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Authors: Amanda Grange

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BOOK: Colonel Brandon's Diary
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When I returned to the house, my aunt summoned me to her sitting room. She was an impressive sight, with her hair powdered and arranged in a towering style and her brocade dress taking up most of the sofa.
‘Your sister tells me that you are making good progress with Miss Heath,’ she said. ‘She will no doubt be overawed by your style of living but that is all to the good as she will be eager to please. Your sister has an idea of visiting you for the Season, but if you have any sense, you will not allow your wife to use her London house once you are married, except out of season. A woman with a London house is prey to all sorts of temptations that do not exist in the countryside, and she is apt to forget her place. Well, boy?’
‘I was not aware that you needed an answer,’ I said.
‘Do not be impertinent. What do you have to say?’
‘Yes, Aunt,’ I replied.
It satisfied her, and she went on.
‘I have invited the Heaths to dine with us tomorrow. It will give Miss Heath an opportunity to become more intimately acquainted with the family, and it will give her a chance to exhibit. Her mother has spent a great deal on her education and she will wish her daughter, at the least, to play the pianoforte and to sing.’
‘I look forward to hearing her.’
‘As well you might. Miss Heath, so her mother tells me, is a proficient. I should not be surprised if she also plays the harp. You will compliment her on her taste, and you will say that it is a most superior performance. You will also compliment her mother on providing her with the very best masters. ’
I thought of Eliza’s music masters, and of her light touch, and of her sweet voice, and I smiled.
‘Why are you smirking?’ my aunt demanded.
‘I — nothing,’ I said.
‘You will not smirk tomorrow, or our guests will think you have a toothache. If you wish to smile, you will lift the corners of your mouth, like so.’
She demonstrated with a grimace, and I nodded my head.
She eyed me as though I was a poor specimen, and then, with a wave of her hand, she dismissed me. I left her sitting room to amuse myself by fishing and then by playing billiards with George.
 
 
Friday 3 July
I looked for a letter from Leyton this morning, but the only letters on the silver salver were for my aunt. I was not surprised, for although I had hoped for a letter, I knew I could not really expect anything so soon. I could not expect Leyton to leave his own business and attend to mine straight away, and so I hoped for a letter in a few days’ time.
I escaped the house with George and we rode into town. He had some business to attend to and so we parted, he to go to his lawyer’s office and I to go to the local inn. Once there, I was tempted to write a letter to Eliza, but I knew it would be hopeless because my father would not let her see it, so I contained myself, thinking that, God willing, it would not be long before we were together again.
When I returned to the house, I found that the table had already been laid for dinner. The party was to be a small one, just ourselves, Mrs and Miss Heath, the Bormans and the Maidstones. I was thankful for it as I had no mind for company.
‘Do you like Miss Heath?’ asked George idly as we went into the billiard room.
‘She is very agreeable,’ I replied vaguely.
‘Agreeable before marriage is not the same as agreeable afterwards,’ he said. ‘Believe me, I know. Stand out against them, my boy, if you do not wish to marry; and I am sure you do not wish it. Let them blow and bluster, and then go back to Oxford and forget all about it.’
I was glad of his support, and we passed the time with a game or two before we changed for dinner.
The Heaths arrived promptly, a fact which would have annoyed my aunt had she not been so desirous of my marrying Miss Heath.
Miss Heath was looking very pretty, and if I had not been in love with Eliza, I believe I might have been in some danger, for I knew her to be agreeable and intelligent as well, but as my feelings were already attached, I could approach her without risk. We fell into conversation, and were smiled upon by those around us.
Dinner was announced, and Mrs Heath entertained us by comparing my aunt’s plate to her own. She then launched into a description of her wealth.
‘Folks say Miss Stallybrooks is an heiress, but she’s no more than twenty thousand pounds. My Sally’ll ’ave thirty thousand pounds when she marries. What d’you say to that?’ she asked, looking at each of us triumphantly.
Miss Heath murmured, ‘Mama,’ reproachfully, but did no more, being well used to her mother’s ways.
My aunt ignored her, whilst my sister murmured, ‘De lightful.’ Mrs Borman hid a smile and Mrs Maidstone looked shocked.

