The Midnight Rose (62 page)

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Authors: Lucinda Riley

BOOK: The Midnight Rose
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Jim decided the best thing would be to use Miss Anni’s telephone and tell Doreen on the exchange at the village post office to run down the street and ask Tilly to telephone him here. She would know what he should do, but he didn’t feel comfortable leaving the poor child alone. Jim headed down the stairs toward the table in the hall where the telephone stood. He had only got halfway when he heard the sound of another car pulling up in front of the cottage. Not able to see who it was, and realizing he had no real reason to be inside the house as Miss Anni wasn’t here, Jim turned tail and ran back up the stairs and went into the bedroom at the front of the cottage to see who the new visitor was.

His heart missed a beat when he saw Lady Maud Astbury herself emerge from the car, accompanied by Dr. Trefusis. Lady Maud marched up the garden path toward the front door and Jim, now terrified of being discovered, knelt down and wriggled beneath the big brass bedstead. He heard the front door open and close, and the sound of low voices downstairs.

“The child must be upstairs sleeping. Go and get him, will you?”

Jim heard the heavy tread of the doctor climbing the stairs and held his breath as the door to the bedroom he was hiding in opened. He glimpsed a large pair of shiny black shoes, which paused for a few seconds a couple of feet away from him before disappearing out again onto the landing.

“He’s here, Lady Astbury. Shall I pack a few belongings for him? He’ll need a change of clothes and some napkins for the journey,” Jim heard the doctor call from the other bedroom.

“Collect whatever you need, but be quick about it,” he listened to Lady Maud answering irritably from the bottom of the stairs.

Jim heard the sound of the doctor moving about in the room next
door and then a loud cry from Moh, before footsteps descended back down the stairs.

“Hush now, child,” he heard the doctor say, trying to soothe Moh, who was rightly complaining at having been woken so abruptly by a stranger. “I should take some bottles for him, your ladyship. I’m sure the mother has some in the kitchen.”

“If you must, but I hardly think the child is likely to starve on the way to London,” Lady Maud replied. “Please, hurry up!”

Jim’s heart was now pounding in his chest. Perhaps they were taking the child to London, to Miss Anni? Taught from birth never to question the ways of the gentry, Jim remained hidden, listening.

“Are we finally ready?” Maud said a few minutes later.

“Yes, Lady Astbury.”

“Good. Now, you will drop me at the dower house and then proceed on to London with the child.”

“Yes, my lady. It’s a good place and they take excellent care of the children there.”

“And you will, of course, tell them that the child has been abandoned and that you have no idea where he’s from or what his parentage might be.”

“Of course, your ladyship,” replied the doctor as Jim heard them open the front door and shut it behind them.

Jim let out the breath he was unaware he had been holding as he’d struggled to catch every word the two of them had been saying.

He heard the car engine turn over, followed by the sound of it struggling to turn around on the rough grass outside.

Crawling out from under the bed, he chanced a surreptitious glance out of the window and as he did so, he saw another figure on horseback racing toward the cottage.

Crouching down, his face half-hidden by the curtains, Jim had a bird’s-eye view and could hear every word as the window was ajar to let in fresh air.

The figure who flung himself off the horse was Lord Donald Astbury. As the car prepared to move off, he placed himself in front of it to stop its progress.

“Where’s Anni, Mother?” he asked as he wrenched open the car’s passenger door. “And where are you taking Moh? What the hell is going on here?”

Donald reached inside the car, grabbed Moh from his mother’s lap
and took him into his own arms. By this time the boy was hysterical, but when he looked at the person who was now holding him, his face broke into a smile. “Mr. Don!” he cooed with glee.

“Yes, yes, it’s Mr. Don, Moh. I’m here, and I’ll look after you, as soon as I’ve worked out what on earth is happening!”

By this time, Lady Maud had stepped out of the car and Donald turned to face her. “I’ve just seen Anni being driven through the village in the back of a police car. She was weeping hysterically, and she screamed Moh’s name to me. Where were you taking my son?”

