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Title: Dead men's shoes, vol. 2 (of 3)
Author: M. E. Braddon
Release date: May 28, 2026 [eBook #78773]
Language: English
Original publication: London: John Maxwell and Co., 1876
Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78773
Credits: Peter Becker, Dori Allard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEAD MEN'S SHOES, VOL. 2 (OF 3) ***
Transcriber’s Note: Italicized text is surrounded by underscores:
_italics_.
DEAD MEN’S SHOES
A Novel
BY THE AUTHOR OF
‘LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET’
ETC. ETC. ETC.
IN THREE VOLUMES
VOL. II.
[Illustration: (Colophon)]
LONDON
JOHN MAXWELL AND CO.
4, SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET
1876
[_All rights reserved._]
CONTENTS TO VOL II.
CHAP. PAGE
I. A DANGEROUS TRIUMPH 1
II. HALF CONFIDENCE 31
III. RECEIVED BY THE COUNTY 42
IV. JENNY’S VISITOR 53
V. ‘WILL FORTUNE NEVER COME WITH BOTH HANDS FULL?’ 69
VI. STARTLING INFORMATION 96
VII. TOWN TALK 116
VIII. BETWEEN LOVE AND GOLD 127
IX. SIR WILFORD HAS HIS OWN WAY 141
X. MARION IS RAISED TO DISTINCTION 159
XI. AT THE HOW 177
XII. TILBERRY STEEPLECHASE 188
XIII. JOEL PILGRIM 227
XIV. ALEXIS COMES TO GRIEF 244
XV. FALLEN BY THE WAYSIDE 265
XVI. GOOD SAMARITANS 275
XVII. BITTER ALMONDS 294
XVIII. VILLAGE SLANDER 313
DEAD MEN’S SHOES.
CHAPTER I.
A DANGEROUS TRIUMPH.
That visit of Sir Wilford Cardonnel’s to Lancaster Lodge is
followed in about ten days by a second morning call, the baronet
being supported on this occasion by his elder sister, a rather
strong-minded young woman, who rejoices in the pastoral name of Phœbe.
‘My sisters are dying to know you,’ says Sir Wilford, with a gush of
enthusiasm, after the necessary introductions have been gone through
in a slipshod way, Sir Wilford being careless of the rules and
ceremonies of polite life.
Miss Cardonnel’s countenance does not support her brother’s statement
by any gleam of light from the spirit within. She is looking round
the handsome--upholsterer’s--drawing-room with a critical air, taking
stock of the big Japanese vases, so like those in the window of the
chief grocer at Krampston, the crimson satin curtains, and sofas,
half an acre or so of looking-glass, the black boys in front of the
console table, holding up golden baskets of emptiness in their ebony
arms. A room so different from the spacious saloon at the How, with
its faded curtains and fine old pictures, its tulipwood coffee-tables
and threadbare carpets, its crystal chandeliers, and cabinets of old
English china, collected by the grandmothers and great-grandmothers
of the reigning family.
‘What a pity these commercial people have everything so fine and so
new!’ thinks Miss Cardonnel. ‘If they didn’t burst out into all this
splendour one might forget they were parvenus. The girl is pretty, I
suppose, or what most people call pretty. Features too sharply cut
for my taste.’
Miss Cardonnel’s features are of the blunt order, and her face
inclines to that type of beauty which the vulgar mind classifies as
‘puddingy.’
They have found Sibyl in the drawing-room, looking her very prettiest
in white muslin, much adorned with Valenciennes, straw-coloured bows
dotted about here and there among the flouncings and ruchings, and
a broad straw-coloured sash tied with that artistic carelessness
which is one of Sibyl’s gifts. She has a running account now at
Carmichael’s, the leading draper of Redcastle, and orders what she
likes. The account has been running for the past twelve months, and
indulgent as her millionaire uncle is, Sibyl rather dreads the hour
when the sum-total of this account shall be brought under his notice.
But in a dull provincial town what excitement can a pretty girl have
except a little extravagance in the way of dress? Even matrons whose
beauty is a matter of tradition are apt to plunge into a vortex of
millinery for want of any other whirlpool wherein to rotate.
Stephen Trenchard receives his guests with a marked graciousness,
accepts Sir Wilford’s friendly advances greedily, and tries to make
himself agreeable to Miss Cardonnel, who is rather more stony and
unimpressionable than she ought to be if she comes prepared to extend
the hand of friendship.
‘I am very glad for my niece to make pleasant--indeed distinguished
acquaintance,’ says Mr. Trenchard. ‘People in Redcastle have been
very kind, Mrs. Stormont especially, quite motherly in her goodness
to Sibyl. But I am better pleased for her to know county people,
there is a--a difference.’
‘Yes, I suppose you find it so,’ replies Miss Cardonnel coolly, as if
she felt that she belonged to another order of bipeds. ‘Mrs. Stormont
is nice, of course,’ with seraphic patronage, ‘very good family, I
believe, the Stormonts,’--this dubiously, as much as to say, ‘so they
tell me, poor creatures, but I haven’t seen the particulars in Burke.’
Sir Wilford has come to ask when Mr. Trenchard is going to drive Miss
Faunthorpe over to the How.
‘If you want to see our roses, you know, you must not lose any time,
you know,’ he adds, emphatically,--‘must they, Phœbe?’
‘The roses are nearly over now, Wilford,’ replies Miss Cardonnel,
which remark is not exactly a warm invitation.
‘Oh, stuff! why, you were saying that the Dijons were just in their
glory this very morning, while we were waiting for the phaeton. When
will you come, Miss Faunthorpe? To-morrow--Wednesday--Thursday?’
‘We dine at the Friary on Wednesday, Wilford.’
‘Ah, to be sure. To-morrow, then?’
Sibyl looks embarrassed. This marked attention from the head
of a county family kindles no flush of gratified vanity on her
cheek to-day. Sir Wilford’s admiration was pleasant enough on the
racecourse, a triumph in the sight of all Redcastle, but the matter
is now growing more serious. She begins to think that she has really
made a conquest, that Sir Wilford is disagreeably in earnest.
‘It is like the realization of my childish dream about a rich
husband, and all the bells in Redcastle ringing for my wedding,’ she
says to herself, ‘only it comes too late. I am not sorry that it is
so. I have no regret. I made my choice, and shall be proud to stand
by it when the time comes. Only it is curious that the childish
dream should come true after all.’
