The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15) (10 page)

BOOK: The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)
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“I suppose if I behaved properly, I would go to join the rest of our boat-crew, and leave you here until somebody arrives to rescue us.”

Lydia gave a little cry.

“N-no ... please do not ... leave me. I want to be with you ... and I want to feel ... safe in your ... arms.” Her voice stumbled over the last words and the Earl said:

“That is what I want too, my precious. While I know I am behaving very reprehensibly, it is something I cannot help.”

“For the moment,” Lydia said in a low voice, “we are ... alone and nobody ... except the birds ... will know ... how we behave.”

The Earl smiled, then he said:

“My darling, you have just been telling me how honourable I must be.”

“I know,” Lydia agreed, “but ... love seems to sweep away everything but that I am close to you ... and you ... care for me.”

“ ‘Care’ is a very inadequate word to describe what I feel,” the Earl said in a low voice, “but I have to think of you and actually, my precious one, I am not protecting you from the gossip of a world who cannot see us, but from myself!”

She looked up at him and he knew because of her innocence she did not understand what he was saying.

She was so different from all the other women he had ever known and he knew that what he felt for her was not only a burning desire to make her his, but also because of her purity, a reverence.

“I adore you,” he said, “and I promise you, my darling, that all I want to do is look after you and protect you.”

“That is why you must ... stay with me,” Lydia said quickly. “Supposing there are ... Hawaiian warriors like the ones who ... killed Captain Cook lurking in the jungle and who if I were ... alone would ... kill me?”

The Earl thought she looked so lovely as she spoke that any man who saw her would not want to kill her, but would have a very different idea of what he wanted to do.

Yet he knew that he had to control himself and do nothing to frighten or upset her.

“Very well,” he said. “We will stay here, but darling, when you look back on this adventure it will remain something very precious in your memory, and you will know that you drove me very hard.” Because she did not understand, Lydia replied: “Whatever happens in the future ... I shall always know that this was the most wonderful ... glorious moment of my ... life ... and yet I thought when you ... kissed me it was something which was inevitable and had perhaps been planned thousands of years before ... we were born.”

“I am sure that is true,” the Earl smiled, “and I have been searching for you all those thousands of years, only to be disappointed.”

Then he was kissing her again, kissing her at first gently, then more fiercely and demandingly until when they were both breathless, Lydia hid her face against his shoulder and said in a very small voice:

“We can ... only go on ... hoping.”

“Hoping for what?” the Earl asked bitterly. “That Heloise will die before you? That she was drowned last night at sea? Those things, my darling, do not happen except in story books. In real life we have to face the truth, that I am committed for life!”

“We might ... see each ... other from ... time to time,” Lydia faltered.

“How could I bear that?” the Earl asked. “How can I go through life living at the Abbey, knowing you are not far away, but I cannot see you?”

He paused before he went on:

“How can I go out hunting without searching the field to see if you are there? How can I listen to my wife speak of you and feel every time she says your name that it is as if a dagger had been plunged into my body, drawing my very life-blood?”

He spoke so violently that Lydia gave a little cry. “You must try not to feel like that,” she said, “but just believe that our love is great enough to make us behave as we ... should do until perhaps one day ... by the mercy of God ... we can be ... together.”

“Do you really believe that?” the Earl asked. “In my experience God is not often merciful in matters which concern the heart.”

“That is not true,” Lydia said quickly, “and perhaps I am being prophetic when I say that because I love you with every breath I draw, and because I feel I am part of you one day we will be together.”

He looked down at her and there was a tenderness in his eyes she had never seen before.

“Only you, my precious love, could believe that," he said, “but because I worship you and am prepared to accept everything you tell me. I shall pray that some day God will remember us.”

The way he spoke was so moving that Lydia felt the tears come into her eyes.

As she looked up at him he thought it would be impossible for any woman to look more lovely and so spiritual that her face was like a light shining in the darkness.

He took one of her hands in his, kissed it and said: “I adore you! But now, because I must look after you I am going to find you something to eat. You can call it breakfast, if you like, but I feel we are both hungry.”

“Something to ... eat?” Lydia repeated.

She looked around her then gave a little laugh. “Yes, I am sure there must be plenty in this magical Paradise, and now that you speak of it, I am hungry.”

