Read The Return of the Gypsy Online
Authors: Philippa Carr
“That must have been interesting.”
I was glad I was sitting with my back to the light.
“You know he is Tamarisk’s father,” I said.
“Good Lord, yes. Dolly, of course.”
“I have had to ask him to come down here for a short visit. He wants to see his daughter.”
“That’s natural enough.”
“I am wondering how to break the news to Tamarisk. What will her feelings be, do you think?”
“She can be unpredictable.”
“I want to get her used to the idea before he comes.”
“Of course. What sort of man is he … this gypsy cum baronet?”
“Well, I suppose he is in his late twenties … maybe thirty. He’s dark …”
“I didn’t mean his appearance so much.”
“He … er … fitted very well into the Inskips’ circle.”
“That’s just about top notch, isn’t it?” he said with a laugh.
“I suppose so. He told me that he had run away from home to join the gypsies because of family disagreements.”
“And now he has apparently stepped back into his rightful niche.”
“I suppose you could say that.”
“Tamarisk ought to be pleased to have such a father. I wonder if he will want to take her away.”
“I wonder if she would want to go.”
“With Tamarisk, one never knows. One thing I know is that you will do what is right… and for the best.”
He smiled at me lovingly and in that moment I felt the burden of my guilt was almost unbearable.
Tentatively I approached the matter with Tamarisk.
“Tamarisk,” I said, “have you ever missed not having a father?”
She looked surprised and thought for a moment. Then she said: “No.”
“What would you say if you suddenly found you had one?”
“I don’t want one,” she said.
“Why not?”
“He’d tell me what to do. Old Mr. Frenshaw still tells young Mr. Frenshaw what to do and he’s quite old.”
I laughed. “Old Mr. Frenshaw tells everybody what to do. You might like your father.”
“I don’t think I need one.”
“It’s nice to have one.”
“What for?”
“Well, everybody had a father at some time.”
“I haven’t.”
“You couldn’t be born without one. There has to be a mother and father.”
She looked puzzled, and feeling I was getting into difficult ground, I started again. “As a matter of fact you have a father.”
“Where?”
“In London. He wants to meet you.”
She stared at me in amazement. “How can he, when he doesn’t know me?”
“He knows
of you.”
“Why isn’t he here then … like other fathers?”
“It’s rather complicated. He had to go away. He’s been away for a long time, right to the other side of the world. Now he’s back and he wants to meet you.”
“When?”
“Next week?”
“Oh,” she said. There was a pause before she went on. “Brownie had to have a bran mash this morning. Stubbs is giving it to her. Jonathan is coming over this afternoon and we’re going to ride together.”
Brownie was her very own horse and the joy of her life. Stubbs was one of the grooms.
I could see that she was not greatly impressed by the prospect of seeing her father, and that her mind was on other matters far more interesting in her opinion. Riding with Jonathan was far more important to her—so much so that she did not want to consider anything else.
I felt excited and apprehensive at the thought of having Jake at Grasslands. I was very much afraid that we might betray our feelings for each other.
I introduced him to Edward and watched them together… my husband and my lover. Edward was courteous and as Jake was quite frank about his life as a gypsy and on the convict settlement there were none of those uneasy moments which occur when there are subjects which must be avoided.
Edward’s verdict when we were alone was: “What an interesting man! I suppose all that happening to one would give one a certain … what shall I say … an aura of fascination perhaps. Then running off with the gypsies. He’s an individualist. There is no doubt about that. He will liven us up, I daresay. You’ll want to take him over to Eversleigh, I imagine.”
I said they would invite us and we should also go to Enderby, although Amaryllis was scarcely in a condition to entertain.
“Oh, Eversleigh will do the honours. But the main problem is Tamarisk.”
It was a strange meeting. She came into the room and he stood up and went to her. She looked up at him with curiosity.
“So you are my daughter,” he said.
“They say that,” she said almost disbelievingly.
“Well, then it is time we got to know each other.”
She shrugged her shoulders and turned away.
