Tuesday 27 August 2013

11. Darjeeling is Entertained

THE GREAT TAMASHA COOKBOOK AND FAMILY
HISTORY
11


Darjeeling Is Entertained

Spiced Beef With Vinegar
(A recipe from a dear Anglo-Indian friend)
 

Cut the meat up, salt a little, turn it into a bowl, & just cover with vinegar. Sprinkle well with mixed spices. This may be kept for several days without ice, even in the hottest weather. When ready to use, fry with tomatoes and onions. Our dear friend’s husband used to say: “Those who say that you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar can never have tasted this dish!”

Introductory Note by Katy Widdop:
    From this point on, we found that large pieces of the manuscript, Our India Days, were missing. They seemed to be largely the old ladies’ accounts of the old days in India, whereas Antoinette’s descriptions of the scenes at Tamasha in the 1860s were all present, as far as we could tell, and we eventually came to the conclusion that Antoinette had written her notes that were meant to be interspersed with the India story in a block, intending to interfile them with the transcriptions of the great-aunts’ stories that she’d worked on at Tamasha. Whatever then happened in her life—we think it was the Boer War,* judging from the date of the manuscript—stopped her from consolidating all the scripts.
* Antoinette would have been about 50 in 1899. The Thomas family papers from Jane and Bill Cooper reveal that her oldest son, Michael, was killed in the Boer War. –Julie Darling.
    However, the Thomas family papers from Jane and Bill Cooper were a huge help in filling in some of the gaps: Madeleine Thomas seems to have been terrifically impressed both by Ponsonby sahib in person and by the Lucas sisters’ description of Collector John Widdop: she wrote what read like verbatim transcriptions of everything that was said by Ponsonby or about Widdop to her sister, Adelaide. (Adelaide’s replies are mostly recipes for jam and household hints for getting spots off linen, etc!) So we’ve more or less got Ponsonby sahib’s own words, including his amusing stories of Indian life and his version of old Indian tales.
    As well, we were thrilled to discover that the tin trunk contained several volumes of Collector Widdop’s journal (diary). A lot of the earlier volumes were just notes of what happened in his District—interesting historical documents but not relevant to our story. But  his account of the goings-on in Darjeeling that year is extremely relevant and so we’ve drawn on it a lot, in some places quoting it in full and in others using it to flesh out the narrative. As you’ll see, he was a really lovely man and we’re proud to have him as an ancestor.
    Even Charles concluded: “Cripes, what a decent bloke, eh?” This was after he’d found a new girlfriend through the blog, and to a certain extent it was at her prompting, but for a 21st-century, Generation-Y kid like Charles, it was a huge step in the right direction! Up until about then we’d all assumed he was interested in two things: his ruddy degree, it’s something incomprehensible to do with microorganisms that attack blue crabs—there are lots of blue crabs off the coast of South Australia, true—and surfing. With girls, at least a permanent relationship with one that might entail his moving out of his old mum’s house, coming a poor third. By the time we got to this chapter a few more people were starting to read the blog—Julie and Cassie were ecstatic, of course, so I didn’t point out that so far they’d had emails from two people. Well, you could count Jane and Bill as two rather than one, but it was a joint email, wasn’t it?
    Sally Ponsonby was the other. She’d been surfing the Net, looking for stuff on her family history, and though she worked out that it wasn’t the same Ponsonbys, she got all interested in the blog and got in touch. As she’s a history student, and was just about to finalise her subject for her Ph.D., she wanted to come over to Adelaide to talk to Julie about it in person. She’s from Sydney, did I say? Easier than nipping over from the other side of the world—right. Anyway, she’d’ve either had to come over on the red-eye and go straight back the same night or sleep at a hotel, which being a student she couldn’t have afforded, of course, so Cassie said: “No way! She can stay with us. You can collect her from the airport, Charles, you’re not doing anything.”—Whinge, whinge, whinge. His car was in dock. (The ruddy thing’s always in dock.)—He could take Cassie’s.—He couldn’t spare the time from his Ph.D.—A blatant lie, as Cassie pointed out, also pointing out that if he wanted to be fed in future he could get off his bum and BE OF SOME HELP! He did point out that he’d transcribed pages and pages of horrible male writing that none of us had managed to read but Cassie just ignored the whole bit and he gave in. Well, at the time, she was working on a new recipe for chicken vindaloo in my kitchen and the smell was miraculous!

Cassie’s Easy Chicken Vindaloo
Joint and skin a chicken (or use equivalent chicken thighs/pieces) and soak in 1/2 cup wine vinegar (I use a Belgian red wine vinegar). Leave to stand for at least 1/2 hour. 

Heat a frying pan on medium, add 6 cloves & one 8-cm cinnamon stick, unfurled as much as possible, & heat just until the aromas are released. Add 2 tablespoons olive oil & a 3 to 4 cm piece ginger, peeled & chopped, & fry for a few moments. Lower heat to medium-low & add 2 good teaspoons garlic paste and 1 teaspoon turmeric, stirring till mixed.
Transfer the chicken and the spice mixture to a slow cooker, add half of the remaining vinegar, & cook on LOW for about 6-8 hours. If it looks a little dry add some water, but the finished dish should not have very much liquid.
The result is quite delicate in taste and wonderfully aromatic. (I don’t add salt but you can if you like.) I’ve also done it in the big electric frypan and it works quite well. Let it simmer slowly for at least an hour and a half.

    So Charles went off to the airport and collected Sally and they seem to have hit it off immediately. At any rate, he brought her back to Cassie’s place and actually asked meekly if there was anything he could do to help with breakfast—the poor girl hadn’t had any, she’d had to get up at around four to catch the ruddy red-eye from Sydney, and Cassie had said that of course they’d wait for her, and give her a decent breakfast. So they had pancakes with her special faked-up hot strawberry sauce, just for a treat, and you could have knocked Cassie down with a feather, because over breakfast he actually told Sally proudly about the lovely puris Cassie sometimes makes them for breakfast! (The sauce is really easy, even I can do it.)

Cassie’s Really Easy Hot Strawberry Sauce
  

Just chop the cleaned strawberries roughly, add sugar (I use raw but any will do), and microwave for a few seconds, until it bubbles. You do need to watch it like a hawk, that’s the only trick to it.

    Get this: after the strawberry pancakes Charles volunteered to do the washing up! Usually he orders his mother loftily to bung the stuff in the dishwasher and stop being mean about electricity. Then instead of pushing off to uni he hung round and offered to drive them both over to my place. Well, it was pretty obvious he was really keen. Julie came over, of course, so as she could show Sally her blessed files, and while Charles was proudly showing her the stuff he’d deciphered for us she said in my ear: “Is that girl a miracle worker? What’s come over him?” Well, exactly! She is quite pretty, with nice hazel eyes, the sort that look very clear and somehow honest and straightforward, not the bulgy kind, and short, wavy light brown hair in one of those wispy cuts the girls have been going in for lately, but more than that, she’s one of those—if I used the word “perky” that wouldn’t give quite the right impression. Nor “lively”, either. One of those bright-eyed, slim people who seem really alive is about the closest I can get to it. Julie thought it over for a bit and then she decided that Tiddy Lucas must’ve been a bit like that. Sally’s fairly tall—well, lots of Aussie girls are taller, she’s not very tall, maybe about five-foot-nine (don’t ask me what that is in metric!) while we know that Tiddy was short, but yes, I’d say she’s right.
    It hasn’t gone anywhere as yet, it’s a bit soon for that, but Sally got really keen on the project and took loads of notes and spent ages and ages talking to Julie about her thesis subject, and promised she’d be back soon, so it’s looking good! And she’s given Charles her phone number. And he actually said if she can’t make it back here he might go over there at Easter. Mind you, after she’d gone home Julie put her great foot in her mouth by saying to him: “See? It just shows what happens when you get involved with the rest of the world instead of sitting in your room with your head in your computer all day and night,” but he just laughed and said: “Knock it off, Aunty Julie!”
    Sorry, I meant to say, the recipe for the puris is the one we’ve put in Chapter 2, “Poorees of White Flour (A Breakfast Dish)”. Cassie does them in a non-stick pan lightly sprayed with cooking oil. A lot of recipes say to deep-fry them, and they are nice like that, but she’s trying to cut down on using lots of oil.
    When you read this chapter you’ll see why we’ve started it with the vindaloo-type recipe where Antoinette mentions catching flies with honey! There sure were some honey-traps being laid in Darjeeling that year—and a fair amount of vinegar around, too!

