Lament For A Lost Lover - Lament for a Lost Lover Part 50
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Lament for a Lost Lover Part 50

I laid out the food. I had brought some ale, too, which he drank eagerly.

He smiled at me and said: "Do you know, last night I was thinking that I was glad this happened. It brought me to you."

"You have had to pay rather a high price for the introduction," I said.

He took my hand then and kissed it. "It has been the most important thing in my life," he said.

"You're alone too much," I replied. "It makes you think these things. I have hopes that Leigh will have some solution when he comes back."

"We shall meet again when this is over ... you and I. I am sure of that."

"Oh, I expect so. Edwin says that opinion is turning against Titus Oates and when it does that will be the end of all this. We shall go back to normal again. Our families will meet now and then. I daresay my mother will invite you to stay with us."

"I shall make every effort to bring that about. I have met you in extraordinary circumstances. I should like to do so ... in a ballroom, say. Do you often go to Court?"

"Not yet. I daresay I shall some time. They think I'm rather too young at the moment."

"You don't seem to be to me."

"Do I not? How old do I seem?"

"Seventeen. It's the best of all ages. I know because I was seventeen two years ago."

I was delighted to be told I looked older than my years. People of my age always are, I supposed. One is always eager to throw off one's youth when one has it and it is only when it is beyond recall that one wants it back.

"Perhaps," he went on, "seventeen was the age I wanted you to be."

"Why should my age be any concern of yours?"

"Because I wanted you to be nearer to me."

"Listen," I said, "I can hear something."

We were silent, straining our ears. Yes, there were voices from some way off being carried to us on the southwesterly wind.

"Let's get inside the cave," I said. "Collect everything and take it in. We don't know who this can be."

Hastily we gathered up the remains of the picnic. We went into the cave and listened. Jocelyn had become rather tense; so had I. I was imagining Jasper's face. I could hear him as he betrayed us. "They be up to something. Food gone from the pantry, so my wife tells me. They're hiding something ... they're hiding someone. It's someone whose been up to sin, you can be sure of that. There's something more sinful than usual in the air."

Jasper could always be sure of sin. It was there all round him and he was the only one he knew who had not been contaminated by it.

The voices were undoubtedly coming nearer; I looked at Jocelyn and felt sick with anxiety.

If Leigh were here ...

But Leigh was not here and I could not think what he would tell us to do but remain quietly where we were.

In the distance I heard the crunch of boots on shingle. It was followed by the bark of a dog ... more than one dog.

We were seated side by side on the hard rock floor of the cave and suddenly Jocelyn reached for my hand. He kissed it and went on holding it.

I whispered: "It's someone coming along the beach. They're coming this way."

"With dogs," he said.

"Jocelyn, do you think ..."

He nodded. "We have been betrayed. Oh, Priscilla, this will be the end ... for me ... for us ..."

"It might be people out for a stroll."

Out for a stroll! I thought. On a winter's day with heavy clouds louring! Out for a stroll on the beach with dogs! The nearest house was a mile away. Leigh had mentioned that when he had said what a good hiding place it was.

I whispered: "Come farther into the cave." We crept into the recess and took everything there was with us.

The rock overhung and we could crawl in even farther if we were on our hands and knees. We did so and lay down, very close, trying to hide ourselves. Jocelyn put his arms about me and we lay as one in that small space under the overhanging rock.

I could hear our hearts beating. The footsteps were coming nearer. The dogs kept barking.

Jocelyn's face was very close to mine, his lips against my cheek.

"You shouldn't be here," he whispered. "You shouldn't be in this ..."

"Hush," I warned.

"Bruno! Bruno!" It was a man's voice. "What have you got, eh?"

The dogs barked. They were close now.

I felt sick with fear for Jocelyn. I believed in that moment that I was never going to be happy again. They would drag him away. They would kill him as they had killed his father.

Nearer, nearer they came. They were very close now.

Jocelyn said: "I must say it. It's my last chance. I love you."

I put my hand over his mouth.

There was a shadow in the mouth of the cave. It was one of the dogs. He had entered it and he came immediately to us.

I heard someone call: "Bruno!"

The dog stood over us.