“Tamarisk,” I cried indignantly. “Your father has come a long way to see you.”
“You’ve been to the other side of the world.” She turned to him and there was a certain interest in her eyes.
“Yes,” he said. “It’s very different there.”
“With kangaroos?”
He nodded.
“Did you ever see one?”
“Yes.”
“With a baby in its pouch?”
“Yes, and I’ve eaten kangaroo soup.”
“You killed it.”
“Somebody must have killed it to make the soup. You can’t make soup out of live things.”
“Did you have a boomerang?”
“Yes, I had that. I hear you are riding and that you are a good rider.”
“Do you like horses?”
“Very much. Perhaps we can go for a ride together and have a good talk.”
“All right,” she said. “I’ll put on my riding habit. I’ve got a new one.”
“That’s splendid. You can show me the country.”
“All right,” she said. “Wait there. I won’t be long.”
I smiled at him when she had gone. “I think,” I said, “you have taken the first step.”
We were alone in the room.
“Jessica,” he said. “I have missed you so much.”
“Please … not here … not in this house.”
“You will come to London.”
“Oh Jake, it can’t go on. Now I am back here with Edward I see that.”
“He will never know. And we need each other.”
“I could not bear for him to know.”
“You can’t be expected to live like a nun … not you, Jessica. You couldn’t.”
I said: “I have already shown that I am no nun. I have already broken my marriage vows.”
“I love you.”
“And I love you … but it is all impossible. We have to see that. This is the way I have chosen. I could not ever hurt Edward.
He has suffered so much already. What do you think it is like for him, lying there, day after day … a man and yet not a man.”
“What is it like for us … being denied each other?”
“You will find someone.”
“There is only one I want.”
“That can’t be so. If we had not met at the Inskips’…”
“I should have come down here and found you. It was inevitable … from the moment we met all those years ago. It had to be.”
“We must be strong.
I
am going to be. It was a madness which came to me in London. Now that I am home … with Edward … I know that.”
Tamarisk burst into the room wearing her new riding habit and looking pleased.
“I’m ready,” she announced.
“Well, let us away,” said Jake.
He opened the door for her and she went through. Then he turned to look back at me. He put his fingers to his lips and threw them towards me.
I should be pleased. The meeting had gone off better than I had hoped. Tamarisk was wary but he would soon win her with his charm. I could see that.
It might be that she would have another hero to set beside Jonathan.
I went to Edward.
“I can see all went well,” he said. “You look very pleased with yourself.”
“They’ve gone riding. I think she is going to take to him.”
“Well, he’s a likeable fellow. I wonder if he will want to take her away from us.”
“That will be for him and her to decide.”
“She might like the idea of that place in Cornwall.”
“There is one person you have forgotten. Jonathan. She has quite a passion for him.”
“Oh yes. It would take a great deal to get her to leave him.”
“I wouldn’t be sorry to see her go to Cornwall.”
“She is something of a liability.”
“I wasn’t thinking of that. She is old for her years and I am a little perturbed about this obsession with Jonathan. Jonathan himself has quite a reputation.”
“I am sure Jonathan would never misbehave at home.”
“I hope not. I fear that violent passion of hers might tempt him.”
“No, no. It is true he has been rather free with the girls. Tamarisk is different. Whatever his inclinations he would curb them where she is concerned.”
“The feeling might come over him. After all she is there, his willing slave. She is old for her years … precocious … growing up fast.”
Edward shook his head. “Jonathan would show restraint, I am sure. He is a decent fellow at heart.”
Oh Edward, I thought, you believe the best of everyone. What would you say if you knew your wife had thrown restraint to the winds in a house in Blore Street, that she has betrayed you not once but several times with this man who is now a guest in your house?
There was an innocence about Edward. He was like Amaryllis in a way. He believed in the goodness of people. Such as they were aroused a protective instinct. I never wanted Edward to know the truth about me. I vowed that he never should. I remembered fleetingly the occasion when Peter had come across us arm in arm in Blore Street. Peter might not be very observant, having other matters on his mind, but everyone might not be the same.
