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Jane and the Barque of Frailty jam-9 Page 11


  “You did not then quit the house for your own rooms?”

  “I went into my office — an antechamber to his lordship’s study. The room gives onto the square — which is how I came to hear the charley so distinctly.”

  “Your office?” Mr. Whitpeace repeated, a fine line between his brows. “What did you there?”

  “I set about answering some of his lordship’s correspondence.”

  “What hour would this have been?”

  “Perhaps … half-past one o’clock in the morning.”

  “You undertook to answer his lordship’s correspondence in the middle of the night?”

  Malverley’s gaze met the coroner’s without hesitation. “I was not at all tired; and I find the quiet of the household at such an hour conducive to work.”

  “I see. How long were you at your writing desk?”

  “I hardly know. Several hours, I should think.”

  “His lordship accords you a great deal of responsibility!”

  “I am gratified to say that he does.”

  The secretary was very much on his dignity now; the implausibility of his story, and the publick imputation that should be put to it — that he was in Lady Castlereagh’s service, rather than her lord’s— appeared so far beneath his notice, as to be unworthy of question.

  My brother Henry leaned towards me. “This begins to grow interesting, Jane.”

  “And dangerous,” I whispered.

  “Please describe for the panel what happened next, Mr. Malverley,” Mr. Whitpeace said drily.

  “I had just risen from my desk, preparatory to seeking my own lodgings, when a cry went up from the paving-stones below my window. I heard a cry for help, quite distinctly, and recognised the charley’s voice. Thinking that perhaps he had been set upon by footpads, I unbolted the front door and peered out. It was then I saw old Bends kneeling on the paving, and the Princess.”

  “You knew her for Princess Tscholikova?” Mr. Whitpeace demanded sharply.

  “Not immediately. I went to the charley’s assistance, of course — saw from the great cut in the throat that the lady was dead — and summoned a footman from his bed, in order to despatch him to the magistrate in Bow Street. Only then did I have occasion to look again on the corpse’s countenance, and understood that it was the Princess Tscholikova.”

  Malverley’s pallor was remarkable now, and his lips compressed; but he did not falter, or raise his hand to his eyes. He was indeed a young man of considerable resolution — the sort who should have made an excellent cavalry officer, or a loyal aide-decamp. I found occasion to wonder just how far his loyalty might extend, to those he loved — or feared.

  “Were you acquainted with the Princess?” the coroner enquired.

  “Only slightly. One might meet her often in certain circles, and perhaps exchange a few pleas- antries — but I should never say that we were well acquainted.”

  “In the course of your duties, Mr. Malverley, did you have occasion to answer the Princess’s letters to his lordship?” Mr. Whitpeace asked it mildly.

  Castlereagh started from his chair, with no restraining hand to save him. “I’ll answer that, Charles,” he said sharply. “You never answered the woman’s letters, because she never wrote to me! It’s all a pack of damned lies!”

  The room went still. An hundred pairs of eyes were fixed on his lordship, except my own — which profited from the appalled silence, in a survey of my fellows. George Canning’s looks were alert; Lord Alvanley’s intrigued; the Comte d’Entraigues’s— oddly exultant.

  “You may step down, Mr. Malverley,” Thomas Whitpeace said. “The coroner calls Robert, Lord Castlereagh!”

  Chapter 13

  Dark Horses

  Friday, 26 April 1811, cont.

  I WILL NOT ATTEMPT TO REPEAT LORD CASTLEREAGH’S testimony here in my journal; it is enough to say that he delivered it with his usual arrogance, coldness, and appearance of contempt for all the world. A lesser man than Mr. Thomas Whitpeace should have quailed before the duty of interrogating such an one, who has been accustomed to stare out of countenance the most formidable orators in the Kingdom — but the coroner proved equal to the task. He demanded to know where Castlereagh had gone, after quitting Mrs. Siddons’s play at the Theatre Royal — and Castlereagh refused to tell him. His lordship produced no friend who might vouch for his presence at one of his numerous clubs; no hackney coachman who might swear he had delivered his lordship to a reputable address; and no explanation of his apparently solitary pursuits throughout the small hours of Tuesday morning. Castlereagh proved as impenetrable as the walls of Copenhagen he’d once ordered bombarded — and invoked the honour of his reputation, in his refusal to disclose his movements.