‘Will you come to the How to-morrow, Mr. Trenchard?’ asks Sir
Wilford. ‘We have some old pictures that you may like to see. There’s
a Vandyke my father used to think great things of, and our gardens
are worth a visit in this weather, though I’m always blowing up those
beggars of gardeners. Come early, and we can do the gardens before
luncheon, and the pictures after.’
‘My uncle so seldom goes out in the morning,’ says Sibyl, quickly, as
if eager to find an excuse for declining.
‘But this invitation is too tempting to be refused,’ interposes Mr.
Trenchard. ‘I have heard wonders of the How. Mrs. Stormont is very
fond of talking about the How vineries and the How stables.’
‘Then you’ll come to-morrow,’ exclaims Sir Wilford, delightedly.
Miss Cardonnel is lost in contemplation of the lights and shadows on
the lawn, seen under the Spanish blind, which affords but a limited
view of the garden.
‘If that day will suit Miss Cardonnel’s engagements.’
‘Oh, I shall be very happy, I’m sure,’ replies the young lady thus
directly appealed to.
After this Miss Cardonnel is tolerably civil, and talks to Sibyl a
little, questioning her about her habits and amusements--whether
she rides, is fond of croquet, archery, and so on, with rather a
district-visiting air, as of a kindly inquirer letting herself down
to the level of the lower classes.
‘You have a croquet club, or something of that sort in Redcastle,’
she says, loftily, as if she had never had the institution clearly
explained to her. ‘I rather think my sister and I are honorary
members, but we’ve never been.’
‘Yes, there is a club for croquet and archery. They meet in Sir John
Boldero’s park.’
‘Very nice for you, I dare say,’ remarks Miss Cardonnel, as much as
to say, ‘People of your class must be provided with amusements of
some kind.’
They all take a little stroll in the garden presently, and Miss
Cardonnel deigns to admire the fine old plane trees on the lawn. It
is a considerable relief to move about in the sunshine, and have
flower-beds and standard roses to look at and talk about, after that
forced conversation in the drawing-room.
‘I think your ribbon borders are better than ours,’ remarks Miss
Cardonnel. ‘Those are the stables, I suppose,’ looking at the
slated roofs which appear just above the shrubbery. ‘Have you many
saddle-horses?’
‘Only the one my uncle bought for me. The groom rides one of the
carriage horses.’
Miss Cardonnel visibly shudders.
‘And is your horse nice?’
‘She’s a darling, very pretty, and very gentle.’
‘Indeed,’ says Miss Cardonnel. ‘I hate gentle horses. I like a horse
to be lively, and give me something to do. It must be rather dull
work for you riding alone, if you’re not particularly fond of riding.’
‘Oh, but I’m very fond of riding.’
‘You don’t hunt, I suppose?’
‘No, my uncle would hardly like that, I think.’
‘I dare say not. Wilford, your roans must be very tired of waiting,
and I have some more calls to make.’
Mr. Trenchard begs his guests to stay to luncheon.
‘Thanks; you are very good, but it would be quite impossible,’
replies Miss Cardonnel, decisively. ‘I have so much to do before I go
home. Then we are to see you at the How to-morrow. Good-bye.--Come,
Wilford, pray.’
Sir Wilford, who has been gazing at Sibyl, and forgetting the
engagements of life and time, follows his sister reluctantly, after a
cordial leave-taking.
‘Well, little woman, I think there’s no doubt about your having made
a conquest there,’ says Stephen Trenchard, directly the Cardonnels
have vanished.
His tone is at once more cheerful and more affectionate than it has
been for some little time, for a period dating from that night on
which he received his nameless visitor.
‘Please don’t talk about conquests, uncle.’
‘Nonsense, child! It’s a subject I’m very glad to talk about. I want
you to marry well. I should like you to make a brilliant marriage,
Sibyl, before I am gone.’
‘Dear uncle, pray don’t----’
‘My love, I’m an old man,--tough and wiry enough, it is true, but
well on in years. I can’t expect to live for ever. And I should like
to see you well placed in life before I say my _nunc dimittis_.’
‘What does it matter, uncle?’ says Sibyl impatiently.
It is so tiresome of this old man--rolling in wealth, and of course
intending to bequeath a considerable portion of his riches to her--to
harp thus persistently upon the advantages of a good marriage. What
could a rich husband avail to one who is to be so richly dowered? Two
fortunes are no better than one if the one be large enough for every
earthly desire.
‘Believe me, dear uncle, I have no idea of marrying. I never shall
marry. And as for Sir Wilford Cardonnel,’ adds Sibyl with asperity,
‘I positively hate him.’
She has her husband’s letter in her bosom--that letter written in
the Pimlico coffee-house, and transmitted through Jane Dimond’s
toil-stained hands,--and the idea of any other man’s admiration is
revolting to her. If--if she dared but tell her uncle the truth! If
he had not this rooted hatred of his dead enemy’s race, how different
life might be!
‘Hate a fine, handsome young man--one of the best men in the
county--who has come out of his way to pay you attention! I’m ashamed
of you, Sibyl,’ exclaims Stephen Trenchard, and his bristling brows
contract threateningly over his keen dark eyes as he scrutinizes
Sibyl’s pale face.
‘I hope there is no one else in the background,’ he says, ‘no scamp
whose acquaintance you made in London. Perhaps that’s the reason why
you stayed away so long after I had asked to see you.’
Sibyl’s pale cheek grows paler.
‘There is no one, uncle,’ she says resolutely, feeling that the
situation is desperate. ‘Have you ever heard me speak of any one? All
I want is not to be worried about marrying. If you are tired of me,
if you think me an encumbrance, or a burden, send me away. I can go
back to uncle Robert, or I can be a governess again.’
This little bit of temper, or independence, pleases Mr. Trenchard.
‘Don’t fly into a passion, little one,’ he says, kindly. ‘I suppose
you know how pretty you look when you are angry. I won’t tease you
any more about getting married, but when a good chance offers don’t
refuse it. That’s all I say, my dear.’
They go in to luncheon together, and Sibyl resumes those pretty
coaxing ways that have won her uncle’s heart. She sits near him and
ministers to his wants, which are not many, never forgets to hand
him the Nepaul pepper, pours out his glass of claret--all with a
caressing tenderness which is not without its charm for him.
‘I think I shall pay a duty visit this afternoon, uncle, unless you
want me for anything.’
‘Going to see your sister and the old doctor, I suppose,’ replies Mr.
Trenchard. He speaks of Robert Faunthorpe with a touch of compassion,
as if the surgeon were considerably his senior, instead of being his
junior by about ten years.
