Read Beggars and Choosers Online
Authors: Catrin Collier
âBut you will stay now?' Edyth begged.
âI'll stay,' Sali promised, âbut I have to go back for Harry.'
âHe can grow up in his father's house, playing with his father's toys, reading his books ...' Edyth patted Sali's hand. âGet him now and I'll see you both later when you bring him back.'
âI'll return as soon as I can,' Sali promised.
âTake the carriage. Mansel's son should travel in style.' Edyth had always been thin, but as she closed her eyes and her features relaxed, Sali could see the skull beneath her aunt's flesh. It was as if the dreadful confirmation of Mansel's death had robbed her of the will to live.
Sali looked back at her aunt and Mari sitting beside the old woman's bed as she opened the door. âI am glad that we finally found out what happened to Mansel, Aunt Edyth, Terrible as it is, I would rather know than live in uncertainty.'
âAt least we can finally begin to grieve for him.' Edyth opened her eyes. âYou promise me faithfully, Sali, you will come back and live here with Mansel's son?'
âI promise, Aunt Edyth.'
âThen I will sleep for the first night since Mansel disappeared. Give me one last kiss.' Sali bent over her and she stroked her face. âYou've grown into a handsome woman, Sal. Grieve, but not for the rest of your life. Mansel wouldn't have wanted that.'
Geraint and the doctor were alone in the drawing room. They looked to the door as Sali joined them.
âI was discussing your aunt's condition with your brother, Mrs Bull. She's had a dreadful shock, she's Exhausted â'
âAnd she has just lost her reason to live.' Sali hooked her arm through Geraint's. âToday is the first time that I have seen my aunt since I left the infirmary, but I think that now she knows for certain that she will never see Mansel alive again, she is prepared to die.'
The doctor glanced from Sali to Geraint. Realising from Geraint's bleak expression that he had also accepted Mrs James's mortality, he dropped the jocular, blustering manner he used to chivvy the spirits of the relatives of the terminally ill. âI believe you are right, Mrs Bull. But if her condition worsens, please send for me. Any time, day or night. I may not be able to help her regain her health, but I can alleviate her pain.'
Geraint offered him his hand. âWe will, Doctor, and thank you.'
âI'll see myself out. No,' he held up his hand as Geraint moved to the door, âyou don't want to face all those people out there until you have to.'
Sali hugged her brother when they were finally alone. âDespite everything, it is good to see you.'
âAnd it is good to see you and looking so well. We have all been worried sick about you. Gareth, Llinos and me, as well as Aunt Edyth.'
âAnd Mother?'
âIs so sunk in laudanum, thanks to Uncle Morgan, that she barely opens her eyes long enough to eat her meals these days,' he said scornfully. âThank you for the letters you sent at Christmas. Aunt Edyth asked Mr Richards to smuggle them to us. It was a relief to hear from you. I tried everything I could think of to find out where you were hiding. I suspected Mr Richards knew, but he wouldn't tell us anything other than you and your son were safe and well.'
âWhich we were.' Sali sank down on the sofa and he sat beside her. âAs your birthday isn't until next week, I am surprised Uncle Morgan let you stay here.'
âHe had no choice. I threatened to take him to court and sue him for mismanagement of father's estate if he didn't. And I still might do just that. He has sold the house.'
âOur house! Danygraig House!' she cried in disbelief.
âTo someone who wants to tear it down and build on the site,' Geraint muttered angrily. âHe also sold the Watkin Jones Colliery to a consortium along with all the shares we owned in other collieries just after Father died.'
âI know.' Sali recalled her outrage after her uncle's argument with Lloyd, when she discovered what he'd done.
Geraint left the sofa and slammed his right fist in his left hand just as he had done as a boy when something had annoyed him. He paced restlessly to the hearth. âI had a long talk with Mr Richards when I came home yesterday.'
âDidn't you finish university in July?'
âYes, but one of my friends invited me to go to Italy with him for the summer. Although I applied to Mr Richards for the money to finance the trip, I was surprised when Uncle Morgan didn't try to prevent me from going. His reasons for wanting me out of the way are now all too obvious. He's done just what he damn well pleased with our estate, trust funds and property while I've been away. Mr Richards blames himself for not keeping a closer eye on Uncle Morgan, but it's not his fault.'
