Ellen Trilby
Copyright© 2024 by Argon
Chapter 19: A Dish to be Enjoyed Cold
September 1829
It was a week after the charity ball, and Sir Anthony Carter was sitting in his chair, perusing the Naval Gazette, when he stumbled over a small article.
Bolivian Merchantman Lost
On Sept. 15, the Rosemary schooner, out of Falmouth, after having weathered a severe cyclone, and standing one-hundred miles north-east of Barbados, came to sight a small boat, carrying the survivors of a ship wreck. The rescued sailors and passengers reported the brig Estrella del Sur to have sprung a leak in the heavy storm. They also reported of a second boat with other sailors and passengers, but this boat could not be found by the Rosemary’s crew. Of note is the fact that one of the missing passengers is His Excellency, Don Antonio Ruiz y Costa, Bolivian ambassador at the Court of St. James. It is to be hoped that the second boat met with another ship or somehow reached land.
“What is it, Tony?”
Harriet had entered the study unnoticed by him, and she had seen his paleness. She saw his grave expression and knew that something terrible had happened.
“The ship in which Antonio was sailing back, the Estrella del Sur, sank in a hurricane. One boat with survivors was recovered, but Antonio was in another boat that has not been found yet.” He swallowed heavily. “We must tell Eleanor and Maria.”
Harriet sat down heavily, desperation washing over her.
“Is there a curse on us? Why can’t we and our children be happy?”
“Harriet, we need to be strong and encouraging! He may still be found. Eleanor and Maria need us now, but we must give them hope.”
Harriet looked at her husband doubtfully.
“Do you really think there is hope?”
“Absolutely! If one boat with survivors made it through the storm, there is a good chance for the second boat. There is much traffic in that region, and the second boat may have met a southbound ship.”
They both went up to Eleanor’s room. Harriet made Eleanor sit down on her bed and sat beside her, holding her shoulders. Sir Anthony saw the pain in his daughter’s eyes when she grasped the meaning of all this, and her lips began to tremble.
With a calm voice, he related the news to his daughter. To his surprise, Eleanor showed relief.
“Oh my god, father, but for a moment, I thought Antonio was dead!”
“Eleanor, dear, they have not found him. He may have perished,” Harriet started cautiously.
“No, he is alive,” Eleanor said with finality. “I know that he is alive, and I refuse to believe otherwise. He will come back to me. Father, there is hope, isn’t there?”
For his life, Sir Anthony would not have destroyed his daughter’s hope, and he had seen enough unexpected things on the seas.
“There is hope, Eleanor, yes. The boat crew may have been rescued by another ship. Even so, we need to tell Antonio’s mother. Will you come with us?”
Eleanor took a deep breath. “Yes, let me change, though.”
Anthony and Harriet were surprised to see their daughter walk down the stairs in a dark green velvet dress, but they said nothing. The coach brought them to the Ruiz’ house where Doña Maria was surprised to see them. Hearing the news, she had a momentary lapse of strength, but recovered quickly. Glancing at Eleanor, she asked.
“You believe that Antonio is alive?”
Eleanor answered with a firm “Yes.”, and the older woman nodded.
“We shall wait for his return. Could you stay with me for a little while longer, Eleanor?”
Eleanor stepped forward and put her hand on the older woman’s arm.
“Of course, Mother,” she said simply. Then she turned to her parents. “We are fine. Can you send back the coach around five? Doña Maria and I shall spend some time together.”
The Carters left, fervently hoping that their daughter’s hopes would not be disappointed. Over the next hours, days and weeks, Maria Ruiz and Eleanor Carter kept their pact of mutual support. It was Eleanor’s calm conviction that kept up Maria’s hope. Even when weeks and months went by without news, Eleanor visited her future mother in law daily, refusing to wear dark colours, let alone black, refusing the suggestions by others that her hope might be in vain. She received support by her father and by her brother Richard. One evening, when her fears nearly overwhelmed her, Richard sat with her and gave her encouragement.
“Eleanor, there is hope. Look at me! I still hope that Ellen will forgive me one day, and believe me, those chances are much slimmer than Antonio’s. Don’t give up!”
In spite of herself, Eleanor had to smile at his words. She spoke to Ellen regularly, and she knew that her friend secretly still loved Richard, albeit without admitting it even to herself.