‘Yes, uncle. Marion thinks me unkind for not going oftener. But it’s
such a long dusty walk through the town, and if I take the carriage
she does nothing but sneer at me.’
‘Poor Marion,’ says Mr. Trenchard. ‘She has all the littleness of a
girl fresh from boarding school. Let her sneer, child. We must all
live our own lives, and let people think what they like about us.
You’d better take the carriage.’
‘It’s not worth while. I should like to stop with Marion and Jenny
for a few hours. I shall be back to dinner, of course, uncle.’
‘I’m glad of that. You’ve spoiled me for lonely dinners, little one.
I miss those bright eyes of yours at the other side of the table.’
It is a broiling summer afternoon, and that long empty street below
Bar, the broad bright market-place, Little Bethel, the British
schools, the Sunday school, the Independent Chapel, the Athena Lodge,
are all glaring in the sun. Mrs. Groshen has made her house-front
a blaze of geranium and calceolaria, festoons of verdure hang
down from the encaustic flower-boxes, brass canary cages glitter
in the open windows. Dr. Mitsand’s grave old house on the shady
side of the street, brown and sombre, contrasts this variegated
glare. From this point the houses decrease in size and importance,
and a little lower down begin the shops--all of a refined and
elegant character at this end of the street. The hairdresser’s--the
stationer and bookseller’s--the fancy and Berlin wool warehouse--the
photographer’s--the fashionable pastrycook’s, in whose plate-glass
window appear a wooden wedding cake, sumptuously decorated with
fly-spotted plaster of Paris, two glass jellies, and three tall glass
jars of confectionery of the méringue and cracker bonbon order, which
have never been opened within the knowledge of the external world.
The méringues, the bonbons, the Savoy biscuits are pale with old
age. But the confectioner is not without business, for it is he who
supplies the _vol au vents à la Financière_, and the lobster cutlets
which are an inevitable feature in a Redcastle dinner.
After these genteeler repositories come the vulgar every-day
butchers and bakers, grocers, candlestick-makers, drapers, and
tallow-chandlers. The street opens into the market square, in the
middle of which stands the town hall, square and imposing, with a
façade of no particular style, and a big-faced clock which is always
at variance with the minster. Here, too, is the police station at a
corner, with a flaming bill stuck against its stony front, offering
a reward for the apprehension of the assassin in a murder case which
no one has ever heard of. That bill will disappear in a day or two,
and no one in Redcastle will ever be any the wiser about the murderer
or murder. After the market square the high street, or main artery
of the town, dwindles and grows narrow. The shops become dingy and
small. There are rows of cottages at intervals; then a row of very
ancient and shabby almshouses, whose parlours have sunk below the
level of the pavement, and whose upper chambers are no higher than
the passing pedestrian’s shoulder. Here, at the end of the street,
the centre of all this shabbiness, rising sublimely above the petty
modern town, stands the minster--one of the most perfect cathedral
churches in the land,--its ancient burial-ground stretching widely
behind it, a forge and a cluster of old-fashioned cottages for its
opposite neighbours, and beyond the white high road and the open
fields. There are a few houses and gardens on this high road, and the
second of these, on the same side as the minster, is Dr. Faunthorpe’s
dull old dwelling. The roses are in bloom in the front garden to-day,
and brighten the aspect of the house a little, but the roses and the
grass, the old cherry tree in the corner, and the jessamine against
the wall are all alike whitened with dust.
The garden gate is rarely locked, and the house door is always open
in warm weather, so Sibyl has nothing to do but walk in. She has not
seen her relatives at this end of the town since she saw them on
the racecourse, and she is quite prepared to find Marion somewhat
cantankerous. That young lady starts up from the sofa with flushed
face, rumpled hair, and a generally towzled appearance, as Sibyl
enters the every-day parlour. She has fallen asleep over a novel,
in which an impossibly lovely and accomplished heroine revolves in
a circle of dukes and duchesses, marquises and millionaires; the
male members of which patrician society fall in love with her at the
slightest provocation.
‘Oh!’ exclaims Marion, with a long yawn, ‘It’s you, is it? I didn’t
expect you’d come and see _us_ any more, now that you’ve made the
acquaintance of the county. Pray to what fortuitous combination of
circumstances do we owe this unlooked-for honour?’ she adds, with a
touch of the all-accomplished heroine’s dignity.
‘Don’t be an idiot, Marion. I wonder I ever do come to see you,
considering how execrable you make yourself.’
‘I do not enjoy _your_ opportunities,’ replies Marion, briskly. ‘_I_
am not favoured with the friendship of the Stormonts. _I_ don’t live
in a splendidly furnished house with pampered flunkeys to wait upon
me. _I_ haven’t a running account at the draper’s. In short, I’m a
low vulgar person altogether.’
‘Marion, you are too absurd!’
‘“Her manners had not the repose that marks the cast of Vere de
Vere.” You ought to pity my shortcomings. I dare say when you are
Lady Cardonnel you will cut me altogether. You looked as if you would
have liked to do it on the racecourse.’
‘And so I should, you provoking minx. The idea of taking that horrid
old rattle-trap of a pony carriage up to the racecourse, to let all
Redcastle see how often the harness has been mended, and how the
cushions have been devoured by moths!’
‘Everybody can’t have barouches and pairs,’ cries Marion, with
vixenish energy. ‘You thought I was going to stay away from the
races, did you? while you were enjoying yourself with your grand
friends. If you didn’t want me to go in uncle Robert’s pony chaise,
why didn’t you take me in uncle Trenchard’s barouche? He’s my uncle
every bit as much as he’s yours, unless I’m a changeling. I was to be
moping at home, was I, while you were decked out in new bonnets and
things, and flirting audaciously with a baronet. Cinderella’s sisters
were kindness itself compared with you.’
‘Talk as much nonsense as you like, Marion, I’m not going to quarrel
with you. The weather’s much too warm for family squabbles. I’m sure
I’ve been nearly melted between Lancaster Lodge and here.’
‘People accustomed to a barouche must find walking a trial.’
‘Where’s Jenny?’
‘Making an object of herself in the garden, I suppose,’ replies
Marion, flinging herself down upon the sofa and resuming her novel.
‘I’ll go and have a chat with her. She’s pleasanter company than you
are, at any rate.’
‘I dare say,’ says Marion contemptuously, with her back to her
sister. ‘Some people don’t like home truths.’
Sibyl goes into the garden, not displeased at being on bad terms with
Marion. Jenny is the person she has come to see, and it is vital to
her to see Jenny alone.
