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Chapter 27
’m not quite sure how to tell you this,’ Alexander began, looking from his sister, Emily, to his cousins, Paula O’Neill and Anthony Standish, the Earl of Dunvale.
The three of them were seated on the two sofas in front of the fire, sipping the drinks he had poured for them a short while before.
‘In fact,’ Alexander went on, ‘I’ve racked my brains for weeks now, seeking the right words, the best way of explaining –’
Breaking off, he rose from his chair, walked across the drawing room, stood at the huge, bow-shaped window that soared to the ceiling, overlooked the small garden behind his Mayfair house.
He suddenly wished that he hadn’t asked them to come over, that he didn’t have to tell them…fervently wished that he could simply…let it happen. But that would be unthinkable. Unfair of him. And besides, there were too many things to be decided, too many legalities involved.
Alexander was tense, held himself stiffly, his shoulders hunched underneath his jacket. He took a deep breath, summoning his courage. This was perhaps the most difficult thing he had ever had to do in his entire life.
Emily, watching him intently, had detected the strained note in his voice when she had first arrived at the house. And now she noticed how taut he was. They had been unusually close throughout their lives, and she knew him as well as she knew herself. Intuitively she felt that something was radically wrong.
Pressing back her alarm, she said, ‘You sound awfully serious, Sandy.’
‘Yes,’ he responded, continuing to stare out of the window, wondering how to begin. In the gathering dusk of this January evening, the patch of garden looked sad and bereft with its blackened skeletal trees, empty flower beds frosted with old snow turned grey by London soot. It seemed to him that this bit of earth echoed his bleak mood.
The three cousins were waiting for Alexander to continue, to explain why he had invited them here, had actually insisted they come tonight. And they exchanged concerned glances behind his back.
Paula swung her head, focused on Anthony, lifted a brow questioningly.
The Earl shrugged, half-raised his hands in a helpless gesture, indicating his own considerable bafflement.
Paula peered at Emily on the sofa opposite. Emily tightened her lips, shook her head rapidly, expressing her own puzzlement. ‘I don’t know what this is all about either,’ Emily mouthed silently to Paula. After a moment, she cleared her throat, ventured aloud, ‘Sandy dear…Gran always said that if a person had something difficult to explain, or unpleasant to say, the best thing to do was simply to blurt it out. Why don’t you do that?’
‘That’s not as easy as it sounds,’ her brother answered quietly.
‘Whatever problems you have, you know you have our full support,’ Anthony volunteered in his most reassuring voice.
Alexander pivoted on his heels, stood with his back to the great window, regarding the three of them thoughtfully, ‘Yes, I do know that, Anthony, and thanks,’ he said at last. A faint wavering smile touched his mouth, then faded instantly.
Paula, studying him alertly, saw something strange in the back of his light blue eyes, the emptiest of expressions, and it made her heart tighten. ‘There’s something awfully wrong…it’s…it’s bad, isn’t it, Sandy?’
He nodded. ‘I’ve always prided myself on being able to handle anything, Paula. But this…’ He discovered he was unable to finish his sentence.
Paula remembered then, remembered the telephone conversation she had had with him at the end of August last year. She had sensed he had a problem that particular morning, had then dismissed it as being merely her vivid imagination at work. But she had been right after all, she was sure of that. She clasped her hands together tightly, feeling unaccountably nervous and filling, unexpectedly, with apprehension.
Alexander said slowly, ‘I asked the three of you to come round this evening…because of our closeness over the years, the special relationship I have with each one of you.’ He waited, took a breath. ‘I do have certain problems. I thought we could discuss them rationally, and that perhaps you would help me to come to a few decisions.’
‘Of course we will,’ Anthony said. His cousin was behaving out of character and he was desperately worried. He fixed his clear, steady gaze on the other man, wanting to convey his affection and devotion. They had helped each other over some rough terrain in the past, and would no doubt do so again.
Leaning forward with a degree of urgency, Anthony asked, ‘Is it to do with business? Or is it a family matter?’
‘Personal really,’ Alexander answered.