And
an ’ouse in town,’ added Mrs Heath, for good measure. ‘Nothing but the best for our girl, that’s what ’er pa and me decided. Got to look after ’em, eh, Lady Graves?’ she asked of my aunt.
‘Lady Greaves,’ corrected her daughter.
‘Children!’ said Mrs Heath indulgently. ‘What would we do without ’em? D’you ’ave any children, Mrs Poorman?’ she asked Mrs Borman, who murmured that she had two, a girl and a boy.
‘Grown up by now, I’ll be bound,’ she said.
‘Henry is seven and Katherine is five,’ replied Mrs Borman repressively.
‘Lawks, I took you for forty!’ said Mrs Heath. ‘And you, Mrs Mandibles? D’you ’ave any little ’uns to bless your ’earth?’
Mrs Maidstone dabbed her mouth fastidiously with her napkin and revealed that she had five, the eldest being fourteen and the youngest seven.
‘A fine family,’ said Mrs Heath. ‘Me and Arthur wanted a fine family, but — ’
Fearing a description of Mrs Heath’s troubles, my sister cut in with, ‘Do you play, Miss Heath?’
‘A little,’ said Miss Heath.
‘A little! Lawks! The best player in the country is my Sally,’ said Mrs Heath. ‘All the masters said so. “Ain’t my Sally the best little thing you’ve ever ’eard?” I used to ask them, and they all agreed, every one!’
‘Mama,’ said Miss Heath, shaking her head.
‘You must perform for us after dinner,’ said my aunt.
‘There you are, Sally. Singing for a Lady!’ said Mrs Heath, much pleased.
The ladies soon withdrew, and the gentlemen lingered over the port.
We talked of the political situation, but at last we could delay no longer and we joined the ladies. Miss Heath was sitting at the pianoforte when we entered the drawing room, and she was soon persuaded to play. She had a fine voice and it was a pleasure to listen to her as she entertained us.
‘What d’you think of that?’ asked Mrs Heath triumphantly, as Miss Heath came to the end of her song.
‘A fine performance,’ said my sister. ‘Do you not agree, James?’
‘Very fine,’ I said with a smile at Miss Heath.
‘There you are, Mrs Mandrake,’ said Mrs Heath. ‘Pay for the best masters, and one day your little ’uns could be playing like that.’
Mrs Maidstone did not deign to reply.
The party then broke into groups, some playing cards, some gossiping, and some turning over the pages of a fashion journal. The evening passed agreeably enough, but I was glad when it was over, all the same, for I would swap a dozen such evenings if I could spend one moment with Eliza.
 
 
Saturday 18 July
At last! I heard from Leyton today. He would have replied sooner, but he was away from home when my letter arrived. He promised to speak to his father and he assured me that he would search for some suitable lodgings.
My father will soon be going to London and I must have everything ready, for then I can rescue Eliza and take her to her new life. I am looking forward to it. It will be difficult, at first, for we will not have a proper establishment when we are married, but we are young and strong, and as long as we are together, then nothing else matters.
I hope that Leyton will be able to find some lodgings with a garden, for I do not want Eliza to be separated from her precious roses. But, good fellow that he is, I am sure he will find something that will suit.
 