From the unfinished MS., circa 1899: Our India Days
Chapter 11: More Darjeeling Days;
Together With Some Curious Indian Tales
    Indeed, Madeleine, dear, it was so delightful to have Ponsonby sahib’s company yesterday, was it not? And his knowledge of all the personalities concerned greatly enlivened the story, did it not? Naughty man! –Such a pity you missed him, Mr Thomas. No, no, dear sir, it was not too much for him at all—he keeps very well in the warmer weather, you know, and in spite of the good doctor’s orders often rises early and takes a little constitutional in the grounds. Yes, as Tiddy says, in order to present a convincing appearance of an elderly gentleman who is strictly obeying his medical man’s orders when poor Dr Fortescue calls at ten!
    Now, this afternoon the children and our dear Ponsonby sahib have gone for an elephant ride—they have decided the gazebo on the far side of the lake is an elephant, Mr Thomas, and it is certainly as ornate as any howdah we ever saw, so why not? We were planning to reveal the solution to the mystery of who exactly held the title deeds to the Widdop bungalow, but perhaps Mr Thomas will not find it interesting, girls, so— You caught up with Antoinette’s notes this morning, Mr Thomas? And cannot wait to have that mystery resolved, as also the puzzle of who was Mrs Allardyce’s mysterious seductress? Very well, then, if you are quite sure, dear sir—yes, by all means pull up that little table for Antoinette, thank you! Oh, thank you, Madeleine, dear, that new parasol of Tess’s does have a very stiff catch. There, now! Most comfortable! Now, it is more tiffin and verandahs, we fear!


    Emily Carruthers had refused nimboo panee but allowed the meek Violet Allardyce to provide her with a cup of tea instead. Now she looked disdainfully at the tray of sujee cakes proffered by Mrs Allardyce’s own Kamala and said: “Oh—native food. No, take them away, ayah.”
    Grimly Tiddy ordered, just as Violet was opening her mouth: “Do not dare to apologise, Violet, nor to offer her anything else. She has lived in the country all her life.”
    “My dear Tiddy,” said Emily, looking down her nose, which was certainly substantial enough to make the gesture easy, “that does not mean that one has to lower one’s standards.”
    “Um, they’re very nice, Emily,” offered Harriet Doolittle uneasily.
    “Oh, pooh!” said Emily with a shrug. “I must say, one of the great benefits of staying at a pleasant hotel is that one can order up nice food whenever one cares, and is not at the mercy of frightful native bearers who think that being in one’s service forever entitles them to rule the roast. You would not believe the things that Mamma’s ghastly Ram Gopal and that dreadful old woman who was Martha’s ayah attempt to get away with. Why Mamma does not send the old creature packing I cannot imagine: she does nothing but sit around eating night and day, embarrassing one when one is attempting to entertain one’s friends.”
    “This is the same old ayah who saved Martha and Julian Carruthers’s lives in the big cholera epidemic when they were three and five, an I mistake not,” noted Tiddy grimly.
    Harriet was very red. “Um, yes!” she gasped. “Of course! Mrs Carruthers could not possibly sack her, Emily!”
    “Pooh,” said Emily, pouting.
    “Cook might be able to provide some sandwiches,” said Violet limply.
    “Rubbish,” said Tiddy grimly. “There is plenty here. And if Cook’s sujee cakes are good enough for your Mamma and Collector Widdop, they are certainly good enough for her.”
    Emily’s teacup became suspended halfway to her mouth. “Collector Widdop has called?”
    “Only for tiffin,” said Violet in a small voice.
    “Good heavens!” she said, sipping the tea.
    Violet was very flushed. “Mamma has known him since she was a girl,” she said in a defiant voice.
    Emily lowered the cup. “I am very sure she has, my dear Violet.”
    Tiddy glared but could think of no retort, and Violet and Harriet just stared glumly into their laps, so Emily, very satisfied, sipped the tea again and pronounced it to be very tolerable. And refrained for at least ten minutes from producing the further remark:
    “What a busy man Collector Widdop is, to be sure.”
    The other girls had thought the subject safely turned to the oddness of Mrs Mollison’s clothes and the more general oddness of Mrs Mollison, for cigarillos were such horrid, smelly things, and they jumped.
    Then Tiddy said firmly: “To be successful at his job, a Collector must be.”
    Emily gave a titter. “Not that! Goodness, what a child you still are, my dear Tiddy! No, finding the time to visit with Mrs Turner, and of course her sister-in-law, Miss Turner, so kind, for she does not receive many visits, and also with Violet’s Mamma, and escorting Mrs Matcham and Lady Anna Lovatt to dinner with Colonel and Mrs Wendell-Fiennes, and finding the time to tool Lady Caroline Armstrong about the town in his tonga, well, possibly his brother’s tonga, since he is not up here so very much himself, but at all events the Widdop bungalow tonga, so kind, for of course Lady Armstrong is rather occupied with Miss Armstrong, and I am sure Lady Caroline would be thrown quite on her own resources, otherwise—and still finding the time to offer delightful little dinners to Mrs Mollison at the hotel!” She gave them a triumphant look.
    “Given that you used the phrase ‘finding the time to’ at least thrice, that information was not such a sophisticated offering as you apparently imagine it to have been, Emily,” said Tiddy grimly to the smirk.
    “No, indeed,” agreed Harriet Doolittle bravely. “And pray do not believe her implication that Mrs Mollison did anything so shocking as to dine alone with the Collector, girls, because it was no such thing. It was the public dining-room, and Lady Anna Lovatt and her brother, Lord Freddy, and the Collector’s brother and Mrs Matcham were there also! And—and they are all adult people,” she said on a defiant note, “and the ladies are widows, and—and must be supposed to be old enough to—to please themselves!”
    “They are certainly old enough to do that!” agreed Emily with a snigger. “And more than old enough to refer to Lord Frederick Dewhurst by his pet-name, though I confess myself surprised to find you consider yourself so, Harriet. Or is it that you feel you have become close enough with him, in the short period of time you have known him?”
    “I met him in Calcutta!” said Harriet loudly, very red-faced.
    “Well, yes. And of course the two years between you has not diminished since, so I dare say you may well feel at ease to take the liber—”
    Harriet bounced to her feet. “You are an unspeakable cat, Emily Carruthers, and I am not at all interested in Lord Frederick, and if you think he will look twice at you, you are very much mistaken!” Forthwith she rushed into the house.
    There was a moment’s stunned silence on the side verandah of the Allardyce House. Tiddy Lucas, for one, found she was wishing that Mrs Allardyce were not so complaisant in the matter of her daughter’s entertaining her own friends in private.
    Violet rose uncertainly. “Perhaps I should—um—”
    “She will have run home. It is only a step to the hotel. They only took a tonga because of Someone’s consequence,” said Tiddy, getting up. “You may go away, Emily Carruthers, and do not bother to favour us with your spite again, thank you. And if your Mamma wonders why you are no longer welcome at Mrs Allardyce’s house, you have my permission to give her the full story.”
    Emily got up uncertainly, looking at Violet. “It is not your say-so, Tiddy Lucas!”
    “You had better go, please, Emily,” said Violet in a tiny voice. “And—and I’m very sorry.”
    “No, you’re not,” said Tiddy, putting a sustaining arm round her.
    “Um, no, I meant about Lord Freddy,” said Violet, still in the tiny voice.
    “‘Freddy!’” cried Emily angrily, suddenly turning crimson. “You are as bad as she is! Very well, I shall go, and don’t think that Mamma will invite you or your sisters, Tiddy Lucas, when Julian comes home!” And she flounced off.
    “Goodness, never tell me she affects Freddy Dewhurst, too?” said Tiddy with a laugh.
    “Mm.”
    “Well! Now, never tell me you said it on purpose!”
    “Um—yes,” admitted Violet.
    Tiddy gave her a hug. “Good for you!” she said gaily. “Well, Emily always was a cat, and if her nose is out of joint because Freddy D. hasn’t looked twice at her, I dare say we may expect her to get worse before she gets better!”
    “Mm.”
    Tiddy looked hard at her. “That stuff about the Collector and your Mamma was only rubbish, you know, Violet. It is just that your Mamma has so much charm: the cats and the dull puddings alike are all jealous of her.”
    “Yes, it is only that, isn’t it?” she said gratefully.
    “Of course.” Tiddy sat down again and reached for the plate, cordially inviting her hostess’s daughter to join her, and the two maidens finished the sujee cakes.