There was only one way to ensure Edward’s never finding out that he had an unfaithful wife. So far we had been undetected. We must never let there be a chance of our betraying our guilty secret.
I remembered what a big part Leah had played in our story. She had come into our household and now seemed like one of the ordinary servants. She was an excellent nurse for Tamarisk and I often wondered what I should have done without her. She was quiet, they said below stairs, and kept herself to herself. She was not interested in the young men although many would be ready to take notice of her with a little encouragement. It was whispered that she was afraid of them because of an “experience” she had once had.
We knew what that experience was for it had nearly cost her saviour his life and he had paid for his part in the affair with seven years in a penal settlement.
And now she would come face to face with him.
She was there when they returned from their ride. I had prepared her for I thought that was wise. She had turned very pale and then flushed.
She said: “It was a long time ago.”
“Yes,” I agreed.
“I never forgot what he did for me.”
“Of course you wouldn’t.”
And there they were. He was rather flushed from the ride; his eyes were alight with pleasure. I think he was rather intrigued by his daughter. Tamarisk looked like a handsome boy in her riding clothes; she was a daughter of whom he could be proud.
“We had a lovely ride, Leah,” said Tamarisk. “We raced. He beat me … but only just.”
“Leah,” he said. “Little Leah.”
He went to her and took both her hands. She lifted her eyes to his and I saw the adoration there. It moved me deeply.
“So you are looking after my daughter?”
She nodded. There were tears in her eyes. She said: “I have thought of you.”
“I’ve thought of you too, Leah,” he answered gently.
“What you did for me …”
“It was long … long ago.”
“And they blamed you. They were going to hang you…”
“But here I am … hale and hearty.”
“You’re gentry now,” she said. “You were never one of us.”
“It wasn’t for lack of trying.”
I thought I ought to go and leave them together. I felt as though I were prying on Leah’s emotion.
“Come, Tamarisk,” I said. Strangely enough she obeyed me.
She ran off to see that her horse was all right. I went into the garden … out to the shrubbery. I felt I wanted to
get
away from the scene of reunion.
I wondered if Leah loved him. She had made a hero of him, that much I knew. She had lured his child away from her home because she must have wanted something which was part of him. She loved Tamarisk devotedly.
And what were his feelings for Leah? He had spoken to her very tenderly. He had cared for the innocent young girl in the days when he had first gone to the gypsies. He had been overcome with fury when he had come upon that brute intent on rape. He had lashed out in that fury and it had nearly cost him his life.
How would he feel about Leah now? I was aware of the stirrings of jealousy.
He was susceptible to women, I was sure. I remembered Dolly dancing round the bonfire. Dolly had loved him, and how had he felt about her? He pitied her, I think, but there must have been some desire; and he had lightheartedly given way to it. How lighthearted had he been such a little while ago in a house in Blore Street?
And Leah? When she had been a gypsy girl and he had come among them, had she thought it possible that one day there might have been a match between them? It could have happened. Now, of course, everything was different with him. He was a country gentleman and Leah could have no place in his life. Or could she?
And in any case, what part could I have? Nothing but a secret one.
He must have seen me go into the shrubbery for he found me there.
“At last,” he said, “we are alone.”
I had sat down on the wooden seat there and he was beside me, very close. I was deeply stirred as I always was by his proximity.
I said: “Poor Leah was deeply moved.”
“Yes, she was. It brought it all back to her. When I saw her again I was glad I killed that devil. She was such a gentle girl.”
“She still is and she has been wonderful with Tamarisk. If Tamarisk went to live with you in Cornwall Leah would have to go with her.”
“Tamarisk won’t leave you. I’m a newcomer. She’s not sure of me yet. Jessica, couldn’t we be alone … somewhere … together …”
“Here?” I cried. “In this house? Oh, no … no.”
“It is hard for me to see you here… so near and yet so remote.”
“That is how it has to be.”