Authors: Ann Victoria Roberts
We found an open pew and seated ourselves gratefully, eyes taking in the detail all around. I chanced to look down, and saw the strong, clear lines of a small brigantine carved into the woodwork. There was such power and liveliness there, it brought a smile to my lips; Bram's too when I pointed it out.
âWho do you think carved that?' he asked. âA small boy with a new penknife, or a budding naval architect?'
âA bored and frustrated shipbuilder,' I said, feeling my voice tremble between laughter and tears, âin the middle of an interminable sermon!'
We laughed then, softly, while Bram squeezed my hand. He turned to gaze at me with quizzical affection, and I saw that he was moved too. He'd begun to ask me something when suddenly, behind us, a door closed. We both paused, breath halted, before turning to see who had entered the church. But no one had.
The porch was deserted. Outside, no one was visible and the fog was rapidly disappearing, sinking like fluffy meringue to the level of the rooftops below. I told myself that we'd not closed the door properly when we came in, although it seemed a feeble excuse for such a physical occurrence, and strange not to see the visitor walking away. I was uneasy, but after glancing round, Bram said it was probably nothing. Anyway, he wanted to have another look at the edge of the cliff, to see for himself that Lucy's tomb had disappeared. The sun put a different complexion on things, but even so I was reluctant to venture forth again.
We walked with care to the far end of the graveyard, viewing the surrounding area from various angles until we were sure that the main fall had been some time ago. The old tomb was long gone, which was a relief, but from below came the surge and pull of the tide against the rocks, sounding with all the regularity of a heartbeat.
In the cold, still air we stood in silence, a little apart, like mourners beside an open grave. Bram shifted his walking stick from one hand to the other and tugged at the brim of his black felt hat. After a pause he said slowly: âIs possession too strong a word? Or was it just an unhealthy fascination?'
Remembering his state of mind then, and the times we'd spent here, fingers tracing the wind-scoured stones, I understood what he was asking. For a while the dead had been part of our lives, the creatures of the night had stalked us in the moonlight, and old superstitions had been reborn; blood had taken on new meaning, and I was still the victim of paralysing fear whenever I cut myself. I didn't like graveyards, and I never walked in the moonlight.
With an effort, I said, âIt doesn't matter now. It's over. They're all dead, including Irving. You're free, and so am I. We've survived.'
âYes. And now Lucy's gone, too.'
âAre you sorry?'
âNo, not a bit,' he said decisively. âRelieved, I think. Unburdened â yes, that's how I feel, as though a great weight has gone from me. I'd like to think of the sea carrying it all away...'
That pleased me too, but still I stood there, listening to the sea, watching the mist as it dispersed in the sunlight. âBy the way,' I said, âthat name you gave her, in the book?'
âLucy Westenra?' He gave me a broad smile and squeezed my hand. âDidn't you guess? You spotted so many things, I thought you'd have worked that one out. Lucy â light. Westenra â rays of the westering sun...'
âOh.' I smiled at that, picturing the sunsets here, understanding at last the surname which had always mystified me. âOh, yes, I see...'
As I glanced up, still smiling, in the distance I noticed a man in black watching us. Shadowed by the church, he was too far away for me to distinguish his face, but there was something disturbingly familiar about him. Something that made my heart race in apprehension. Was he real, or a ghost?
âWhat's wrong?' Bram asked as my smile faded.
âNothing,' I said abruptly. âShall we go?' But when we turned the man had gone, which disturbed me even more. All at once I was keen to be back at the hotel, where blazing fires and hot coffee might dispel these lingering fears.
~~~
When the time came for Bram to collect his luggage and say goodbye, it seemed too soon. We'd had two days of each other's company, two days of intensity in which sorrow and anger had been turned to greater account; two days of atonement for all the wrongs of twenty years before. I felt soft, weak, wrung-out, but at the very last, I didn't want him to leave me, didn't want to be alone. He knew me so well, and with him there was no need to pretend. I even wished â but no, it wouldn't do, even to wish. Better to leave things as they were. I think we both knew, without it needing to be said, that he and I were part of some other existence, never destined to be together in this.