Sujee Cakes
Mix 1 cup of sujee [semolina] in a saucepan with  2 cups of milk. Add the milk gradually to make sure that no lumps are formed. Stir in 1 tablespoon of melted butter and 2 tablespoons of sugar (or more, to taste). Boil till the mixture thickens very much, stirring constantly to prevent sticking. Allow this mixture to cool. Then briskly mix in 2 beaten eggs & the seeds of 10 elaychee pods [cardamoms], ground. Cool further.* Now heat yr. frying oil & fry spoonsful of the cold sujee mixture till golden on both sides. Remove & drain. Serve these cold for [afternoon] tea.
* It must be completely cold or the sujee cakes tend to fall apart when fried. -Cassie Babbage


    Naturally speculation about the various persons up in the hills that season was also engaging older and possibly wiser heads.
    “I had heard,” said Miss MacDonnell on a dubious note, “that Collector Widdop was very much interested in Lady Caroline Armstrong.”
    In the deep shade of Miss MacDonnell’s deodar tree, Mlle Dupont peered at her uncertainly. “Eugh—well, he was seen driving her, I think, Miss MacDonnell.”
    “More than once, chère Mlle Dupont!” contributed Mr Sebastian Whyte with a giggle. “The Widdop tonga has scarce had two hours’ rest together since he arrived!”
    “That,” said Miss MacDonnell on a very weak note, “is a naughty exaggeration, dear Mr Whyte.”
     —Malcolm, dear boy, we thought you were playing with the others? Matt sent you for the tiger? Dearest child, it must have been a joke! Is Ponsonby sahib not still with you? He’s in charge of the guns? Do you mean he is still in the gazebo with the other children? Yes, on the elephant, of course, we do apologise! He said that the tiger is in the libr—Oh, good gracious, the old tiger-skin rug! Yes, as your Great-Aunt Tiddy says, Ponsonby sahib is misremembering: it was in the library at Ma Maison. Our Grandfather Pointer shot it, years and years before any of us were born—yes, from the back of an elephant, Malcolm, that’s quite right!


    Not on the floor, no: Great-Aunt Tonie is correct in saying it used to be draped over a sofa, the head leering quite horridly at one—surely it was not missing a glass eye back then, was it? Well, perhaps it was! Ponsonby sahib had it out for the children when? Well, yes, your Papa would have been about your age, Malcolm, Josie’s children very often came to stay… But where is it? In the India bedroom, Antoinette? –It has a ridiculously ornate carved and inlaid bed, Mr Thomas, which was presented to our father by an Indian rajah who apparently believed that an English bed had to be an immense four-poster surmounted by a positive cupola! Mamma tried to persuade him to leave it behind in Calcutta but dearest Papa loved his joke: he had it dismantled, with every last peg labelled and numbered, and brought it home express, or such was his claim, to invite the Duke of Wellington to sleep in it! –No. Malcolm, dear, the Duke never stayed here, but Ponsonby sahib’s dear friend the Earl of Sleyven certainly slept in it whenever he visited: he had just such a sense of humour, too! Why, of course: he used to play at tiger hunts with the little ones, such a dear man: the rug must be in that room! Take Malcolm up, Antoinette, dear, he will not know which room it is.
    …Help, help, a tiger! –Yes, a ferocious tiger, Malcolm! You look very lifelike indeed! But is not the skin horridly heavy? It will certainly give them a scare, yes, but dear boy, you do realise that the inevitable result of a tiger hunt is that the poor tiger is shot? –Roll over with your paws in the air? Er, very well, dear, if you wish to be the tiger… Well, at least they are letting him play. The skin will not really scare the little girls, Mr Thomas, though we may well hear the screams: but you see, that is their way of enjoying themselves, at that age! Er, yes, and as dearest Tiddy says, sometimes at a later age, too! And, indeed, in comparison to the social amusements of Darjeeling in its season, not even a tiger shoot in an English garden could be called silly!


    Mlle Dupont and the girls had volunteered for barouche duty. Mademoiselle had reproved Tiddy for the phrase, but without her customary conviction, for really, driving out with Mrs Allardyce now that the town was so full had become, it was not putting it too strongly, a positive penance. Usually they at least managed to get out of their own gateway in peace, but not today! True, it was only a Sub-Lieutenant Jones and a scarcely more fledged Lieutenant Macdonald, but Mrs Allardyce greeted them with as much delight as if they had been—well, to put it as charitably as one reasonably could, fully-blown colonels about to retire to large English country estates. “Who were they?” said Violet limply as the two young men went on their way, very pink in the region of the ears.
    “My darling girl, you met them at Mrs Colonel Cornell’s little hop! Now, the Jones boy is nothing very much, but of course his father is that delightful ‘Jonesy’, as everyone calls him, with John Company! And Bobby Macdonald is one of the Macdonalds! Well, a cousin of a cousin, but—”
    They had actually reached the corner of Trafalgar Grove before a very senior officer was sighted. In company with a couple of very junior ones, who, it appeared, did not count. Though she was very, very charming to them. “Mamma, pray do not claim I have met them before,” said Violet limply at long last.
    “What?” she said vaguely, smiling. “Oh! No, well, of course you have met General Sir Michael Trandor, the dear man: though as you were in your cradle at the time, I shall allow it not to count! Then he was sent up the country, and my dears, what a stir that caused! Because of course he had been at Corinna Frayn’s feet, and everyone said that ‘Poppy’ F. had had him sent, you know, and then, there was the added complication of Mrs Medway…”

"General Sir Michael Trandor, K.C.M.G., upon the Occasion
of his Engagement to Lady Caroline Armstrong"
Oil on canvas, 1832, by Frederick Greenstreet
(Formerly in the Trandor Collection)
Courtesy of the Maunsleigh Collection
    She shook her head, sighed, smiled and gave herself a little shake. “Well! It was years back, my dearest, and of course, once he was there, and the Maharajah—such a cultivated man—determined on marrying him to his daughter, it was a different story entirely! But I shall allow you not to have met those boys before!” She smiled kindly at her.
    “What?” said Violet limply. “Oh! Um, yes. Um, shall you, Mamma? Thank you.”
    Mrs Allardyce patted her hand lightly. “But you shall have the pleasure of meeting them again, at General Hay’s ball, I promise you!”—Violet smiled palely, not pointing out that they would not remember her, or not notice her if they did remember her.—“And you, of course, Tiddy,” she said kindly.
    Then a madly-signalling tonga forced them to pull up, and the grinning Major Mason jumped off the back of it in company with another major, and the driver, not a native but another major, unceremoniously dumped the reins on his startled companion and leapt down, also grinning— “What,” said Tiddy thoughtfully as at long last the barouche proceeded on its way, with Mrs Allardyce in possession of a bunch of flowers which quite undoubtedly had originally been intended for some other lady entirely, “is the collective noun for a group of majors, I wonder?”


