1850
It was a bright, windy October morning, and Mrs Bentley and I were down in the basement kitchen making a rabbit pudding. The rabbits were a gift from Mrs Bentley’s second son, whose daughter I had helped to place in a very respectable domestic situation with the Mayburys of Finchley, and when the doorknocker sounded I was up to my elbows in flour.
‘Drat.’ Mrs Bentley dropped the potato she was carving (she was infinitely patient about cutting out the black parts). ‘You’re not expecting anyone today, are you, ma’am?’ She got up and went to peer out of the window. ‘It’s Watson – from Mr Tyson’s office!’ Her pale eyes were suddenly as bright and alert as a squirrel’s. ‘Shall I ask him to come straight down?’
‘Yes, do.’ I carried on rolling out the suet pastry, very glad not to be interrupted by a formal call, which would have meant handwashing and hairbrushing and the removal of my coarse apron. Despite my ‘reduced’ circumstances (that term always puts me in mind of sauces), the vicar’s wife felt obliged to visit me, and I sat on several charitable committees with various local ladies. They all knew how reduced I was, but would have been horribly shocked to catch me in the act of cooking.
‘Well, I hope this means Mr Tyson needs another little job doing.’ Mrs Bentley beckoned Watson in eagerly, and I felt a flutter of anticipation as his great nailed boots came ringing down the area steps. Watson was a ticket-porter employed by my brother’s chambers; the fact that he had been sent all the way from Lincoln’s Inn to Hampstead could only mean a new case.
‘Good morning, Mrs Rodd.’ Watson pulled off his greasy hat; he was a stocky, grizzled, growling man, wrapped in a greatcoat that looked and smelt like a horse-blanket. ‘I’ve a note from Mr Tyson, ma’am, and I’m to wait for a reply.’
‘Thank you, Watson.’ I banged my floury hands on my apron and took the single sheet of paper. ‘Please sit down and rest for a few minutes – Mary, draw him a glass of beer.’
‘Very civil of you, ma’am.’ Watson was not an enormous man, yet he seemed to swamp the room and fill the entire house with the reek of stale tobacco; I would have to open all the windows later.
The note was the usual terse summons: ‘Dear Letty, a matter has arisen. My carriage will come at five, yrs affect. F.’
I pencilled an equally terse reply: ‘Dear F, at your service, L.’
Discretion was the foundation stone of my work; Fred and I were scrupulously careful about what we committed to paper.
Watson drained his beer, and was barely through the door before Mrs Bentley burst out with, ‘Well, ma’am? Is it another case?’
‘That’s what it looks like.’
‘Praise be! I’ll get your good black silk out of the press.’
‘Yes, Mary, if you would.’
‘And you’ll be staying at Mr Tyson’s for dinner,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘So we can keep the rabbit pudding for tomorrow.’
‘Don’t be silly – what will you eat?’
‘I’ll toast the rest of the bread and cheese; there’s more than enough for one.’ She scattered white pepper and salt over her bowl of meat and vegetables. ‘I wonder what it’ll be this time?’
‘So do I, but Mr Tyson didn’t give any details, and it’s pointless to speculate.’
‘The money will be handy, that’s for certain – we’d never have managed till next quarter-day on what you’ve got left. The Bradshaw business was months ago and you didn’t take enough for it.’
‘That was light work; all I needed to do in the end was intercept a couple of letters.’ The previous spring I had uncovered the younger Bradshaw daughter’s plan to elope with her dancing master; my work could be described as the Management and Prevention of Scandal (my brother used to enjoy making up facetious advertisements for my services – ‘Blushes Spared and Broken Commandments Mended!’).
‘Anyway, that was dull as ditchwater,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘Let’s hope the sins are bigger this time.’
‘Mary!’
‘I’m not wishing for any more sin in the world, ma’am – but there’s never a shortage, so why shouldn’t some of it come our way? You’re too charitable, that’s your trouble – and too blooming refined to ask for more money, when folk certainly ain’t too refined to cheat you.’
Overfamiliarity is, of course, a dreadful quality in a servant; this was one of the first principles I had to get into the heads of the girls I used to train up for domestic work. ‘You’ll never rise out of the scullery if you take that tone,’ as I told them. ‘You’ll be turning a mangle until doomsday.’ But Mary Bentley was more than a servant to me. Mary Bentley was a friend I trusted with my life, and she had an endless fund of the plainest common sense; her shrewd eye for human falsity had been invaluable in all my cases.