  Mr. Whitpeace then turned to the matter of the Princess’s appearance at his lordship’s town house, and was informed, in scathing accents, that no intimacy whatsoever existed between his lordship and the unfortunate woman. When the matter was pursued— and the pregnant business of the lady’s correspondence raised — Castlereagh displayed the hot temper for which he is justly famous, and insisted that he had never corresponded with the Princess. He went so far as to suggest that Tscholikova had merely sought attention in throwing herself at a fashionable household— and that this mania for the world’s notice had ended in madness and suicide.

  When queried as to the cause of the Princess’s despair, Castlereagh could offer no explanation — save that she had received no vouchers from his wife for admission to Almack’s Assembly Rooms. As the better part of those present understood how exalted was the favour of inclusion at Almack’s, and how rarely and whimsically it was bestowed by the Assembly’s patronesses— among whom was numbered Lady Castlereagh — this notion appeared almost plausible. But it was my brother Henry who supplied a surprising bit of intelligence.

  He was called to bear testimony before the panel, to my shock and consternation. I believe he must have expected the summons — that he had, indeed, attended the inquest in order to satisfy it — but had kept mum, rather than excite Eliza’s interest.

  There is nothing like the pair of them for shielding each other.

  “You are Henry Austen, of Austen, Maunde and Tilson, a banking establishment in Henrietta Street?” Thomas Whitpeace enquired.

  “I am.”

  “And you reside at No. 64, Sloane Street, in the area of Hans Town?”

  “That is correct.”

  “Pray explain to the panel the terms of your acquaintance with Princess Tscholikova.”

  I studied my brother’s countenance, which was unusually guarded, and felt the depths of my bowels twist with dismay. Henry! Acquainted with the Princess! When Bill Skroggs, the Bow Street Runner, had intimated as much the evening before — and I had rushed to disprove the very idea! My brother was a dark horse, indeed — and there was no knowing, now, what hidden paths he might pursue, when he was far from Eliza’s society.

  “My partner in business, Mr. James Tilson, was a near neighbour of the Princess in Hans Place. About a week since, she approached him with the request for a loan.”

  A murmur of interest rippled through the pub-lick room. Mr. Whitpeace’s eyes narrowed.

  “And did your partner satisfy the Princess’s needs?”

  “He was loath to do so. Mr. Tilson is a most circumspect man. He lends money only when he is certain of securing its repayment.”

  “—He regarded the Princess as uncertain, then?”

  “You may say so, if you like,” my brother cautiously replied. “He placed the matter in my hands for determination.”

  “And what did you then, Mr. Austen?”

  “I sent round my card to Hans Place, and was summoned to wait upon the Princess on the morning of Friday, the nineteenth of April. — I did not like to ask a lady to condescend to my place of business in Henrietta Street.”

  “Quite. How did the Princess seem to you?”

  “Having no knowledge of her person or character prior to our meeting,”
my brother said, “I may only speak to the lady’s manner that particular hour. She was greatly agitated, naturally — and seemed a prey to the worst kind of anxiety. She confessed to a considerable embarrassment of circumstances. I collect that the lady has — had — a taste for deep play. She disclosed that her debts were most pressing — and that she required a loan, of some seven thousand pounds, to satisfy her creditors.”

  “Seven thousand pounds!” exclaimed Mr. Whitpeace. “And did you make over such a sum?”

  “I did not,” Henry answered. “I could not immediately command so much, and was obliged to disappoint the lady. I offered her half the amount, but she told me flatly that nothing less than the full sum would do. I may say that my refusal appeared to appall her.”

  “Indeed?”

  “Her countenance lost all colour, but she stopped me when I would have summoned her maid. I clearly recall her words as I took my leave: Then all hope is ended. I shall have to steel myself to it.”

