Authors: Ngaio Marsh
âWell,' she thought crossly, remembering her long tramp that morning in search of a bath, âFenella might have told me I'd got one of my own.'
She had dirtied her fingers on the brush and went in to wash them. The soap in the marble hand-basin was already stained with Rose Madder. âThis is a mad-house,' thought Troy.
Sir Henry posed for an hour that afternoon. The next morning, Sunday, was marked by a massive attendance of the entire family (with Troy) at Ancreton church. In the afternoon, however, he gave her an hour. Troy had decided to go straight for the head. She had laid in a general scheme for her work, an exciting affair of wet shadows and sharp accents. This could be completed without him. She was painting well. The touch of flamboyancy that she had dreaded was absent. She had returned often to the play. Its threat of horror was now a factor in her approach to her work. She was strongly aware of that sense of a directive power which comes only when all is well with painters. With any luck, she thought, I'll be able to say: âDid the fool that is me, make this?'
At the fourth sitting, Sir Henry returning perhaps to some bygone performance, broke the silence by speaking without warning the lines she had many times read:
Light thickens, and the crow
Makes wing to the rooky woodâ¦
He startled Troy so much that her hand jerked and she waited motionless until he had finished the speech, resenting the genuine twist of apprehension that had shaken her. She could find nothing to say in response to this unexpected and oddly impersonal performance, but she had the feeling that the old man knew very well how much it had moved her.
After a moment she returned to her work and still it went well. Troy was a deliberate painter, but the head grew with almost frightening rapidity. In an hour she knew that she must not touch it again. She was suddenly exhausted. âI think we'll stop for today,' she said, and again felt that he was not surprised.
Instead of going away, he came down into the front of the theatre and looked at what she had done. She had that feeling of gratitude to her subject that sometimes follows a sitting that has gone well, but she did not want him to speak of the portrait and began hurriedly to talk of Panty.
âShe's doing a most spirited painting of red cows and a green aeroplane.'
âT'uh!' said Sir Henry on a melancholy note.
âShe wants to show it to you herself.'
âI have been deeply hurt,' said Sir Henry, âby Patricia. Deeply hurt.'
âDo you mean,' said Troy uncomfortably, âbecause of something she's supposed to have written onâon your looking-glass?'
âSupposed! The thing was flagrant. Not only that, but she opened the drawers of my dressing-table and pulled out my papers. I may tell you, that if she were capable of reading the two documents that she found there, she would perhaps feel some misgivings. I may tell you that they closely concerned herself, and that if there are any more of these damnable tricksâ' He paused and scowled portentously. âWell, we shall see. We shall see. Let her mother realize that I cannot endure for ever. And my cat!' he exclaimed. âShe has made a fool of my cat. There are still marks of grease-paint in his whiskers,' said Sir Henry angrily. âButter has not altogether removed them. As for the insult to meâ'
âBut I'm sure she didn't. I was here when they scolded her about it. Honestly, I'm sure she knew nothing whatever about it.'
âT'uh!'
âNo, but reallyâ' Should she say anything about the dark red stain under Cedric's finger-nail? No, she'd meddled enough. She went on quickly: âPanty brags about her naughtiness. She's told me about all her practical jokes. She never calls you grandfather and I happen to know she spells it “farther,” because she showed me a story she had written, and the word occurs frequently. I'm sure Panty's too fond of you,' Troy continued, wondering if she spoke the truth, âto do anything so silly and unkind.'
âI've loved that child,' said Sir Henry with the appallingly rich display of sentiment so readily commanded by the Ancreds, âas if she was my own. My little Best-Beloved, I've always called her. I've never made any secret of my preference. After I'm gone,' he went on to Troy's embarrassment, âshe would have knownâhowever.' He sighed windily. Troy could think of nothing to say and cleaned her palette. The light from the single uncovered window had faded. Sir Henry had switched off the stage lamps and the little theatre was now filled with shadows. A draught somewhere in the borders caused them to move uneasily and a rope-end tapped against the canvas backcloth.
âDo you know anything about embalming?' Sir Henry asked in his deepest voice. Troy jumped.
âNo, indeed,' she said.
âI have studied the subject,' said Sir Henry, âdeeply.'
âOddly enough,' said Troy after a pause, âI did look at that queer little book in the drawing-room. The one in the glass case.'
âAh, yes. It belonged to my ancestor who rebuilt Ancreton. He himself was embalmed and his fathers before him. It has been the custom with the Ancreds. The family vault,' he rambled on depressingly, âis remarkable for that reason. If I lie thereâthe Nation may have other wishes: it is not for me to speculateâbut if I lie there, it will be after their fashion. I have given explicit directions.'
âI
do
wish,' Troy thought, â
how
I do wish he wouldn't go on like this.' She made a small ambiguous murmuring.
âAh, well!' said Sir Henry heavily and began to move away. He paused before mounting the steps up to the stage. Troy thought that he was on the edge of some further confidence, and hoped that it would be of a more cheerful character.
âWhat,' said Sir Henry, âis your view on the matter of marriage between first cousins?'