What was really bad was that several suitors showed up. So-called friends tried to convince her that she should give up on Antonio Ruiz and find herself a new fiancé. It embittered her greatly that people would think she could give up her hopes and love and just move on to the next suitor.
Doña Maria knew about all this, and she developed a true affection for the girl. If ever Antonio would return to the living, she would tell him of Eleanor’s unwavering love and commitment. The days trickled by, though, becoming weeks and months, without any news from Antonio Ruiz.
A half year after his last meeting with Ellen, Richard Carter, 3rd Baron Lambert, arrived at his work place at the Foreign Office at a quarter to nine, a task that he had taken over nine months before, to distract himself from his woes. The work he did, assessing the numerous new nations in Spanish South America, and the possibilities for British trade, was interesting and in line with his previous training and his interests in commerce. He authored briefs and reports for the Secretary, and sometimes he was even asked to present the results of his research to select cabinet members. He had joined the Foreign Office as a protégé of Lord Brougham when there had been no opening in the Trade Ministry, his original preference. Nevertheless, he soon appreciated his appointment for more than one reason.
For his immediate superior, Sir Gilbert Hume, was, as all London knew, the current love interest of one Marjorie Binnings. Hume was a harmless type, although, on Binnings’s instigation, he tried to terrorise his subordinate. He just was not that effective. The most serious diatribe somehow lost much of its sharpness when the superior official had to address his subordinate deferentially as ‘milord’ or ‘your lordship’.
Hume hardly ever showed before lunch time, and Richard had the run of the department in the mornings. Most of the time, he was done with his work and gone before Hume could harass him. Two months ago, Richard had also begun to pick and collect documents from Hume’s desk. Never really important ones lest he caused alarm, but in a steady trickle, official Foreign Office documents in Sir Gilbert’s care continued to disappear, and people upstairs began to notice.
On this particular day, Sir Gilbert appeared at the office at ten o’clock, and the staff was alarmed. When he asked for Lord Lambert to come to his office, everybody, including Richard, expected another meaningless reprimand. The clerks in the office chuckled and wished Richard luck as he hurried to Hume’s office. They appreciated the pleasant young man who worked with tireless energy and surprising skill.
When he entered Hume’s office, Richard was surprised at the friendly reception.
“Oh, thank you for coming, milord. Listen, we’ve had some run-ins in the last months, but I wanted to tell you how much I appreciate your efforts on the whole.”
“Thank you, Sir Gilbert,” Richard answered drily, comprehension dawning.
“I’ll be having a dinner party at my house on Friday. Would you care to come?”
“That is exceedingly kind of you, Sir Gilbert. Of course, I shall attend.”
“Jolly good! Now, where are we with that report on Mexico?”
Patiently, Richard explained to his superior the current situation on the Spanish Main and the implications for the Mexico trade. A half hour later, when he emerged from Hume’s office, he could not help but grin. Binnings had taken the bait.
Two weeks ago, he had sent a short letter to Ellen, through his grandmother. In response to that letter, Ellen had attended a function to which Sir Gilbert Hume had also gone. For three hours, Ellen had flirted mercilessly with Sir Gilbert, until Marjorie Binnings, doubtlessly alarmed by some informer, had appeared and dragged Hume away from Ellen.
“Oh, I’m sorry, Sir Gilbert. I was not aware that you prefer elderly women,” had been Ellen’s parting shot.
No wonder Binnings wanted to be on his good side now. She obviously planned a revenge against Ellen, and since it was known how Richard and Ellen detested each other these days, Richard appeared to be a natural tool for her retribution. Or so she thought.
In his office, Richard surveyed the documents in his care. There was a draft for a commerce treaty with Bolivia, which if leaked to the public, would cause serious difficulties with Spain. He contemplated for a minute. Was his revenge worth this risk? But then he remembered the ham fisted reconciliation attempt by Hume, and he smiled grimly. Besides, Ellen had exposed herself already, and he could not betray her in this. He set the draft aside for Friday.
When he came home that evening, Richard had a lengthy conversation with his grandmother which left the old woman thoughtful. The next afternoon, Ellen Wilkes visited with Lady Lambert, like she did every Wednesday. They sat, drinking tea and eating cookies, when Lady Lambert cut the idle chatter short.