Aware of the bond between us, we came together naturally, with understanding this time, and affection. Reminded of our first embrace, I clung to him, and his arms tightened around me. I felt the softness of his beard as he rubbed his cheek against mine, and the warmth of his breath as he kissed me; he felt safe and familiar, a proverbial rock in my ocean of uncertainty, and I didn't want to let him go.
âI know, I know,' he whispered, âbut you don't want me, my dear â not now.' He kissed me again with tender affection, and then, like a father to a daughter, put me from him firmly and said: âYou're young still, and beautiful â and you have so much living yet to do. For goodness' sake don't waste yourself on widowhood. Go to Australia â see your brother and his family â enjoy your life!'
âI will â I promise!'
All at once I felt guilty for not mentioning Jonathan. Next time, I promised Bram silently; when I've found him, then I'll tell you...
I managed to smile, even to laugh a little at my own sentimentality as I wiped away a tear. âBut we'll meet again,' I said, âin London. I'll let you know my plans.'
âBe sure you do,' he said with mock severity. âRemember, I have your address.'
And with that we parted. I watched from the balcony as he left the hotel. He looked up and raised his hat to me, waved from the cab, and then he was gone. Not for ever, not this time, but when next we met it would be as friends, not lovers and no longer enemies. It was right, and it pleased me.
With Bram's departure, Alice was inclined to fuss, but there was barely time to rest. I had Old Uncle's funeral to attend in Robin Hood's Bay, and knew I had to keep moving. It was either that or sleep, and sleep would have to come later. I set off to walk along the harbour, enjoying the sun, feeling the pull of old memories, and wishing I had the rest of the day to myself.
Passing the fish stalls on New Quay, I paused briefly to gaze at the rows of cod and turbot, inhaling the wonderfully fresh salty smell and wondering why I'd hated it so much, once upon a time. But then I looked at the raw red hands of the girls and women minding the stalls and felt the agony of their chilblains through my fine leather gloves; saw the perpetual anxiety behind their smiles, and knew how fortunate my life had been.
The cold blurred my eyes as I stood there by the harbour rail, listening to the voices, to the cry of the seabirds mingling with the sound of sawing and hammering from across the water. I breathed the scent of steam and wood shavings and wet canvas, and thought anxiously of Jonathan. It was hard to turn my steps towards West Cliff station and the waiting train, when all I wanted to do was cross the bridge, go into Markways' chandlery and have my questions answered.
The station was busy, and I found myself examining the faces of several black-clad men and statuesque women, looking for my Sterne relations. I spotted three or four, we bowed to each other as a matter of course, and later walked in a loose kind of group from Bay station to the house at Bank Top.
The gathering for Thaddeus Sterne's funeral could not have been more different from Bella Firth's. Honour had been done to his memory by following all the old traditions. Every blood relative was invited, together with friends and colleagues, and representatives from all the families in Bay. Food and refreshment were available throughout the day for the funeral guests, who dropped in to talk, commiserate, and eat and drink until the time came to leave for the service.
About three o'clock the procession started to form. The coffin was lifted onto the sturdy shoulders of six male relatives. The long line of mourners followed on behind, winding their way up the steep incline from the house to the little church a mile away.
There must have been at least three hundred people. It was like a medieval pilgrimage. I had forgotten the feeling of pain and humility, that sense of doing honour to the dead. For me it was not just honour to Thaddeus Sterne, but to the whole of my family: mother, father, grandfather and grandmother.
Before, I was too young, too ignorant, I had not understood. I did now. And Thaddeus Sterne in his ninetieth year was the last of his generation. We climbed the hill at sunset, we crowded into and around the little church, and we heard him lauded and applauded as a grand old man who had not only served his time before the mast but lived through five reigns, from George III to Edward VII. He had been shipmaster, shipowner, author and local historian. We knew that he would be greatly missed, not just in Bay, but in the wider community beyond.
I bowed my head in acknowledgement. In the shipping world I had discovered Old Uncle's reputation for astuteness, and, while I'd never done business with him personally, I was often pleased to claim a connection. After my marriage we hadn't met again, but we'd corresponded from time to time. Mr Richardson said he'd always asked after me, and had seemed proud of my achievements as well as vastly amused by them.
