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Authors: Allan Mallinson

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It appeared, however, that the meeting had been one of respectful listening and then accommodations, said Elizabeth. She had been there throughout, much to her surprise as well as the family’s, for Mr and Mrs Hervey had imagined that the archdeacon would wish his visitation to be entirely private (Mrs Hervey’s loathing of the archdeacon had disposed her to believe that he would not welcome witnesses). At the last minute, Mr Hervey’s spirits had faltered somewhat, and therefore Elizabeth had found herself the supporter.

‘And so what was agreed on?’ asked Hervey, as Elizabeth stood watching him rub down the gelding.

‘Well, Father was truly Christian – or, at least, he was very clever. He was at the greatest pains to explain each and every little thing to which the archdeacon had found objection. And he did so with such a humility that the archdeacon, who was disposed at first to be a little stiff, was quite warmed to Father by the end. And he stayed to luncheon.’

‘Did he indeed? Who would have thought it! So all along there has been much smoke and little fire?’

Elizabeth furrowed her brow. ‘I don’t think we can say that. Did Father ever show you the letter of complaint? It was a long list, and it was written in attorneys’ language.’

‘No, he didn’t show me,’ Hervey replied, emptying a quarter of a bucketful of crushed barley into the stable manger. ‘But Mr Keble told me that if the complaints were upheld, then any diocesan would be obliged to act. There’s no doubt that Father might have been unbeneficed had the archdeacon still found fault today. As Mr Keble pointed out – as
you
did, indeed – Father does not own the freehold.’ He pulled the bar across the stall gate and took up his coat.

Elizabeth noticed the streaks of dried mud across the shoulders. ‘Matthew, you haven’t taken a tumble have you?’ There was a smile on her lips.

‘Yes,’ he frowned.

‘Oh dear. He isn’t going to do, then?’

Hervey was of a mind not to reply, but thought better of it. ‘He’ll do very well.’ He smiled and shook his head. ‘It was I who didn’t do! He took off half a stride before I was ready and—’

‘Did anyone see? Are we to read of it in the
Warminster Miscellany
? “Captain Hervey, lately returned from—” ’

‘Enough!’ her brother protested, taking her arm and closing the bottom half of the stable door behind them. ‘Nobody saw. Daniel Coates brought him back soon afterwards and we had a laugh about it.’

‘I can imagine Daniel’s laughing. Did he say more?’

‘About what?’

‘About your gun. That is what you said you were to see him about.’

‘Oh . . . we had a good talk.’

They walked to the front of the house as the first pipistrelles were beginning their nightly acrobatics, which, now spring was truly come, would soon be rivalled during the day by the house martins which returned every year to the vicarage. Hervey followed the swoops and turns for a while, as if they might help his thoughts.

‘Elizabeth,’ he began, after an interval, ‘do you think Dan is become old? I mean . . . I know he’s not getting any younger, but today he seemed . . . well, a little less . . .
reasonable
.’

Elizabeth furrowed her brow again, and shook her head. ‘No, I have not thought that – and not a week goes by that I don’t see him in the town. And Lord Bath was saying only the other day that he was the best magistrate in the whole of west Wiltshire. Why do you ask?’

Hervey paused another while, and then smiled. ‘You’ll think me proud, but he would not see the advantages in my new carbine. He could only see the faults. And that, I’ve observed, is the mark of someone become old.’

Elizabeth gave him a disapproving look. ‘I should not wish you to be
my
judge in anything, brother!’

‘I have never known you to be other than an optimist – to a fault, indeed!’ he replied at once, opening the door of the house for her as if it were an end to the matter.

The door to their father’s library was open, and the Reverend
Thomas Hervey was sitting by his fire (a fire was always lit there throughout May) with glass in hand and contentment on his face. He turned as he heard them come in. ‘Well, well, well. Here’s a turn-up, eh? All those weeks troubling over my books, and then the archdeacon is all sweetness and light. I’m not sure I ever met a more reasonable fellow.’