âIâreally, I don't know,' Troy replied, furiously collecting her wits. âI fancy I've heard that modern medical opinion doesn't condemn it. But I really haven't the smallest knowledgeâ'
âI am against it,' he said loudly. âI cannot approve. Look at the Hapsburgs! The House of Spain! The Romanoffs!' His voice died away in an inarticulate rumble.
Hoping to divert his attention Troy began: âPantyâ'
âHah!' said Sir Henry. âThese doctors don't know anything. Patricia's scalp! A common childish ailment, and Withers, having pottered about with it for weeks without doing any good, is now going to dose the child with a depilatory. Disgusting! I have spoken to the child's mother, but I'd have done better to hold my tongue. Who,' Sir Henry demanded, âpays any attention to the old man? Nobody. Ours is an Ancient House, Mrs Alleyn. We have borne arms since my ancestor, the Sieur d'Ancred, fought beside the Conqueror. And before that. Before that. A proud house. Perhaps in my own humble way I have not disgraced it. But what will happen when I am Gone? I look for my Heir and what do I find? A Thing! An emasculated Popinjay!'
He evidently expected some reply to this pronouncement on Cedric, but Troy was quite unable to think of one.
âThe last of the Ancreds!' he said, glaring at her. âA family that came in with the Conqueror to go out with aâ'
âBut,' said Troy, âhe may marry andâ¦'
âAnd have kittens! P'shaw!'
âPerhaps Mr Thomas Ancredâ¦'
âOld Tommy! No! I've talked to old Tommy. He doesn't see it. He'll die a bachelor. And Claude's wife is past it. Well; it was my hope to know the line was secure before I went. I shan't.'
âBut, bless my soul,' said Troy, âyou're taking far too gloomy a view of all this. There's not much wrong with a man who can pose for an hour with a helmet weighing half a hundredweight on his head. You may see all sorts of exciting things happen.'
It was astonishing, it was almost alarming, to see how promptly he squared his shoulders, how quickly gallantry made its reappearance. âDo you think so?' he said, and Troy noticed how his hand went to his cloak, giving it an adroit hitch. âWell, perhaps, after all, you're right. Clever lady! Yes,
yes
. I
may
see something exciting and what's moreâ' he paused and gave a very queer little giggleââwhat's more, my dear, so may other people.'
Troy was never to know if Sir Henry would have elaborated on this strange prophecy, as at that moment a side door in the auditorium was flung open and Miss Orrincourt burst into the little theatre.
âNoddy!' she shouted angrily. âYou've got to come. Get out of that funny costume and protect me. I've had as much of your bloody family as I can stand. It's them or me. Now!'
She strode down the aisle and confronted him, her hands on her hips, a virago.
Sir Henry eyed her with more apprehension, Troy thought, than astonishment, and began a placatory rumbling.
âNo you don't,' she said. âCome off it and
do
something. They're in the library, sitting round a table. Plotting against me. I walked in, and there was Pauline giving an imitation of a cat-fight and telling them how I'd have to be got rid of.'
âMy dear, please, I can't allowâ¦Surely you're mistaken.'
âAm I dopey? I tell you I
heard
her. They're all against me. I warned you before and I'm warning you again and it's the last time. They're going to frame me. I know what I'm talking about. It's a frame-up. I tell you they've got me all jittery, Noddy. I can't stand it. You can either come and tell them where they get off or it's thanks for the buggy-ride and me for Town in the morning.'
He looked at her disconsolately, hesitated, and took her by the elbow. Her mouth drooped, she gazed at him dolorously. âIt's lonely here, Noddy,' she said. âNoddy, I'm scared.'
It was strange to watch the expression of extreme tenderness that this instantly evoked; strange, and to Troy, painfully touching.
âCome,' Sir Henry said, stooping over her in his terrifying costume. âCome along. I'll speak to these children.'
The little theatre was on the northern corner of the East Wing. When Troy had tidied up she looked out of doors and found a wintry sun still glinting feebly on Ancreton. She felt stuffed-up with her work. The carriage drive, sweeping downhill through stiffly naked trees, invited her. She fetched a coat and set out bare-headed. The frosty air stung her eyes with tears, the ground rang hard under her feet. Suddenly exhilarated she began to run. Her hair lifted, cold air ran over her scalp and her ears burned icily. âHow ridiculous to run and feel happy,' thought Troy, breathless. And slowing down, she began to make plans. She would leave the head. In two days, perhaps, it would be dry. Tomorrow, the hands and their surrounding drape, and, when he had gone, another hour or so through the background. Touch after touch and for each one the mustering of thought and muscle and the inward remembrance of the scheme.
The drive curved down between banks of dead leaves, and, overhead, frozen branches rattled in a brief visitation of wind, and she thought: âI'm walking under the scaffolding of summer.' There, beneath her, were the gates. The sun had gone, and already fields of mist had begun to rise from the hollows. âAs far as the gates,' thought Troy, âand then back up the terraces.' She heard the sound of hooves behind her in the woods and the faint rumbling of wheels. Out of the trees came the governess-cart and Rosinante, and there, gloved and furred and apparently recovered from her fury, sat Miss Orrincourt, flapping the reins.