I write this by desire of my brothers
and sisters, that if any reports of our strange family
history should come down to after generations the
thing may be properly understood.
The old times at Trevorsham seem to
me so remote, that I can hardly believe that we are
the same who were so happy then. Nay, Jaquetta
laughs, and declares that it is not possible to be
happier than we have been since, and Fulk would have
me remember that all was not always smooth even in
those days.
Perhaps not for him, at
least, dear fellow, in those latter times; but when
I think of the old home, the worst troubles that rise
before me are those of the back-board and the stocks,
French in the school-room, and Miss Simmonds’
“Lady Ursula, think of your position!”
And as to Jaquetta, she was born under
a more benignant star. Nobody could have put
a back-board on her any more than on a kitten.
Our mother had died (oh! how happily
for herself!) when Jaquetta was a baby, and Miss Simmonds
most carefully ruled not only over us, but over Adela
Brainerd, my father’s ward, who was brought up
with us because she had no other relation in the world.
Besides, my father wished her to marry
one of my brothers. It would have done very
well for either Torwood or Bertram, but unluckily,
as it seemed, neither of them could take to the notion.
She was a dear little thing, to be sure, and we were
all very fond of her; but, as Bertram said, it would
have been like marrying Jaquetta, and Torwood had
other views, to which my father would not then listen.
Then Bertram’s regiment was
ordered to Canada, and that was the real cause of
it all, though we did not know it till long after.
Bertram was starting out on a sporting
expedition with a Canadian gentleman, when about ten
miles from Montreal they halted at a farm with a good
well-built house, named Sault St. Pierre, all looking
prosperous and comfortable, and a young farmer, American
in his ways free-spoken, familiar, and
blunt but very kindly and friendly, was
at work there with some French-Canadian labourers.
Bertram’s friend knew him and
often halted there on hunting expeditions, so they
went into the house very nicely furnished,
a pretty parlour with muslin curtains, a piano, and
everything pleasant; and Joel Lea called his wife,
a handsome, fair young woman. Bertram says from
the first she put him in mind of some one, and he was
trying to make out who it could be. Then came
the wife’s mother, a neat little delicate, bent
woman, with dark eyes, that looked, Bertram said,
as if they had had some great fright and never recovered
it. They called her Mrs. Dayman.
She was silent at first, and only
helped her daughter and the maid to get the dinner,
and an excellent dinner it was; but she kept on looking
at Bertram, and she quite started when she heard him
called Mr. Trevor. When they were just rising
up, and going to take leave, she came up to him in
a frightened agitated manner, as if she could not help
it, and said
“Sir, you are so like a gentleman
I once knew. Was any relation of yours ever
in Canada?”
“My father was in Canada,” answered Bertram.
“Oh no,” she said then,
very much affected, “the Captain Trevor I knew
was killed in the Lake Campaign in 1814. It must
be a mistake, yet you put me in mind of him so strangely.”
Then Bertram protested that she must
mean my father, for that he had been a captain in
the th, and had been stationed at York
(as Toronto was then called), but was badly wounded
in repulsing the American attack on the Lakes in 1814.
“Not dead?” she asked,
with her cheeks getting pale, and a sort of excitement
about her, that made Bertram wonder, at the moment,
if there could have been any old attachment between
them, and he explained how my father was shipped off
from England between life and death; and how, when
he recovered, he found his uncle dying, and the title
and property coming to him.
“And he married!” she
said, with a bewildered look; and Bertram told her
that he had married Lady Mary Lupton as
his uncle and father had wished and how
we four were their children. I can fancy how
kindly and tenderly Bertram would speak when he saw
that she was anxious and pained; and she took hold
of his hand and held him, and when he said something
of mentioning that he had seen her, she cried out with
a sort of terror, “Oh no, no, Mr. Trevor, I
beg you will not. Let him think me dead, as
I thought him.” And then she drew down
Bertram’s tall head to her, and fairly kissed
his forehead, adding, “I could not help it,
sir; an old woman’s kiss will do you no harm!”
Then he went away. He never
did tell us of the meeting till long after.
He was not a great letter writer, and, besides, he
thought my father might not wish to have the flirtations
of his youth brought up against him. So we little
knew!
But it seems that the daughter and
son-in-law were just as much amazed as Bertram, and
when he was gone, and the poor old lady sank into her
chair and burst out crying, and as they came and asked
who or what this was, she sobbed out, “Your
brother Hester! Oh! so like him my
husband!” or something to that effect, as unawares.
She wanted to take it back again, but of course Hester
would not let her, and made her tell the whole.
It seems that her name was Faith Le
Blanc; she was half English, half French-Canadian,
and lived in a village in a very unsettled part, where
Captain Trevor used to come to hunt, and where he made
love to her, and ended by marrying her with
the knowledge of her family and his brother officers,
but not of his family just before he was
ordered to the Lake frontier. The war had stirred
up the Indians to acts of violence they had not committed
for many years, and a tribe of them came down on the
village, plundering, burning, killing, and torturing
those whom they had known in friendly intercourse.
Faith Le Blanc had once given some
milk to a papoose upon its mother’s back, and
perhaps for this reason she was spared, but everyone
belonging to her was, she believed, destroyed, and
she was carried away by the tribe, who wanted to make
her one of themselves; and she knew that if she offended
them, such horrors as she had seen practised on others
would come on her.
