Fortunately there was not a great deal that was not entailed.
But things that had belonged to his mother had gone and his father’s superb collection of snuffboxes of which he had been exceedingly proud.
Early next morning, after a sleepless night, the Earl drove into Oxford to see his father’s Solicitors.
It had not been a fast journey.
There were only two horses left in the stable, which had been kept by his uncle for him to use up to the last minute before he disappeared. They were getting on in age and would travel only at a pace that suited them.
Without any help the Marlows had looked after Basil Burne as best they could.
He told them bluntly that they could stay with him and he would provide their board and lodging, but they would have no wages.
“No wages!” the Earl exclaimed in horror.
“What could we do, my Lord?” Marlow asked. “If we left, it meant the workhouse.”
“I cried and cried and pleaded with him,” Mrs. Marlow joined in, “but he wouldn’t listen. There was no one we could turn to for help.”
“What did the Vicar have to say to all this?” the Earl asked.
“Oh, he left a year after your Lordship went to India,” Marlow replied. “Mr. Basil told him he wouldn’t pay his stipend so there be nothing he could do but go.”
“So you mean the Church is closed.”
“Someone comes from the other Parishes about once a month. Otherwise the Vicarage be shut up and I’m not sure who has the key of the Church.”
When the Earl confronted his father’s Solicitors, he had difficulty in choosing his words because he was feeling so angry.
They should at least have written to tell him what was occurring.
The Solicitor facing him across the desk was an elderly man who, he learnt, had at first been entirely hoodwinked by his uncle.
“He told me, my Lord, that things were difficult on the Stock Exchange,” the Solicitor said, “and a great number of your father’s investments had fallen in value. So he thought it only right that he should economise.”
“Do you realise,” the Earl asked him angrily, “that the pensioners have not been paid for three weeks and before that they were receiving only a pittance? I gather that they are now on the verge of starvation.”
“I did not know that, my Lord,” the Solicitor replied. “Of course when the news came through that the Viceroy had been murdered, your uncle would have then expected that your Lordship would come home.”
“So he then took everything that he had not taken already,” the Earl said sharply. “The servants tell me that he has gone to America.”
“If that is true,” the Solicitor answered, “it will be extremely difficult to get hold of him. America is a very large country and so it would cost your Lordship a great deal of money to bring a case against him.”
“Which, as you are well aware,” the Earl retorted, “I do not now have.”
As he drove back to The Castle, he wondered despairingly what he could do.
He had travelled home comfortably and had had a number of things to pay for in India before he left.
He had taken only a little money with him when he went out in the first place.
He then relied on his salary for all that he required.
The Viceroy had been most particular in not allowing his young aides-de-camp to run up large debts.
He made it possible for them to have ample pocket money while everything else, more or less, was provided for them.
The Earl realised now that he had nothing in the Bank and his entire fortune, if that was the right word for it, consisted of under twenty pounds.
He had intended to cash a cheque at his Bank in London.
However in the end he had just boarded the first train that would bring him back to The Castle.
‘What am I to do? What the devil am I to do?’ he asked himself over and over again.
He knew frantically that he had to do something.
Then suddenly he felt as if the man he had loved and admired so much was guiding him.
‘There must be someone,’ he told himself, ‘from whom I can borrow enough to at least keep my people from starving.’
He had not missed, as he drove through the village, that the cottages all needed the thatch on their roofs to be repaired.
Windows were broken, gates were falling down and it was so obvious that not a spot of paint had been applied in the four years that he had been away.
He remembered that in his father’s day the village had been one of the prettiest in the whole County and people who had come to gaze at The Castle always admired the village as well.
Now the only word to describe the situation was ‘appalling’.
“I must have money,” the Earl said and it was a cry for help.
It was then that he knew the answer.
Adjoining his estate was that of Lord Frazer.
He was an enormously rich man whose father had made a fortune in shipping.
He had come down from the North because he wished his son, who had been to Oxford University, to get to know the right people.
The present Lord Frazer had quarrelled with his neighbour, the tenth Earl of Rayburne, over a wood.
It was a very fine wood on the boundary between the two estates.
The Earl of Rayburne, Michael’s father, had said that without question it belonged to him and always had.
Lord Frazer had contested this by producing an ancient map and it depicted the wood as belonging to what was now the Frazer Estate.
The two old gentlemen fought fiercely for what they each believed to be their rights.
Shortly before his death, his father had told him that he was still getting rude letters from Lord Frazer, complaining that their gamekeepers had been in Duncans Wood and interfering with his game.
“His game indeed!” the Earl had exclaimed. “I have never heard such impertinence in my life! Those pheasants have been ours since the thirteenth century and no amount of maps will ever convince me that I am wrong.”
When Michael left for India, he had forgotten about Duncans Wood.
Now he thought that if he agreed to let Lord Frazer take it once and for all as part of his estate, he might lend him enough money to take his own land back to normal.
He had no idea what it would cost, but it would be a large amount.
At least his experience in India with the Viceroy had taught him how to make fertile an area of land that was growing nothing.
Natives who had very little knowledge of farming were shown how to produce crops and carry livestock successfully and the means by which the Viceroy had succeeded in the famine areas made him feel that he could do the same.
After all the Rayburne Estate was not as large as India.
The Earl, therefore, told the old groom, who was driving him, to proceed to Watton Hall.
Wicks, who had been with his father for over twenty years, said with the familiarity of an old servant,
“Your Lordship won’t get no change out of that Master of Watton Hall. He’s been a-fightin’ against us ever since he come there.”