He moved away from the window, walked slowly across the elegant, period drawing room, lowered himself into the chair he had vacated a short while before. He knew there was no point in putting it off any longer. They simply had to be told.
Alexander let out a deeply weary sigh. He said, in a controlled voice, ‘I’m very ill…I’m dying, actually.’
Emily, Paula and Anthony gaped at him. None of them had expected to hear anything as devastating as this. They were stunned.
Alexander went on hurriedly, ‘I’m sorry to have told you in such a blunt manner, but I took Emily’s advice. And Gran was right, you know. It is the only way…best to blurt it out, get it said without too much preamble.’
Paula was so shaken she was unable to respond. Blindly, she groped for Anthony’s hand.
He took it, enfolded it in his comfortingly. He was as stupefied as she, at a complete loss. There were no words. Anything he said to Sandy would be cold comfort. A great sadness flowed through him. What an appalling thing to happen to poor Sandy, who was in his prime. Sandy had been such a good friend, a source of strength during his own travails over the years. And most especially at the time Min had been found drowned in the lake at Clonloughlin. Anthony reached for his glass of scotch-and-soda on the end table. He suddenly needed a drink.
Emily was ashen with shock.
She sat perfectly still, staring at her brother in disbelief, her eyes dark with sudden pain. She felt as though all blood had drained out of her. Then taking hold of herself, she got to her feet a bit shakily, and went to him. Kneeling down next to his chair, she took his hand in hers, clung to it.
‘Sandy, it’s not true! It can’t be!’ she cried in a low but vehement tone. ‘Oh please say it isn’t…’ Emily’s voice quavered, came to a stop, and her green eyes brimmed. ‘Not you, Sandy, oh please, not you.’
‘I’m afraid so,’ he said in the steadiest voice imaginable, ‘and there’s not much I can do to change this one, Dumpling. It’s out of my hands.’
His use of her old nickname made her choke, and long forgotten memories came rushing back unbidden, evoked their childhood years together; she remembered how he had protected her, looked after her, and her throat suddenly ached and her heart felt as if it was being squeezed in a vice. She closed her eyes for a split second, striving to come to grips with her brother’s tragic and frightening news.
‘You say you’re d-d-dying.’ She stumbled on this last word, had to take several deep breaths before continuing, ‘But of what? What’s wrong with you, Sandy? You seem perfectly well to me. What are you suffering from?’
‘I have leukaemia…it’s known as acute granulocytic leukaemia.’
‘Surely that can be treated!’ Anthony exclaimed, sudden hope leaping onto his worried face. ‘Tremendous strides have been made in medicine today, especially in the treatment of cancer, and perhaps –’
‘There is no cure,’ Alexander interrupted.
‘But what actually is it?’ Emily demanded, anxiety making her voice rise, giving it a shrillness abnormal for her. ‘What on earth causes it?’
‘A malignant change in cells that produce granulocytes, one of the types of white blood cells made in the bone marrow,’ he explained, so well educated about his disease the details were now readily on the tip of his tongue. ‘They multiply and survive longer than normal cells. Very simply put, they destroy. As their numbers increase, they invade the bone marrow, enter the bloodstream and eventually attack the organs and tissue.’
‘Oh God, Sandy –’ Paula began, and came to a halt. Her feelings got the better of her. The words she had been about to say strangled in her throat. She steadied herself; somehow she managed to hang onto her self-possession. After a few moments, she went on, ‘I’m so sorry, so very sorry, darling. I’m here for you, we’re all here for you, whenever you need us, day or night.’
‘Yes,’ he said, ‘I know you are. I’m counting on it, actually, Paula.’
‘Isn’t there any chance of at least arresting the leukaemia?’ Paula probed, her manner gentle, her sympathy and compassion reflected in her eyes.
‘There really isn’t,’ Alexander replied.
With sudden fierceness, Emily said, ‘I realize you must have been to the best doctors in London, but we must go farther afield. We really must. What about the States? Sloan-Kettering in New York, for instance? We can’t just stand by and allow this to happen, Sandy. We must do something.’