    “That other man,” said Violet weakly, “was a medical man, Tiddy.”
    “Young Dr Hethersett; I remember his father,” said Mrs Allardyce dreamily, sniffing the flowers. “Mmm… Lovely. I wonder whom the naughty fellow bought them for?” she added with a gurgle. “—Mountain, Tiddy?” she said dreamily.
    Tiddy jumped. “I beg your pardon, ma’am?”
    “A mountain of majors?” suggested Mrs Allardyce, twinkling at her over the flowers.
    “They certainly gave that impression,” admitted Tiddy feebly.
    “Um, yes, but it isn’t very military. I would just have said, a regiment,” Violet offered.
    “Expectable, darling,” murmured her mother.
    Tiddy’s eyes narrowed. “A medley?”
    Mrs Allardyce’s delicious silvery laugh rang out upon the warm Darjeeling air. “Lovely! Take these, darling,” she added in a vague voice, dumping the flowers suddenly on her daughter. “Syce! Pull up! I declare, it is Commander Voight in person! But it cannot be! What are you doing in the hills, you naughty man?”

"Voight ready to woo the ladies"
Sketch, pencil & watercolour, from John Widdop's jouranl, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
    “—So far from the sea,” muttered Tiddy, sotto voce, allowing her chin to sink onto her chest and her person to slump down—
    “Sit up straight, Tiddy! You are a young lady now!”
    “Oui, Mademoiselle.” Tiddy sat up straight and prepared to smile at, for a change, a naval gentleman of somewhat advanced years who was now fawning over Mrs Allardyce’s hand. Yes, fawning: there was no other possible word. For they were all, young or old, and whatever the colour of the uniform, entirely at Mrs Allardyce’s feet.
    The following day, Miss Martinmass having demanded the entire report, Tiddy gave it. “We bought half a dozen handkerchiefs. The whole expedition taking us just under three hours.”
    “Three?”
    “Just under.”
    Miss Martinmass tried to envisage it and failed. “But the town is so very sm—Stay! You called somewhere, did you not?”
    “No,” said Tiddy baldly.
    “Just at Miss MacDonnell’s, for a rest in the sh—”
    “No.”
    “Three hours,” she muttered dazedly. “Did you get as far as Long Reach Villa, then?”
    “No,” said Tiddy baldly.
    “She is,” said Miss Martinmass very weakly indeed, “a very popular lady.”
    “Yes. It certainly gave the lie to the story of Collector Widdop’s fascination by Lady Caroline Armstrong, for they were chatting together outside Madame Lucille’s, but he abandoned her in the most brazen fashion to mount into the barouche with us.”
    “No!” she gasped.
    “Well,” said Tiddy meanly, “it is a commodious vehicle: it could not have been thought inconvenient.”
    “Silly one,” returned Miss Martinmass tolerantly.
    “Sorry! He’s quite a lot younger than his brother, is he not?”
    “Yes,” said the squashed Miss Martinmass, blushing very much. 

"The martyred Miss M."
Sketch, watercolour, pen & ink, from John Widdop's journal, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
    Oh, dear. Tiddy had not suspected her of— She had now realised that in spite of Mrs Martinmass’s known preference, Miss Martinmass did not want the elderly Major-General Widdop. But his brother was a very different kettle of fish and, when one thought about it, why should Miss Martinmass be the only unmarried lady in British India not to realise it? Oh, dear. Quickly she said: “Well, large families, I suppose.”
    “Of course. Why, there were eleven sisters!” she said, brightening.
    Smiling bravely, Tiddy allowed Miss Martinmass to give her chapter and verse on the eleven Widdop sisters. Doubtless it was her just punishment for having been so heedless as to voice her thought without first asking herself what might be Miss Martinmass’s reaction to it.
    —No, no, Mr Thomas, we shall not reveal at this point whether Lady Caroline Armstrong were she! And you must not think to catch us out by asking in such a demure tone! Now, what came next, Tiddy, dearest? Oh, yes: Lady Cartwright had got up a picknick. Nothing below the rank of collector? Almost! A few junior souls had been invited in order to make it seem as if the thing were not got up express to allow the senior strata of hill station society to behave in a manner unbecoming to their years and stations in life. Sops, in fact, to Cerberus.

Extract from a letter to Miss Lucas from Tiddy Lucas,
from “The Allardyce House, Trafalgar Grove, Darjeeling”,
found in the tin trunk in poor condition
    One of the sops swiftly enough cut out another from the herd and sequestered it on a rug under a shady tree. The conversation then did not go in the direction which, it was clear, he had intended. And Charlie Hatton said with the suspicion of a pout in his voice: “I don’t see why you’re so interested in Widdop. Or are you at one with the vast majority?”
    “Vast majority of what?” I returned smartly.
    “The fair sex,” said Charlie on a sour note, raising himself on his elbow a little to look with resentment at the spectacle of the top of Collector Widdop’s head, surrounded by a froth of frills and parasols.
    “Not quite. But I can see that he is very charming: I am not wholly impervious!”
    “Fancy,” said Charlie sourly.
    “But my chief fascination with him—” Here I paused artfully.
    “Yes?” he said unwillingly.
    “Is the mystery of who holds the title deeds to the Widdop bungalow, of course! –You  gaby!” added I with a laugh as he grinned sheepishly.
    “You will never solve it,” he noted, rallying.
    “What do you bet I do not?” said I instantly.
    “Oh—the supper dance at General Hay’s ball,” he said on an idle note.
    That is at the end of the week, as I pointed out feebly. As might have been expected, he drawled: “What, no bottle?”
    This of course put me on my mettle. “Very well, I shall do it!”
     Charlie smiled. “You’ll have to get near him first,” he noted, glancing over at the gaggle of fr[ills and parasols]. “And in the unlikely event you win?”
    Beating that pest, Charlie Hatton, and solving the mystery that had engrossed polite Darjeeling society for the last several years would be quite enough for me, I assure you! But I suggested: “Dance the supper dance with Miss Martinmass, Charlie.”
    “I shall not have to,” he noted. “—Done.”

    —Calm down, Antoinette! Great-Aunt Tiddy was more than a match for Charlie Hatton and ever had been! You will see!


Sunday 25 August 2013

10. The Bafflement of Mademoiselle Dupont

THE GREAT TAMASHA COOKBOOK AND FAMILY
HISTORY
10


The Bafflement of Mademoiselle Dupont

Miss MacDonnell’s Delightful Seedy Biscuits

SeedyBiscuitsBKGRDFRAMED.jpg
Wax your trays and if the biscuits to be rolled, have ready a wooden spoon. Against your whole eggs take the same weight of eggs of cleaned sugar, 3 will do for a small batch, and two thirds of fine white flour. Cream all together well. Add a few drops of saunf [aniseed] water if to hand. Spoon out in circles on yr. waxed trays and sprinkle with anise seeds*. Bake in a low oven until pale gold. If desired, roll over the handle of the wooden spoon. Work fast while still hot.
* Miss MacDonnell's recipe uses aniseed because this is readily obtainable in India. Caraway seeds might be used instead. -Cassie Babbage.