The long old-fashioned garden is a land flowing with milk and honey
in this blazing July weather. Gooseberry bushes bending under their
heavy load; smooth gooseberries and hairy gooseberries, green, red,
and yellow gooseberries, currants red, white, and black. The hoary
old bushes grow such fruit as you could rarely find in your orderly
modern garden. This midsummer-time is Jane Faunthorpe’s saturnalia.
She spends the long warm afternoons in a dwarf forest of prickly
shrubs, tears her frocks to absolute ribbons, neglects her stockings,
lets her long tails of brown hair go loose and ragged as a beggar
girl’s, and in her sister’s words makes an object of herself. The
fruit she eats all day, the lettuces and other green stuffs she
consumes at supper-time, would lay an ordinary mortal low, under
the deadly grip of cholera; but Jenny is none the worse for her
intemperance, and rises with renewed vigour every morning to run riot
among the gooseberry bushes. Dr. Faunthorpe remonstrates occasionally
on the subject of his youngest niece’s unkempt and down-at-heel
condition, and remarks plaintively that she is not exactly a credit
to him or to her sisters. But Marion flings the burden of blame on
Jane. She is quite incorrigible. It is useless to attempt improvement.
‘If I were to work my fingers to the bone to-day, she’d be just as
ragged to-morrow,’ argues Marion.
‘But, my love, there are rents, absolute rents in her frock which
might surely be sewn up with very little labour,’ pleads the mild
doctor.
‘Then let her sew them up herself,’ exclaims Marion, ‘she’s old
enough. I shan’t encourage her to be a tear-coat by doing all her
mending.’
The old servant and factotum, Hester, girds at both,--Jenny for her
sluttishness, Marion for her fine-ladyism.
‘You can pore your eyes out over a bit of trumpery to make yourself
smart,’ she says to the elder damsel, ‘yet you won’t thread a needle
to make your sister tidy.’
Thus Jenny is an element of discord in the house, and, conscious of
this fact, confines herself but seldom within its walls. She rambles
about the garden, or squats in dusty corners, or hides among the
gooseberry bushes all day long. She has sundry members of the animal
kingdom for her amusement, a blind jackdaw in a dilapidated old cage
in the stable, caterpillars and green beetles in paper boxes or old
pickle bottles, a family of white mice, a hutch full of rabbits. With
these companions she is perfectly happy.
Sibyl finds her youngest sister sitting on the ground in a spot where
the gooseberries grow thickest, sunburnt, disorderly, her plentiful
brown hair hanging loosely over her shoulders, no collar, no cuffs,
a dirty holland gown out at elbows and too short at the wrists, and
two stout legs stretched straight before her in wrinkled stockings,
two overgrown feet in clumsy boots making themselves ungracefully
conspicuous. Jenny Faunthorpe is not a bad-looking girl, and may
possibly develop eventually, into a good-looking woman, but in her
present wild state she has not that air of refinement which Sibyl
would like to see in her sister.
To-day, however, Sibyl is anxious to be on good terms with this young
Bohemian.
‘Well, child, burning yourself to a cinder as usual,’ she begins,
‘and you might have such a nice complexion if you would only take
care of it.’
‘I should never have _your_ complexion,’ answers the reprobate
child without looking up; ‘I’m not made of tinted marble, like Mr.
Somebody’s coloured Venus.’
‘Get up, you silly girl, and let me have a look at you.’
‘De-ah me!’ cries Jenny, ‘So you know me to-day; you didn’t seem to
recognise me on the racecourse last week, in uncle Robert’s pony
chaise. You needn’t have been so proud. We were carriage people just
as much as you. A carriage is a carriage anyhow.’
‘There are some carriages that are a great deal more disgraceful than
walking,’ exclaims Sibyl, forgetting the necessity of conciliating
this outspoken child.
‘Yes, carriages that people ride in through lick spittling, and
turning their backs on their truest benefactors,’ cries the
incorrigible Jane. ‘If it hadn’t been for uncle Robert’s goodness we
might all have died of starvation when we were tiny children. Uncle
Trenchard did not think of us then, oh dear no. But uncle Trenchard
can leave us a lot of money, and uncle Robert can’t, so we court
uncle Trenchard. At least some of us do--not a hundred miles from
this gooseberry bush.’
‘Well, Jenny, I came here this overpowering afternoon, through that
baking town, on purpose to see you, but as you’re not particularly
civil I may as well go back.’
‘No, you needn’t,’ cries Jenny, springing up from the ground and
letting a shower of gooseberry skins fall from her lap. ‘I feel
better tempered now that I’ve given you a piece of my mind, but when
you see me again in a public place, Sib, don’t you try to cut me,
because it won’t do. I’m not going to be cut by my own flesh and
blood. I’ll run and coax Hester to let us have tea in the arbour.
You know that old vine in the corner; it doesn’t grow grapes, but
it grows lots of leaves; me and Tom Sprig have made an arbour, and
trained that old vine over it.’
‘I should say Tom Sprig and I.’
‘Should you? I shouldn’t. If I’m not of more consequence than a boy
that comes to litter the pony for eighteen-pence a week, I don’t know
English grammar. Such an awfully jolly arbour, Sib. I’ll run and see
about tea.’
There is a vision of legs whirling wildly down the garden walk,
and Jane is gone to hold parley with honest old Hester, who stands
at a wash-tub by the back kitchen window, the perspiration pouring
down her toilworn face. There are women in the world who bear all
the burden of family cares without the sweets of kindred, and this
faithful old servant is one of these. She has toiled and striven for
Dr. Faunthorpe’s nieces as if they were her own flesh and blood; has
scolded and praised them, worked for them and thought for them, risen
early and gone to bed late; and except that she is recognised in a
general way as a good creature, too fond of using her tongue, she has
not much reward for her labours in this sublunary sphere.
‘Tea in the arbour!’ cries her shrill voice, ‘and on a washing day!
Who ever heard of such a thing? You’re never happy unless you’re
giving trouble.’
‘But we must have tea somewhere, mustn’t we, stupid? And what’s the
difference of our having it in the arbour if I carry out the tray?’
‘Yes, and smash half the cups and saucers.’
‘Oh dear yes; I’m always smashing things, ain’t I? Who was it broke
the pie-dish yesterday? Not me.’
