Read Nine Coaches Waiting Online
Authors: Mary Stewart
When finally I was free to sit down beside my own fire I felt so tired that the flesh seemed to drag at my bones. I slumped down in the armchair and shut my eyes. But my mind was a cage gnawed by formless creatures that jostled and fretted, worries-some real, some half-recognised, some unidentified and purely instinctive-that wouldn't let me rest. And when, very late, I heard a car coming up the zigzag I jumped to my feet, nerves instantly a-stretch, and slid quietly through the shadows to the door of Philippe's room.
He was asleep. I went wearily back into my bedroom and began to undress. I was almost ready for bed when someone knocked softly on the door.
I said in some surprise: "Who is it?"
"Berthe, miss."
"Oh, Berthe. Come in."
She was carrying a parcel, across which she looked at me a little oddly. "This is for you, miss. I thought you might be in bed, but I was told to bring it straight up."
"No, I wasn't in bed. Thank you, Berthe, Goodnight."
"Goodnight, miss."
She went. I sat down on the bed and opened the parcel in some mystification.
I sat there for some time, looking down at the silver-webbed folds of Italian stuff that glimmered against the coverlet. Then I saw the note.
It read:
"For the kiss I can't honestly say I'm sorry, but for the rest I do. I was worried about something, but that's no excuse for taking it out on you. Will you count the fetching of your parcel as penance, and forgive me, please?
R.
PS. Darling, don't be so Sabine about it. It was only a kiss, after all”
Before I got to sleep that night, I'd have given a lot, drugs or no, for some of Madame de Valmy's tablets.
I told my love, I told my love,
I told
him
all my heart…
William Blake:
Poem from MSS
.
Next morning it might all have been illusion. Raoul left Valmy early, this time for the south and Bellevigne. I didn't see him go. Whether or not he and Léon had spoken of last night's incident I never discovered; certainly nothing was said or even hinted to me. When I braved my employer in the library to tell him about Philippe's second escape, he received me pleasantly, to darken as he listened into a frowning abstraction that could have nothing to do with my personal affairs.
He was sitting behind the big table in the library. When I had finished speaking he sat for a minute or two in silence, the fingers of one hand tapping the papers in front of him, his eyes hooded and brooding. I had the feeling that he had forgotten I was there.
When he spoke it was to say, rather oddly: "Again.”
I said, surprised: "Monsieur?"
He glanced up quickly under his black brows. I thought he spoke a little wearily. "This is the second time in a very few days, Miss Martin, that we have had cause to be indebted to you for the same rather terrible reason."
"Oh. I see," I said, and added awkwardly: "It was nothing. Anyone-"
"Anyone would have done the same?" His smile was a brief flash that failed to light his eyes. "So you said earlier, Miss Martin, but I must insist as I did before that we are lucky to have so…” a little pause… "so foresighted a young woman to look after Philippe. When did you put the ladder there?"
"Only yesterday."
"Really? What made you do it?"
I hesitated, choosing my words. "The other day I went out myself along the balcony to-to wait for a car coming. I remembered the coping had felt a bit loose before, and tried it. It was loose, but I’d have sworn not dangerously. I intended to mention it to you, but honestly I'd no idea it was as bad. Then the car came, and… I forgot about it."
I didn't add that the day had been Tuesday and the car Raoul's. I went on: "Then yesterday, just before I was due to leave for Thonon I went out again, to see if it was going to rain. The ladder was lying on the balcony and I wondered if workmen had been there. I remembered then about the coping, but I was in a tearing hurry for the bus, so I just shoved the ladder along in front of the balustrade and went. I-I vowed I'd remember to tell you as soon as I got back. I-I'm terribly sorry." I finished lamely.
"You needn't be. You were not to know that the stone was as rotten as that. I did have a report on the stonework of that balcony some time ago, but there was no suggestion that the repair was urgent. There'll be trouble about this, you may be sure. But meanwhile let us just be thankful for whatever inspired you to put the ladder across."
I laughed, still slightly embarrassed. "Perhaps it was Philippe's guardian angel."
He said dryly: "Perhaps. He seems to need one."
I said: "There's a phrase for it, isn't there? 'Accident-prone'."
"It seems appropriate." The smooth voice held a note that, incongruously, sounded like amusement. I looked sharply at him. He returned my look. "Well? Well, Miss Martin?"
"Nothing," I said confusedly. "I-it's just that-you take it so calmly. I'd have expected you to be angry."
"But I am," he said, "very angry." And meeting his eyes squarely for the first time during the interview I realised with a shock that he spoke a little less than the truth. He smiled again, and quite without amusement, "But being a rational man, I keep my anger for those who are to blame. It would ill become me, mademoiselle, to vent it on you. And I cannot spend it in protests, because that is… not my way."
