Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
had his reasons for employing me. ‘You are right,’ I said brightly. ‘He did.’
‘But this is not a situation that can continue indefinitely.’ He regarded me
somewhat threateningly. ‘If Mr Tredgold – Heaven forbid – should fail to recover, then
certain steps will have to be taken concerning the constitution of the firm. In that sad
eventuality, Mr Glapthorn, it may prove necessary, regretfully, to dispense with your
services, given your then redundant association with the Senior Partner. Perhaps I need
say no more.’ On this friendly note, the interview was swiftly terminated.
That night I drank heavily, compounding my folly by succumbing to the
temptation of my bottle of Dalby’s.? In my dreams I saw Evenwood, but not as I had
dreamed of it as a child, nor as I had seen it in the clear light of day; but at some future
time when a great catastrophe had laid waste its former plenteousness and toppled its
soaring towers. Only the Mausoleum remained intact amidst the disfiguration and
desolation. I saw myself standing once more before the loculus containing the tomb of
Laura Tansor, and beating my hands against the slate slab until they bled, desperate to
gain access to where she lay; but the slab remains immovable and I turn away to see Lord
Tansor, perfectly attired as ever and smiling, standing in the gloom beside me. He speaks:
What do you know? Nothing
What have you achieved? Nothing
Who are you? Nobody.
And then he throws his head back and laughs until I can stand no more. I reach
into my pocket, take out a long knife secreted therein, and plunge it into his heart. When I
wake, I am drenched in sweat and my hands will not stop shaking.
Then, as dawn breaks, I believe I understand what Mr Carteret had wanted to tell
me.
Sursum Corda. The words themselves were of no significance. But what they
were graven upon was. For not only did the slab of slate that carried these words shut out
the living from the abode of the dead: it also shut in the truth.
38:
Confessio amantis?
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Long days followed, of uncertainty and near despair, interspersed with periods of
fevered elation. Was I right, or was I wrong? Did what I had dreamed of finding lie
within the tomb of the woman who had given me life, or had I become a deluded
obsessionist? And how could I prove my conviction, except by an act of the grossest
violation? Backwards and forwards, round and round, hither and thither, my mental
turmoil increased. One moment I was triumphantly sure of my ground, the next
prostrated by confusion. Abandoning both food and exercise, and resorting more and
more to my drops, I lay on my bed trapped in the coils of hideous nightmares, oblivious
to both the coming of night and the breaking of the day.
I continued thus until my bottle of Dalby’s stood empty by my bed. Incapable as I
then was of going out to procure some more, I subsided into a state of stuporous vacancy
until I was roused by the gentle prodding of Mrs Grainger, who, finding me in this
alarming condition and believing I was in the throes of death, had called upon the
assistance of my neighbour, Fordyce Jukes, who now stood behind her scratching his
head.
‘This is rum,’ I heard him say, ‘very rum indeed.’
‘Is the gentleman dead, sir?’ asked Mrs Grainger plaintively.
‘Dead?’ said Jukes with a contemptuous click of his fingers. ‘Dead? Why of
course he’s not dead, woman. Can’t you see he’s breathing? Is there food here? No? Well
run and get some. And some strong ale. Be quick now, or we’ll all have died before you
get back.’
‘Should I bring a doctor, sir?’
‘Doctor?’ Jukes appeared to consider the question at some length. ‘No,’ he said at
last. ‘No need for a doctor. No need at all. Come along, come along!’
Though I could see and hear quite clearly, I found I was unable to speak or to
move either my head or my limbs, and I remained in this curious suspended state for
some time. It seemed that Jukes had left my bedside, for I could hear the familiar
creaking of the floor-boards in the sitting-room. Then, some time later, though whether
hours or minutes I cannot say, I began to find strength returning and turned my head to
look about me.
On the table beside my bed stood an empty plate, with the remains of a chop and a
half-eaten potato; beside it was a tankard of ale, partially consumed. Of either Mrs
Grainger or Jukes there was no sign.
I concluded that food had been obtained for and partaken by me, and that I had
then fallen asleep, though I had no memory of doing either. Slowly, I pulled myself out
of bed and, on unsteady feet, dragged myself to the door that led to my sitting-room.
‘Mr Glapthorn, sir, so pleased to see you feeling better! Let me assist you.’
Jukes, who had been sitting in my chair reading a copy of The Times, sprang to
his feet and ushered me over to where he had been sitting.
‘That’s it, take my arm, sir, take my arm. There we are. Goodness me, what a
scrape you got yourself in, Mr Glapthorn. I’ll tell you what, sir: you appear to have
stepped up to death’s very front door, sir. But all’s well now. Food and rest was what you
needed, and what you must take great care to provide yourself with in the future – if I
may be so bold. I’ve been sitting with you since yesterday. Oh no, sir —.’ He held up his
hand and shook his head from side to side in grinning admonishment as I attempted to
speak. ‘Pray don’t say a word. It would be like your good self to thank me for my trouble,
but I beg to insist that you will do nothing of the sort. Trouble? Why what possible
trouble have I been put to? None whatsoever, I assure you. A fellow-toiler in the
Tredgold vineyard, and neighbour to boot, taken ill? Why, only one course of action
possible. Pleasure and the satisfaction of a duty done are ample, though undeserved,
reward for the little I have been able to do. And so, Mr Glapthorn, if you are feeling
better, I shall leave you to your recuperation, but on the strict understanding – strict,
mind! – that you will take better care yourself hereafter, and that you will allow me to
call again tomorrow morning to see how you are.’
And then, having set a cushion at my back, placed a rug over my legs, and thrown
a log on the fire, he made a low bow and sidled away, leaving me aghast at the situation I
had awoken to find myself in.