“If I was looking after you properly, I should have thought of it before,” the Earl said. "There are sure to be bananas somewhere, and unless I am mistaken guavas are the most common fruit in the islands.”

Lydia gave a laugh and rose to her feet.

‘Let us go to find them,” she said.

They moved into the thick vegetation and found some guavas quite easily.

Her books had told her that they were tangy but juicy and quenched the thirst.

After that they found quite a number of ripe berries which were delicious and then the Earl discovered a papaya which they divided between them, using a sharp stone as a knife.

When they had finished and had washed their fingers in the sea Lydia said:

“I am sure if we had some matches and could make a fire I could find some birds’ eggs and cook you a delicious meal.”

The Earl laughed.

“I would adore to live on a desert island with you, my darling. At the same time I feel if there were many storms like last night’s, we would find it very cold, however close I held you in my arms.”

She blushed at the way he spoke, then once again was conscious that her nightgown, although it was made of lawn, was very revealing.

She was so used to not thinking about herself that it was really only in that moment that Lydia became aware that the Earl’s eyes were on the curves of her breasts, or that against the sunlight he could see every contour of her body.

Because she loved him so overwhelmingly it did not seem to matter, and she had only to look into his eyes to move closer to him and lift her lips to his, waiting for him to kiss her.

“I love you!” he said, pulling her almost roughly against him. “It has been an agony I hope never to experience again to be acutely conscious of you every minute of every hour we have been on this journey, and at the same time to know that it would be most dishonourable to let you know what I was feeling.”

“I was so ... afraid that you would ... guess how much I ... loved you.”

“I found it impossible to think of anything else when you were near me.”

“How was I to know that?”

She was thinking of how it had hurt her when she imagined he was making love to Heloise, and how she had sat alone in her cabin on the ship and in her bedroom on the train, trying to think of other things.

“How could we really believe we could do without each other for the rest of our lives?” the Earl asked. He looked out to sea. Then he said:

“In a short time I am quite certain we shall be rescued. They will be coming from Honolulu to search for all the missing travellers on the ship.”

“I want to stay ... here with ... you for ... ever and ever!”

“I wonder how soon you would become bored?”

“Never ... as long as I was ... with you.”

The Earl did not speak, but she knew he felt the same. Then he said:

“Why should we crucify ourselves? Come away with me! We will take my yacht and go round the world, and when we come back people will have a great number of other scandals to talk about and we shall have been forgotten.”

Lydia smiled.

“If you were any other man that would be true,” she said, “but you are different. You are you—a hero, a leader. How could I rob you of that and, I am certain, cause great harm not only to Heloise, but to a great number of other people who admire you?”

The Earl took his arms from her and walked away two paces, then back again.

“That is what I might expect you to say,” he said. “At the same time, I feel trapped! No wild animal in a cage ever wanted to break out of it as violently as I wish to do!”

She knew as he spoke that he was finding it intolerable to be constrained into doing anything against his will and that his whole being rebelled against being imprisoned by a marriage that would never be anything but a farce.

Then because she could not bear his unhappiness, she ran towards him and put her arms round his neck.

“I love you!” she said. “I love you so much that I would kill myself rather than allow you to suffer because of me.”

“You are not to say such things,” he rebuked her angrily.

“It is true!” she insisted, “and because I love you I will not spoil anything about you, or your honour. How could I endure it if people sneered at you or said you had betrayed your own image?”

The Earl did not reply, he merely kissed her and now his lips were not passionate, but tender and gentle.

She knew he understood what she was saying and that although it broke his heart, he would abide by it.

Then as with an effort they took their eyes from each other and automatically looked out to sea, they saw a boat coming towards the shore.

They were being rescued from a Heaven of happiness they might never find again.

chapter six

Lydia
saw there were five men in the boat, one of them a Naval Officer, and she said hastily:

“I cannot let ... them see me ... like this.”

“No, of course not,” the Earl agreed. “Go and hide in the bushes, and I will see if they have something with which you can cover yourself.”

She ran away from him across the sand and into the thick jungle of flowering shrubs.