Elizabeth soon demonstrated that her brother’s opinion of her was more brotherly than exact. ‘Father, I should not be too quick to that sentiment were I you, for I did not observe any change in his mind, only a desire to have things done with.’

‘Oh?’ said Mr Hervey, disappointed with her opinion, though unsurprised – proud, in fact – that she should give it so freely. Elizabeth had been his mainstay these past three years since the death of his elder son.

She poured him more sherry. ‘Well, Father, on each and every complaint you assured him that you believed you were following the practice of the early Church; “before Rome erred and strayed” – those were your very words.’

Mr Hervey nodded, and Matthew Hervey grew a little in awe of his sister, for here were affairs that he had never had occasion for mastering.

‘And you gave him evidence, and cited authorities,’ Elizabeth continued. ‘And it seemed to me that the archdeacon was inclined to concede your argument lest it reveal his own ignorance. So that, even now, he may be delving into his books in order to refute that argument should the time come.’

‘Oh, now, surely—’ protested Mr Hervey.

But Elizabeth persisted. ‘Because it appeared to me that the only issue on which he was certain that you stood in breach of any ordinance was that of facing east at the communion table. I notice that you forbore, for once, to call it an
altar
. And that was his chief concern.’

Her brother thought it only right that he should make some contribution. ‘And how was this resolved, Father? The Prayer Book is quite explicit, is it not?’

‘Explicit, yes, but not dogmatic. I didn’t argue the point, though. I assured the archdeacon instead that he would hear of no further complaint in this regard.’

‘Oh, so you
did
concede in one matter at least!’ tried Hervey.

‘Matthew,’ his father replied gravely, ‘I have said what I have said.’

Hervey looked a little chastened. And then his father relented. ‘Your friend from the wooden world is come, by the way.’

‘Captain Peto?’

‘He stays at the Bath Arms, but he’ll dine with us – in about an hour, indeed. We are all so late today.’

Hervey was thoroughly enlivened by the news. ‘Oh how I wish Henrietta were back to meet him! There’ll be so little chance before Thursday. What did you think of him, Father? Is he not the very embodiment of a frigate captain?’

‘I thought him a very fine fellow at once,’ he replied squarely.

Elizabeth smiled. ‘His voice was perhaps a
little
too great for such confined quarters, and he seemed to bump into the furniture rather a lot. But I liked him at once, too. Do you know, he says he believes this to be the furthest inland he has ever been?’

Hervey’s smile was even broader. ‘I can well believe it!’ And then the clock struck the half-hour. ‘Oh, have you seen Johnson? I must tell him about tomorrow.’

Elizabeth frowned, but it was an approving sort of frown. Private Johnson had preceded Hervey to Horningsham by several days, and with him Jessye, and had been warmly welcomed by all. ‘Find Hannah Towle first, for he’s been making eyes at her all day!’

In a village such as Horningsham, which owed its well-being to a great house like Longleat, it was by no means unusual for important affairs of state to be played out within the witness of the meanest of its inhabitants. But even Horningsham did not expect ever to be party to the news that broke next morning. It appalled and fascinated everyone alike, from day-labourer to Lord Bath himself. The details were dreadful, and needed no embellishing in the retelling. The shock about the village was so apparent that even Private Johnson, a visitor with an undeveloped sensitivity, felt its strange effect during his progress from one end of Horningsham to the other on an errand for Hannah Towle.

One of the yeoman farmers, the same that had proposed to Mrs Strange and whose property lay remote at the very edge of the parish bounds, had been found murdered in his own house, and
his maidservant, the only other occupant, was likewise dead and her body disposed of in the garden well. Nothing more was known but that the house bore the signs of ransacking for money and valuables, and that the parish constable had hastened there at once. In no one’s memory had there ever been such a thing – in the most distant past, even – and it was everywhere assumed that the culprits must be from Warminster Common, which all knew to be a sink of growing proportions. Except, as the Reverend Thomas Hervey pointed out, the farm lay the other side of the village from the common, so the murderers would have had to make a very great detour in order not to have been seen there. The farmer himself had no kin in the village, and his maidservant’s family was from the neighbouring parish, so Mr Hervey had no immediate pastoral calling: the coroner’s business would likely be slow, and the funeral many days off therefore – a mercy in not claiming his attention as the wedding approached.