I immediately threw off the rug and stumbled over to my work-table. Everything
appeared to be exactly as I remembered it; nothing had been moved, I was sure of that.
The pen still lay across an unfinished letter – to Dr Shakeshaft on the merits of various
English translations of Paracelsus? – precisely where I’d left it; the papers tied up in their
labelled stacks appeared undisturbed; and the spines of my mother’s journals, each one a
familiar old friend, were still ranged in the strictly undeviating line in which I always
took care to leave them To the cabinet next, containing all my notes and indexed
abstracts: nothing out of place, and each drawer shut tight shut. I let out a little sigh of
relief.
And yet the thought of Jukes having the liberty of my room continued to rankle,
and I began to examine everything again with redoubled care, looking for any sign that he
had been through my papers or other possessions. But then I checked myself. Odious as
Jukes was, I knew that Mr Tredgold trusted him, so why should I not do the same? These
sudden baseless suspicions to which I was prey only served to cloud my judgement, and
divert me from my true goal. Thus did I argue myself out of unreason, though I
determined that Fordyce Jukes should never be given an opportunity to enter my rooms
again. To this end, when he knocked on my door the next morning, as promised, I did not
open it to him, but simply told him through the keyhole that I was much improved (which
I was) and that I did not require his assistance.
I ventured out the next day for the first time in more than a week, to take a
restorative dinner at the Albion Tavern. The following morning I thought I would look in
at Tredgolds, and so, at a little after half-past eight, I locked my door and walked through
the rain to Paternoster-row.
As I entered the clerks’ room, young Birtles, the office boy, came running across
and thrust a letter into my hand. ‘This came in the last post yesterday, sir.’ I did not
recognize the handwriting; and so, having nothing better to do, I went upstairs to my
room to read it.
To my complete surprise it was from Miss Rowena Tredgold, expressing the
hope, in somewhat drawn-out terms, that circumstances would allow me to pay another
visit to Canterbury at my earliest convenience. It concluded by saying that this invitation
had been sent at the express request of her brother, Mr Christopher Tredgold. Deducing
from this that my employer’s condition had improved significantly, I joyously sent off an
immediate acceptance.
A few days later I was admitted once again to Marden House and shown into the
room where I had first met Dr Jonathan Tredgold.
Miss Rowena Tredgold sat, unsmiling, in an uncomfortable looking high-backed
chair set near an ugly black-marble fireplace, the cavernous opening of which yawned
darkly cold. On a low table, drawn up close to her knees, was a tumbler of barley-water.
Beside it lay a sealed envelope. The heavy curtains in the window behind her were
partially drawn, and what remained of the soft declining light of late afternoon struggled
into the room through a slash of grimy glass.
I began, naturally, by asking how her brother fared.
‘I am grateful to you for your concern, Mr Glapthorn. It has been a terrible time,
but I am glad to say that he is much better than he was, thank you. He knows us, and has
been sitting up. And we are thankful that he can speak a few words now.’ She spoke in a
lingering, staccato manner, carefully enunciating every syllable, which produced the odd
impression that she was mentally examining each word for impropriety before it was
spoken.
‘There is hope, then, that there will be further improvements?’
‘There is hope.’
‘Mr Glapthorn,’ she said, after a short expectant pause. ‘Would you say that my
brother, Mr Christopher Tredgold, was a good man?’
Though taken back a little by the question, I replied immediately: ‘That would
certainly be my opinion. I do not think there can be any other.’
‘You are right. He is a good man. And would you say that he was an honourable
man?’
‘Unhesitatingly.’
‘You are right again. He is an honourable man. Goodness and honour are two
words that perfectly describe my brother.’
She said this in a way that seemed to suggest that I had in fact taken precisely the
opposite view.
‘But there are many people in this world who are neither good nor honourable,
and who take advantage of those who regard these virtues as the unalterable foundation
of their moral character.’
I could only agree with her.
‘Well, then, I am glad we are of one view. I wish you to remain steady in that
view, Mr Glapthorn, and remember always what kind of man my brother is. If he has
erred, it is because he has been placed in an intolerable position by those who do not
aspire, and who never will aspire, to the high ideals of conduct and character that have
distinguished all my brother’s dealings, both personal and professional.’
I confess that I had no idea what the woman was talking about, but I smiled in a
conciliatory way that I hoped would convey my complete comprehension of the matter.
‘Mr Glapthorn, I have here a letter’ – she gestured towards the sealed envelope –
‘written by my brother the night before he was taken ill. It is addressed to you. However,
before I give it to you, my brother has asked me to preface his words with some of my
own. Do I have your permission?’
‘By all means. May I ask first, Miss Tredgold, if you have read your brother’s
letter?’
‘I have not.’
‘But I may presume, I suppose, that it contains matters of a confidential nature?’
‘I think you may presume so.’
‘And are you yourself a party to any of those confidences?’
‘I am merely my brother’s agent, Mr Glapthorn. If he were well, then you may
take it that he would be communicating these matters to you himself. However, there is
one subject on which I have been honoured with his confidence. It is on this subject that
he has asked me to speak to you prior to your reading his letter. Before I do so, I hope I
may depend on your absolute discretion, as you may depend on mine?’
I gave her my word that I would never divulge what was imparted to me, and
begged her to proceed.
‘You may wish to know first,’ she began, ‘that the firm of which my brother is
now the Senior Partner was established by my great-grandfather, Mr Jonas Tredgold, and
a junior associate, Mr Meredith Orr, in the year 1767. In due course, my late father, Mr
Anson Tredgold, joined the firm, which then became known as Tredgold, Tredgold &
Orr, a name which it has since retained, along with a reputation second to none amongst
London solicitors.