From the unfinished MS., circa 1899: Our India Days
Chapter 10: Darjeeling Days (Continued)
    As the Darjeeling season wore on, the weather hotted up and the hills dried out to shades of fawn and dull brown, Miss MacDonnell’s little bungalow, well-known amongst the habitués of the pretty little hill station for its gigantic deodar tree which enveloped her front verandah and, indeed, the whole of her small front lawn in the most deliciously drenching icy shade,  received increasing numbers of visitors.
 
"Bungalows amidst the deodars at the hill station"
Photograph, circa 1880?
Courtesy of Miss Thomas
    Major Mason dropped into a sagging basket chair on the verandah with a sigh of relief. “That’s better! –Thank you, Ashok,” he said as a bowing bearer proffered a glass of nimboo panee. “Well, ma’am,” he said to his hostess, “I can reliably report it’s a selection of widows. What is it about the hills that attracts not only your India widow but also your English widow with the reliability of the goat meat stall in the bazaar attractin’ flies?”
     Predictably, Miss MacDonnell squeaked, and held up her hands in protest, and told him that was not nice, dear Major Mason, and giggled delightedly—all in a breath.
     “It’s the climate, I think, Major Mason!” offered Violet Allardyce, also giggling.
     “Oh, is it?” he said in astonishment.
  Predictably, Violet, Miss MacDonnell, Miss Martinmass, Mr Viccy Truesdale and Mr Sebastian Whyte all collapsed in giggles.
     “What sort of widows?” asked Tiddy.
     “Well, India and English, my dear Miss Tiddy,” he explained politely.
    More giggles from the company, whilst Ashok circulated with more nimboo panee, and, since Miss Martinmass’s formidable parent was not present, Miss MacDonnell’s famous little seedy biscuits.
    “No, well,” the Major added: “they was all holding parasols, or had fellows holding parasols over ’em, and then with the dust, they all had veils on their bonnets—”
    “Up at the plantation? What dust?” demanded Tiddy suspiciously.
    “Hey? Oh—Lor’, no, you mistake, Miss Tiddy. I did not trail all the way up there. No, met them at Long Reach Villa, for tiffin.
    “General Hay’s villa is known for its smothering dust!” squeaked the plump, elegant Mr Sebastian Whyte suddenly, collapsing in giggles again.
    The Major grinned tolerantly. “Quite. Well, such was the complaint, I do assure you, and as we inspected the General’s roses, the veils was all lowered.”
    “Stop teasing, you naughty man,” commanded Miss MacDonnell, shaking a bony finger at him, “and tell us at once who they are and what they are like.”
    Giving in, Major Mason admitted: “A Lady Cartwright, heard of her?”
    “General Hay’s sister. Her late husband was a Member of Parliament,” said Miss MacDonnell firmly.
    “Aye, that’ll be it: English widow.” Tiddy choked, and the Major’s eyes twinkled, but he went on smoothly enough: “A Mrs Morrison—no, I have it wrong. Mollison. Claims to be an old India hand. No?” There was general blankness and he added helpfully: “Not young, laugh like a hyena? No, well, s’pose it could apply to any of a round dozen, aye. Got the impression Lady Cartwright couldn’t stand her, not sure if that were good or bad. Oh—claimed to know Mrs Allardyce: ring any bells, Miss Allardyce?”
    Violet admitting it did not, he continued: “Put her down as an India widow, then. A Mrs Fox. No E: I asked her,” he explained modestly. Viccy Truesdale and Tiddy both choked. Grinning, Major Mason explained: “Well, better safe than sorry, y’know. English widow. Not politically connected—I asked her that, too. A Lady Armstrong and a Lady Caroline Armstrong. Sisters-in-law. Handsome pair, if not in the first blush. Both English widows.”
    “I am acquaint with a Hampshire family of the name: I wonder would it be they?” asked Mr Sebastian Whyte with interest.
    “No notion, Sebby, old man. Did your lot have a fellow called Sir George in ’em?”
    Regretfully Mr Sebastian Whyte conceded it could not be the same family—no.
    “That was Lady Armstrong’s husband, y’see. Lady Caroline was married to his brother. She was a Gratton-Gordon: do that ring any—”
    Apparently it did, for there was quite a clamour, which resolved itself into the decision that this Lady Caroline, if not in the first blush, must be a sister rather than a daughter of the present Marquis of Wade. Miss MacDonnell and Mr Sebastian Whyte remembering young Sub-Lieutenant Lord Vyvyan Gratton-Gordon, who had been with dear Colonel Wynton’s regiment for a short while, quite clearly: down to the lovely head of dark curls. And appearing equally gratified by the news that Lady Caroline was also dark.

"Lord Vyvyan Gratton-Gordon"
Oil on canvas, circa 1826, by Frederick Greenstreet
(Formerly in the collection of the Marquis of Wade)
Courtesy of the Maunsleigh Collection
    “That was it, was it?” Tiddy then asked kindly.
    “No need to take that tone, dear Miss Tiddy,” replied the robust Major, greatly injured. “Of course it were not: old Hay has a positive houseful. Um—forget where I was, actually.”
    Promptly Mr Sebastian Whyte listed the widows he had so far named.
    “Thanks, Sebby,” said Major Mason very weakly indeed. “Um, well, there was a Mrs Madge.”
    “Er—is that not a first name, dear Major Mason?” offered Miss MacDonnell dubiously.
    “Oh, is it? Well, dare say I have it wrong,” he said cheerfully.
    “Mrs Madge Something?” suggested Mr Viccy Truesdale helpfully.
    “Viccy, you imbecile, he is doing it to provoke!” cried Tiddy.
    Young Mr Truesdale subsided, grinning sheepishly.
    “Matcham!” produced the Major, unblushing. “Knew it was some name like Madge.”
     “Oh!” cried Violet. “Mrs Matcham! Why, she is a very old friend of Mamma’s!”
     “Oh, aye. India widow, then.”
    “Of course,” said Miss MacDonnell, shaking that bony finger at him again, “you naughty, naughty man! Why, she is one of the Carnacs!”
    “That so, ma’am? She is travelling with a friend, a Lady Anna Lovatt, would she be one of the anybodies?” he asked meekly.
     “Um, no-o,” said the maiden lady uncertainly.
    “Stop it, Major Mason,” ordered Tiddy severely. “She must be a something, if she is Lady Anna, clearly. So you had best tell us and get it over with.”
    “English widow—told you they was all widows, see? Um, well, think somebody mentioned Scotland in that connection. Though it might have been in relation to the husband, come to think of it. Um, no, hang on. Said she was a cousin of the MacInneses.”
    Miss MacDonnell gave a happy gasp. “That is Lord Ivo’s family, and of course dear General Hay’s own Mamma was a MacInnes!”
    “Oh, well, there you are, explains why they was tacked on to Lady Cartwright’s party; must say, I wondered, a bit. Er—well, don’t seem the type, really,” he said under the company’s concentrated stare. “No, well, Mrs Matcham told me she found tea the most borin’ beverage in the world, only two seconds after old Hay had finished telling us how successful Urqhart’s plantation was becomin’ and how interestin’ the visit had been.”
    Several persons choked. After which Miss MacDonnell asked wistfully: “I suppose dear Mr Urqhart was not there in person, was he?”
    “Not this time—would have made it better, though.” Several persons choked again, and the Major added kindly: “No, they tell me Timmy Urqhart’s wife prefers him to stay in England with her. Odd sort of woman she must be, hey?”
    “Stop that at once,” replied Miss MacDonnell severely. “You are too entirely dreadful. What on earth must the girls be thinking of you?”
    “That he is entirely dreadful,” responded Tiddy on a dry note. “Well, does this preponderance of widows indicate that the threatened ball at Long Reach Villa—what a misnomer, Long Reach Palace would be more like it—will not eventuate after all?”
    “Oh, Lor’, no, Miss Tiddy! None of ’em is here to mourn, y’know!”
    “Stop it now, Tom,” said Mr Sebastian Whyte with a laugh in his voice, “or you will go too far. Of course the ball is to be held, my dear Miss Angèle, and you will find that Long Reach Palace,” he added coyly, “is the pleasantest venue imaginable for such an event.”
    “Yes, for dear General Hay has the side verandah positively lined with punkah-wallahs!” added Miss MacDonnell.
       Mr Sebastian Whyte was driven to clear his throat. “Quite.”
    “But if they are all widowed ladies they won’t dance, though, will they?” ventured the misguided Viccy.
    Mr Whyte eyed him drily. “My dear boy, you have failed utterly to seize the essence of our delightful Darjeeling society. Out of course they will all dance.”
    “I see,” he conceded limply. “Um, in that case, Miss Tiddy and Miss Allardyce,” he added quickly, recovering, “might I book all the dances with you now?”
    “They would have to be country dances, if you wish to dance them all with the both of us,” retorted Tiddy while Violet was still giggling. “But I am afraid it would not be the done thing.”
    “Um, no,” he admitted, smiling uncertainly.
    “No: you must have half with Violet, and half with me!” concluded Tiddy cheerfully.
    Forthwith Mr Viccy collapsed into gales of giggles. Gasping through them: “I shall hold you to it, mind!”
    Mr Sebastian Whyte got up and wandered over to Major Mason’s basket chair. Very quietly he said in that gentleman’s ear: “Piqued, repiqued and capotted, I think, Tom?”
    “You’re right, there,” agreed Tom Mason, eyeing the laughing Tiddy ruefully.