At Longleat, Lord Bath was in a mood of some despair, for – the more personal effects of the crime apart – he believed it reflected ill on the stewardship of his demesne. Such things might happen in cities, or on an estate where the owner took no careful interest in affairs other than its rents. But not here. Wiltshire wasn’t Clare or Kerry after all, and he was not an absentee landlord. And what might the parish constable discover? He was good enough when it came to the odd bit of mischief, but this was altogether too grave a crime for a man whose principal occupation was the maintenance of the Longleat fire engine. No, it would not do. Lord Bath would not wait for the trail to go stone cold while Constable Gedge completed his thorough but fruitless enquiries. He would send at once to London for Bow Street detectors.

When Hervey set out for Longleat in the mid-morning he had a mind to call on Mrs Strange to condole with her, for he imagined that an offer of marriage on the farmer’s part supposed some degree of intimacy, or at least familiarity. But as he passed the school he heard the children singing a hymn – and by no means a sombre one – so he presumed Mrs Strange was not so indisposed as to put off her charges and draw the curtains at home. He therefore rode on to his appointment with Henrietta, who would be returned, he trusted, from that nearby fashionable spa where ladies could find everything that a lady needed. The appointment was not
so much with Henrietta, however, as the two of them with Mr Keble. John Keble had also dined at the vicarage the night before, and the meeting this morning, he had explained, was in order to discharge his obligation in certain matters respecting the Prayer Book.

The meeting began well. They sat in a small summer breakfast room, the late spring sunshine warm through windows full east, with orchids from the Longleat hothouses about them. Hervey’s and Henrietta’s chairs were drawn close enough together for them to place a hand on one another’s from time to time, with Mr Keble’s chair somehow arranged so as not to be too formal, though not yet so intimate as to make for any additional awkwardness in his discourse with them.

First Mr Keble explained that, in order to preach as he intended, and so that the dean, who was to officiate, might omit the lengthy declaration of the duties of man and wife which the Prayer Book otherwise required, he felt obliged to ‘share with them certain things’. And so the familiar injunctions of Saints Peter and Paul were rehearsed, and the parties were content. Then, with a certain delicacy of manner, he asked their leave to go a little further. He wished, with considerable authority as well as delicacy, to ‘lay their minds at rest’, as he put it; to disabuse them of any doubts they might have as to ‘the worthiness of the desires of the flesh within wedlock’. Henrietta smiled serenely, and her countenance gave no indication of whether the desires of the flesh were in any respect understood. Hervey shifted slightly in his chair, and feared somehow that his own understanding would be all too readily exposed.

‘For it would be contrary to all Christian doctrine,’ explained John Keble, ‘to imagine – as did the Gnostics – that the body is the enemy of the spiritual life.’ Henrietta listened as before. She had not the slightest notion of who the Gnostics were, but her instincts were true enough. Hervey
had
known who the Gnostics were, and what their heresy was, but had forgotten, and he drifted off into recollection of his Shrewsbury divinity. Indeed, he would have languished there an age had not John Keble’s discourse suddenly taken an unusually frank turn. Henrietta’s eyes lit, at last, as the young priest began speaking with perfect candour of the growth in love that came with its physical consummation. Hervey did not see her eyes, for he was avoiding them intently, wondering
how a man so recently ordained priest, so unworldly a man, could speak of this so assuredly.

‘So let me conclude with Scripture,’ said Keble at length, and rather to Hervey’s relief. ‘Not St Paul, this time, but from the Old Testament – from the Song of Solomon.’

Hervey glanced at Henrietta. She touched his hand for an instant, telling him at once she understood all, perfectly.

‘As the lily among thorns, so is my love among the daughters,’ began John Keble.

BOOK: A Regimental Affair
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