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Warned by a Ghost
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AUTHOR’S NOTE
It is believed by some people who call themselves psychic that there are all kinds of ghosts.
The ‘warning ghosts’, like the one in this story, who appear to give notice of a forthcoming death or tragedy are different from the earthbound unhappy spectres who are vengeful and send things flying around a room.
Or it can be love that binds to this world after they have died the ghosts who haunt by continuing to carry out the customs that they observed in life.
For all of them a certain spiritual energy and awareness is necessary for them to “go on, but to do so needs a decision and independence of will that can take aeons to acquire.
During the First World War I had lessons with a girl of my age, thirteen to sixteen, who lived in a lovely house in Somerset. It was however haunted.
There was always someone going upstairs in front of us and someone coming up behind. We used to hear a horse trot up to the front door, but when we looked out there was nothing there.
It was some years before I learned that it was the home of a Royalist who had been wounded in the Civil War and who came home to die.
An Irishman told us that there was a lovely woman with fair hair walking in the dining room. We laughed at him but five years later the workmen took up the huge flagstones in front of the fireplace.
Hidden in there was the body of a young woman with long fair hair.
Even while they were looking at it, it disintegrated and fell into dust.
When I came to Camfield Place in 1949, I had the house blessed as I had no wish to live with ghosts.
It was after I had the house blessed that I found in an autobiography of Beatrix Potter, whose grandfather altered the house and made it very much larger, that while she was here as a little girl she was frightened by ghosts in the hall and the large statues there.
There are, however, no ghosts there today, except for the ghost of a dog who was put to sleep after the blessing and who has stayed with us because he loves us so much.
Chapter One ~ 1818
Sedela rode across the Park looking for the deer underneath the oak trees.
In the distance on the other side of the lake she could see Windle Court.
It was a very fine example of the best architecture of the previous century.
She was thinking that every time she saw it that it was even more beautiful than before.
There had always been a house here since the Windles had first come to the County in the reign of King Henry VIII.
One generation after another had either pulled some of it down or added to the existing building until the fourth Marquis, sixty years ago, had altered and upgraded the whole facade. It was magnificent now with two wings stretching out from a central building.
Although Sedela had known it since she was a small child, she always felt a little thrill when she looked at it.
She felt the same in the woods, the gardens and in the Greek Temple that stood at the far end of the lake.
Sedela knew that the present Marquis had returned from France and, as she rode on, she was thinking that he would soon be coming home.
He was nine years older than she was. She had therefore only been a small girl when he had gone to the War against the French and Napoleon Bonaparte.
She had not often seen him before that because he was at school while she was still in the nursery.
‘I wonder if he will remember me?’ she was thinking to herself.
It would be strange if he did not, seeing that her father, General Sir Alexander Craven, and his father had been close friends for many years.
When the late Marquis had died after a long illness, the General had in fact been broken-hearted.
Sedela thought that he missed more than anything else the games of chess that the two old gentlemen used to play regularly in the afternoons.
Of course they also discussed the War in its every aspect and detail.
She often thought that her father had been as delighted as the Marquis when his son, Ivan, had won a medal for gallantry in Spain. Later he had also received personal congratulations from the Duke of Wellington after the Battle of Waterloo.
“Thank God the War is over!” Sedela said aloud fervently as she rode on.
She could not remember a time when England had not been battling against Napoleon.
Since peace had come three years ago the country had been trying to recover its prosperity and she was aware that all of Europe was trying to do the same thing.
‘At least I can now persuade Papa to talk about something other than fighting and the horrors of war,’ she thought.
Because he had no son, the General had given his only daughter what was really a boy’s upbringing and education.
She had not gone to school. But he had engaged Tutors from the nearest town and even from London to instruct her in the same subjects that he had studied when he was her age.
She had learnt to ride from the moment she could crawl.
She could shoot straight and she was exceptionally good at archery.
She was now reaching the end of the Park.
It had been dangerous to ride too quickly because of rabbit holes, but now she was able to increase her pace.
She rode towards the front of the house and then turned right.
In a few seconds she came to the stables.
The cobbled yard had been washed down in the same way it had been when the old Marquis was alive and the horses had their heads over the half-doors of their stalls.
She felt because she knew them all so well that they greeted her affectionately whenever they saw her.