    There now commenced the season of our poor dear Mlle Dupont’s bafflement—not an emotion to which she was accustomed. She was, of course, completely unaware that Miss Allardyce and Miss Angèle Lucas, to name but two, were entirely aware of it and entirely entertained by it. Mademoiselle could not determine at all which one it was, that Mrs Allardyce intended should distract Charlie Hatton! Of the crowd of widows visiting at Long Reach Villa, Mrs Allardyce seemed to be closely acquaint with at least half, and if these were not all in the first blush, they were not all completely over the hill, either. Eventually she gave in and asked her maddening hostess, but that lady just murmured serenely: “Wait and see.”
   There were certainly plenty of opportunities for observation, for the hill station was now crammed with the fashionable and not-quite-so-fashionable of Anglo-India, and there were picknicks and parties galore, not to mention the inevitable sessions, whether officially for tiffin or no, upon the verandahs.
    Mrs Carruthers and Mrs Doolittle had come up to Darjeeling together this year. They more often went to Patapore but they had made the effort to travel the two hundred miles or so this summer. Though Martha Carruthers and Catherine Doolittle were now safely off their hands, married to, respectively, that George Hilton of John Company and Frederick Dean of the wealthy and knowledgeable Papa who been their constant escorts back in the days of the Ma Maison verandah parties, Emily Carruthers, she who was a year Josie Lucas’s senior, and her friend Harriet Doolittle, a year her elder, were still unattached. The ladies had not rented a bungalow but were staying at the best of Darjeeling’s inns. The which, Mrs Carruthers now owned discontentedly, was a mistake, for it was full of noisy subalterns on leave and the families of minor officials of John Company and—and postal employees’ wives!

"Our hotel at the hill station"
Photograph, circa 1890.
Courtesy of Miss Thomas
    “One in particular,” noted Mrs Doolittle grimly, accepting a cup from the hand of Mrs Allardyce. “Thank you. –A Mrs Potter, the most encroaching creature who ever walked. She had the impertinence to inform us—without having been introduced, I may add—that she was closely acquaint with a Lady Carruthers living in Sussex, and was it a relation?”
    “Impertinence, indeed,” agreed Mrs Allardyce smoothly.
    “Was it a relation, dear Mrs Carruthers?” asked Mrs Georgina Matcham with a smile in her deep, velvety voice.
    “Certainly not! Horace comes from a well-respected Derbyshire family. And in my opinion, Mrs Matcham, the person exists only in Mrs Potter’s imagination, and not in Sussex at all!”
    Mrs Matcham smiled, the deep, glowing dark velvety eyes crinkling in the most entrancing of manners, and gave a little throaty gurgle.
    Miss Allardyce’s and Miss Angèle Lucas’s eyes met, as Mademoiselle’s face was seen to express considerable enlightenment at the entirely charming spectacle of Mrs Matcham’s wonderful glossy dark curls, lovely pink cheeks, and delightful, maturely beckoning curves—not to say at the spectacle of Mr Charlie Hatton, ostensibly present in attendance on Tiddy, giving one of those silly male laughs, the meanwhile looking at the gurgling visitor with blatant admiration writ large on his fair face. Mrs Matcham had been a widow for some years but was still well on the sunny side of forty. Clearly she must be Mrs Allardyce’s contender in the Charles Hatton Stakes!


     Mrs Mollison, the India widow described by Major Mason and reported faithfully at either first- or second-hand by more than one caller at the Allardyce House as being not young and possessed of a laugh like a hyena, was due to call, but Mademoiselle was not interested in the fact: manifestly it could not be she, old friend of Mrs Allardyce or not. She went out, therefore, to pay calls on Mrs Turner and Mrs Martinmass, returning in time to catch the noise from the side verandah. She went on out—
    She blinked. An unknown fair-haired lady of Junoesque appearance, draped, to boot, in something decidedly Grecian-looking, though probably of the best Madras silk, it certainly shimmered richly enough, was seated on the big swing seat that was a feature of the Allardyce House’s side verandah, surrounded, positively surrounded, by smiling gentlemen! Ranging in age from silly little Viccy Truesdale up to Major-General Harkness, who was most certainly old enough to know better! True, one of the admiring male heads was the fair one belonging to Charlie Hatton, but this could not possibly be she, the woman must be within half a dozen years of Mrs Allardyce’s own age.
    “What did you think of Mrs Mollison?” asked Tiddy baba meekly after the visitors’ departure.
    Mademoiselle frowned, and expressed a pithy condemnation of the confection on the head that was scarcely a bonnet, the whole notion of a get-up like a Greek goddess to take tiffin, and the unsuitable cut of that bodice for an afternoon gown.

"La Mollison, à la Grècque"
Sketch, pen & wash, from John Widdop's journal, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
     “Yes, and she does have a strange laugh,” ventured Violet Allardyce meekly. “I suppose one could characterise it as that of a hyena.”
    Replying repressively: “I am not sure what a hyena is, Mlle Violette, but I am not sure, either, that a young lady should mention the point. But for myself, if I were forced to, I should characterise it, rather, as a bray,” Mademoiselle exited, very fortunately missing the spectacle of Miss Allardyce and Miss Angèle Lucas then flinging themselves face-down on two of Mrs Allardyce’s charming sofas and burying the giggles in the cushions...
    “I suppose it is not Mrs Mollison?” said Mademoiselle as Mrs Allardyce prepared to follow the girls upstairs that evening.
    Mrs Allardyce raised her eyebrows at her.
    “She is not even a Lady!” said Mlle Dupont crossly.
    “Er—I assure you— Oh!” she said with a trill of laughter that in its way was wholly as irritating as the bray. “No, Mrs Mollison has not a title, but then she does not need to, my dear: she was a Bon-Dutton. Her papa had the title,” she explained smoothly.
    “I have never heard of—”
    “Lord George Bon-Dutton. His papa, of course, was the Duke of Chelford. Well, my dear, I would not put it beyond her powers.”
    “It will never work!” she hissed. “She is much too old for him!”
    “I think he appeared as fascinated as any of them, though?” she smiled. “Well, we shall see. Do, pray, go before me, chère Mlle Dupont.”
    Baffled, Mademoiselle went upstairs, very fortunately just missing the spectacle of two new muslin party dresses whisking themselves out of sight round the bend in the stairs...