The Earl walked to the edge of the sea, and saw coming towards them one of the long thin Hawaiian boats being rowed by four men and with the Naval Officer in the stem directing them.

As they rowed along the shore-line he was looking searchingly among the trees and in the bays, and the Earl felt sure that he was seeking for him.

He waved and the boat instantly pulled towards him.

As soon as it came to rest on the sand two of the oarsmen jumped out and dragged its bow out of the water.

The Naval Officer saluted.

“I am delighted to find you, My Lord,” he said. “We were extremely worried when we realised last night you were missing.”

He drew nearer as he spoke and the Earl asked: “What has happened?”

“The Captain and a dozen of the crew stayed aboard the Ship to try to put out the fire. They managed it eventually, but one stoker lost his life and three seamen were badly burned.”

“It is out!” the Earl exclaimed. “That is good news!”

“We are all delighted, My Lord, as you can imagine,” the Naval Officer said. “Your valet and Sir Robert’s have already gone back on board to try to collect Your Lordship’s luggage which we think will be unharmed, as the fire was prevented from reaching that part of the ship.”

The Earl smiled.

“I am glad, for at the moment I feel somewhat inadequately clothed!

The Officer looked down in the boat.

“I have brought some blankets and bandages with me in case Your Lordship was injured,” he said, “but stupidly I did not think of clothes.”

He paused before he went on:

“Your Lordship will not think it impertinent if I offer you my coat? And as the King’s representatives will be waiting for you when we return, perhaps you would also accept my shoes.”

The Earl laughed.

“Thank you, I am very grateful.”

The Officer who was a young Lieutenant took off his white coat and helped the Earl into it.

They were about the same size and it was therefore not a bad fit. As he removed his shoes the Earl said: “I think a bandage also is what I need.”

“You are injured?” the Lieutenant asked quickly. The Earl shook his head.

“No, but I could use it to cover my neck.”

The Lieutenant handed him a box in which there was a number of bandages of all sizes.

They were made from strips of white linen and the Earl took the widest of them and wound it round his neck in the same way that he would have worn a stock out hunting.

“Now,” he said as he tucked the ends into the coat, “I would like a blanket for Miss Westbury.”

“I thought I saw her here when I first sighted you,” the Lieutenant exclaimed.

“As she is as inadequately clothed as I was, you will understand that she is somewhat embarrassed.” The Lieutenant lifted a white blanket from the boat and the Earl took it from him and started to walk across the sand to where Lydia was hiding.

While the Earl was talking to their rescuers Lydia had been looking around her at the beauty of the shrubs and trees, thinking she must imprint them on her mind because she would never come here again.

It was an agony to think she would never again see the sunlight percolating through the thick trees overhead, or the exquisite blossom of the shrubs.

Then, while she was looking around her, thinking that if she were an artist she would paint a picture of it so that she could never forget it, she saw what she had longed to see.

For a moment she thought it was a blossom, but then she realised that it was the elusive Hawaiian Honeycreeper, which she had read about as being the most colourful of the song-birds on the islands.

It looked exactly as she had expected it would, with its crimson plumage and long, curved beak which enabled it to dip deep into the tubular flowers to reach their nectar.

Lydia stood very still, and the Honeycreeper looked at her with inquisitive eyes before, so swiftly that she could hardly follow its flight, it vanished upwards among the leaves into the sunshine.

Because it was so beautiful, she felt perhaps it was an omen of good luck.

Because she had seen it so unexpectedly, she would go on hoping, as she had told the Earl she would, that one day they would be together.

The Earl, with the blanket over his arm, pushed his way through the bushes until he found Lydia.

She was standing very still with her head thrown back, looking up into the tree through which the Honeycreeper had flown away.

In her white nightgown which clung to her slight figure, revealing rather than concealing her beauty, he thought she looked like the goddess Aphrodite, and he could almost believe there was a Divine Light exuding from her.

Then as if she realised he was there she turned around and the radiance in her eyes was so compelling that for a moment the Earl could not move, but could only look at her.

He thought then that it was impossible that any woman could be more lovely.

Then knowing they were out of sight of their rescuers, he held out his arms, and with a little cry of joy Lydia threw herself against him.

“I love you!” he said. “In fact, I have a very good mind to tell the boat to go away and come back tomorrow!”