I had been living with her in this narrow, sooty, inconvenient house in Hampstead for more than two years. On the day that I came to look at the place, my husband had just died, and our house in Bloomsbury had been broken up and sold. I had been looking for a small place near my brother in Highgate, but there was nothing suitable in Highgate that I could afford (Fred couldn’t help me; his wife’s lavish housekeeping ate his income up to the very limit), and I had come to Hampstead because it was busier than its sleepy neighbour, with cheaper lodgings to be had.
Well Walk was a bustling, workaday street and Mrs Bentley’s house was practically next door to a tavern. I didn’t see how I could possibly live in this shabby little terrace, with carts and drays rumbling past all day. I had done my best to put a good face on things, and I really don’t think pride is one of my besetting sins, but at that moment, on that damp February morning, I felt how far I had fallen – Matt would have been so sad to see me. I had been as brave as everyone expected me to be, but there were times when my longing for him, and my sense of how solitary I was without him, pierced me like a knife.
The door of this unpromising house was opened by a small, spare old woman. At first glance I took her to be ancient. The thin frizz of hair underneath her cap was snow-white. Her brows and lashes were white and her pale eyes held only the washed-out memory of blue. But she was wiry and vigorous, and simply pale in the way that very fair-skinned people and white mice are pale. Once upon a time (as she told me later), her hair had been flaming red. Her five sons and her tribe of grandchildren were all red-headed; she had scattered ginger across every north London village from Golders Green to Kentish Town.
Mrs Bentley was talkative, and while I was examining the fireplace in the front parlour, she told me that she had once, many years before, let rooms to the poet John Keats.
I was off my guard, aching for the lost half of my soul, and a great tenderness and sorrow came over me. Matt had a fondness for poetry that I often told him was unsuitable in an archdeacon. I was only teasing – it was our shared weakness for poetry that drew us together in the first place. I saw myself as I had been at twenty-two, dreaming my way through the long summer days of our engagement, reading Matt’s letters that bristled with romantic quotations from Wordsworth, Crabbe, Young – but mostly Keats, the highest romantic of them all, whose verses he particularly loved.
Now Matt was gone, as thoroughly as if he had never existed, and I was a poor, childless widow of two-and-fifty – ‘In drear-nighted December,/Too happy, happy tree,/Thy branches ne’er remember/Their green felicity –’
I found, to my mortification, that I was weeping.
Mrs Bentley said, ‘There, there, ma’am!’
Ignoring my feeble protests, she marched me down to the kitchen, where the fire was, and told me that I needed ‘something to keep the cold out’.
I sniffed that a cup of tea would be most welcome.
‘Tea be blowed,’ said Mrs Bentley.
She made a little jug of brandy and hot water, with a spoonful of sugar, and it warmed us into a state of confidentiality. I spilled out the story of my husband’s sudden death, and the annuity he never got round to providing for me. Mrs Bentley told me about the rheumatism which prevented her letting her lodgings to anyone more demanding than a single lady. At this moment, the supposed social gulf between us was meaningless; we were two lone women, struggling for a place in this cold world. By the time the jug was empty I had even told her about Fanny.
‘I’m living with my brother and his wife at the moment, and I can’t endure much more of her.’
‘Wants rid of you, does she?’
‘Worse – she’s counting on me to stay in that tiny room overlooking the stables and teach the children for nothing. She thinks that’s what a poor female relation is for.’
‘Oh, I know all about that,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘When Bentley died, all my sons’ wives were wild for me to give up the house and move in with them as an unpaid nursemaid. You should stand up for yourself more, ma’am. I could make a beautiful little place for you here, and you’d be at nobody’s beck and call.’
And so the bargain was made and Fanny had to keep her expensive governess, much to her annoyance. I had the house in Well Walk thoroughly cleaned and repainted; I installed the few bits and pieces I had salvaged from my old home – most precious of all, the portrait of my beloved Matt by Edwin Landseer, which was presented to him by the Diocese of London the year before he died (and is so like him that it can still, after all this time, make me weep if I gaze at it too long). Mrs Bentley’s youngest son nailed up pictures, curtain rails and shelves. I discovered that my neighbours were an interesting mixture of busy tradesmen, out-at-elbow young writers, retired sea-captains, bankers, actors and vagabonds of every class. Matt would have loved it.