The damsel opens a cupboard, takes out loaf and butter-dish, whisks
a tea-tray from its shelf, and arranges cups and saucers with a
tremendous clatter, while the longsuffering Hester is wiping her
shrivelled hands. There is a good deal of squabbling, but the tray is
laid between the disputants, the tea made, a plateful of bread and
butter, and another plate of plain currant cake cut, and Hester bears
the tray off to the garden, Jenny following with the cake and bread
and butter, radiant at her victory.
The arbour, in an angle of the crumbling red brick wall, is not
altogether a bad place after its fashion. An ancient fig tree, which
grows anyhow, and bears innumerable figs that never ripen, shields it
on one side, the vine covers the other side, and trails over the top.
Tom Sprig, the stable boy, has exercised his mechanical genius in
constructing a rude table and bench out of old packing cases--Jenny
has painted bench and table a vivid green.
Here Hester places the tea-tray, under protest, after a passing
nod--not a very friendly salutation--to Sibyl.
‘If you like earwigs in your teas you’ll have ’em in plenty,’ she
says, as she surveys the rustic banquet. ‘There’s no accounting for
tastes;’ and with this remark she returns to her wash-tub.
‘I’ll run and fetch Marion,’ says Jenny.
‘Not just this minute, dear,’ says Sibyl, stopping her. ‘I want to
have a few words with you alone.’
For an instant or so Jenny apprehends a lecture, but as Sibyl winds
her arm caressingly round her sister’s waist, Jenny opines that she
is wanted to share some agreeable confidence.
‘You are going to tell me about _him_,’ she cries eagerly. ‘Do, Sib.
When is it to be?’
‘Whom do you mean by _him_?’
‘Sir Wilford Cardonnel, of course. Anybody could see that it was a
case of smite.’
‘Jenny, what horrid language!’
‘I mean to say that he was smitten. And he has called on you with
Mrs. Stormont, too. That must mean something.’
‘Who told you that?’
‘Hester knows a young woman that’s housemaid at Mrs. Stormont’s, and
she tells us all that goes on Above Bar. Oh, we’re not quite cut off
from the world of fashion, though we do live at the shabby end of the
town. When is it to be, Sib?’
They are walking slowly up and down the path by the old red wall, and
the border where clove carnations and cabbage roses grow in wildest
luxuriance.
‘When is _what_ to be, child?’
‘Your wedding. When are you going to be Lady Cardonnel? You’ll let
me be bridesmaid, won’t you, Sib? I’ll try to be graceful. I’ll take
such pains with myself for a month beforehand, and I’m your own
sister, you know. It stands to reason I ought to be bridesmaid; I’ve
just as good a right as Marion. When is it going to be, Sib?’
‘Never,’ cries Sibyl, turning upon her angrily; ‘and if you allow
your tongue to run on in this ridiculous manner I shan’t come to see
you any more.’
‘But you’d marry him if he asked you, sure to goodness,’ exclaims
Jane. ‘Sure to goodness’ is a favourite ejaculation of Hester’s.
‘No, I should not, Jenny;’ and, in a gush of feeling or remorse, or
utter helplessness, Sibyl flings her arms round Jane Faunthorpe’s
neck, and sobs upon her shoulder.
‘Sibyl, whatever _is_ the matter?’
‘I’ll tell you presently. Oh, Jenny, I’m very miserable.’
‘Miserable, with that lovely hat, and with all that Madeira work on
your dress?’
‘Yes, Jane. I want some one to help me, some one to pity me, and I
would rather trust you than Marion.’
‘Trust me, then. You might trust me with high treason,’ cries Jenny,
vehemently, her notions of history being for the most part derived
from Mr. Ainsworth’s novels. ‘If I had my flesh torn off with red-hot
pincers, or my feet screwed up in iron boots, I wouldn’t tell. You’d
get no Rye House Plot out of me.’
‘Yes, I think I can trust you, Jenny,’ says Sibyl, drying her tears.
‘You were always my favourite sister, you know.’
‘I didn’t know it, though I remember you said so when I told you
about that man.’
‘Yes, dear, I always loved you best.’
‘I’m very glad to hear it, Sib; and I shall be your bridesmaid,
shan’t I, when you marry, and wear white muslin over white silk,
a pink sash, and a wreath of pink daisies? That’s _my_ idea of a
bridesmaid’s dress.’
‘I shall never have any bridesmaids, Jenny.’
CHAPTER II.
HALF CONFIDENCE.
‘What do you mean by not having any bridesmaids, Sibyl?’ demands
Jenny, as the sisters walk slowly along the garden path. ‘You can’t
be married without them, can you?’
‘Yes,’ answers Sibyl; ‘I know a girl who was married one morning with
not a soul belonging to her in the church.’
‘Gracious goodness! Who gave her away?’
‘The beadle.’
‘How horrid!’
‘And now let’s be serious, Jenny. Do you remember that man who came
here two years ago in the winter, and questioned you about me?’
‘As if I were likely to forget him!’
‘If he were to come again, and want to see me, what should you say to
him?’
‘Well, that would depend upon how he was dressed. If he looked like
a beggar, as he did last time, I should tell him some bouncer or
other, and send him away, because I’m sure you wouldn’t like a ragged
person to come and ask for you at Lancaster Lodge.’
‘What a sensible girl you are, Jenny!’
‘Yes, I believe my head is screwed on pretty tight.’
‘Now listen, darling. If that poor young man should come here again
and ask you questions about me, you must contrive to send him away
with the idea that I am ever so far from Redcastle. In Scotland,
Ireland, anywhere you like. But you must not say that I am abroad,
as he knows that I’m within a twenty-four hours’ post of London. Say
what you like, but don’t let him know that I’m in Redcastle; and
whatever you do, don’t mention uncle Trenchard’s name.’
‘I’ll be as secret as the grave,’ answers Jane, solemnly. ‘Don’t you
think that tea will be overdrawn?’
‘Let it draw a little longer. We all like it strong, you know. You
shall have this hat next week, Jenny, since you think it pretty.’
‘Pretty! It’s absolutely divine! Marion will be awfully jealous.’
‘I can’t help that. If Marion were a little more civil I should give
her plenty of pretty things. Now listen, Jenny. Suppose that poor
young man were to say curious things--were to tell you something
strange about me----’
‘What could he tell me?’ asks Jane, making her eyes as round as
marbles.
‘Never mind what. You must not be surprised, and you must not let
him discover anything from your manner. Above all, remember that he
is to know nothing about uncle Trenchard. It is nothing wrong that I
am asking you to do, Jenny, except so far as it is wrong to tell a
falsehood, and I really think even that is excusable when one is in a
great dilemma.’
