he had thought it fit to wear undress instead so that he might gain entry to the Duke of York’s headquarters with more expedition. He touched his forage cap to the two dismounted sentries at the inner archway and entered the building through an unimposing door in the side-arch. Within, an orderly directed him up the stairs to the adjutant- general’s department where he was received (rather distantly, he thought) by a civilian clerk. ‘Please be seated Mr … ahm … Hartley. We shall attend you forthwith.’
Hervey sat on a bench comfortably upholstered in buttoned green leather and picked up the copy of
‘I beg your indulgence, Mr Harley, we have so much to be about in the wake of events on the Continent,’ the clerk replied.
He turned to the back-page sales: ‘A PAIR of handsome BROWN CHARIOT or CURRICLE GELDINGS, 15 hands 2 inches high …; THIRTY very clever, active, well bred, seasoned MACHINE HORSES, in high condition, mostly young …’
Up and down the columns he went, from ‘valuable collection of paintings’ to ‘singularly elegant gothic cottage’. They occupied him another half-hour, and still there was no activity in the clerk.
‘Now, see here,’ he began, putting down the paper noisily, ‘I have urgent regimental business to be about. Will you kindly present that dispatch to the adjutant-general now so that I may be released to attend to it.’
‘Mr Hurley,’ replied the clerk, with an indulging smile, ‘papers arrive from Paris every day, hourly at times. If your letter were urgent, it would be marked as such. You are merely a courier, sir!’
‘Courier be damned!’ he stormed. ‘I have the welfare of brave men’s widows, and much else besides, to be about. If you will not so much as have the courtesy to read the letter, then I shall not wait hereabouts!’
He stalked out of the headquarters and marched angrily across the parade ground even as guardsmen were drilling there, reaching the middle of St James’s Park before his anger began to subside. What had become of things? he railed. The nation seemed driven by self-important clerks for whom tallies and ledgers, copying and filing were ends in themselves.
* * *
It was early evening, almost a week later, that he stepped down from the Yarmouth-to-London stage at the crossroads near Southwold. So much had passed since his dismal time at the Horse Guards. The Earl of Sussex, whom he had called on shortly afterwards, had been solicitude itself. The earl, not yet an old man but whose service with the Duke of York in Flanders twenty years before had ended with a broken hip, had been at once animated by the prospect of finding new officers for his regiment. And in Norwich, where it was his business to settle the regimental estate of Joseph Edmonds, he had found the major’s widow and two daughters in uncommon spirits and a very safe distance from destitution. But, unappealing though the prospect of Norwich had been, he anticipated that Southwold would be an altogether more formidable ordeal.
There should have been a chaise, or at least a van, from the town waiting at the crossroads, but there was not another soul in sight. As far as the eye could see in the direction of Southwold there was desolate marsh, and the forlorn calls of the curlew accentuated the eerie emptiness. In the other direction there was open heath, with scarcely a tree, and those that there were leaned to landward, bent halfway to the ground by the wind which often as not drove in from the sea. The coach-driver, anxious because hay-waggons had made him almost thirty minutes late on this stage, asked if Hervey would take charge of some packages for merchants of the town. ‘Daren’t wait no longer, zur,’ he explained in Suffolk vowels more pronounced than Serjeant Strange’s. ‘Anything from Southwold’ll ’ave to wait till tomorrow. There should be summat along soon.’
Hervey understood the driver’s impatience full well: his pay would be docked if he were late at Ipswich, and there would be little chance of making up any more time along this road, as yet unmacadamized, and with a team already blowing. In truth he was glad of the peace of this lonely crossroads for a while, where he might compose his thoughts in respect of Widow Strange. Not that she would have been aware of that status; for, while Margaret Edmonds might learn from an express or even
A mile or so across the marshes, in the direction the stage now took, stood Blythburgh church, rising from the wetlands with all the grandeur of a cathedral, testimony to the county’s former wool-wealth. Wealth long past, he knew. Now it was fishing and little else, although the war had brought additional business by way of the new naval establishments along the coast — victualling yards, hospitals, signalling stations. But he did not suppose the Strange family would have much of it.
After a quarter-hour a growler came up from the direction of Southwold and the driver began a litany of apologies before even the brake bound on. Immense was his relief when Hervey assured him that it mattered not at all and that he had the packages from the London coach. Minutes later, the parcels and his portmanteau safely stowed, they set off at a trot towards the little fishing town. ‘Only a couple of miles, that’s all, zur,’ began the driver, ‘but it’s a bugger when the tide’s ‘igh ’cos the stream ’tween us and the town gets up and the old ’orse ’e doesn’t always like it!’
Hervey sympathized. ‘Do you know of a family called Strange?’ he added. ‘A fisherman, I believe.’
‘Peter Strange?’
‘I do not know his Christian name. He had a son …’ Hervey checked himself. ‘His son enlisted in the Army.’
‘Well, there is but one Strange in Southwold, zur — or, rather, there
‘Not exactly.’
‘Terrible sad, it were. Alice Strange, old Peter’s wife of nigh on fifty years, died in May an’ old Peter just seemed to give up all will to go on. That daughter-in-law of theirs never left ’is side these past three months, but weren’t to no avail: she ’ad to bury ’im, too.’
‘Where is Mrs Strange now, then?’ asked Hervey.
‘Bless me, zur, in ’eaven for sure — an’ Peter, too, for they were fine God-fearing folk.’
For all the solemnity Hervey found it hard not to smile.
‘I meant their daughter-in-law,’ he explained gently.
The driver looked at him quizzically. ‘You know the family, then, zur?’
‘No, I do not, but I have news of Serjeant Strange.’
‘Yes,’ said Hervey softly, ‘he did well. Where might I find Mrs Strange?’
The driver’s directions were precise, and Hervey tipped him a half-crown after alighting at the Swan hotel in the centre of town — a place, the driver was anxious to assure him, that was most appropriate for someone of Hervey’s rank. And in exchange for this handsome tip the driver swore not to reveal the purpose for which Hervey was in Southwold, and to be outside the Swan at nine the following morning to take him the mile or so to the Strange cottage at the harbour inlet.
He slept better at the Swan than perhaps he had since those exhausted few hours at La Belle Alliance. The sea air was clean and invigorating. At Yarmouth, where he had spent the previous night, there had been a stench of putrefying fish which had forced him to close the windows of his room, and his doubts about leaving Strange to the French lancers had again returned to haunt him through the small hours. Armstrong had absolved him from all