“Donald, I heard what had happened to Miss Chavan, so I came immediately to collect the child with Dr. Trefusis to take him with me and care for him until we knew the outcome.”

“Really, Mother? Well, then, Moh can come back with his father to the hall on horseback, can’t you, little chap?” Donald remounted his horse, taking Moh astride with him.

“Are you out of your senses?” Maud screamed suddenly. “You cannot take that . . .
bastard
back to Astbury Hall. For God’s sake, Donald, see sense! Your wife has just died and your lover has been arrested for her murder and taken away by the police an hour ago! Surely you must understand what this means? All trace of your association with that Indian woman and . . .
that 
”—she indicated her grandson—“must end. If any whisper of it gets out, you will be disgraced! And the Astbury name will be trampled in the mud.”

Donald was staring at her in disbelief. “Anni has been arrested for Violet’s murder? How? Why? It’s totally ridiculous—it’s obscene!”

“Donald, for once in your life, stop being blinded by lust. Dr. Trefusis found some dangerous herbs growing in her greenhouse. He already had his suspicions, so he handed them over to the police and subsequently she has been charged. Sadly, Donald, the matter is now completely out of my hands.”

“No, it isn’t, but I’m sure it started there, Mother,” he said in a voice cold with hatred. “So before I go and try to free the mother of my child from prison, just where
were
you thinking of taking my son? Perhaps you had a thought to do away with Moh completely? I really wouldn’t put it past you.”

“Don’t be ridiculous! Dr. Trefusis has told me he knows of a very good orphanage in London where they take cases such as this.”

“ ‘Cases such as this’? Good God, Mother!” Donald exploded as he looked down on her. “I truly think you’re mad. But it seems I’ve
arrived just in the nick of time. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ll take my boy back to Astbury Hall.”

“No!” shouted Maud as Donald tapped Glory’s flanks in preparation to move off. “I can’t let you take the child.” She sprang out to position herself in front of the horse. “Give that child to me!”

“Mother, I suggest you move out of the way, because if you don’t, I will simply ride over you and it will be no less than you deserve!”

Jim, still crouching by the window, watched the standoff between mother and son in fascinated horror.

“Doctor, move your car and stop him,” ordered Maud.

“For the last time, get out of the way!”

Glory’s hooves were dancing nervously as the woman in front of her refused to move. Donald tried to steer the horse to the right, but as he did so, Dr. Trefusis swerved the car around to block their path. Glory gave a whinny of terror and reared up to her full height, bucking off her master with Moh still grasped in his arms.

There was a dreadful thud as Donald, unable to use his hands to break his fall, landed on a jagged rock on the ground nearby. Father and son lay motionless together, Moh’s head still resting on his father’s arm.

Dr. Trefusis leaped out of the car and immediately went to tend to them as Maud watched him, frozen.

“Your ladyship, I can barely feel a pulse. Lord Astbury must have hit his head on the rock as he fell. There’s blood seeping from his ear. We must get him into the car and to a hospital as soon as possible.”

“What about the child?” asked Maud. “Is he alive?”

As if Moh wished to prove it, he stirred suddenly and let out a yell of pain.

“He must go to a hospital too. I’ve no idea what injuries he’s suffered internally.”

“Don’t be a fool, man! That child should never have been born, and you’ll take him to London now as planned.”

“Your ladyship, I beg you, there’s no time to lose. We must drive Lord Astbury to a hospital immediately!” Dr. Trefusis repeated.

“You will do as I say. Now, pick up the child and we’ll go.”

“I don’t understand . . .” Jim could see the agony on the doctor’s face. “You’ll leave your son here alone? Lady Astbury, he may well die if he isn’t attended to immediately.”

“Come on, man! Get that child.”

Reluctantly, Dr. Trefusis picked up a tearful, shocked Moh in his arms and rested him on the backseat of the car as Lady Maud climbed into the front. They set off at top speed, away from the cottage.