âBut Mr Richards is our solicitor as well as joint guardian. Surely he could have prevented the sale of the house?'
âHe could have if he'd known about it,' Geraint agreed tersely. âBut Uncle Morgan engaged another solicitor to act for him, or rather us, as he's supposed to be in guardianship of our interests.'
âCould he do that?' Sali moved to the edge of the sofa.
âLegally, it's questionable. Mr Richards found out what Uncle Morgan had been up to purely by chance, when the man who has bought our house consulted him about developing the site. The solicitor Uncle Morgan has been using has an office in Cardiff. Mr Richards has already written to him and intends to visit him next week. Although it appears one hundred per cent certain that our dear Uncle Morgan has been selling things he had no right to sell, supposedly on our behalf, to perfectly respectable and well-meaning people. We have no idea of the extent of his dealings.'
âGeraint, you have to go to the police,' Sali broke in urgently.
âIf Morgan Davies has taken our money, shares, house, sold them and re-invested the money elsewhere in our name or placed it in the trust fund, he has done nothing wrong except for not informing Mr Richards. And, as Mr Richards pointed out, if we take Uncle Morgan to court for mismanagement of our estate, the legal fees will be prohibitive and all we'd succeed in doing is wasting our own money to no good end.'
âHave you confronted Uncle Morgan about this?'
âMr Richards and I cornered him in the house yesterday morning. Ten minutes later the sexton came to tell us that he had found a body in the Horton family grave that shouldn't have been there.' He stared blindly into the hearth.
He doubted that he would ever blot the sight of Mansel's remains lying in the earth from his mind. Mr Richards hadn't lied when he'd told Sali that Mansel had been recognised by his hair. But what neither of them would ever tell her or Aunt Edyth was that Mansel's hair hadn't been attached to his pitifully splintered skull.
There had been precious little left, apart from a few rags and dirt-encrusted bones to connect the remains they had lifted from the top of Mrs Horton's coffin with the vibrant, healthy, young man who had courted his sister.
âYou're thinking about Mansel, aren't you?' Sali said perceptively.
âYes. And I could kill Owen Bull ... and not just for murdering Mansel.' His eyes were moist. âI heard what he did to you. I even gave Uncle Morgan the slip when I came home on holiday and hid in the doorway of the shop opposite Owen Bull's in Mill Street hoping to catch a glimpse of you.'
âDid you ever see me?'
âNo, but I saw the filthy conditions he forced you to live in, smelled the stench of the river. Saw the workhouse clothes he made his sister wear ...'
âIt's over, Geraint. There is no going back.' She unconsciously repeated the words Lloyd had spoken to her earlier in the carriage and for the first time since she had walked out of the infirmary, she actually believed them. In a week Geraint would be in control of their father's estate. Owen was wanted by the police and even if he was innocent of Mansel's murder, which she doubted, he was no longer the respectable deacon her uncle had promoted and protected. No one could force her to return to Owen, not now that Uncle Morgan had lost his hold over her and her family.
And most important of all, she had her independence and a job that paid enough to keep both her and Harry in necessities, if not luxuries. She had Lloyd and the Evanses...
She recalled the promise she had made to her aunt to live in Ynysangharad House with Harry so he could grow up surrounded by his father's things. When her aunt was better she would find a way to tell her that she would stay â for a while. But not permanently. The Evanses needed her to run their house â and she needed Lloyd. Desperately.
âI promised Aunt Edyth I would fetch my son and move in here.'
âWhere is he?'
âTonypandy.'
âTonypandy! Do you mean to tell me that all the time we were searching for you, you were only living in Tonypandy?' He smiled and for the first time that afternoon she saw traces of the boy he had been in the man he had become. âI imagined Aunt Edyth had sent you to London or North Wales, or tucked you away in a cottage in West Wales.'
âI couldn't risk Aunt Edyth sending me anywhere because I was terrified that Owen would hurt her if he suspected she knew where I was. And Tonypandy was far enough away from Pontypridd for people not to recognise me.' She looked her brother in the eye and braced herself for rejection. âYou do know that Owen's not the father of my son.'