“That is what I would like,” Lydia answered, “but you would miss the Coronation.”

She gave a little cry.

“The Coronation! It is today! You must not be late for it!”

The Earl’s lips twisted wryly.

“We are about to leave our dream-island,” he said, “and step back into the Social world which is waiting to gobble us up.”

“I know,” Lydia said unhappily, “but this is why you came to Honolulu, and I must not do anything to distract you from your duty.”

The Earl did not answer. He merely kissed her.

Then he wrapped the white blanket around her shoulders and stood back for a moment to look at her.

“You look like a Saint!” he exclaimed. “I feel I ought to kneel at your feet and burn a candle to you!”

“You are not to speak like that,” Lydia cried. “I do not feel at all good or holy at the moment. I only know I love you and however wrong it may be, I shall love you all my life!”

The Earl kissed her again.

Then because there was nothing more to say to each other, he took her by the hand and drew her through the scented blossoms out onto die sandy beach.

She walked carefully with her bare feet, and when she reached the boat she realised that the sailors and the Officer were looking at her with admiration.

She had in fact, no idea how lovely she looked with her hair waving on each side of her face and falling over her shoulders onto the blanket.

The sunshine seemed to be reflected in the light of her eyes and, as the Earl had seen, because her love had lifted her spiritually into a Heaven of happiness she had a radiance that had something holy about it.

The Lieutenant helped her into the boat while the Earl paused to put on his white shoes which he had left on the sand.

Then the Earl joined Lydia and they sat side by side as the Hawaiian oarsmen carried them to Honolulu at a tremendous speed.

They seemed literally to shoot like an arrow through the calm water and more quickly than they had expected the roofs of the town were in sight and they could see a long stretch of golden beach with palm-trees growing down to the water’s edge.

Behind were the majestic Koolau mountains.

Sheer walls of green and brown rock all covered with strange but beautiful vegetation, they were quite different from anything Lydia had expected.

In fact, the dazzling green of the mountains, the blue of the sea, and the gold of the beaches made her know that she had been right when she had thought Honolulu would be exactly like a fairy-story.

She was glad that she had seen it for the first time with the Earl.

Although he did not speak she knew that he was feeling as she was, that it was still part of their island Paradise, and if it was a fairy-story it must somehow have a happy ending.

As the Lieutenant brought the boat into a place where she could see a large number of people waiting for them Lydia suddenly felt shy.

She was acutely conscious that if the Earl looked more or less like his usual self in his borrowed clothes, she must look very strange in nothing but her nightgown and a blanket.

As if once again the Earl knew what she was thinking he said quietly:

“Do not worry. Leave everything to me.”

She gave him a little smile knowing that was all she wanted to do for ever and ever.

As the boat pulled up beside a small wooden jetty the Earl stepped out first, and immediately a pretty girl in Hawaiian dress came forward with a garland of flowers in her hand which Lydia knew was known as a
Lei.

She placed it round his neck, then kissed his cheek.

Leis
were used originally as offerings to the gods, but now she was aware it was a gesture of love and a symbol of welcome.

Then several Hawaiians in Military uniform bowed to the Earl and presented themselves as representatives of the King.

Only when he had shaken hands with them did the Earl turn back to hold out his hand to Lydia and draw her beside him.

“As I expect you know,” he said, “Miss Westbury was with me when our boat was unfortunately swamped by the waves. She has been very brave, but it has been a dramatic experience, and I want to take her immediately to wherever she is staying with her father.” A Lei was placed round Lydia's neck and they were then taken to an open carriage which had the Royal Insignia on it.

Having thanked the Lieutenant and arranged about the return of his clothes, the Earl helped Lydia into the carriage and sat beside her while two Hawaiian Officers sat opposite them.

“You were unfortunate, My Lord,” one of them who was a General said, in good English, “that your boat was over-turned.”

“Was ours the only one?” the Earl enquired.

“The others all reached here safely last night,” the General replied, “and no member of the crew was unaccounted for except for those who have been rescued at the same time as yourself.”

“I am extremely glad about that." the Earl said, “and also that the fire has been extinguished in
H
M
S
Victorious.”