‘I agree with you, Emily,’ Anthony said. ‘There has to be some sort of advanced treatment in this day and age. Somewhere. I can’t accept this either, Sandy. I won’t.’ He averted his face, struggling with his feelings.
Alexander shook his head, and it was with a finality that was unmistakable. ‘I understand how the three of you feel. I was exactly the same as you in the beginning. Looking for a cure, full of hope, but the hope rapidly changed to frustration, then anger, and finally to acceptance. You see…’ He stopped, took several deep breaths, continued slowly, ‘There is absolutely nothing that can be done for me. And believe me, I have been to the very best specialists in London, New York and Zurich. What I’m suffering from is fatal. I’m having treatment, of course, but there has been hardly any remission.’
A grim silence settled in the drawing room.
Alexander sat back in his chair, relieved at last to have finally told them. He had resigned himself to his fate some time ago, but he had worried greatly about the family and how they would take it, most especially Emily.
For their parts, his sister and his cousins were trying to come to grips with the heartbreaking news he had just imparted, striving to absorb it, and to get a hold of their emotions as well. They each, in their different ways, loved Alexander, and although they did not know it, they were sharing the same thought at this precise moment. All were asking themselves why it had to be Alexander who had been stricken in this manner. He was the finest, the kindest, the most loving and understanding of men. The very best. He had always been there for them, whenever they had needed him, no matter what the problem, and that was how he had been since childhood. The three cousins believed him to be the one truly good man they knew. If anyone was a saint, it was Alexander.
Paula eventually spoke. ‘You’ve known for some months, haven’t you?’
Alexander nodded, then picked up his glass of white wine, took a sip.
‘Was it the end of August last year when you found out you were ill?’ she asked.
‘No, it was October. But you’re close enough, Paula.’ He gave her an odd look. ‘How did you know?’
Paula’s grave face was infinitely still. ‘I didn’t. Not really. But I did have a queer feeling things were not right with you, when you phoned me from Leeds – the day we missed each other at Fairley. There was such a peculiar note in your voice, it prompted me to ask you if there was a problem, and, if you recall, you said no. So I dismissed it, I thought it was my imagination getting the better of me.’
‘You were very perceptive that morning,’ Alexander murmured. ‘I felt uneasy, wanted to talk to you. I was already starting to have symptoms. I was becoming fatigued quickly, and it worried me, and I discovered I bruised and bled very easily…if I merely knocked myself against something.’
Alexander got up, went to fetch the bottle of wine, refilled Paula’s and Emily’s glasses, and his own, took the bottle back to the silver ice bucket on the console.
The others waited in silence, dreading what else he had to say to them.
He went on, as he sat down, ‘I was doing a lot of work on the estate at Nutton Priory in late September, and I was baffled. I wondered if I’d become a haemophiliac overnight – if that was possible. Then early in October I developed the
most frightful ulcers in my mouth. I was growing more alarmed than ever, and that’s why I cancelled our lunch date, Paula. I finally went to see my doctor. He immediately sent me to a specialist in Harley Street. The tests and the bone marrow biopsy were quite conclusive.’
‘You say you’re having treatment,’ Anthony said. ‘It must be doing you some good, Sandy, having some effect. You don’t look as though you’re dreadfully ill. You’re a trifle pale perhaps, thinner, but –’
‘All it’s doing is keeping me going for the moment,’ Alexander interjected.
Emily looked at her brother closely. ‘What sort of treatment is it?’
‘Transfusions of red blood cells, and platelets when I need them. I also take antibiotics from time to time, to help reduce the chances of my getting infections.’
‘I see.’ Emily bit her inner lip nervously. ‘You just said the treatment is keeping you going…for…for…how long?’ she asked in a voice that shook. She was filled with fear for her brother.
‘Four to five months at the outside, I think. Not many people last much longer than a year, after this type of leukaemia has been diagnosed.’
Emily’s mouth trembled. ‘I can’t bear it. Not you. It’s just not fair. Oh Sandy, you can’t be dying!’ She tried to push back the tears, knowing he wanted her to be strong, to face this with the same kind of courage he was displaying. She was unable to do so.
She jumped up, hurried out of the drawing room, aware that she was about to break down completely.
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