“Ellen, the final stage is close. Richard needs your help.”
Ellen took a deep breath. She did not know Richard’s plan, for he refused to tell her. If this went wrong, he maintained, he wanted to keep her out of it.
“What does he need?”
Lady Lambert smiled sardonically.
“You must write him a love letter.”
Ellen choked on her tea. She looked at the old woman incredulously and, with a chuckle, Lady Lambert explained.
Nobody would have recognised him in his disguise. The heavy walrus moustache and the bushy eyebrows made him look like a man at least ten years older. The disguise was courtesy of Anita Heyworth. The woman he was about to meet was a key to his plan. In fact, he had not begun any serious planning before he had met her again by chance. Her name was Charlene Beckham, and she was a trollop. More so, she was a trollop in trouble. She also was the trollop with whom Richard had spent that fateful night. That was why she had known him and asked for his help. That was also why he met her in disguise, lest Ellen heard of him meeting a loose woman.
Four months ago, Charlene had been with a punter, a very uncouth person. Charlene, not accustomed to such rough treatment, threw the money back at the man and bade him leave. That did not sit well with him, and he threw her on the bed and proceeded to take her with force. The girl did not know how to help herself other than grab a hidden knife and stab her assailant. Now he was dead. When the landlord came up to the room, he almost had a stroke. The man was one Tim Cook, brother of Jeremiah Cook, the leader of one of London’s most notorious gangs. Realising the danger she was in, Charlene fled the whorehouse that same night. The house burned down the very next evening, and the word was out on the streets of London that Jeremiah Cook wanted Charlene Beckham.
In her desperation, she had waylaid Richard’s coach and begged him for help. Richard was terrified that Ellen might find out that he sheltered this girl, but he recognised her value when she confessed that she had been a pick pocket in her youth. He stashed her away with John Little’s family. The Littles liked him like their own son, and Inez Little made sure that his contacts with Charlene involved appropriate clothing on both sides. Today, though, they met in secret, because he did not want to compromise his friends.
If Charlene was nervous she did not show it. If all went well on Friday, she would be out of England and off to a new start in America. All would go well, and she was confident. This was her trade, after all.
“Are you set with the butler?” Richard asked.
Charlene nodded and giggled. “Am I ever. ‘E’s all crazy about me. ‘E said the coast is to be clear on Friday! What about that sleeping draught?”
He handed her a small bottle, from Lucy Wilkes’ stores and courtesy of Ellen.
“And them papers?”
“Will be on the coach that brings you to the rendezvous.”
“No trust, eh?” Charlene asked with a mock pout, and Richard shrugged.
“Not more than necessary. So, are we all set? Splendid! If those papers are retrieved where I expect them to be, you will be taken to Liverpool on Saturday. You will travel to Boston in your own, private cabin. Kindly refrain from stealing from your fellow travellers; the captain will keep an eye on you. You will also receive your one-hundred American Dollars, as agreed, and another three-hundred in Boston at the office of the shipping line. I shall not see you again, Charlene, but I wish you all the luck. Try to stay honest.”
Charlene nodded. “I sure will!. I’m right grateful for this chance, milord, I really am. ‘Ave you practised your moves like I teached you?”
“Every free minute,” Richard answered.
“Remember to look annoyed-like when you drop the letter.”
“I shall. Farewell, Charlene!”
“Farewell. Milord, I hope you can get your bride back. I really feel bad about my part in this.”
“You should not, Charlene. Bonne chance!”
Friday afternoon, Richard was still very busy. He had seen to this. Around four o’clock, Sir Gilbert stuck his head through Richard’s door.
“You still plan to come, milord?”
“Yes, yes,” Richard replied eagerly. “I only need to finish this report. I shall work on the treaty over the weekend.”
“Splendid, splendid. I shall see you then.”
At a quarter past eight, a rather ruffled looking Richard arrived at the residence of Sir Gilbert Hume. As expected, Sir Gilbert received him at the entrance, together with Marjorie Binnings. This was good because he could start the little charade right away.
“I’m awfully sorry for the delay, Sir Gilbert, but we had to redo parts of the report. There were some grievous spelling errors in it, and you know how the Secretary feels about that.”