“His Majesty was pleased to hear the good news,” the General replied, “and he is My Lord, looking forward to welcoming you at the Palace.”

He paused and before the Earl could ask the question he added:

“That is where Your Lordship will be staying, while Sir Robert Westbury and his two daughters will be at the British Consulate with Mr. Wodehouse.”

The Earl thought that was what he might have expected, and a few minutes later the horses turned in through two white gates and Lydia saw in front of them an attractive low-storeyed house with a flag-pole on which flew the Union Jack.

As the carriage drew to a standstill the Earl said to the General:

“As I know we are pressed for time, General, and the King will be getting ready for the Coronation which I think I am right in saying is at midday, I will just hand Miss Westbury over to her father, then rejoin you.”

Lydia was aware that he was saying tactfully that it would be best for the Hawaiians to stay in the carriage.

She gave them a shy smile when they said goodbye to her and the Earl helped her out and up the steps of the British Consulate.

There was a large cool hall and a servant led them across it and opened the door of what Lydia thought was the Drawing-Room.

Sitting in front of an open window was her father and two other people who she realised must be the British Consul and his wife.

Good-looking with a large moustache, the British Consul sprang to his feet at their entrance exclaiming:

“They have found you, My Lord! Thank God for that!”

He hurried forward, his hand outstretched, and the Earl said:

“We are safe Mr. Wodehouse but of course a little shaken by our unfortunate experience, as you can understand.”

“We were deeply perturbed when you did not arrive last night, and of course, what made it worse, Miss Westbury was also missing.”

Lydia smiled and moved towards her father.

“I am back safely, Papa,” she said, “and I am sorry if you have been worried.”

“Very worried!” Sir Robert answered.

As he spoke the door burst open and Heloise came into the room.

Surprisingly, she was not fully dressed but was wearing a light muslin wrap ruched and trimmed with lace over her petticoats, her hair hung down her back and was tied with a bow of blue satin ribbon.

She swept towards them exclaiming in a loud voice as she did so:

“I heard you were back! I am surprised it should have taken so long to find you!”

She passed the Earl to confront Lydia where she stood beside her father and went on:

“Where have you been and what have you been doing? You had no right to hang back deliberately instead of getting into the boat with me and Papa!”

“I did not do ... that,” Lydia replied in a low voice. She felt embarrassed that Heloise should be shouting at her in front of the Earl in the hard voice she used when they were alone.

“Do not lie!” Heloise stormed. “You lingered behind so that you should not accompany me as you ought to have done, but travel in another boat with Hunter!”

“That ... is not ... true!”

“You lie! You lie!” Heloise shouted. “And what have you been doing all night instead of getting here as everybody else managed to do?”

She was working herself up into one of her passions, and now as if she acted impulsively and without thinking she raised her hand intending to slap Lydia across the face.

It was something she often did at home, but as Lydia instinctively moved her head to avoid the blow Heloise hit her instead on the forehead where she had been bruised the night before.

It was so painful and because she was taken by surprise and encumbered by the blackout Lydia fell back onto the sofa which was just behind her.

For a moment there was only darkness and she did not hear what was happening:

“Heloise ...!” Sir Robert exclaimed sharply. Before he could say any more the Earl was beside her.

“Stop!” he commanded. “Stop that immediately!” At the stern interruption Heloise turned her attention from her sister to him.

“Do not give me orders!” she raged. “You have behaved abominably and you should be ashamed of yourself! Instead of looking after me and protecting me, you stayed behind with my sister and spent the night with her!”

Her voice rose to a shrill shriek as she added:

“I know all about your reputation, Hunter, and the way you behave with other women, but I thought you would cease your philandering tricks, at least until we were married!”

The Earl stood very still, his eyes on Heloise.

He was thinking that when she was in a rage and her face was contorted with anger she lost all her beauty and became positively ugly.

“I am disgusted by you, do you hear?” Heloise went on as he did not speak.

“Really, Heloise,” Sir Robert intervened, “you cannot talk in that way to the man you are going to marry!”

“Marry?”

Heloise made the word vibrate around the room as she repeated it shrilly.

“Marry! I would not marry such a rake and lecher if he was the last man in the world!”