    Mrs Martinmass, Mrs Carruthers and Mrs Doolittle had got together and arranged a picknick. Possibly agreeing amongst themselves, given the facts of Miss Martinmass, Miss Carruthers and Miss Doolittle, not to invite the charming Mrs Matcham—no. Nor yet Mrs Mollison, of whom Mrs Carruthers’s expressed opinion was: “A walking man-trap, my dear Mlle Dupont, and shameless with it. I know not how dear Mrs Allardyce supports her company. And I have it on unimpeachable authority that she smokes a cigarillo after dinner like a man. On poor General Hay’s own balcony!”
    Lady Armstrong and Lady Caroline Armstrong, however, were permitted to come, possibly on account of a meek little Miss Armstrong, not mentioned by Major Mason as forming one of the house party at Long Reach Villa, perhaps because he had overlooked her. She was, admittedly, that sort of girl. Lady Armstrong turned out to be a pleasant, vaguely pretty, vaguely smiling person of quite sufficient years to have a daughter of Miss Armstrong’s age or, for that matter, a son of Charlie Hatton’s, and so was clearly not she. The more so since she was completely matronly in manner.
    Lady Caroline Armstrong, née Gratton-Gordon, however, was quite a different kettle of fish, and long before the picknick was over it was evident that Mademoiselle was possessed of the conviction that it must be she. The dark curls were even glossier than Mrs Matcham’s, the cheeks just as pink, the smile even more beckoning, and the age very much closer to Mr Hatton’s.

"Lady Caroline Armstrong, upon the occasion
of her engagement to Sir Michael Trandor, K.C.M.G."
Oil on canvas, 1832, by Frederick Greenstreet.
(Formerly in the Trandor Collection)
Courtesy of the Maunsleigh Collection
    She professed herself entranced to learn that some of the Darjeeling ladies had known her nephew, Lord Vyvyan, and explained, laughing very much, that of course, they were almost the same age, and it was absurd to think of “darling Vyv” as one’s nephew! Unasked, she revealed that her eldest brother, Wade, was the stuffiest of old fogies and she had barely set eyes on him since marrying “poor darling Jimmy”—the late Mr Armstrong, one presumed. Lady Caroline had a very caressing manner—and in fact it was not confined to manner: she was given to extraneous little pats and strokes as she addressed one. Apparently unaware that it was not quite the done thing to pat a gentleman’s hand or stroke his arm as one spoke to him. Especially on first acquaintance. Charlie Hatton seemed very struck indeed and Viccy Truesdale, to judge by the glowing cheeks and the inability to utter more than stutters in the presence, was completely overcome.
    So it must be she who was intended to distract Charlie Hatton from Tiddy’s fortune! Though, oddly, Mrs Allardyce did not seem to have any previous acquaintance with her. But they certainly had friends in common, so… Well, judging by the way she managed to winkle Mr Charlie out of the company of the other ladies and take him off to inspect a little stream, it was certainly she. Mademoiselle observed Tiddy narrowly during the winkling and the subsequent failure of the pair to reappear for quite some time, unaware, poor little lady, that she in her turn was being observed. Obligingly Tiddy encouraged Major Mason to overstep the line, quite sure that Mademoiselle would conclude that she was doing it to show Mr Charlie that what was sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander.
    Whether as a result of this stratagem or not, Charlie rode back beside the Allardyce House barouche. Mlle Dupont was clearly very puzzled at Mrs Allardyce’s saying cheerfully in front of him, in response to Violet’s admiring the simplicity of Lady Caroline Armstrong’s gown: “Well, my dear, Lady Caroline does not have very much, for her husband was a younger son. And then, you see, though she speaks so lightly of her brother Wade, in fact the family is said to have been quite horrid to her when she married. And there is no doubt that Jimmy Armstrong was a gambler who ran through every penny of her dowry in the first year of marriage. I dare swear she is come out to catch one of our nice India officers, like all the English Misses! But of course you are right, my dear: that gown was charming in its simplicity: she most certainly knows how to make the best of what she has.”
    Poor Mlle Dupont spent the remainder of the journey home in what was very evidently a baffled silence.


    “General Porton does not often hold a dinner, so one is very flattered to be invited,” explained Mrs Allardyce solemnly, a day or two later.
      “Why is he holding this one, ma’am?” asked Tiddy suspiciously.
    Those lovely violet eyes twinkled. “Well, my dear, one is not absolutely sure, but one suspects it is to impress General Hay and his sister with his consequence.”
    “But Mamma, General Porton is retired from his army career,” said her daughter, very puzzled. “Surely General Hay’s opinion can no longer signify to him?”
    “Nevertheless,” she said serenely.
    At this Tiddy went into a helpless giggling fit, emerging from it to mop her eyes and admit: “It is all like that! Just enjoy it for what it is, Violet!”
    “Precisely,” said Mrs Allardyce serenely. “And you must admire the white soup, my dears, because Mrs Porton makes it with her very own hands, but do not on any account mention the fact.”
    “Of course,” agreed Tiddy on a weak note.
    “Best bib and tucker, out of course,” she added graciously, sailing from the room.
    And Tiddy broke down in giggles again, owning as she mopped her eyes again: “I do so adore your Mamma, Violet!”
    “Do you? Good,” said Miss Allardyce thankfully. “I am afraid many persons find her, um, irritating, on closer acquaintance.”
    Tiddy had her suspicions that Mademoiselle was beginning to do so, but refrained from saying so, or from laughing again.
    The company at General Porton’s dinner was very select—very select indeed. Though this could have had something to do with the restricted size of the drawing-room.