âFrankly, I'd be more concerned if he was.'
âBut being Mansel's, he's a bastard.'
Geraint returned to the sofa and wrapped his arm around her. âHe wouldn't have been if Mansel hadn't been murdered.'
âUncle Morgan said I brought disgrace on all of you. On Llinos...'
âI think we've all heard more than enough of Uncle Morgan's pontificating. In time, I might forgive him for selling everything Father spent a lifetime building, but I'll never forgive him for marrying you off to a monster like Owen Bull. When I heard what he'd done I could have killed him. Do you know he wouldn't allow Gareth and me to come home that first Christmas? He ordered the school to send us to a Methodist mission in London so we could see how unfortunates live. I tried to run away and get back here ...' He looked into her eyes and saw her pain. âYou're right. It is over. I'll order Aunt Edyth's carriage to be brought around and we'll go and get your son. What is he like, Sali?'
âHe's three years old and looks exactly like Mansel. He has the same blond hair, blue eyes and smile. He's very bright. I've taught him his letters and he loves drawing, colouring, singing ...'
âWhat did you call him?'
âOwen christened him Isaac Bull, but as he never spoke to him from the day he was born, I doubt he would even recognise the name. I call him Harry Glyndwr and we've been using the surname Jones since last August.'
âHarry Glyndwr Jones. A good name. Put in Watkin and it sounds even better.' He rang the bell.
Jenkins opened the door. âMr Watkin Jones, sir.'
âWill you order the carriage to be brought around to the front door please, Jenkins. Mrs ...' He turned to Sali. âMrs Jones and I are going to Tonypandy to fetch her son.'
âYes, sir.' The butler hesitated.
âIs something wrong, Mr Jenkins?'
âThe person who arrived with Miss Sali has returned from the police station where he has been helping them with their enquiries. He is asking if he can see her.'
âOh God!' Sali exclaimed. âI almost forgot he was here. Please, Jenkins, show Mr Evans in.'
âIf you wish me to, Miss Sali.' Jenkins's tone suggested that if it were up to him he would show the man the door. He turned his head and glanced at someone standing behind him in the hall. âIf you would come this way. Mrs Jones will see you now.'
That time Sali noticed the condescending inflection in the butler's voice.
âMr Evans.' Geraint stared at Lloyd in amazement. âThe last time I saw you was the day of Father's funeral.' He looked from Lloyd to Sali.
âI have been living with Lloyd's family, Geraint,' Sali explained. âIt was he who recognised Mansel's jewellery when Owen lost it at cards.'
âYou took in Sali and her son, Mr Evans.' Geraint held out his hand. âI am extremely grateful to you ...'
âMy father, brothers and I are colliers, Mr Watkin Jones, and in no position to take in anyone who doesn't work for a living.'
âI am Lloyd's father's housekeeper, Geraint.'
âA housekeeper!' Geraint whirled round and faced Sali. âYou mean to tell me that you have been working for Father's assistant as a housekeeper?'
âIf Lloyd's father hadn't offered me the job, I doubt I would have survived, and I certainly wouldn't have been able to keep Harry with me.'
âAll you had to do was appeal to Aunt Edyth, she would have given you money â'
âIt wasn't merely a question of money, Geraint. I was terrified to go to her, even to write to her, and Lloyd and his father â'
âYou call one another by your first names! Sali, I accept that Uncle Morgan gave you little choice in the matter of marrying Owen Bull, but to deliberately seek out a home with colliers â'
Jenkins knocked on the door. His shoulders were bowed, tears fell unchecked from his eyes but his voice remained steady and he spoke as formally as usual. âI am sorry to interrupt, Mr Watkin Jones, Miss Sali. But Mrs Williams has just informed me that Mrs James died five minutes ago.'
She has just lost her reason to live.
Sali's own words came back to haunt her. She had accepted her aunt was dying but dear God, not immediately, and not without saying goodbye.
She rushed past Lloyd, her brother and the butler and ran upstairs. Mari was standing next to the bed.
âIt was peaceful, Miss Sali. She never woke up after you left, not once. A few minutes ago she stirred, gave a small sigh and that was it, she was gone.'