There was only a second’s silence before the Earl said quietly but clearly:

“In which case I can only accept that you have terminated our engagement and our marriage will not now take place!”

He looked towards Mrs. Wodehouse, the Consul’s wife who was sitting as if turned to stone by the scene taking place in front of her.

He bowed to her politely and said:

“I hope you will excuse me, but I understand His Majesty is waiting impatiently for my arrival at the Palace.”

He then walked from the room with great dignity, and only as the door closed quietly behind him did Sir Robert and the Consul find their breath.

Then Mr. Wodehouse picked Lydia up from the sofa and carried her across the room while his wife opened the door for him to take her slowly up the stairs.

As he did so Lydia opened her eyes and had a glimpse through the open door of the Earl driving away in the Royal carriage.

The pain of the blow on her head had made her faint and although she had heard as if from a distance her sister’s voice shrieking hysterically, she had not understood what she was saying.

Now she told herself that the Earl was driving out of her life. The thought that she was losing him for ever was more agonising than anything she could suffer physically and she closed her eyes again.

Mr. Wodehouse took her into a bedroom where there were two Hawaiian maid-servants waiting for her arrival.

He put her gently down on the bed and said to the elder of the two:

“Look after Miss Westbury. Do not leave her alone, and do not let anybody disturb her.”

“Yes, that is right,” Mrs. Wodehouse said who had followed her husband. “Nobody is to disturb her until she has slept. She is very tired. But bring her something to eat and drink, as I am sure she must be hungry.”

She then went from the room with her husband following her and outside she said to the maid who had opened the door:

“Make quite certain no one goes near Miss Westbury until she wakes.”

“I keep watch, Mistress,” the girl replied.

As husband and wife walked down the stairs Mr. Wodehouse said:

“I hope your orders are carried out, Mary. That ghastly girl must not be allowed to upset her sister more than she has done already.”

“I could not have believed that any lady could behave in such a disgraceful manner!” Mrs. Wodehouse answered. “If you ask me, James, the Earl is well rid of her!”

Mr. Wodehouse smiled.

“That is exactly what I thought myself.”

Left alone in the Drawing-Room Sir Robert said to Heloise:

“Are you mad? How could you be so rude to Royston?”

Heloise was actually feeling somewhat abashed by the way first the Earl, then everybody else had disappeared, but she tossed her head defiantly.

“You know as well as I do, Papa,” she replied, “that he should have come with us last night, and taken care of me!”

“You were quite safe,” Sir Robert replied.

“He was not to know that! And how dare he spend the night alone with Lydia, and without a chaperon?”

Sir Robert laughed, but there was no humour in the sound.

“I do not suppose they chose to be capsized in a stormy sea,” he replied. “In fact, Mr. Wodehouse was saying, if you had listened, that they were extremely fortunate not to have been drowned.”

“If they had been with us they would have been perfectly all right, as we were,” Heloise objected.

Sir Robert was too tactful to remind his daughter that she had behaved hysterically all the time they were in the boat, clinging to him convulsively and reiterating over and over again that they would die.

Instead he said dryly:

“If you have lost Royston I think I shall wring your neck! You are not likely to give me another son-in-law who is so distinguished and so rich.”

“Oh, he will soon be back,” Heloise said complacently, “and will apologise abjectly to me for his neglect which is something I am not used to.”

“Oh, for Heaven’s sake, Heloise,” Sir Robert said crossly, “try to understand that Royston has more women running after him than he has horses, which is saying a great deal, and as you have been stupid enough to throw him over, he is not likely to come crawling back!”

“You are quite wrong—you will see!” Heloise retorted airily. “Now I must go to get ready for the Coronation, and Lydia must do my hair.”

She walked up the stairs, but when she tried to go into Lydia’s room the Hawaiian housemaid stood in front of the door and refused to let her enter.

When Heloise raged at her and insisted she must speak to her sister, the other maid went to fetch Mrs. Wodehouse who hurried up the stairs and said:

“I cannot believe, Miss Westbury, that you are not aware that your sister is in a delicate state of health after her terrible experience of last night. Besides which, when you struck her she fainted.”

There was a note of condemnation in Mrs. Wodehouse’s voice which for once made Heloise ashamed of the way she had acted.