A stable lad came running to take hold of Firedragon’s bridle.
“Mornin’, Miss Sedela,” he called out.
“Good morning, Sam,” Sedela replied. “Is everything all right?”
“Fine, Miss Sedela,” he answered. “We’ve two new ’orses arrived yesterday from London.”
“New horses?” Sedela exclaimed. “How exciting! I would love to see them, but first I must visit Nanny.”
“I’ll be a-waitin’ to show ’em to you, Miss Sedela.”
Sam took Firedragon away to put him into his stall.
Sedela, now carrying the package that she had held in front of her saddle, walked into the house through the back door.
She knew every inch of the long flagstoned passage.
She passed the cool room where the cream was forming on top of the milk and the huge open bowls stood on marble slabs.
After that, on the right, came the servants’ hall and on the left the huge kitchen.
From the high beams Sedela knew that there would be hanging ducks, chickens, onions, hares, rabbits and legs of pork.
She knew that Mrs. Benson, the cook, who had been in the house for thirty years, would be delighted to see her.
But she walked on because her first visit must always be to Nanny.
Nanny was a very special person.
She was known to everybody in the house, on the estate and in the village. They all spoke affectionately of her and addressed her as ‘Nanny’.
Presumably she had another name, but it was doubtful if anybody knew it or could remember it.
Nanny had been engaged twenty-seven years ago to look after the eagerly expected heir, Master Ivan.
Son of the fifth Marquis of Windlesham, he was idolised from the moment he was born.
When Ivan had grown too old to need her services, Nanny had moved to General Sir Alexander Craven’s house at the end of the village.
There she looked after Sedela.
She had stayed on at Four Gables until she found Sedela’s Governesses intolerable and said that she wished to retire.
“My son may be needi
ng your services in a few years’ time, Nanny,” the Marquis of Windlesham had told her, “so you had better come back to Windle Court.”
Nanny had been delighted to agree and she had found plenty to occupy herself with at the Big House.
Besides, everybody in the village who needed advice or healing, came to see her as a matter of course.
Nothing happened, either big or small, in the neighbourhood that Nanny did not know about.
Sedela knew that gossip flew from cottage to cottage as if it had wings.
But a good deal of it started from the nurseries at Windle Court.
She passed the pantry.
Hanson the butler, who had been at The Court for thirty-five years, had a new footman he was training.
Billy came from the village and he was the son of the estate carpenter.
Sedela thought that when she came downstairs again she would enquire how Billy was getting along.
She remembered her father telling her that he was a good lad and anyway it was traditional for the footmen at Windle Court to come from the village.
She climbed the stairs, and there were quite a lot of them, until she reached the third floor.
This was where the nurseries were situated and they were as impressive as the rest of the huge house.
The large nursery looked East and caught the morning sun.
There were two bedrooms, one of which Ivan had once occupied – the other was Nanny’s.
There were two more rooms on the other side of the corridor and these were for any child who might come to stay from time to time.
Sedela opened the nursery door.
She found as she had expected that Nanny was sitting by the fireside crocheting.
Since she had no baby to look after Nanny had added crocheted lace to practically every sheet in the house. All the hand towels had six inches of crochet elegantly done at the hems and Nanny was now starting on the pillowcases.
She had grey hair and there were lines on her face that had not been there when she was young.
She still had, however, a warm friendliness in her eyes and the loving smile that Sedela had known and loved as a child.
“Good morning, Nanny,” she began. “I have brought you some of the cream cheese we have just made. Papa had a luncheon party yesterday before leaving this morning with Mama. They are making a visit of a week or perhaps more to Mama’s sister in Leicestershire, who is very ill. I know how much you enjoy this particular cheese.”
“I need something to cheer me up,” Nanny replied in a low voice.
Sedela looked at her sharply.
“Cheer you up, Nanny? What is the matter?”
“I don’t know how to tell you, Miss Sedela,” Nanny answered, “I don’t really! I can’t bear that it should happen to him, of all people, my baby who – I’ve never ceased to love.”
Her voice broke on the last words and she put a handkerchief up to her eyes.
Sedela went down on her knees beside her chair.
“What has happened, Nanny?” she asked. “What has upset you?”