  “Have you an idea of what she meant, Mr. Austen?”

  “When I heard of her death … ” Henry paused. “I will say that I have carried a most terrible weight of responsibility. I feel myself to be culpable.”

  “—Believing that your failure to relieve her debts drove her to self-murder?”

  Henry offered no reply but an inclination of the head.

  Eliza’s own dear apothecary and surgeon, Mr. Haden, was then called to say that the Princess had sought his help on several occasions, owing to sleeplessness and general agitation of nerves; that he had given laudanum in the case, and advised rest; and that upon viewing the body once it was returned to Hans Place Tuesday morning, he had found the arteries of the neck raggedly severed — as befit a halfhearted attempt to cut oneself with a broken bit of porcelain. He judged this consistent with self-murder. A determined killer should have employed a more potent weapon, and succeeded at the first blow, he avowed.

  This final testimony all but sealed the panel’s conclusion. The foreman, Samuel Hays, looked the sort of man to consider any woman — particularly a Russian princess — subject to fits of dejection and hystericks; I did not doubt he should persuade his men to a swift judgement of self-murder.

  And so it proved: the panel quitted the publick room for an interval of perhaps twenty minutes, during which time they were happily supplied with ale; and returned forthwith to state what was expected. The foreign woman had killed herself. The question only remained of where and how she should be interred.

  Lord Castlereagh did not stay to receive the well-wishes of the exquisites who had assembled to observe his martyrdom; neither did he offer George Canning the slightest notice. He strode from the room with an expression of injured fury on his countenance, and I had an idea of the targets at Manton’s being riddled with balls at a later hour in the day.

  “There is old d’Entraigues,” Henry observed as we submitted to the crush surging about the door. “What interest can bring him here?”

  “A secret he refuses to tell, no doubt.” I glanced at my brother. “You are very sly, Henry. You have been labouring under strong emotion ever since Tuesday morning, and have sought no one’s comfort. I shall never call your soul transparent again!”

  “I am relieved to be done with the business,” he admitted. “Guilt is an ugly master, Jane.”

  “But who now suffers under its whip, Henry?”

  He frowned at me, the turbulent room suddenly receding. “What do you mean?”

  “The business is hardly concluded — no matter what Mr. Whitpeace says. Where was Castlereagh that night, and why does he refuse to be explicit?”

  “Because he is a gentleman,” Henry said reasonably, “and can have no cause to satisfy the curiosity of the vulgar.”

  “The same compunction may be said to seal the lips of Mr. Charles Malverley — whom I cannot credit with answering correspondence at the dead of night, in evening dress! There is a want of openness there that must perplex the interested observer.”

  “Only when the observer believes the very worst of all mankind,” my brother retorted. “Malverley seemed a frank and pleasant enough young fellow to me.”

  “Who owned the carriage pulled up in the mews of No. 43, Berkeley Square — and did the pair within, or their coachman, observe any violence in the street beyond?”

  “You shall never learn the answer to that, my dear. From the description of the watchman, that pair were in no case to observe anything — and should never admit to their presence in such a circumstance, at any hour!”

  “Where was Princess Tscholikova between the hours of midnight — when she left her card with Castlereagh’s porter — and five o’clock in the morning, when her body was discovered at his door?”

  “Wandering the streets of London alone, steeling herself to it.” Henry’s tone bordered on contempt.

  “Did she then dismiss her equipage at quitting Castlereagh’s house, and proceed on foot? She certainly did not return to Hans Place — or Druschka would have informed the panel.”

  “That is singular,” Henry agreed, his brows knit, “for she was discovered in evening dress. It seems a most unusual costume for a lady to employ in walking.”

  “And most singular of all: Why did the Princess carry the lid of a porcelain box about for some five hours prior to her death?”

  “So that she might cut her throat with the fragments, Jane!” my brother retorted impatiently.

  “Good God! She might as well have employed a knife! Are you so blind, Henry?”

  “I simply chuse to be satisfied with what all the world accepts,” he said. “You cannot seriously mean to question Bow Street — magistrate, coroner, and all.”