“Calm down, calm down, milord,” Sir Gilbert laughed, obviously in good humour. “Why don’t you take off that cloak and make yourself comfortable?”
Richard did, and an envelope dropped to the floor, right in front of Marjorie Binnings. The letter in it had fallen out as well. Richard seemingly did not notice this and Marjorie Binnings looked at the letter with moderate interest. Then she became alert. She knew that handwriting! Looking carefully, she could decipher the first lines:
“My dearest Richard,
I beg of you to meet me once more to resolve the issues between us. You have not spoken...”
The letter was picked up. With a seemingly embarrassed smile, Richard stuffed the envelope back into his breast pocket, handed his coat to the servant, and followed the valet into the dining room.
A wolfish grin spread over Marjorie’s features. That was too precious! That stupid, spineless girl begging the man who had betrayed her. Oh, to throw that into her face at the next opportunity! She would deny it, of course. Wait! Let her deny it and then throw the actual letter into her face! Then she would be really crushed, and she would be so mad at young Lord Lambert! Marjorie needed that letter!
The opportunity arose after the dinner when Richard stood to the side, with a glass of Madeira wine in his hand. Marjorie faked a stumble and fell into him, spilling the wine over his shirt.
“Oh I’m so sorry, milord. Please forgive my clumsiness. Gilbert, dear, you would not have a shirt that you might lend to his lordship?”
She steered Richard into an upstairs room and directed him behind a paravent. Smilingly, Richard hung his coat on the outside of the paravent and took off the stained shirt. In a moment, Marjorie Binnings was back with a fresh shirt. He noticed it was closed at the bottom, and he had to pull it over his head, blocking his view temporarily. When he had the shirt on, she even helped him into his coat, again apologising profusely.
Richard was seemingly embarrassed by the incident and he made his escape under the pretence that he had to pick up his grandmother at another function. Marjorie Binnings showed him to the door in person, apologising over and over again. She felt ready to burst. She felt tempted to go upstairs and read in her treasure, but people would notice. The whole silly dinner party would end soon anyway, and the anticipation made her giddy.
Almost two hours later, the last guests had left, and Marjorie Binnings prepared to leave.
“You don’t really have to leave, do you?” Gilbert Hume pouted, but Marjorie would have nothing of it. She left his house with a spring in her step, and she noticed very late that soldiers were standing around her coach.
“What is this?” she asked sharply.
A colonel in the uniform of the Coldstream Guards appeared before her.
“Mrs. Marjorie Binnings?”
“Why yes, what is it?”
“Please surrender the envelope that you took from Lord Lambert’s coat!”
“That is ridiculous!”
“Madam, you were seen taking that envelope. Please save yourself the embarrassment of a search.”
“Oh well, here you have the stupid letter! I hardly think this is a business for the Guards.”
The Colonel took the envelope and inspected the papers within. He turned, and, from the shadows, Richard Carter stepped into the light of the coach lantern.
“Is this the document, milord?”
Richard inspected the draft treaty carefully.
“Yes, it is, Colonel. You have prevented great damage to the Crown, Sir, and I thank you.”
“We are only doing our duty, milord. Mrs. Binnings, I am afraid that you will have to accompany us.”
“For what? Lord Lambert has his letter back.”
“I must arrest you on the suspicion of high treason, Madam.”
Marjorie Binnings shrieked and looked about in panic.
With a clatter of hooves, another coach arrived. A solemn man in a black cloak emerged.
“Have you secured the documents, Colonel?”
“Yes, Sir! The Binnings woman had the documents on her person.”
“Are those documents complete, Lord Lambert?”
“Yes, Sir, all four pages.”
“Any chance they could have been copied?”
“No, Sir, they have not been unfolded. I can tell from the little drop of glue that I put between the folds.”
“A good thing you noticed. Did your superior know that you had those documents on you?”
“Yes, Sir. I informed Sir Gilbert this afternoon that I would work on the treaty over the weekend. This is his house, by the way.”
“Indeed? And this person has been going in and out here? Hume, Hume, right, he has been losing confidential documents over the last months, hasn’t he?”
“Not to my knowledge, Sir,” Richard replied cautiously.
“No, you would not know, of course. Do you know this person’s address?”
“Yes, I have been there twice. Nº12, Oxford Lane.”