He swung the wheel-chair round so that he was turned a little away from me, looking out of the window across the rose- garden. I waited, watching the drawn, handsome face with its fine eyes and mobile mouth, and wondering why talking with Léon de Valmy always made me feel as if I were acting in a play where all the cues were marked. I knew what was coming next, and it came.
He said, with that wry calmness that was somehow all wrong: "When one is a cripple one learns a certain… economy of effort, Miss Martin. What would be the point of raging at you here and now? You're not to blame. How's Philippe?"
The question cut across my thoughts-which were simply that I'd have liked him better indulging in some of that profitless rage-so abruptly that I jumped.
"Philippe? Oh, he's all right, thank you. He was frightened and upset, but I doubt if there'll be any ill effects. I imagine it'll soon be forgotten-though at the moment he's inclined to be rather proud of the adventure."
He was still looking away from me across the garden. "Yes? Ah well, children are unpredictable creatures, aren't they?
Le pauvre petit,
let's hope he's at the end of his 'adventures', as you call them."
"Don't worry, Monsieur de Valmy. He's having a bad spell, but it'll get over." I added, inconsequentially: "When does Monsieur Hippolyte get home?"
He turned his head quickly. The chair moved at the same moment so suddenly that the arm struck the edge of the desk. His exclamation was lost in my cry.
"You've knocked your hand!"
"It's nothing."
"The knuckle's bleeding. Can I get you-"
"It's nothing, I tell you. What were you saying?"
"I forget. Oh yes, I wondered if you knew just when Philippe's Uncle Hippolyte gets home?"
"I have no idea. Why?"
My eyes had been on his grazed hand. I looked up now to see him watching me, his face as usual calmly shuttered, but with something in that quiet gaze that held me staring without reply.
Then the brilliant eyes dropped. He moved a paper-knife an inch or two and repeated casually: "Why do you ask?"
"Just that Philippe keeps asking me, and I wondered if you'd heard from Monsieur Hippolyte.”
"Ah. Yes
.
Well, I don't know exactly, I'm afraid. My brother has always been slightly unpredictable. But he'll be away for another three months at least. I thought Philippe knew that. I believe his scheduled lecture-tour finished just before Easter, but he plans to stay for some time after that to assist the excavations at-as far as I remember-Delphi." He smiled. "My brother is a remarkably poor correspondent… I imagine that Philippe knows just about as much as I do." He lifted the paper-knife, placed it exactly where it had been before, looked up at me and smiled again, charmingly. "Well, Miss Martin, I won't keep you. I still have to divert some of that anger into its proper channels."
He was reaching for the house-telephone as I escaped. It occurred to me with wry surprise that "escape" was exactly the right word for my relieved exit from the library. The discovery annoyed me considerably. Damn it, the tiger played velvet-paws with me, didn't he?
But, unreasonable as it was, I couldn't rid myself of the impression that some of that much-discussed anger had been- whatever he said, whatever the probabilities-directed straight at me.
It was only a fortnight now to the Easter Ball, and I had to work fast. The weather was bad, so walks with Philippe were not obligatory, and though I took him several times to the stables to play on wet afternoons, we had a good deal of spare time indoors when I cut and sewed. Philippe and Berthe both appeared fascinated by the idea of making a dance-dress, and hung over me, fingering the stuff and exclaiming over every stage in its manufacture. Berthe was of rather more practical help than Philippe, as she gave me the use of her machine, and-since she was of my height and build-let me fit the pattern on her, never tiring of standing swathed in the glinting folds while I pinned and pulled and experimented.
As the days went by the chateau hummed with activity and pleased expectation. If there was indeed any shortage of money here, it could not have been guessed at. I did gather, from odd snippets of gossip to which I was careful to pay no attention, that much of the cost for the ball must be borne by Monsieur de
Valmy himself. Monsieur Hippolyte, it was whispered, didn't care for such things, and whereas in past years Philippe's father had willingly financed the affair and had invariably, with his wife, come from Paris to attend it, now that Monsieur Hippolyte was Philippe's co-trustee he was (I gathered) inclined to sit down rather tightly on the money-bags. Whatever the case, it seemed that Monsieur de Valmy was determined to recall at least some of the splendours of "the old Comte's" time. To my unaccustomed eye the preparations seemed lavish in the extreme. Rarely-used bedrooms were opened and aired-for there were to be guests over Easter week-end-the great ballroom and the big drawing-room were thrown open, chandeliers were washed, lustre by lustre, mirrors were polished, furniture and rugs spirited from one place to another, all, it seemed, under the eagle eye of Monsieur de Valmy. His chair was everywhere; if a servant dropped a piece of silver he was cleaning, the Master heard it; if a table was pushed along a parquet floor instead of being lifted, the Master spoke angrily from a corner of the room; he was even to be seen constantly on the upper corridors, swiftly propelling himself in and out of bedrooms and along corridors not commonly used by the family.