“I can hardly go to the Coronation with my hair as it is at the moment!” she replied. “Perhaps you could send for a Hair-dresser.”

“I think it unlikely that one will be available at such short notice,” Mrs. Wodehouse replied, “but my head maid is very skilful with hair, and all the Hawaiian girls have theirs beautifully arranged at Festivals.”

There was nothing Heloise could do therefore but accept the services of the Hawaiian maid, who in fact, arranged her hair very prettily.

Heloise however made it perfectly clear that she would expect Lydia to wait on her before the Ball which was to take place that night.

“When you see my sister,” she said coldly when she was dressed and ready to leave, “will you please inform her that I expect her to be up by the time I return.”

“I will see if I consider her well enough to rise,” Mrs. Wodehouse replied. “Otherwise, Miss Westbury, I am afraid you will have to manage without her.”

Just after Lydia’s arrival with the Earl the luggage had been brought to the house, having been retrieved from
HMS Victorious.

Heloise made a great fuss over which gown she was to wear but thanks to Lydia’s forethought in listing what was in every trunk, everything she required was found comparatively easily.

Mrs. Wodehouse did not miss the fact that while Heloise had more than a dozen trunks Lydia had only one, and after what she had seen and heard in the Drawing-Room her kind heart went out to somebody who she thought, was being extremely badly treated by her relatives.

When she was driving with her husband to the Royal Pavilion especially built for the Coronation she said to him:

“I cannot understand Sir Robert treating one of his daughters so differently from the other, and I am already convinced in my mind that poor little Cinderella who is the elder, is much the nicer of the two.”

“I think the same,” Mr. Wodehouse said, “but it is no use your interfering, my dear, you will get no thanks for it.”

It was not surprising that Lydia lying in bed feeling limp and listless, was depressed at missing the Coronation Ceremony.

When the King had decided to have a Coronation such as no King of Hawaii had ever had before, he ordered a Royal Pavilion to be built in front of Iolani Palace.

A covered amphitheatre surrounded it on three sides and provided seating for thousands of spectators.

Octagonal, the domed pavilion symbolised the Crown and its eight Grecian columns represented the eight uninhabited islands of the Hawaiian Kingdom.

Inside the Royal Pavilion the Chief Justice of the Kingdom placed the Royal Mantle—the large feather cloak of Kamehameha I—on the King’s shoulders, and handed him a Royal Sceptre.

The Princess Poomaikelani, his sister-in-law, presented him with a
pulo’ ulo’u Rapu
stick and a whale tooth pendant suspended from a necklace of woven human hair.

Besides this he also received a Royal feather standard.

The Coronation’s greatest moment however came when one of the Princes stepped forward with the crowns which had been made in England.

As the choir sang:
“Almighty Father! We do Bring Gold and Gems for the King,

King Kalakaua took his crown, placed it on his head, then placed a smaller similar crown on the head of Queen Kapiolani.

The choir sang: “
Cry out O Isles with Joy
!”

Cannons on land and at sea fired a salute after which the Royal Hawaiian Band played a spirited
Coronation March.

Then the general festivities started and Sir Robert thought that King Kalakaua certainly lived up to his reputation as a ‘Merry Monarch.’

The whole populace was dressed in their best and Honolulu seemed to be turned into a Fun-Fair of beautiful girls dancing, every kind of side-show and sport taking place as well as the beach being crowded with surf-bathers.

The gaiety of it was so irresistible that the Earl who had been treated as a Royal Personage kept thinking how much Lydia would have enjoyed it.

He had a special place in the Pavilion, to which he had been escorted by the Lord Chamberlain, and until he was seated everybody stood.

The King singled him out for a special greeting so that the people could understand that he was embracing the Queen of England in the personage of the Earl.

At the Royal Banquet which followed the Coronation the Earl was given the Seat of Honour.

Heloise was seated a long way away from him. He deliberately did not look in her direction and there was no question of either her or Sir Robert speaking to him while the ceremony and the banquet was taking place.

On the way back to the British Consulate Heloise grumbled all the way.

“You would think, Papa,” she said, “after his disgraceful behaviour that Hunter would have made some effort to speak to me and apologise.”

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