But he'd been a hard old rogue, amusement or not, no matter what plaudits they heaped upon him. An old Viking at heart, I thought as everyone flooded out into the midwinter dusk. As we prepared to follow the minister to the appointed place in the graveyard, there came a sudden flare of light. Torches were lit, at least a score of them, blazing against the coming night, lending an unexpected air of pagan joy to the final goodbye.
Cheered by the warmth, by the flickering lights, it seemed there were fewer tears than smiles of triumph as we saw Thaddeus Sterne into the ground. Even the earth which followed was scattered with a hearty sound. Remembering the hand he'd had in my early life, I bade him a silent if rueful goodbye.
As I turned from the grave, a man behind spoke softly into my ear. âIf you ask me, they should have taken him to the Wayfoot at high tide â laid him in his boat with the sail set, and thrown the torches after him...'
The comment followed so closely on what I'd been thinking, I shivered with the aptness of it. Half amused, half afraid, I turned to see a thin face and lively dark eyes. His clean jaw and sweeping black moustache almost disguised his identity. Almost, but not quite.
Rooted to the spot, I felt myself begin to smile; I could hardly believe he was real. He took my arm then, with a firmness that proved his existence beyond doubt, and led me apart to where purple shadows disguised even the stunted trees. For an eternity we gazed at each other, and then he cupped my face in his hands and kissed me. Fiercely, deeply, even angrily, until he remembered where we were and broke away. As for me, I was beyond speech, in a world of stunned, delighted acceptance, where words were unnecessary.
The train was crowded, too crowded for conversation. He looked at me from time to time but mainly kept his eyes on the window for the short journey to West Cliff. It was probably fortunate. My smile, I'm sure, was far too revealing. Then it was into a cab for the short distance down to the Royal Hotel. What the reception staff thought as I asked for my key I hardly dared to imagine, since I'd walked out the door with one man that morning and was now arriving after dark with another. But I was past concerning myself with such trivialities.
He remembered Alice, and when we reached my suite had the wit to lock the bedroom door before casting aside my raven's-wing hat, loosening my hair and divesting me of my clothes. I didn't protest and he barely spoke, but even in my bemused and delighted state I was aware of his tension as he stripped me down to my chemise, a self-control that contrasted alarmingly with the dark glint in his eyes. He didn't hurt me, at least not intentionally, but his grasp was firm and his intentions clear. After all the restraints of the past couple of days, I found his forcefulness intoxicating. Within moments we were naked on the bed, and, with few preliminaries, making love with single-minded intensity.
For both of us the crisis came quickly, in great, heaving gasps of release. He held me fast, face hidden in my hair, body locked to mine, his reaction deep but wordless, while I seemed to be spinning endlessly in a darkened, star-studded world. Gradually, by the rhythm of his breathing, I knew he was calmer, and just as gradually I was restored to earth.
In a daze of dreams, I hardly knew what was real and what imagined. He was alive and well, I could feel him, taste his salt on my lips, recognise the scent of his body, but I could scarce believe he was by my side. Eventually, I opened my eyes to find him gazing at me, and, with a smile, I raised my hand to smooth the frown away.
âJonathan Markway,' I said, on a deep, indrawn breath of satisfaction, âyou came back...'
He traced the line of my cheek and brow, pushing back wild tendrils of hair. âDamsy Sterne,' he whispered, âwhen I had your letter, I couldn't stay away...'
But still, the frown stayed, the darkness in his eyes did not disappear. After a little while, he put some space between us and said carefully, âThis morning, Damsy, on the east cliff, you were with a man. Who was he?'
I knew then that Jonathan was the man I'd noticed, watching from the shadows. As I began to protest he reached out to place a finger over my mouth. âI wasn't spying, I promise you â at least, not intentionally.
âYou see, I went to your house in London, only to find you'd gone to Whitby. I came on by train, but it was late when I arrived, so I went straight to my brother's. This morning, early, I called at the Royal, on the off-chance you might be staying there, but you'd already gone out and no one knew where. I couldn't believe the ill-luck â I was so angry I just walked, back through town and up to the east cliff. But as I came through the churchyard, there you were, arm in arm with a man -'