The Essex Serpent

‘Really,’ he said, ‘I wish she hadn’t mentioned it – it’s nothing – only a bit of stuff I found on the saltings last week, and put in my pocket, thinking you might like to see it. Come with me!’

It did not occur to him then that no-one but Stella ever entered his study – that it was neither clean nor tidy, and that anyone caring to look at the litter of books and notes on the desk and floor might’ve made a guess at the full character of his mind. Not even the children were allowed to enter, unless expressly invited, and then only in order to be chastised or taught; it would seem to him less exposing to relieve himself against Traitor’s Oak at noon than to allow anyone across the threshold. But none of this struck him as he opened the door, and stood back to let her pass, nor was he troubled by how immediately her attention turned to his desk, or that her letter was set beside his papers, thin at the folds from being opened and reopened. ‘Do sit,’ he said, gesturing to the leather armchair which had been his father’s; and she did, spreading out her skirts. He reached up to a bookshelf and withdrew a white paper packet, which he placed on the desk and opened very carefully, taking out a pale lump a little larger than a child’s fist. Embedded within were several black and pitted fragments, as if a rough plate had been smashed, and concealed for some reason inside a piece of clay. Will picked it up, and showed her, stooping beside her chair; looking down she saw where his hair grew whorled at the crown, and the few white threads which grew thick and gleaming as wire. ‘It’s nothing, I’m sure,’ he said, ‘but there it was, broken away from one of the banks down in the creeks; I go down so often, and never saw anything like it before, but then until you came I wouldn’t have thought to look! What do you think – ought we to contact the museum in Colchester, and offer to make a donation?’

Cora was not entirely sure: ammonites and toadstones she knew well enough, and the shocking white curl of a shark’s tooth biting through its lump of clay; she knew the puffed and spiny echinoid when she saw it, and the flared ribs of a trilobite, and was convinced that once at Lyme Regis she’d struck a seam in which was concealed the bone of a small vertebrate. But she’d learned the humility of scholars: that the more she knew, the more she did not know. Will flexed his hand – the lump rolled in his palm – a piece of clay broke off, and fell between his outspread fingers to the floor. ‘Well then,’ he said: ‘What is the expert’s verdict?’ He looked both eager and shy, as if certain there was nothing he could show her that might please her, but hoping all the same that he might. She drew her thumbnail across the black surface; it had grown warm from his hand, and was smooth. ‘I wonder,’ she said, grateful that the thought had occurred, ‘if it’s a kind of lobster – I’ll never remember the name! – hoploparia, that’s it. I can’t tell you the age of it, though several millions of years, I imagine.’ (And would he counter this with talk of an earth barely cool from creation?)

‘Surely not!’ he said, evidently delighted, though attempting to conceal it. ‘Surely not! Well – if you say so, Mrs Seaborne: I bow to your knowledge.’ And indeed he did bow, standing, and holding the crumbling bit of mud out as he did so, and placing it on the mantelpiece with a reverence that was only partly mocking.

‘Will,’ said Cora: ‘How did you come to be here?’ She spoke with a kindly hauteur very like that of a minor royal greeting dignitaries at the opening of a library; they both heard it, and smiled.

‘Here, you mean?’ he said, taking in the uncurtained window which overlooked the lawn, the pot of leaking pens, the several drawings of mechanical devices which served no purpose other than to turn and turn.

‘Here, I mean! Here, in Aldwinter – you ought to be elsewhere – Manchester, London, Birmingham – not always fifty paces from a rural church with no equal near to hand! If I met you elsewhere I would think you a – a lawyer, or an engineer, or a government minister – what, did you vow to take holy orders at fifteen, when you were a child, and were afraid to break your promise in case you were struck by lightning for your betrayal!’

Leaning against the windowsill Will surveyed his guest, and frowned. ‘Am I really so interesting – did you never meet a clergyman before?’

‘Oh – I am sorry – do you mind?’ said Cora. ‘I have met more clergymen than I care to remember, but you surprise me: that’s all.’

He shrugged, elaborately. ‘You are a solipsist, Mrs Seaborne – can you really not imagine that I might take a path which differs from yours and be happy walking there?’

No, she thought: no, I cannot.

‘I’m not an unusual or interesting man. You’re mistaken if you think so. For a time I wanted be an engineer, and revered Pritchard and Brunel, and once skipped school and travelled by train all the way to Ironbridge, and made drawings of the rivets and struts; I’d sit bored in class and make plans for box-girder bridges. But in the end it was purpose I wanted, not achievement – you see the difference? I have a good enough mind – if I’d played my cards right I could even now be sitting on the back benches debating some minor point of law – wondering whether it’s turbot for dinner and has Ambrose found another parliamentary candidate and ought I to go to Drury Lane or the Mall for dinner. But it chills me. Give me an afternoon guiding Cracknell back to the God who never left him over a thousand Drury Lane dinners. Give me an evening with the Psalms on the saltings and the sky breaking open over a thousand walks in Regency Park.’ He could not remember having ever spoken so long on the subject of himself, and wondered how she’d contrived to make him do so. ‘Besides,’ he said, a little irritated: ‘I have an equal in Stella.’

‘I think it a shame, that’s all.’

‘A shame!’

‘Yes – a shame. That in the modern age a man could impoverish his intellect enough to satisfy himself with myth and legend – could be content to turn his back to the world and bury himself in ideas which even your father must have thought outdated! Nothing is more important than to use your mind to its last degree!’

‘I’ve turned my back on nothing – I have done the reverse. Do you think everything can be accounted for by equations and soil deposits? I am looking up, not down.’ There again was another of those little alterations in the air, as if the pressure had dropped, and a storm was coming: each was aware of having grown angry with the other, uncertain why.

‘You certainly don’t seem to be looking outward – I know that at least!’ Cora found herself braced against the arms of her chair, wanting to be a little unkind: ‘What do you know of England now, of how the roads are laid, and where they’re going – of places in the city where children have never seen the Thames – never seen a patch of grass. How content you must be, reciting your Psalms to the air, and coming home to a pretty wife and books that left the press three hundred years ago!’ It was unjust, she knew; she faltered a little, wanting neither to retreat nor press on. And if she’d intended to infuriate her host she succeeded; he said, with a sharpness to his voice on which she could have cut herself, ‘How perceptive of you, to have my character and motives sketched out on our third meeting.’ Their gazes met. ‘It is not I who goes grubbing about in the mud for scraps of dead things – it’s not I who has run away from London and lost myself in a science I barely understand.’

‘True,’ said Cora. ‘Oh well, true enough!’ and smiled; and the effect was to disarm him completely.