‘_I_ don’t mind telling a bouncer,’ says Jane, boldly. ‘Bouncers
never weigh much on my conscience.’
‘It is very wicked to tell stories in a general way. You ought to
know that, Jenny. But this is quite an exceptional case. It is all
for the best. All will come right in the end. And I shall love you
dearly, Jenny, if you will help me out of my difficulties. Mind,
the person I speak of may not come here again. I only wish you to be
prepared for him if he should come.’
‘I’m prepared,’ answered Jenny, boldly. ‘Poor fellow! I did feel
sorry for him that bitter winter day. He looked so tired and
worn--very good-looking, too, in spite of all. How handsome he must
be when he’s well dressed!’
‘Yes, he is very handsome,’ says Sibyl, pensively.
‘And you like him, Sib--just a little bit?’
‘I loved him with all my heart--I love him still--I am true to him
through all difficulties. Remember that always, Jenny.’
‘Gracious!’ cries Jenny. ‘And it is on his account that you would
refuse to marry Sir Wilford Cardonnel if he were to ask you?’
‘Yes, Jenny.’
‘But I say, Sib, suppose he should come to the front door, and Marion
or Hester should get hold of him?’
‘You must be on the watch to prevent that. If he comes at all, he is
likely to come within the next few days. I rely upon your cleverness
to prevent his seeing Marion or Hester.’
‘Very well. It will be difficult, but I’ll do my best. And now I’d
better run and call Marion to tea, or she’ll begin to think there are
secrets between you and I.’
‘Between you and me, Jenny!’
‘Oh, bother! If I say me, it’s I; if I say I, it’s me. I’ll run for
Marion.’
Again appears that vision of legs whirling wildly, and scanty
skirts flying in the wind. Sibyl strolls along the path, and looks
at the big cabbage roses, the red crinkled wall, the sprawling
vegetable marrows, the flush of uncultivated fertility. Red and
yellow dragon’s-mouth flourishes on the wall. Stonecrop in full
flower yonder on the sloping roof of the tumbledown old shed,
that serves as a stable, converts the thatch into a roof of gold.
Butterflies, bees, and all the summer insects, are flying from flower
to flower, carrying the yellow pollen on their honey-smeared wings,
and intermarrying all the families of blossoms as they flutter to
and fro. It is only poverty’s poorly tended garden, but how full
of colour and perfume and beauty! It is almost as good as uncle
Trenchard’s velvet lawn and mosaic flower-beds. ‘One feels more at
home here,’ thinks Sibyl.
‘I wish I were Jenny or Marion, without a care for what to-morrow may
bring forth,’ she thinks; ‘even though I forfeited my chance of uncle
Trenchard’s fortune.’
Marion comes along the path by the gooseberry bushes presently,
tearing her muslin skirt once or twice by contact with the straggling
thorny branches on the way, and muttering little ejaculations which
come as near swearing as a lady can permit herself to venture.
‘Plague take the brambles!’ she cries. ‘At uncle Trenchard’s the
kitchen-garden is in its proper place, not all mixed up with the
flowers. How you must laugh at us, Sibyl, for drinking tea in such an
arbour as that, and calling it pleasure!’
‘Not at all. I am very fond of uncle Robert’s old garden; and I think
everything grows here better than at Lancaster Lodge.’
‘It’s very considerate of you to say that, in order to reconcile us
to our lowly lot,’ replies Marion with a sneer, as she takes her
place on the narrow green bench, and begins to pour out the tea.
‘Milk and sugar, I suppose? You used to take both when I had
the privilege of being intimate with you--of course it’s cream
at Lancaster Lodge--and the sugar doesn’t look as if it had the
jaundice, as ours does.’
Marion is not comfortably awake yet; her eyes have a watery look;
the great lump of hair and padding with which she adorns the top of
her head is pushed awry; her toilet has an air of faded fashion,
of tumbled frippery, which is suggestive of a struggle to be fine
under disadvantages. No dress is more becoming to a girlish wearer
than fresh uncreased muslin; but a muslin dress that has been worn
three days and slept in three afternoons is not the loveliest of
garments. Marion has pinned a bow here and there, and has put on the
last fashionable ruffle at one and elevenpence threefarthings, and
has done her best to embellish the soiled muslin, but the result is
failure, and she feels that it is so as she looks at Sibyl’s pure
white cambric and delicate Madeira embroidery.
‘I wonder you are so fond of mauve, Sibyl,’ she says, after a
critical survey of her sister’s hat. ‘It doesn’t suit you by any
means. You look as white as chalk.’
‘The warm weather is rather trying,’ answers Sibyl.
‘And you have such black marks under your eyes.’
‘I have not slept well lately.’
‘You look like it. One would think you had something dreadful on your
conscience. Take that horrid caterpillar off the bread-and-butter
plate, Jenny. I declare this den of yours swarms with reptiles. I saw
a toad under the bench yesterday.’
‘Toads are valuable animals,’ answers Jane. ‘They eat the snails like
one o’clock.’
‘Another of your ladylike similes. Poor uncle Robert! I pity him
when I think how his money was wasted in paying for that child’s
schooling. The only education she got was the bad language she picked
up in the street on her way to school and back. If uncle Trenchard
had a spark of family feeling he’d send her to a good boarding
school, where she’d be licked into shape.’
‘Licked into shape isn’t _my_ idea of elegant language,’ remarks
Jenny, with her mouth full of bread and butter.
‘But I forgot,’ pursues Marion, ignoring this interruption. ‘Uncle
Trenchard reserves all his generosity for _one_ member of this
family. Any attempt of ours to obtain a share of his favour would be
regarded as an intrusion. We are outsiders. But if ever a child was
going to ruin for want of proper tuition, Jenny is that child.’
‘I should have thought you might have taught her yourself, Marion,’
says Sibyl.
‘Should you? Then perhaps you’ll be kind enough to try the experiment
some morning for an hour or two before you think any more about it. A
more unteachable brat I never came across in all my life, and I took
the fourth class at Miss Worrie’s for a week when you were laid up
with scarlatina.’
‘I don’t like to be taught by an ignoramus,’ exclaims the
contumacious Jenny. ‘Who was it said _nous allerons_ was the future
of _aller_? People should learn before they teach. At least, that’s
my idea.’
Sibyl, wearied with these recriminatory passages, looks at her
watch, and finds that it is time for her to go back to Lancaster
Lodge.
