told no one of them. I knew people would say I was building up feelings against him for no other reason than that I resented a stepfather. And perhaps they would be right.
The next day at breakfast, my grandmother said: “What shall you do today?”
“Well, Miss Brown thinks we should waste no more time. Lessons have been a little interrupted lately and she thinks we should get down to normal work without delay.”
My grandmother grimaced. “What does that mean … lessons in the morning?”
“Yes, I’m afraid so.”
“Is that the law?” asked my grandfather.
“As unalterable as that of the Medes and the Persians,” replied my grandmother.
“I was hoping we’d have a ride together today,” he went on. “Perhaps this afternoon, as this morning seems to be devoted to work.”
“You ought to go and see Jack and Marian,” said my grandmother. “They’ll be put out if you don’t take Rebecca along.”
Jack was my mother’s brother. One day he would inherit Cador and he had been brought up to manage the estate. This he did with the same single-mindedness which his father had always shown. He did not live at Cador now although I supposed in due course he would come back to the ancestral home. He, with his wife and five-year-old twins, lived at Dorey Manor—a lovely Elizabethan manor-house. They were often at Cador. On his marriage he had expressed a desire for a separate household, which I think was due to his wife who, although she was very fond of my grandmother, was the sort of woman who would want to be absolute mistress in her own household. It seemed an excellent arrangement.
Dorey Manor had been the home of my grandfather before his marriage, so it was all part of the Cador estate.
“We’ll look in on them this afternoon,” said my grandfather. “Agreed, Rebecca?”
“Of course. I am longing to see them.”
“Then that’s settled.”
“I’ll tell them to get Dandy ready for you.”
“Oh yes, please.”
It felt like coming home. This was my own family. My likes and dislikes were remembered. My dear Dandy, whom I always rode in Cornwall, was waiting for me. He was so called because there was an elegance about him. He was beautiful and seemed fully aware of the fact. He was graceful in all his movements and seemed fond of me in a certain rather disdainful way. “He’s a regular dandy,” one of the grooms had said of him, and that was the name he became to be known by.
Galloping along the beach, cantering across the meadows, I would forget for a while that Benedict Lansdon had taken my mother from me.
My grandmother said suddenly: “Do you remember High Tor?”
“That lovely old house?” I asked. “Weren’t there new people there?”
“The Westcotts, yes. But they were only renting. When Sir John Persing died there was no family left. The trustees of the estate wanted to sell … and they let it in the meantime. That was how the Westcotts came. Well, there are some new people there now … French.”
“A kind of refugee,” said my grandfather.
“How interesting. Do you know them?”
“We are on nodding terms. They’ve come over from France after the trouble there … or before perhaps … seeing it coming.”
“The trouble?”
“Now don’t tell your grandfather you don’t know what’s been happening in France. He’ll be horrified at your ignorance.”
“Wasn’t there a war, or something?”
“A war indeed—and a mighty defeat of the French by the Prussians. And it is because of this defeat that the Bourdons are here.”
“You mean they have left their own country?”
“Yes.”
“And are they going to live here?”
My grandmother shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t know. But at the moment they are at High Tor. I think they have taken the place on approval as it were with a view to buying. I expect a great deal will depend on what happens in France.”
“What are they like?”
“There are the parents and a son and daughter.”
“How
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