“I knowed no good would come from him stayin’ in London,” Nanny said in a broken voice. “The things as goes on there are not for the likes of a man as brave and good as his Lordship.”
Nanny had always been desperately afraid during the War that Ivan would be wounded or killed in battle.
Sedela could hardly believe that once again she was listening to fear and unhappiness.
It was what had torn at all their hearts from the moment Ivan had left England to join his Regiment.
Sedela put out her hand to take the one that Nanny was not holding her handkerchief in and found her fingers to be stiff and cold.
“Tell me what has happened,” she said soothingly, “and try not to cry, Nanny. You know how upsetting it is to everyone when you are in tears.”
She had often thought that for a child to see her mother or her Nanny cry was something so upsetting that it would be impossible to forget.
She could only once remember her own mother crying. And that was when her own mother had died.
Nanny had cried when Ivan had got himself into trouble at school.
She had also wept bitterly when he had left to join the Duke of Wellington’s Army in Portugal.
“May God strike down that French devil!” Nanny had sobbed. “If he harms one hair of his Lordship’s head, I will pray he’ll burn in a hell of his own makin’!”
Strong words, Sedela had thought, but Ivan had survived the War.
He had stayed, however, in France with the Duke of Wellington’s Army of Occupation, which was based in Cambrai in France.
Then three months ago he had returned to England.
But to Nanny’s consternation he had not come home, although everything had been made ready for him.
The house had been cleaned and polished until, in the words of the General, it was ‘spick and span’.
But his Lordship had stayed on in London.
It seemed to Sedela extraordinary, but her father had understood that his services were required at the War Office.
“And of course,” the General said firmly, “the boy wants to make contact with his friends after being abroad for so many years.”
Sedela had told Nanny what her father had said.
She then guessed that Nanny, who was inclined to be a snob, was thinking that the Marquis would be welcomed at Carlton House by the Prince Regent.
Perhaps His Royal Highness would want him to recount how he had won his medal for gallantry.
Anyway, Nanny would always make excuses for her ‘beloved baby’ whatever he did.
It seemed incredible that now she should be in tears when he was back safely in England.
“What has happened?” Sedela asked again.
“I’ve had a letter from my niece, Lucy,” Nanny replied.
She picked it up from where it lay on her lap.
She tried to read it, but the tears blinded her eyes and she gave it to Sedela.
“Read it for yourself,” she suggested.
Sedela knew that Nanny’s niece was lady’s maid to Lady Esther Hasting.
Lucy was the daughter of Nanny’s elder sister and was now nearly forty and she had been with various other Ladies of Quality since she grew up.
Thinking quickly Sedela remembered that Lady Esther Hasting was the daughter of a Duke. She had married a soldier who had been killed at the Battle of Waterloo.
She opened the letter.
Having seen Lucy’s handwriting before, she knew it would be somewhat difficult to read and her spelling was extremely irregular.
Sedela then read,
“Dear Aunty Mary,
This is just a line to tell you that I’m very worried about the things as be going on here.
As I tells you in my last letter, his Lordship’s been a regular visitor and I hardly dares to tell you that her Ladyship’s made up her mind to marry him!
If he does anything so foolish, all I can warn you is look out for trouble because there’s no doubt you’ll get it and all them as is with you at the Big House.
Most of them will lose their jobs. Like I tells you afore no one stays with her Ladyship for more than a few months and there’s them as says they’d sooner starve than work for her!
She’s only polite to me because she won’t find it easy to employ someone else as handy with a needle as I be which be thanks to you.
Her way with the rest of the staff is appalling and she screams at them like she were one of them rude women in Shepherd’s Market. But not to his Lordship, oh no! Nothing like that when he’s around. Sweet as honey, soft as a goose-filled mattress and he ain’t the least idea what she’s really like.
You’d hardly believe the men as sleeps here when he’s got other engagements and she’s sure he won’t be coming here. Shocking is what I calls it!
There be one, Lord Bayford, as has something to gain if her Ladyship marries his Lordship, as she intends to do.
>
I just happened to be passing the bedroom late the other night when they was canoodling each other and I hears Lord B say, ‘It would be to my vantage as well as yours Esther when you becomes the Marchioness. You can count on me to get any obstacles out of the way, even if I has to shoot them!’