I thought of our dogs at home and I said very quietly: "Good Bruno."

He barked and then turned and ran out of the cave.

I heard someone laugh. "Bosun. Come here, Bosun. You too, Bruno."

We lay still, Jocelyn's arms still about me. We neither of us dared move, and then I realized that no one was following the dog into the cave. I could hear their voices farther away now. They had passed on.

"They've gone," I whispered. "They weren't looking for us. They were out for a stroll after all."

I began to laugh. Then I stopped suddenly. "It may be a trick. Oh, no ... why should it be? They could have caught us so easily if they had been looking for us."

I crawled out from under the recess and stood up. Jocelyn was beside me.

"I'm going out to look," I said.

"I'll go."

"No. If they are looking for you they wouldn't take much notice of me. They'd be looking for a man."

I went out into the open. I could see two men with the dogs walking along the beach. One of them picked up a pebble and threw it from him. The dogs chased after it to retrieve it.

The scare was over, but something had happened.

Jocelyn took my hand and kissed it.

"Now you understand," he said.

I had turned away to look at the sea, grey with white frills on the edge of the waves and the wind carrying the spray far up onto the beach.

I said: "I understand how dangerous it is here. Leigh will come back soon."

"I shall have to go away then."

"It may be to Aunt Harriet's."

"You visit her often?"

"Oh, yes. I am a favourite of hers."

"I shouldn't want to go if it meant not seeing you."

"You must go where you will be safe."

He kissed me suddenly. "It has been a great adventure," he said.

"It is not over yet," I warned.

"Let's sit down close and talk."

We sat on the shingle and he said: "I wish you were older."

"What if I were?"

"We could marry."

"They would say I am too young."

"People marry young. When all this is over I shall ask your parents for your hand. May I?"

"Could I stop you?"

"No, I don't suppose you could. But I should want your consent, shouldn't I?"

"I know some people who have been married without their consent."

"You never would be. You would find some way out of an undesirable alliance, I am sure. Oh, Priscilla, I believe you have some feeling for me."

"Yes, I have."

"And it doesn't displease you that I talk like this. You seem content to listen."

"At the moment I can't think of much else but your lucky escape."

"Those people with the dogs ..." He shivered.

"I was terribly frightened, Jocelyn, weren't you?"

He was silent for a while, then he said: "I thought they had come to take me, yes. I thought it was the end. When they took my father and in a short time had murdered him-they called it execution, I call it murder-something happened to me. It was almost as though I felt there was no sense in working against fate. As I lay there with you in my arms, I thought: This is the end. But before I die I shall have known Priscilla and it was all this which brought me to her. You see, it is a sort of acceptance of fate."

"You are philosophical."

"Perhaps. If I am to die then die I must, but if fate is kind to me and preserves me from this, then I can think of my future and I want you to share it with me, Priscilla."

"You scarcely know me."

"In circumstances like this acquaintance ripens very quickly into friendship and friendship into love. You have risked a great deal for me."

"So have the others."

"But I prize what you have done most. Whatever happens I have had those moments with you in the cave when you lay close to me and your heart beat with fear ... for me. I shall remember that moment forever and I should not have had it but for the fear which went with it. Most things that are worth having have to be paid for."

"You are indeed a philosopher."

"Events make us what we are. I know that I shall love you until I die. Priscilla, when this is over ..."

I felt in an exalted mood. Too much had happened in such a short time. That fearful experience and then a proposal of marriage. And I was fourteen years old! I was regarded as a child in my home-Edwin's little sister. And that was how Leigh thought of me, too. Little sister! That had rankled coming from him.

"Priscilla ..." Jocelyn was saying, "will you remember this ... forever? Shall we plight our troth here on this desolate beach?"

I smiled at him. He was so handsome and melancholy in a way-a young man to whom brutal life had been revealed and it had made him accept it instead of rebelling against it. I admired him, and when he kissed me I was aware of an excitement which I had never felt before.

It was so comforting to be loved. Moreover, he did not regard me as a child, I thought to myself, and it was as though I were talking to Leigh.

"Jocelyn," I replied, "I think I love you, too. I know that if they really had been looking for you and had taken you, I should have been more unhappy than I have ever been before."