his eye across the crowded room.
‘I’ve a new song I’d like to sing tonight,’ she said softly. ‘It’s something I composed recently. I hope you all like it. It’s called, “All my tomorrows”.’
Her voice was husky as she sang directly to him. The song was about love and loss, about making the most of every moment. The last line of the chorus was ‘All my tomorrows are wrapped up in you today,’ and as she sang the line her voice cracked a little. Something in the way she sang the song and in the way her eyes filled as the last notes died away scared him.
When she’d finished singing, she smiled a little shakily. The room erupted as everyone clapped and cheered, but Jonathan sat stunned. If he hadn’t known better, he would think she was saying goodbye.
Lord Hilton’s funeral was held a couple of days later in the family church. Summer had arrived and the mourners gathered under a blazing sun. Rose tried not to think that soon a similar crowd might be gathered to say their last farewells to her. Instead, she resolutely pushed the thought away. She wasn’t going to waste a moment of whatever time she had left thinking gloomy thoughts.
And Giles’s funeral wasn’t gloomy. It was a celebration of a remarkable man who, as it was pointed out, had stayed in love with his wife of fifty years right until the end.
Jonathan’s father was there and after the burial he came up to Rose.
‘It’s good to see you again, my dear,’ he said. ‘Won’t you ask Jonathan to bring you home for dinner so we can get to know each other better?’
Rose looked him directly in the eye. If anything happened to her, Jonathan would need his father. She didn’t know if she could make things right between father and son, but she had to try.
‘I don’t know if I can persuade him,’ she said softly. ‘He seems to be very angry with you.’ She took a deep breath and hurried on before she lost her nerve. ‘He seems to think that you don’t care about him. That perhaps you never did.’
Lord Cavendish looked aghast. Whether it was because Rose had the audacity to talk to him about what he almost certainly saw as a private matter, or whether it was because he didn’t want to acknowledge the way his son felt, Rose couldn’t be sure.
Suddenly his expression relaxed and he smiled grimly. ‘I can see why my son is so besotted with you,’ he said. ‘But he can’t think I don’t care about him. My God, he is the most important thing in my life. Why would he think otherwise?’
‘Maybe because you sent him away to boarding school after his mother died? I understand he’s never lived at home since.’
Lord Cavendish pulled a hand through his still dark and thick hair that was so much like his son’s. ‘I sent him away because I thought it was for the best,’ he said stiffly. ‘I was away so much on business and without his mother…’ He shrugged. ‘There would be no one at home to look after him.’
Rose plunged on. Out of the corner of her eye, she could see Jonathan chatting to Lady Hilton.
‘He was only a child,’ she said. ‘And you took him away from everything he knew and loved, just when he had suffered the most devastating loss. Didn’t it occur to you that he’d need his father? At least for a while?’
Jonathan’s father looked even more taken aback, if that was possible. He looked into the distance. ‘I met Jonathan’s mother when I was a young man at university. I loved her instantly. She was like a bright star in my otherwise lonely existence. A bit like I suspect you are to Jonathan. Like you, she didn’t come from aristocracy and my parents didn’t approve. It was different back then. Nobody cares these days. But it didn’t matter what they thought. I couldn’t imagine a future without her. I would have married her even if my family had thrown me on the street.’ He smiled. ‘Luckily it didn’t come to that. We married and had a few short years together. She was a painter, you know. I understand from Lady Hilton that you compose songs? My Clara and you were very much alike. I was working all hours setting up my businesses while she painted. I guess it made her less lonely. Then Jonathan came along and I thought she would miss me less, so I spent even more time away from home.’ His eyes were bleak. ‘I missed her every second, but I thought we had years together.’ His voice was hoarse as if tears weren’t far away.
Unable to stop herself, Rose touched him gently on the arm, wanting to let him know she understood.
‘Then when Jonathan was five, my darling Clara died. I thought I’d go mad with the pain of it. Every time I looked at Jonathan I saw his mother. I couldn’t bear it. I had to throw myself into work. And I had to know they were being looked after. So, yes. I sent him away. I regret it now. I hardly know my son, and it’s my fault.’
‘But you married again. Several times, I gather.’ Rose smiled to take the sting from her words.
‘I wanted what I had with Clara, but it was no use. I never found it again.’ He looked directly into her eyes.
‘Have you ever been in love, Rose? I mean so in love that it feels that he’s the missing part of your soul?’
Rose bit hard on her lip to stop the tears. She nodded.
‘Then you’ll know that no one else can ever measure up, no matter how they try. Your soul remains in two bits. A chunk of you is always missing, no matter how much you search.’
‘But you still have part of her. In Jonathan,’ Rose said, forcing the words past her frozen throat.
She followed his gaze until it rested on Jonathan. His eyes softened. ‘I know I do. But I think I may have left it too late.’
‘It’s never too late.’ Then, at the realisation of what she’d said, she added, ‘At least, it’s not for you two. Talk to him. I know it’s difficult. But tell him what you told me, about Clara. I think you’ll find he understands.’
Lord Cavendish gave her a long appraising look. He grinned and Rose’s heart skipped a beat. In that instant she could see the man Jonathan would become as he aged. What she would give to be around to see it. ‘I think I’m going to like having you around, Rose Taylor,’ Lord Cavendish said slowly. ‘Now, if you’ll excuse me, I think I should go and talk to my son.’
Rose watched as Lord Cavendish walked over to his son. He placed a hand on Jonathan’s shoulder and after a few words the two men walked off together.
Later, back in the Hiltons’ home, Sophia asked Rose to come into her study for a few moments. Rose was baffled. The day was taking its toll on her and she didn’t know how much she could hold it all together. But if Sophia Hilton could keep a brave face even if she was breaking up inside, so could she.
Lady Hilton opened a desk drawer and pulled out an envelope. She handed it to Rose.
‘Giles wanted you to have this, my dear. In the short time we’ve known you, we’ve come to look on you as a daughter.’
Intrigued, Rose opened the envelope. Inside was a cheque, the sum of which made her gasp.
‘What on earth…? You can’t possibly mean to give this to me. It’s far too generous and completely unnecessary.’
Sophia smiled. ‘It’s for your wedding. Giles and I both see the way things are with you and Jonathan. We don’t have daughters of our own, and it gives us both…’ She drew a shaky breath. ‘ I mean, the thought of you using it to get married gave us so much pleasure.’
‘But I’m not getting married. J-Jonathan and I haven’t even s-spoken of it,’ Rose stuttered.
‘But you will, my dear.’
Rose thrust the envelope back at Sophia. ‘I’m sorry. I really can’t take this. There isn’t going to be a wedding, whatever you might think.’ Her throat was clogging with tears and she could barely speak.
‘Don’t you believe he loves you? Is that what you think? Or do you think he won’t marry you because you have some misguided idea about class? But, my dear, Jonathan’s mother was the same and it didn’t stop his father from marrying her. And back then people did make more of it.’
It was all too much. The funeral. The Hiltons’ kindness. That a couple she barely knew had been thinking of her even while going through the most horrible and sad time. Knowing that her days with Jonathan were about to come to an end. She couldn’t bear it.
‘I’m sorry,’ she managed. ‘I really have to go.’ And before she could disgrace herself by breaking down completely, she fled.