“Colonel, prepare to search those premises. I shall send a few of our own specialists to organise the search.”
“Yes, Sir!”
“Have that person brought into custody!”
“Yes, Sir!”
“Milord, I shall need those documents as evidence. I shall give you a receipt. One of my personal secretaries will prepare a copy tonight so that you can continue to work on that treaty.”
“Of course, Sir.”
The commotion had been noticed inside Sir Gilbert’s house and he came out to enquire.
“Good Lord, Lambert, what are you doing out here? Oh dear God, Marjorie, what happened to you?”
He stepped forward but was stopped in mid-stride by the black man.
“Leave her be, Sir Gilbert!”
“What ... Mr. Sunderland! What brings you here in the middle of the night?”
“Your blundering! Haven’t you lost several confidential documents over the last months?”
“Why, yes, but I’m quite sure I misplaced them. They will turn up eventually.”
“Oh, I’m quite sure they will,” Mr. Sunderland replied caustically. “The only question is, on which side of the Channel? How long have you known this woman?”
“Almost a year. She is a good friend and I’m willing to vouch for her.”
“Then you might be interested to hear that we found the draft of a treaty on her person, a draft, Lord Lambert has reported as stolen an hour ago.”
“Is this true Marjorie?” Hume gasped. “Why would she do that?”
“That is what I am here to find out,” Mr. Sunderland replied grimly. “I must ask you to return to your house and to stay in London until further notice. You are not to enter your office until I say otherwise. Do you understand?”
“Yes, Sir. But what about Marjorie?”
“She is not your concern. She is married after all, isn’t she?”
Hume stumbled back into his house, a broken man.
“I hope, Sir Gilbert will not have difficulties, Sir,” Richard offered.
“I don’t think so. He is just stupid, and there is no law against that. Well, milord, I thank you for the alert. At least one person in that department kept his wits about him. Please report to me first thing on Monday morning.”
Richard bowed and left. He had no way of knowing whether the rest of his plan would work out, but it looked good. He knew that he must avoid showing undue curiosity, so he could not watch the search of Marjorie Binnings’ house. There was one thing he had to do, however, when he came home. He took the letter Ellen had written and read it to himself. If only that letter were real! Ellen had written very convincingly; this really read like a desperate plea for a reunion. Maybe, he should write a letter of his own with the same wording, he thought, but he pushed the notion away. The next weeks and months would be crucial. He could not afford a stupidity!
He went to the fireplace and stirred the ashes until a flame reappeared. He dropped the letter into the fire and watched it until it was completely destroyed. The he raked the ashes once more.
“How did your plan go?”
His grandmother had entered the room silently.
“You should not have burnt that letter. Ellen and I spent almost two hours on it.”
“It was perfect, and it served its purpose. I wish it were real, I really do. But there are more urgent matters that need to be addressed first.”
“Yes, but don’t wait too long. I am not getting younger.”
John Little reported to Richard early in the next morning. He had watched the Binnings’ house unobtrusively. Soldiers and civilians had searched the house for over an hour when suddenly an excited civilian had emerged from the house with a stack of papers. Marjorie Binnings’ husband had been led away, and the Guards had been posted around the house. Charlene had got out before the commotion began, around eleven o’clock.
“Please convey her safely to Plymouth and to that ship. Here is her money.”
“Inez and the children will miss her,” John Little observed. “She is not a bad woman.”
“I agree. For reasons you know, she has to leave England, though.”
John Little disappeared quietly. Charlene Beckham was indeed brought on board the Eleanor Boswell, bound for Boston, and changed quietly into being Miss Annabelle Fourtnoy, a respectable nanny. This was done with the help of a real passport issued by the Foreign Office and with Letters of Recommendation written by John Little, Esq., of London, and Lady Lydia Lambert, of Portsmouth.
Charlene had changed in the months she had spent with the Little family. For the first time, she saw the workings of an intact family. She witnessed how the children, five of them, were brought up, and she wondered what could have become of herself if she had been taken care of by real parents. Her father, a veteran of the war, was a cripple. What little pension he received was spend on cheap spirits to numb the pain in the stumps that had been his legs. She had never known her mother who had abandoned her crippled husband and her infant daughter. Charlene had been raised by her aunt who worked as a whore.
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