‘It’s half an hour’s walk,’ she says. ‘And I must be dressed for
dinner by seven, uncle Trenchard likes me to be in the drawing-room
half an hour before dinner.’
‘Ah, no wonder you don’t care about our currant cake when you’re
going to have a regular tuck out at half-past seven,’ exclaims Jenny.
‘If you knew how little appetite I have for uncle Trenchard’s grand
dinners, Jenny, you wouldn’t envy me,’ says Sibyl.
‘In fact, my dear Jenny,’ exclaims Marion, going over to the enemy,
‘Sibyl is a woman of fashion, a superior being whom you and I are not
qualified to comprehend.’
This remark winds up the skirmish, Sibyl wishes Marion good-bye, and
leaves the arbour, followed by Jenny, who hangs on her as they walk
down the narrow path. At the kitchen window Sibyl pauses to say a
civil word to Hester.
‘And how are you, Hester, this warm weather?’ she inquires.
‘Just as hard at work as if it was cold weather,’ replies Hester, in
no wise mollified by the sweetness of this address. ‘Your uncle’s
shirts have to be washed, even if it is the dog days, and the
perspiration running down one’s face. As to how I am in myself, I
haven’t got time to think whether I’m ill or well, and that’s all
about it.’
‘I hope uncle Robert is feeling better than when I saw him last,’
remarks Sibyl, playing with the ivory handle of her parasol,
embarrassed by the faithful servant’s stern countenance.
‘Then he isn’t,’ snaps Hester. ‘And a deal you care about it. I
wouldn’t be an ’ypocrite, if I was you, Miss Sibyl. You’ve got your
rich uncle. Stick to him. And don’t pretend to care about the poor
uncle that brought you up.’
‘Upon my word,’ exclaimed Sibyl, half angry, ‘I wonder that I ever
come here.’
‘So do I, miss. You come so seldom that you might just as well stay
away altogether. It would be more consistent.’
CHAPTER III.
RECEIVED BY THE COUNTY.
At half-past twelve o’clock on the following day Sibyl and Mr.
Trenchard start on their drive to the How. It is more than an hour’s
drive, even with Mr. Trenchard’s well-fed horses, who are used so
little that they are in a chronic state of either wanting to run away
or languishing into a crawl. Their paces between Redcastle and the
How are an alternate bolt and dawdle, and perhaps, on the whole, they
take more time about the journey than the less pampered steeds which
ply for hire at Redcastle station.
Sir Wilford Cardonnel is smoking his cigar on the grassy walk inside
the moat as Mr. Trenchard’s carriage drives through the gateway. The
How is a good old place of the moated grange order. Tudor gables and
windows in front; roofs and chimneys at the back of the premises
of an earlier period; a fine old chapel, which has been converted
into a drawing-room; a monkish refectory, which has been made a
billiard-room. The gardens are lovely, and that deep wide moat, with
its dark still water and smooth green banks, adds not a little to
their beauty. A swan comes sailing down the dark shining water as
Sibyl alights, assisted by Sir Wilford, who has thrown away his cigar
and come to welcome his guests.
‘How late you are!’ he exclaims. ‘I have been expecting you for the
last two hours. Now what will you see first?--the stables or the
gardens?’
Sibyl is going to say the gardens, but Mr. Trenchard, who knows that
his host’s tastes are turfy, votes for the stables.
‘I’m so glad you like stables,’ exclaims Sir Wilford, addressing
himself to Sibyl, as if the choice were hers. ‘I’m rather proud
of mine, you know. I’ve spent a good deal of money upon ’em. They
were regular pigsties when I inherited the place. My poor father
didn’t care about his stables, you know. As long as he had a couple
of carriage horses to drag the family about, a weight-carrying
cob for his own use, and a pony or two for us children, he was
satisfied. His horses weren’t members of his family. Why, in his
time the gardeners and farm labourers were as well accommodated as
the horses,’ concludes Sir Wilford, as if this were the summit of
iniquity.
They traverse a shrubbery, and find themselves in the stable
department, a spacious quadrangle, stone-paved, with a stone basin
of water in the middle. Numbered doors, and windows adorned with
flower-boxes, surround this neat square quadrangle, each door opening
into a loose box, each number belonging to a special quadruped in Sir
Wilford’s stud. Within, the loose boxes are as neat as a spinster
annuitant’s best parlour. Each horse is provided with a cat or dog
for company, while one animal, more social than the rest, is not
satisfied without the society of a stable boy, who sits in a corner
of his box reading the paper all the summer afternoon, while the
lordly beast stares dreamily at him across the swinging door, and
makes an occasional snap at him, displaying an appalling range of
long yellow teeth, in pure playfulness.
Sibyl is introduced severally to the horses, who are swathed in
double sets of clothing, as if they were in Siberia.
‘Why are the poor things wrapped up so this warm weather?’ inquires
Sibyl.
‘That’s to keep up the beauty of their coats, mum,’ says a stable boy.
Numerous animals are unclothed, and brought out in the sunny
quadrangle to display their various graces. They all seem pretty
much alike to Sibyl, except that some are thin and some thick. Sibyl
admires the slimmer animals, but Sir Wilford, Mr. Trenchard, and
the stud groom go into raptures about the thicker and more stalwart
quadrupeds.
‘There’s a shoulder!’ says the groom, punching a bull-necked brute.
‘Carry a church.’
‘There are legs,’ cries Sir Wilford, ‘regular gateposts!’
‘Shall I bring out Bull of Bashan, sir?’ inquires the stud groom,
and another thick-set beast is led forth, plunging viciously to the
rearwards as he emerges from his cool retreat.
Bull of Bashan is the gem of the stud. His leading qualification is
cobbiness, thick neck, thick legs, a straight line from hock to
fetlock, short barrel, broad chest, an eye like Jove to threaten or
command, and not a white hair about him, as the stud groom remarks
complacently. Time was when Bull of Bashan would have been esteemed a
serviceable horse for a village miller, or a tenant farmer. To-day he
is the last fashion for a gentleman of fortune.
‘Ran away with a stable boy yesterday morning when he was being
exercised,’ says Sir Wilford, approvingly, patting the beast’s solid
shoulder, which familiarity the Bull resents by sticking his ears
back till he appears to be unprovided with those appendages, and
giving a vicious kick in the direction of his master’s shins.
‘How do you like the Bull, Miss Faunthorpe?’
‘Isn’t he rather bad tempered?’ inquires Sibyl, doubtfully.
‘Oh, he’s a lively horse, I admit, but the best goer in the stable.