He would also have loved Mrs Bentley’s stories about Keats and his two brothers, though her memories were not very poetic. More than thirty years earlier, the late Bentley had worked as the local postman. Mary Bentley had been a young wife bringing up five little boys, and to make ends meet, she let serviced rooms to gentlemen. Into this crowded house had come the poet and his two younger brothers – how they all fitted in is still a mystery to me. According to Mrs Bentley, the Keats brothers were very nice young men, though Mr John had the sauce to complain about the noise, and he once lost his temper when it poured with rain and she had to dry the boys’ worsted stockings on the stairs. It was the last house, she said, where the Keatses had all lived together and been happy. Matt would have laughed at me for taking this as good omen. ‘By God, Letty,’ he would have said, ‘what a romantic old boiler you are!’
The carriage rolled into Well Walk at precisely five o’clock by the church bell. It was a large four-wheeler built to accommodate my brother’s ever-expanding family. I picked the stale remains of a piece of gingerbread off the seat and threw it out of the window. There were ten children at the last count, and Fanny was constantly stuffing them with treats in a vain attempt to keep them quiet; fewer cakes and another nursemaid would have been my solution, if anyone had asked me. The noise in that house was simply incredible; when the bigger boys were home for the holidays, Fred groaned that he lived in Pandemonium.
My brother, Frederick Tyson, was one of London’s most celebrated criminal barristers, with a reputation for defending murderers; it was said around the Inns of Court that he could have ‘turned’ a jury in favour of the Emperor Caligula. Sketches of his large, flamboyant figure appeared in the popular press. In my mind’s eye, Fred would always be my playmate: the plump little boy with eyes filled with mischief, and the dimples and curls of a cherub. He was still cherubic at fifty, though he had lost the dimples and the curls were grey.
Fred and his family lived above the stew of the city, in an old, red-brick box of a house that overlooked the green in Highgate village. He was waiting for me, prancing with impatience, in the panelled hall.
‘Fanny and the mob are safely shut away upstairs – we won’t be disturbed.’
‘I thought it was strangely peaceful.’ I took off my black silk bonnet. ‘What’s afoot, Fred?’
‘Something absolutely tailor-made for you, old girl – it’s a job that requires nothing more than a little genteel probing and perhaps a modicum of eavesdropping.’
‘Oh dear, I’m never sure about the morality of eavesdropping, even in a good cause.’
His eyes still had that wicked gleam. ‘Think of the money.’
‘Fred!’
‘Don’t get prissy – there’s plenty of it in this case.’
I’m sorry to say that the sum he mentioned blew all moral scruples from my mind. ‘Good grief, who are these people?’
‘Major bigwigs.’ He lowered his voice. ‘You’re about to meet a Mr Filey – confidential lawyer to the parties in the case, and very much your traditional Old Family Retainer. He’s in the library. Remember not to look shocked.’
‘I know the drill, thank you.’
The library was at the front of the house; a comfortable, well-lit room, lined with Fred’s heavy legal tomes. The green blinds were already tightly drawn across the three long windows (the house was built during the reign of Queen Anne, when people must have been very fond of draughts). A fat, rich fire – far too much on a day like this – blazed in the grate; I couldn’t help thinking the coal bill must be colossal.
Mr Filey stood stiffly in the middle of the room, his hands folded behind his back. I took him in quickly. He was a hale, upright old man, with sharp, bright eyes in an intensely wrinkled face. He had an air of indignation held in reserve, as if he half-expected me to offend him (this was quite usual; my cases were invariably touchy about the situations in which they found themselves).
Fred made the introductions and we sat down around the big mahogany desk.
‘Your brother tells me,’ Mr Filey said, ‘that you have been known to get to the bottom of certain domestic mysteries.’
I appreciated his delicacy. ‘Yes, sir – though I’m not in a position to provide references.’
The craggy face softened for a moment, with what might have been a glimmer of humour. ‘As a matter of fact, I’ve made some inquiries of my own. Certain people you have assisted praise your abilities to the skies – I say this most particularly in regard to the letter “H”.’
Fred and I exchanged quick glances; he meant the Heaton case, our finest hour, when my investigations uncovered a wicked conspiracy and saved Colonel Heaton from the gallows.
‘You are very discreet, Mrs Rodd. Everyone is agreed about that.’
‘She’s a veritable Sphinx,’ Fred said. ‘A rock couldn’t be more inscrutable.’
(Matt used to say he fell in love with me because I had a ‘poker face’ and he took it as a challenge to make me smile.)
Filey cleared his throat. ‘I have the honour to be connected to the Calderstone family, of Wishtide in Lincolnshire. You have heard, no doubt, of Sir James Calderstone.’