"Inconveniences of a Crowded Drawing-Room"
Lithograph, hand-coloured, 1818, by George Cruickshank
Courtesy of the Maunsleigh Collection
    There was scarce anybody there below the rank of brigadier, or collector, if from John Company. Or, if a layman, below the rank of baronet. Tiddy was honoured by being seated at dinner between Brigadier Polkinghorne and Major-General Widdop. His brother, Mr Widdop, was on the opposite side of the table. This latter was not an anomaly: Mr Widdop was a collector, on leave from his District. Unfortunately there was little hope that in the course of the evening Tiddy would manage to find some innocent way in which to ask him whether he still held the title deeds of that bungalow his brother was living in and so triumphantly resolve the greatest mystery vexing the joint minds of Darjeeling.
    The Collector was seated between Mrs Allardyce and that Lady Anna Lovatt who was Mrs Matcham’s travelling companion. Lady Anna was a tall, horse-faced woman, handsome if one liked horses, true, who did not appear impressed by the meek-looking Mr Widdop.
    Mlle Dupont had not been flattered with an invitation—though in certain opinions she should have been, since Mrs Allardyce’s other guest had been—and when the girls returned she came into Tiddy’s room and asked who had been there.
    Nandinee Ayah had accompanied Tiddy baba to Darjeeling in spite of all Mademoiselle could do to stop her—though she had later realised thankfully that Violet Allardyce had one, too, and that Mrs Allardyce apparently accepted the thing as normal. She was now busying herself with brushing out Tiddy’s hair and forcing cups of something suspicious-looking on both her and Violet, who had, it might have occurred to anyone less grimly determined and single-minded than Marie-Louise Dupont, quite probably accompanied Tiddy to her room in the hopes of some private girlish chat.
    “One moment. What is that?” she demanded grimly.
    “It’s only jeeruh panee, dear Mademoiselle!” said Violet quickly.
    “She don’t know it. –Like a soup,” said Tiddy kindly. “Um, thin soup, I’ve forgotten the polite word. In French as well,” she admitted lamely.
    Suspiciously Mademoiselle came to sniff it. She recoiled. “That is not bouillon!”
    “It’s harmless. We’re used to it.” Tiddy grasped the cup tightly.
    “Um, we always had it when we were children… I think they only make it out of water and perhaps some onion and—and what is jeeruh?” said Violet lamely to Tiddy.
    “No notion. A spice, Mademoiselle. Looks a little like caraway,” said Tiddy, still gripping the cup tightly.
    “Ce n’est pas—”
    “Um, no, I know. It’s more savoury,” said Tiddy limply.
    “I suppose if I forbid you to drink it, that woman,” she said with an evil glare at the ayah, “will only come back with more when I am gone.”
     “Of course,” agreed Tiddy.
    “Vairy well, then. But I insist on tasting one of these.” Grimly she took a pukkorah from Nandinee’s tray. The girls watched uneasily...
    “Cauliflower at this hour? Unheard! Mon Dieu, I wish I had your digestions,” she muttered. “Vairy well, eat the things if you must, but do not, I beg, complain to me of the belly-ache tomorrow morning.”
    “We won’t,” said Tiddy, grabbing a pukkorah before she could change her mind.
    Sighing, Mademoiselle sat down on a bedside chair. “Sit, if you please, Mlle Violette.”
     Smiling uneasily, Violet sat.
    “So, who was at this so-fine dinner?”
    Exchanging uneasy glances, the girls stumbled through it.
    “That was all?” said Mademoiselle in a stunned voice.
    “Um, yes,” owned Tiddy, “I think so.”
    “But— No young men?”
    “Of course not!” said Tiddy with a sudden loud laugh. “I see! No, no: we were quite safe from all the young fortune-hunters, dear Mademoiselle: there was not a penniless young officer in sight! Let alone a mere Mister!”
    “Um, no,” agreed Violet. “Well, Mr Widdop is a Mister, but then of course he is a collector.”
    “Yes? How old?”
    The girls thought vaguely possibly forty. Or forty-five. Mademoiselle swallowed a sigh, but persisted: “And a widower, non?”
    “Yes; it is a very sad story,” said the kind-hearted Violet.
    “But I can assure you,” added Tiddy sweetly, “that there would be no point in picking him out for either of us. For he is intended for a much bigger fish.”
    Suddenly Violet collapsed in helpless giggles. “I’m so—sorry—Mlle—Dupont!” she gasped. Silently Mademoiselle handed her a pristine handkerchief. “Thank you,” she said weakly, mopping her eyes. “Um, you see, Tiddy said earlier that he was the big fish. Which must explain why she is in Darjeeling at all.”
    “Who?” said Mademoiselle tensely. Because this might at last rule one of them out!
    “Lady Anna Lovatt,” explained Violet.

"Lady Anna L., or, The coup de grâce"
Sketch, pen & wash, from John Widdop's journal, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
     “Eugh—who?” she said limply.
    “Lady Anna Lovatt: Mrs Matcham’s friend: horse-faced but better born than all the rest of them put together,” said Tiddy. “Collector Widdop is reckoned a great catch, at least by General Porton, whose late niece, it appears, was his wife,” she explained primly.
    Violet collapsed in giggles again.
    “The thing is,” said Tiddy, grinning, “although the consensus was, before, that General Porton gave this dinner-party merely to puff off his consequence,”—Violet was in agony—“during, we realised what the ulterior motive was.”
    Violet nodded frantically through her giggles.
    “I see,” said Mlle Dupont heavily.
    Tiddy cocked her head on one side. “It didn’t strike me that Mr Widdop appeared very impressed, though.”
    “Nor—did—she!” gasped Violet.
    “No,” she conceded, the grin appearing again. “Uninterested. Well, half-awake, actually.”
    “Like—horse—asleep—field!” squeaked Violet helplessly.
    Tiddy’s eyes met her and she also collapsed in giggles.
    Sighing, Mlle Dupont got up and left them to it.


    —Ponsonby sahib, you are not becoming tired, are you? No? Then shall we go on? But we warn you, girls, poor Mademoiselle was to continue baffled for some time yet!

    The ladies from the Allardyce House having been honoured with an invitation to tiffin at General Hay’s villa, where his sister Lady Cartwright was playing hostess, Mademoiselle was enabled to ascertain that Mrs Allardyce’s contender was most certainly not she, and nor was it Mrs Fox, a pleasant, plain person of middle age. The party also featured a Captain Lord Alfred Lacey, one of the sons of the Duke of Munn, a man in perhaps his early thirties, at present enjoying the rôle of aide to the General, and a very young, pink-cheeked Lord Frederick Dewhurst, a younger son of the Marquis of Abingdon, ostensibly holding some function at Government House but pretty clearly easily spared by the Governor-General.

"The inane Freddy Dewhurst"
Sketch, pencil & watercolour, from John Widdop's journal, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
    He imparted the interesting news that his master’s post was next due to be held by Lord Auckland, though judging by the expressions on the faces of General Hay and Captain Lord Alfred as he did it perhaps he should not have.
    Not all the ladies of the house party were present, and Mr Hatton most certainly was not, so Mlle Dupont returned home feeling frustrated, the which state Mrs Allardyce’s serenely smiling demeanour did nothing at all to soothe.
    “So who is this Lady Anna Lovatt?” she said on a cross note as her hostess, smiling serenely, removed her much beribboned hat in front of the mirror in the hall.
    “Goodness, that is better!” said Mrs Allardyce, as the shiny, still unsilvered light brown curls were revealed. “I swear, five hundred pins were sticking into my head! I shall have my woman return the thing to Madame Lucille direct. –Has no-one explained to you, dear Mlle Dupont? Lady Anna is little Freddy Dewhurst’s sister: one of Abingdon’s girls.”
    “Oh,” said Mademoiselle lamely. “They are not vairy alike.”
    “No, dear little Freddy does not look like a well-bred Arab steed!” she agreed with the light laugh. “Kamala Ayah,” she said to the salaaming elderly woman who had glided up silently, as Mademoiselle had by now discovered Indian servants were wont to do: “take this horrid hat back to Madame Lucille ekdum: it will not do.”
    The old ayah made a speech in her own language—Mademoiselle did not need to have it translated in order to grasp that its tenor was largely “I told you so”—bowed deeply, and disappeared with the hat.

"Yet another of Mrs Allardyce's appalling hats"
Sketch, pen & wash, from John Widdop's journal, circa 1829.
From the Widdop family papers
    “Well!” said Mrs Allardyce, smiling. “That will serve me out for conscientiously patronising the local tradespeople, will it not? Now, I am sure you are as exhausted as I by all that talk and tiffin, so shall we retire for a little?”
    Resignedly our poor Mlle Dupont went off to her room. Lady Anna Lovatt might or might not be the promised she, for she was not old, if she did look like a horse, and she was certainly well-born, but it was clear that no clarification on the point was about to be offered by the maddening Mrs Allardyce!


Great-Aunt Tiddy’s Receet for Jeeruh Panee
Soak your immalee [tamarind] in a jug of water overnight, then pound well & strain all through a piece of muslin. Add an equal amount of fresh water. Pound your jeeruh [cumin], a good spoonful, with half as much salt and sugar both, a good inch of fresh ginger root, and some generous pinches of spice mix. Add all & stir well. When serving, add the juice of half a nimboo [lime] (lemon will do) & strain.