I’m telling you this, Aunty, so’s you’ll be prepared for the worst. But if she turns you out I knows there be friends in the village as’ll find a place for you somehow.
Love to all,
Lucy.”
Sedela read the letter and felt that it could not be true. How could Ivan, of all people, become involved with a woman who could deceive him with other men?
And who could ever be cruel to the old servants like Nanny?
She folded the letter and put it in Nanny’s lap.
“Perhaps Lucy is mistaken,” she said slowly after a moment.
“She’s always been a truthful girl, Miss Sedela,” Nanny replied. “She was brought up right by my sister and if she says that woman’s bad, she’s bad!”
“But how can Ivan be so deceived by her?” Sedela asked.
“Lucy told me in another letter that she’s known as the most beautiful woman in England.”
Sedela did not speak and Nanny went on,
“It’s understandable for any young man who’s been fightin’ for his country and then stuck in France with nothing but those Frenchies, who are not much to look at, to be deceived by a pretty face.”
Nanny was championing her beloved Ivan again and Sedela knew that nothing would ever be his fault.
At the same time she was apprehensive.
Her father had often said scathing things about the behaviour of those who belonged to the Social world and he had been appalled by the extravagant parties that had been given in London by the Prince Regent.
Especially while the War was still raging.
“Our men,” he asserted angrily, “are fighting in the Peninsula to save England from the tyrant Bonaparte! Does no one think of them?”
Sedela had heard many of the conversations that had taken place at home.
Her father’s friends would come in for a drink after being out hunting and they spoke about the festivities in London.
She had also been present after she was sixteen at most of the dinner parties given by her mother. Because she was there the guests would choose their words with care.

195. Moon Over Eden
Paradise Found
A Victory for Love
Lovers in Lisbon
Love Casts Out Fear
The Wicked Widow
The Angel and the Rake
Sweet Enchantress
The Race For Love
Born of Love
Miracle For a Madonna
Love Joins the Clans
Forced to Marry
Love Strikes a Devil
The Love Light of Apollo
An Adventure of Love
Princes and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances
Terror in the Sun
The Fire of Love
The Odious Duke
The Eyes of Love
A Nightingale Sang
The Wonderful Dream
The Island of Love
The Protection of Love
Beyond the Stars
Only a Dream
An Innocent in Russia
The Duke Comes Home
Love in the Moon
Love and the Marquis
Love Me Forever
Flowers For the God of Love
Love and the Cheetah
A Battle for Love
The Outrageous Lady
Seek the Stars
The Storms Of Love
Saved by love
The Power and the Prince
The Irresistible Buck
A Dream from the Night
In the Arms of Love
Good or Bad
Winged Victory
This is Love
Magic From the Heart
The Lioness and the Lily
The Sign of Love
Warned by a Ghost
Love Conquers War
The Runaway Heart
The Hidden Evil
Just Fate
The Passionate Princess
Imperial Splendour
Lucky in Love
Haunted
For All Eternity
The Passion and the Flower
The Enchanted Waltz
Temptation of a Teacher
Riding In the Sky
Moon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37)
Lucifer and the Angel
Love is Triumphant
The Magnificent Marquis
A Kiss for the King
A Duel With Destiny
Beauty or Brains
A Shaft of Sunlight
The Gates of Paradise
Women have Hearts
Two Hearts in Hungary
A Kiss from the Heart
108. An Archangel Called Ivan
71 Love Comes West
103. She Wanted Love
Love in the Clouds
104. A Heart Finds Love
100. A Rose In Jeopardy
Their Search for Real Love
A Very Special Love
A Royal Love Match
Love Drives In
In Love In Lucca
Never Forget Love
The Mysterious Maid-Servant
The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)
Call of the Heart
Love Under Fire
The Pretty Horse-Breakers
The Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19)
The Devilish Deception
Castle of Love
Little Tongues of Fire
105. an Angel In Hell
Learning to Love
An Introduction to the Pink Collection
Gypsy Magic
A Princess Prays
The Goddess and the Gaiety Girl
Love Is the Reason For Living