However, they had gone to another
resort of theirs, where there was a young hunter who
often visited them, and was on friendly terms.
When he found that there was a white woman living
as a captive among them, he spared no effort to rescue
her. Both he and she were often in exceeding
danger; but he contrived her escape at last, and brought
her through the woods to a place of safety, and there
her child was born.
It was over the American frontier,
and it was long before she could write to her husband.
She never knew what became of her letter, but the
hunter friend, Piers Dayman, showed her an American
paper which mentioned Captain Trevor among the officers
killed in their attack. Dayman was devoted to
her, and insisted on marrying her, and bringing up
her daughter as his own. I fancy she was a woman
of gentle passive temper, and had been crushed and
terrified by all she had gone through, so as to have
little instinct left but that of clinging to the protector
who had taken her up when she had lost everything else;
and she married him. Nor did Hester guess till
that very day that Piers Dayman was not her father!
There were other children, sons who
have given themselves to hunting and trapping in the
Hudson’s Bay Company’s territory; but Hester
remained the only daughter, and they educated her well,
sending her to a convent at Montreal, where she learnt
a good many accomplishments. They were not Roman
Catholics; but it was the only way of getting an education.
Dayman must have been a warm-hearted,
tenderly affectionate person. Hester loved him
very much. But he had lived a wild sportsman’s
life, and never was happy at rest. They changed
home often; and at last he was snowed up and frozen
to death, with one of his boys, on a bear hunting
expedition.
Not very long after, Hester married
this sturdy American, Joel Lea, who had bought some
land on the Canadian side of the border, and her mother
came home to live with them. They had been married
four or five years, but none of their children had
lived.
So it was when the discovery came
upon poor old Mrs. Dayman (I do not know what else
to call her), that Fulk Torwood Trevor, the husband
of her youth, was not dead, but was Earl of Trevorsham;
married, and the father of four children in England.
Poor old thing! She would have
buried her secret to the last, as much in pity and
love to him as in shame and grief for herself; and
consideration, too, for the sons, for whom the discovery
was only less bad than for us, as they had less to
lose. Hester herself hardly fully understood
what it all involved, and it only gradually grew on
her.
That winter her mother fell ill, and
Mr. Lea felt it right that the small property she
had had for her life should be properly secured to
her sons, according to the division their father had
intended. So a lawyer was brought from Montreal
and her will was made. Thus another person knew
about it, and he was much struck, and explained to
Hester that she was really a lady of rank, and probably
the only child of her father who had any legal claim
to his estates. Lea, with a good deal of the
old American Republican temper, would not be stirred
up. He despised lords and ladies, and would none
of it; but the lawyer held that it would be doing
wrong not to preserve the record. Hester had
grown excited, and seconded him; and one day, when
Lea was out, the lawyer brought a magistrate to take
Mrs. Dayman’s affidavit as to all her past history marriage
witnesses and all. She was a good deal overcome
and agitated, and quite implored Hester never to use
the knowledge against her father; but she must have
been always a passive, docile being, and they made
her tell all that was wanted, and sign her deposition,
as she had signed her will, as Faith Trevor, commonly
known as Faith Dayman.
She did not live many days after.
It was on the 3rd of February, 1836, that she died;
and in the course of the summer Hester had a son, who
throve as none of her babies had done.
Then she lay and brooded over him
and the rights she fancied he was deprived of, till
she worked herself up to a strong and fixed purpose,
and insisted upon making all known to her father.
Now that her mother was gone she persuaded herself
that he had been a cruel, faithless tyrant, who had
wilfully deserted his young wife.
Joel Lea would not listen to her.
Why should she wish to make his son a good-for-nothing
English lord? That was his view. Nothing
but misery, distress, and temptation could come of
not letting things alone. He held to that, and
there were no means forthcoming either of coming to
England to present herself. The family were well
to do, but had no ready money to lay out on a passage
across the Atlantic. Nor would Hester wait.
She had persuaded herself that a letter would be
suppressed, even if she had known how to address it;
but to claim her son’s rights, and make an earl
of him, had become her fixed idea, and she began laying
aside every farthing in her power.
In this she was encouraged, not by
the lawyer who had made the will and who,
considering that poor Faith’s witnesses had been
destroyed, and her certificate and her wedding ring
taken from her by the Indians, thought that the marriage
could not be substantiated but by a clever
young clerk, who had managed to find out the state
of things; a man named Perrault, who used to come
to the farm, always when Lea was out, and talk her
into a further state of excitement about her child’s
expectations, and the injuries she was suffering.
It was her one idea. She says she really believes
she should have gone mad if the saving had not occupied
her; and a very dreary life poor Joel must have had
whilst she was scraping together the passage-money.
He still steadily and sternly disapproved the whole,
and when at two years’ end she had put together
enough to bring her and her boy home, and maintain
them there for a few weeks, he still refused to go
with her. The last thing he said was, “Remember,
Hester, what was the price of all the kingdoms of
the world! Thou wilt have it, then! Would
that I could say, my blessing go with thee.”
And he took his child, and held him long in his arms,
and never spoke one word over him but, “My poor
boy!”