 
Monday 27 July
My aunt summoned me to her sitting room this morning. She was dressed in her usual style, in heavy brocade and with an elaborate wig that extended her height by eight inches. When I entered the room, she was seated at her desk, and she held a letter in her hand.
‘You wanted to see me, Aunt?’
She raised her lorgnette and looked at me through it for a full minute before speaking. Then she lowered it and said, ‘Your father has written to me and desires me to tell you that you may return home whenever you wish.’
I was astonished, and then I thought, Of course! He has seen that he will never have his way, and he has relented.
I could not hide my joy, for now there was no need for me to approach the house in stealth. I could go home and marry Eliza in church, for if my father had seen that she would never marry anyone else, then he must surely give his permission for her to marry me.
I did not deceive myself. I knew that her fortune was the temptation for him, and that, seeing she would not marry my brother, he had decided she had better marry me, for in that way her fortune would enrich the Brandons. But I did not care about the reason, just so long as Eliza could be mine.
I wondered when he would allow us to marry. Would he make us wait until I was of age? Or would he be so eager to secure her fortune that he would let us marry at once? The latter, I hoped, for once Eliza was mine, he could not change his mind.
‘You are pleased?’ asked my aunt.
‘I am. I thought he meant to stick to his word and forbid me the house until Eliza had married Harry. But now, everything will be different.’
‘Your father has many faults, but going back on his word is not one of them,’ said my aunt. ‘He has
stuck to his word
, as you put it. Eliza was married yesterday.’
I could not take it in. I was bemused.
‘I do not understand you,’ I managed to say at last.
‘It is simple enough. Eliza and Harry are now married, and as they have embarked on their wedding tour, your father feels it is safe for you to return to the house.’
‘But this is impossible,’ I said, wondering what game my father was playing.
‘I cannot see why you are so surprised,’ she remarked, looking at me as though I were a half-wit. ‘You knew they were to marry.’
‘But Eliza would not marry my brother. She does not love him. She does not like him. She has given me her word that she will not consent to the match.’
‘A word like that means nothing. No young woman can give her word to a young man without her guardian’s approval. Come, come, now, you must have known how it would be; that, with time, her own conscience and common sense would show her that she was in the wrong. It would have been nonsensical for her to refuse a good marriage on nothing more than a whim.’
‘A whim, you call it? Love is a vast deal more than a whim,’ I said, still not knowing whether to believe it or not.
‘Whatever the case, she is now married; and you, I might remind you, are as good as engaged to Miss Heath.’
I gave an exclamation of disgust.
‘I mean nothing to Miss Heath and she means nothing to me.’
My aunt raised her thin eyebrows and looked at me again through her lorgnette.
‘You cannot mean to say you have been making love to her all this time without any serious intentions? Such conduct is unbecoming for a gentleman.’
‘She knows my intentions, and I know hers,’ I remarked.
‘And you know hers?’ demanded my aunt sharply. ‘Pray, what do you mean by that?’
I regretted my hasty words, for I was not willing to give her away.
‘Nothing,’ I said.
But my aunt was not so easily satisfied.
‘I will not be trifled with. You have declared that you know Miss Heath’s intentions, and you will be so good as to tell me what you mean.’
‘I mean nothing, Aunt.’
‘You have been a considerable disappointment to your family all your life, James. I suggest you make amends for it by being frank with me now.’
‘I have nothing further to say to you. Since my father has given me leave to return home, that is what I intend to do. I will leave at once.’
‘You will leave when I say you may go.’
‘No, Aunt, I will leave now,’ I said.
And without waiting for further argument, I left the room.
I packed my things myself, not wishing to involve any of my aunt’s servants in case they incurred my aunt’s wrath, and ran down the stairs.
‘Where are you going in such a hurry?’ asked my sister, coming out of the drawing room.
‘Home.’
‘But you have been forbidden — ’
‘My father has changed his mind.’
‘But what am I to say to Miss Heath?’
‘Pray tell her that I wish her happy,’ I said.
She attempted to argue further, but I ran on through the hall and out the front door, arriving in the stables where I had a horse saddled and, accompanied by a groom, rode to the stage. There I dismounted, and telling the groom to lead my mount back to the stables, I waited for the coach.
How different were my feelings from the last time I had taken a stagecoach. Then, I had been full of happiness, for I had been going to see Eliza. Now, I was full of apprehension, for I did not know what I would find at home.
 
 
Tuesday 28 July
I travelled overnight and arrived at Delaford before dawn, when the birds were just beginning to wake and the air was full of promise. But what did it promise for me? Good or ill?
Good, surely. Eliza could not have married Harry. She would never have agreed to it, and my father could not have forced her to the altar if she had refused. He did not have so much influence in the neighbourhood that he could compel Mr Liddle to perform the ceremony when the bride was unwilling, and Eliza did not lack the courage to tell him that she was being coerced.
BOOK: Colonel Brandon's Diary
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