Love Forbidden
The Importance of Love
Mission to Monte Carlo
Stars in the Sky
The House of Happiness
An Innocent in Paris
Revenge Is Sweet
Royalty Defeated by Love
Love At Last
Solita and the Spies
73. A Tangled Web
Riding to the Moon
An Unexpected Love
Say Yes Samantha
An Angel Runs Away
They Found their Way to Heaven
The Richness of Love
Love in the Highlands
Love In the East
They Touched Heaven
Crowned by Music
The Mountain of Love
The Heart of love
The Healing Hand
The Ship of Love
Love, Lords, and Lady-Birds
It Is Love
In Search of Love
The Trail to Love
Love and Apollo
To Heaven With Love
Never Laugh at Love
The Punishment of a Vixen
Love and the Loathsome Leopard
The Revelation is Love
Double the Love
Saved By A Saint
A Paradise On Earth
Lucky Logan Finds Love
65 A Heart Is Stolen
They Sought love
The Husband Hunters
160 Love Finds the Duke at Last
Kiss the Moonlight
The King Without a Heart
The Duke & the Preachers Daughter
The Golden Cage
The Love Trap
Who Can Deny Love
A Very Unusual Wife
A Teacher of Love
Search For a Wife
Fire in the Blood
Seeking Love
The Keys of Love
A Change of Hearts
Love in the Ruins
68 The Magic of Love
Secret Harbor
A Lucky Star
Pray For Love
21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection)
Alone In Paris
Punished with Love
Joined by Love
A Shooting Star
As Eagles Fly
The Wings of Ecstacy
The Chieftain Without a Heart
Hiding from Love
A Royal Rebuke
The Scots Never Forget
A Flight To Heaven
White Lilac
A Heart of Stone
Crowned with Love
Fragrant Flower
A Prisioner in Paris
A Perfect Way to Heaven
Diona and a Dalmatian
69 Love Leaves at Midnight
Fascination in France
Bride to a Brigand
Bride to the King
A Heart in Heaven
Love, Lies and Marriage
A Miracle of Love
Bewitched (Bantam Series No. 16)
The White Witch
A Golden Lie
The Poor Governess
The Ruthless Rake
Hide and Seek for Love
Lovers in London
Ruled by Love
Mine for Ever
Theirs to Eternity
The Blue Eyed Witch
203. Love Wins
The Cross of Love
The Ghost Who Fell in Love
Love and Lucia
66 The Love Pirate
The Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62)
The Tree of Love
A Night of Gaiety
Danger in the Desert
The Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24)
Money or Love
A Steeplechase For Love
In Hiding
Sword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13)
74. Love Lifts The Curse
The Proud Princess
72. The Impetuous Duchess
The Waters of Love
This Way to Heaven
The Goddess Of Love
Gift Of the Gods
60 The Duchess Disappeared
A Dangerous Disguise
Love at the Tower
The Star of Love
Signpost To Love
Secret Love
Revenge of the Heart
Love Rescues Rosanna
Follow Your Heart
A Revolution Of Love
The Dare-Devil Duke
A Heaven on Earth
Rivals for Love
The Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12)
70 A Witch's Spell
The Queen Wins
Love Finds the Way
Wish for Love
The Temptation of Torilla
The Devil Defeated
The Dream and the Glory
Journey to love
Too Precious to Lose
Kiss from a Stranger
A Duke in Danger
Love Wins In Berlin
The Wild Cry of Love
A Battle of Brains
A Castle of Dreams
The Unwanted Wedding
64 The Castle Made for Love
202. Love in the Dark
Love Is Dangerous
107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle
A Kiss In the Desert
A Virgin Bride
The Disgraceful Duke
Look Listen and Love
A Hazard of Hearts
104. the Glittering Lights
A Marriage Made In Heaven
Rescued by Love
Love Came From Heaven
Journey to Happiness
106. Love's Dream in Peril
The Castle of Love
Touching the Stars
169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection)
171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection)
Sailing to Love
The Unbreakable Spell
The Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28)
The Secret of the Glen
Danger to the Duke
The Peril and the Prince
The Duke Is Deceived
A Road to Romance
A King In Love
Love and the Clans
Love and the Gods
The Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46)
Pure and Untouched
Wanted a Royal Wife
The Castle
63 Ola and the Sea Wolf
Count the Stars
The Winning Post Is Love
Dancing on a Rainbow
Love by the Lake
From Hell to Heaven
The Triumph of Love