And so, bit by bit, corner by corner, the great house was prepared for the event of the year, and excitement seemed to thicken in the air as Easter drew nearer. Then came the final touches; flowers were carried in from the hot-houses, camellias and lilies and gorgeous blooms I didn't recognise, with tub after tub of bluebells and narcissi and tulips looking cool and virginal among the heavy-scented exotics. In one of the galleries there was even a miniature grove of willows over a shallow basin where goldfish glided, with cyclamens clustering like butterflies at the water's edge. Outside, floodlights had been fitted up, and a fountain like a firework shot its sparkling trails thirty feet towards Saturday's big yellow moon. For on Easter Eve the weather cleared, and Easter itself came in bright and beautiful, with a soft wind blowing that set the wild daffodils dancing in the woods, and put the seal on the success of the affair.
The Chateau Valmy was en fȇte.
On Saturday night after Philippe had gone to bed I put the finishing-touches to my frock. Berthe had stayed to help me, and now paraded it delightedly before me, while I sat on the floor among a scatter of pins and watched her with critical eyes.
“Ye-es," I said. "Turn round again, will you? Thanks. It’ll do, I think, Berthe."
Berthe twirled a curtsy in it, gay and graceful. It was amazing how she had shed her prim servant-maid attitude along with her uniform. In the shimmering dress she looked what she was a pretty country-girl, slim and young and-just now-flushed with excitement.
"It's
lovely
, miss, it's really lovely." She spun round so that the full skirt swirled and sank. She lifted a fold and fingered it almost wistfully. "You'll look beautiful in it."
"I've an awful feeling it'll look pretty home-made alongside the collection downstairs."
"Don't you believe it," said Berthe stoutly. "I’ve seen some of them; Mariette and me did most of the unpacking. The prettiest frock I think belongs to the Marquise in the yellow guest-room, and she's no oil-painting herself by a long chalk."
"Hush, Berthe," I protested, laughing, "you mustn't say things like that to me!"
She began to waltz round the room, humming a tune. "Of course Madame's always nice. She looks lovely in
grande toilette
-like a Queen. And that Madame Verlaine gets herself up very smart, doesn't she? Hers is black."
"Is Monsieur Florimond here?"
"Oh, he always comes. He says he wouldn't miss it for worlds. He dresses half the ladies, anyway."
I began to pick up the scattered pins, asking casually: "And Monsieur Raoul? Does he come to this affair as a rule?"
There was a tiny pause. At the edge of my vision I saw Berthe's circling form check and turn. I looked up to catch a sidelong glance before her eyes slid from mine. She plucked at a fold of the skirt. "He hasn't been for years. But they're expecting him-this time."
I said nothing, and picked up pins.
She came over to where I sat, her voice warming into naturalness again. "Why don't you try it on now, miss? Don't bother with those, I'll pick them up after."
"It's done," I said. 'There, that's the lot, I think."
"Don't you believe it," she said darkly. "We'll be finding them for weeks. Go on, miss, put it on, do. I want to see you in it, with the silver shoes and all."
I laughed and got up. "All right."
"It's a shame you haven't got a decent mirror. That one in the wardrobe door's no good at all, not for a long frock."
"It's all right. I told Madame I was making a frock and she said I might use the glass in her room. I'll just go along now and give it the final check-up. Tomorrow night I’ll have to make do in here."
She followed me into my bedroom, speaking a little shyly. "May I help you to dress tomorrow?"
"Why, Berthe, how nice of you! But you'll have so much to do! And I could manage quite well, really. I'm not used to luxuries, you know."
"I'd like to. I would really."
"Then thank you very much. I'd be awfully glad to have you."
Back in her uniform, she helped me pleasedly with the dress. At last I stood surveying myself in the narrow wardrobe mirror.
"Oh, miss, it's lovely!"
"We put a lot of work into it, Berthe. I'm terribly grateful to you for helping. I couldn't have managed without you."
I turned this way and that, eyeing the line and fall of the material, and wondering just how amateurish it was going to look against the other gowns downstairs. Then I saw Berthe's eyes in the glass. They were brilliant with uncomplicated excitement and pleasure. Her delight, it was obvious, wasn't fretted by the shades of Balenciaga and Florimond. "Oh, miss, it's lovely! There won't be one prettier! You'll look a picture! Wait, I'll get the shoes!"
She was scurrying towards a cupboard but I stopped her impulsively. "Berthe…"