Jim, too horrified to move from the window, stared down at Donald’s prone body, his horse standing sentinel over him a few yards away.

“My God,” Jim breathed, turning around slowly in the bedroom, his limbs sluggish with shock. He then saw the photograph of Moh, Anni and Donald by the bed. If he needed any further proof of what he’d already heard, this was it. Lifting the photograph from where it stood on a table next to the bed, Jim hurried down the stairs and outside to see if he could help Donald.

“Your lordship, your lordship, can you hear me?” Jim said urgently as he crouched down next to him, wishing he knew something about first aid. Donald stirred suddenly and opened his eyes.

“That’s it, your lordship, keep awake until help comes. For God’s sake, sir, just keep awake!” Jim begged him.

Donald stared up at Jim. A sudden smile appeared on his lips.

“Anni,” he murmured. Then he closed his eyes for the last time.

Astbury Hall, July 2011

45

A
s Mabel’s story came to its end, Ari found his eyes were wet with tears.

He looked across at Mabel, who was staring out of the window watching the approaching dusk.

“It’s . . . shocking beyond all comprehension,” Ari said, clearing his throat, “that a mother could leave a son to die out there alone on the moors. It truly beggars belief.”

“Indeed it does,” Mabel agreed. “My mum told me that when Dad came home after it happened, telling her that Lord Astbury had died in his arms and Moh had been stolen away, she thought he’d been on the bottle.”

“Do you think Maud wanted her son to die?”

“My dad said it took over two hours for help to turn up. Of course, when it did, my dad made himself scarce. It wouldn’t have done for anyone to know that he’d seen anything. Lady Maud probably would have done away with him too. What a terrible tale it is,” Mabel shuddered. “It haunted both my parents for the rest of their lives.”

“I’m sure it did, Mabel. What a secret to have to carry. Do you have any idea where the doctor took Moh?”

“Only that Dad thought Moh had been taken to an orphanage in London.”

“I’m amazed Maud didn’t drown him in the brook there and then,” said Ari.

“My dad always reckoned she would have done if the doctor hadn’t been there.”

“For all the use he was,” Ari said with a sigh.

“Mr. Malik, you must understand that in those days the local gentry held those who served them in the palms of their hands. No one would dare to refuse their orders. Dr. Trefusis had no choice but to do what was asked of him. He knew she’d ruin him one way or the other if he didn’t.”

“It was him that signed the death certificate Selina Astbury gave
to Indira to give to Anahita,” said Ari. “That surely must have been a criminal offense?”

“But who was there to know he wasn’t telling the truth?” said Mabel. “Except my poor old dad. After that, even when I was grown, my mum refused to work up at the hall ever again and I never knew why. They’d have moved away completely if they could have done, but in those days, it was easier said than done.”

A knock on the door frame made them both look up. “Excuse me for interrupting, but it’s getting late and I don’t want you tiring yourself out, Mabel,” the nurse said, pushing a wheelchair through the door. “Perhaps you can carry on your chat tomorrow, Mr. Malik?”

“Yes,” said Mabel as the nurse helped her gently into the chair. “Although I can’t think there is much more to say, except please remember your promise to keep what I’ve told you to yourself.”

“Of course. I really can’t thank you enough for telling me, Mabel,” Ari replied.

“Well, it was the right thing to do. I feel at least one wrong has been righted. Good night, Mr. Malik, pop up and say good-bye before you leave and perhaps we can talk of happier times.”

“I will.” Ari stood up and was walking toward the door when a thought struck him. “Can you walk at all, Mabel?”

“Not these days, no. My blessed arthritis has done for my legs. The only way for me to get anywhere is in my chair. Sometimes, Lord Anthony will carry me downstairs so that Vicky can take me around the garden and I can get some fresh air. That kind to me, he is.” She smiled. “But my gray cells are still functioning, aren’t they, Vicky, dear?”

“They certainly are, Mabel.” Vicky smiled at her. “She misses nothing, this one.”

“I have no trouble believing that. Well, good night,” he said as he shut the door behind him.

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