‘Yes indeed.’ I knew now why Fred had warned me not to look shocked.
Sir James Calderstone had an immense fortune, due mainly to his coalmines in the north. He had no official position in government yet he pervaded the political scene like an invisible gas; Matt used to accuse him of having half the Cabinet in his pocket.
Sir James Calderstone. Well, well, well.
The goddess of Scandal was no respecter of the Mighty; that was for sure.
‘In a nutshell, Mrs Rodd, the son wants to make a very bad marriage. For various reasons it must be prevented at all costs.’
‘I’m not in the business of preventing marriages.’
‘No – but you do have a reputation for getting at the truth. That is why you are needed. The background of the lady in question is a perfect blank, except for some very worrying rumours. We want facts, but we can’t be seen to search for them. Do you understand? There has been far too much talk as it is. Your task would be to seek out the truth, without attracting attention.’
‘I’m happy to do that. Please be warned, however, that if I find the truth you mightn’t like it. Some people have blank backgrounds simply because their lives are too small to leave a trail. This woman may turn out to be guilty of nothing worse than poverty.’
‘She may – and she may not.’ Again, that glint of humour. ‘Personally, I’d bet good money she has a past that would make your hair curl.’
‘I can’t say I don’t know how it feels,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘I remember how I felt when my boy Tom took up with a woman who was no better than a word I can’t say in front of you, ma’am. She ran off with a sailor and I could’ve danced a hornpipe.’
Fred’s carriage had dropped me back in Well Walk just before ten, and Mrs Bentley had been waiting up for me, dozing bolt-upright in a kitchen chair, as I had known she would be. I had changed my good black silk for a flannel wrapper and described my dinner (roast mutton and potatoes, apple pudding). We were now sitting cosily in front of the kitchen fire, with our skirts turned up and our feet resting on the fender. Mrs Bentley had made a fragrant jug of hot brandy – sensing an occasion she had borrowed a lemon from next door.
‘All that money!’ Mrs Bentley couldn’t get over this; Mr Filey had given me a handsome sum to meet immediate expenses and she had gazed at it with her eyes bulging. ‘They must be desperate for you to stop that wedding, ma’am. Why don’t they just threaten to cut off the young man’s funds? That’s usually all it takes to kill true love.’
‘You’re a cynic, Mary – but whether you’re right or not, the Calderstones apparently can’t cut off young Charles. When he was twenty-one he came into his grandmother’s estate, which provides him with a perfectly good income. He’s an independent man of twenty-three and he claims not to care about his father’s enormous fortune.’
‘Well, why doesn’t he just up and marry her?’
‘She won’t have him without his family’s approval – and if Sir James did cut him off, Charles would lose more than the fortune. In worldly terms he would be a man without a future –yet he’s apparently prepared to surrender everything for the sake of this woman.’
‘She’s playing a long game,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘Holding out for the lot.’
‘That’s possible. It’s also perfectly possible that she is acting from the highest motives.’
‘She must be pretty.’
‘Very, I’m told, and with the manner and appearance of a perfect lady. Charles met her when she came to the house to teach his sisters Italian. She also plays and sings as if she’d had the most expensive masters. But nobody knows a thing about her, beyond the fact that three years ago, in Italy, she married a clergyman named Orme, who died a year later. There’s a perfectly good record of the marriage at the English Consulate in Florence. She still lives with his sister, Miss Winifred Orme.’
‘But they think she’s hiding something,’ Mrs Bentley said.
‘Exactly. They’re pinning all their hopes on a rumour that she’s already married to someone else.’
‘Bigamy! We’ve never had that one before.’
‘It’s the merest wisp of gossip, very difficult to substantiate. I warned Mr Filey there might be nothing I can do.’
‘You didn’t turn him down?’
‘Certainly not; I agreed to start immediately. I’m to go down to Wishtide next week, to put Mrs Orme and her history under a magnifying glass. As far as the rest of the world is concerned, I’m the new governess, come to “finish” the young ladies before they go into society.’ I sighed rather crossly. ‘It’s funny, when you think of the lengths I’ve gone to not to end up governessing; I only hope those girls don’t speak French better than I do. And I might find nothing – if Mrs Orme is as clever as she sounds, she’ll have covered her tracks.’
‘But there are always some things that can’t be covered up,’ Mrs Bentley said. ‘Some secrets go off and stink the house out, like a dead mouse under the floorboards. If Mrs Orme is hiding something, someone in this world will know about it.’