  The faces of Bill Skroggs and Clem Black leered at me in memory. It was possible that a verdict of self-murder should satisfy Lord Castlereagh — and that he would call off his hired dogs; but a something in his lordship’s aspect taught me otherwise. He would regard himself as slandered, and Castlereagh was not the sort of man to rest under such an indignity.

  But I said nothing of all this to Henry. I, too, may play the dark horse when I chuse.

  Chapter 14

  A Drawing-Room Cabal

  Friday, 26 April 1811, cont.

  THO’ ALL THE WORLD HAD BEEN PRESENT AT THE Princess’s inquest, Lord Moira was not — and the gentleman’s failure to appear was felt to be a vexation.

  “I cannot be certain the Earl has breakfasted,” Henry said diffidently as we quitted the Bear, “and should hesitate to call in Brook Street at such an hour.”

  “But it is nearly noon!”

  Henry glanced at me pityingly. “You do not know the habits of the Carlton House Set. Besides, Jane — I am the man’s banker, not his intimate. I am in the habit of meeting him here in Henrietta Street — not in his drawing-room, of a spring morning.”

  “It is essential I should speak with him, Henry.”

  “Indeed?” There was mockery in his tone; he thought me a vulgar dabbler in Princess Tscholikova’s misery.

  “And not only under the impulse of curiosity,” I persisted. “Recollect that Lord Harold’s bequest charged me with drawing up his memoirs! Lord Moira was his lordship’s friend — admitted to his confidence — cognizant of the intrigues of Whiggish life. It must be expected that I should wish to canvass the past with one who apprehended so much of Lord Harold’s world.”

  “I suppose we might send the Earl a line.” Henry’s very stride suggested doubt. “But I cannot entirely depend upon him answering such a note — or indeed, failing to mislay it! It is Moira’s custom to forget much of what he ought to remember, I dare swear.”

  “—Such as his obligations, in the matter of debt?”

  “He should never fail to pay a debt of honour — one contracted in deep play. Such sums are the first to be satisfied among men of the Earl’s cut. It is their tailors and tradesmen who are obliged to wait.”

  “And their bankers? I will not require you to disclose the exact figure, Henry
— but how deeply is his lordship beholden to Austen, Maunde and Tilson?”

  My brother attempted an air of amusement. “A very trifling amount, I assure you. But this is unbecoming, Jane, to nose so deep into a gentleman’s pocket! Or do you hope to gain the upper hand by such knowledge, and have the Earl entirely in your power?”

  “The Earl may ride deep into Dun Territory for all

  I care — but you may not,” I returned.[14] “James Tilson is anxious, Henry. He has many burdens to consider — and less affection for the Great than you or Eliza.”

  “I should never fail Tilson — tho’ his circumspection does grow tiresome. You must believe me, Jane, when I say that all such anxiety is misplaced! To speak only of Lord Moira — his credit is unimpeachable. His lordship has the ear of the Prince Regent. He was a member of the Ministry of All Talents, and has twice since refused posts in Cabinet.[15] If His Royal Highness holds the Earl in trust, why should not I? What greater surety can a banker demand, than the friendship and esteem of the highest Influence in the Kingdom?”

  If I considered privately of the staggering nature of the Regent’s debts — how he had been pressed to appeal to Parliament for the satisfaction of them, upon the occasion of his marriage — how the pub-lick cost of so expensive an Influence had surpassed some six hundred thousand pounds to date, over and above an annuity of sixty thousand pounds he had been granted as Prince of Wales, and the still larger income for which he hinted continuously, now that he was made Regent — I said nothing of my doubts to Henry. It is not for Jane, who must scrape and contrive on a mere fifty pounds per annum, to question a banker’s calculation of the odds.[16]

  “I must believe that the best and simplest manner of forming an acquaintance with Lord Moira would be to throw myself in his way,” I mused. “What a pity I did not force the introduction at Eliza’s party! But he was surrounded by gentlemen — appeared generally to be holding court — and I did not like to put myself forward. What are his lordship’s habits, pray?”