The men don’t care about riding him, but he and I understand each
other,--don’t we, Bull? There, take him in, Chanter.’
They look into other loose boxes, and Sibyl begins to think there is
no end to the horses; but the stable inspection is over at last, and
they go back to the gardens, where the baronet’s sisters condescend
to join them.
Phœbe Cardonnel is a little more inclined to be civil to-day than
she showed herself at Lancaster Lodge yesterday. She tells Sibyl the
names of roses and ferns, and makes herself otherwise agreeable. This
amelioration of the young lady’s manners has been brought about by a
domestic process which Sir Wilford calls ‘a jolly good setting down.’
The baronet has informed his sisters in the plainest language that he
considers Miss Faunthorpe the nicest girl he has met for a long time,
that he has been informed that she has large expectations from the
old Indian beggar, meaning Stephen Trenchard, and that in his, Sir
Wilford’s opinion, she would suit him admirably for a wife.
Whereupon the two sisters, Phœbe and Lavinia, as with one voice,
exclaim in the words of Mrs. Stormont,--
‘Wilford! a girl of no family.’
‘Hang family!’ ejaculates Sir Wilford. ‘We’ve got pedigree enough
and to spare. The needful thing is ready money.’
‘Oh, Wilford, you are rich enough surely.’
‘Oh, I can rub along, if that’s what you mean,’ answers the baronet.
‘But I could buy the Longley Bottom Estate if I had fifty thousand to
dispose of, and then I should be the largest landowner between this
and York. There’s an upland meadow that would make the finest gallop
in England, and you know how badly I want some good training-ground.’
‘Well, Wilford, if I were the head of the family I wouldn’t degrade
myself by a plebeian marriage for the sake of a few paltry thousands.
You might have Lady Malvina Vielleroche for the asking.’
‘But I never shall ask,’ answers Sir Wilford decisively. ‘Lady
Malvina is a good deal too weedy for my money, and I don’t like ’em
that colour. I’d marry Miss Faunthorpe if she hadn’t a sixpence, but
of course I take all the more kindly to the notion on account of that
old chap’s cash. I shouldn’t like to see Longley Manor owned by some
three-quarter bred cockney.’
The result of this conversation, which took place after dinner
yesterday evening, is Phœbe Cardonnel’s amiable welcome of to-day.
She takes Sibyl up to her own room to take off her hat before
luncheon, and Sibyl admires the fine old house with its spacious
corridors, massive Tudor windows, and innumerable rooms. It is all
so different from the formal splendour of Lancaster Lodge. Here all
is picturesque, full of old associations, suggestive of ruffs and
farthingales, silken hose, and jewelled sword-hilts. There must be a
family ghost, of course, in such a house.
‘It is a place whose mistress must feel like a queen,’ thinks Sibyl,
as she stands before the carved oak dressing-table, with its old
Venice mirror, not quite so convenient as a modern dressing-table,
but wondrous stately. From the wide mullioned window she sees the
gardens and park spreading far away to the summer woods, and woods as
well as park and gardens belong to Sir Wilford Cardonnel.
She can but think what a mighty conquest she has made, if Sir Wilford
is really in love with her, as she can hardly doubt. She is just a
little intoxicated by the idea. She feels as if she had been raised
suddenly to a dizzy height, from which she must come toppling down
presently. She feels as she has often felt in a dream years ago at
Miss Worrie’s boarding school, when her slumbers were frequently
visited by a vision of pride in which she saw herself wooed by some
rich and noble suitor, and from which she awoke at the shrill peal of
the school-bell, to find herself in the bleak bare dormitory, with
the prospect of a winter day’s dreary toil before her.
Luncheon at the How is a bounteous and hospitable meal, in an
oak-paneled dining-room. After luncheon they explore the old house,
which although not a show place, is well worthy that honour. They
look at the family pictures, which seem to Sibyl rather a collection
of wigs than of faces, so much more distinctive are the wigs than the
countenances they embellish. The portrait gallery is, of course, a
compendium of the family history, and Sibyl here discovers that the
Cardonnels have produced alternate commanders by land and sea, for
the protection of their country, and have occasionally blossomed into
a judge.
Stephen Trenchard takes his part in the day’s proceedings with
supreme patience; admires the family portraits just as he admired Sir
Wilford’s horses; and makes himself generally agreeable. It is only
when he is seated in the carriage with his niece that the tension
of the bow is relaxed, and weariness overshadows the Anglo-Indian’s
sallow countenance.
‘Rather a long morning, Sibyl,’ he says, ‘and more sight-seeing than
I care about; but I have borne it all for your sake. It will be a
proud day for me if I live to see you mistress of that place. Yes, my
dear, one of the proudest days of my life; and yet I have made many a
conquest over fortune since I left Redcastle, more than fifty years
ago, a gaunt hungry lad--turned my back resolutely on my native town,
knowing very well that there was nothing but starvation for me if I
stayed there any longer.’
Sibyl is silent. It would be cruel to dispel a fancy which evidently
gives the old man pleasure. Let him dream on. If what Mrs. Stormont
says is true--and Stephen Trenchard’s strength is dwindling
fast,--the end may come before he is awakened from his dream.
‘And it will please him better to leave me his money if he thinks
that I am going to be a rich baronet’s wife,’ reasons Sibyl within
herself. ‘To add riches to riches is the delight of such men.’
CHAPTER IV.
JENNY’S VISITOR.
Another blazing July afternoon, and all the cornfields baking under
the ripening sunshine. Jenny Faunthorpe lolls in her favourite
arm-chair--a dreadfully dilapidated arm-chair it is, with a faded
chintz cover which is always grimy--in the surgery window. She is
very fond of sitting in the surgery, chiefly because it is against
her uncle’s household laws--if any man so easy-going and mild as Dr.
Faunthorpe can be said to be a law-giver in his household--that she
should sit there. It is not an attractive apartment. It is dirtier
than any other room in the house, Hester being strictly forbidden to
interfere with things in this sacred chamber, or, in other words, to
sweep, dust, or scour. Its atmosphere is odoriferous with compound
rhubarb pills, colocynth, and pounded aloes. Its counter is sticky
with the traces of divers medicines which have been compounded upon
it. But there are attractions for Jenny in the room notwithstanding,
and she infinitely prefers it to the family parlour. There is the
syrup of poppies yonder on the second shelf from the top, in the
dusty recess where the spiders have such a good time of it, and
Jenny often indulges herself with a few sips of that soporific
decoction. If she has a surreptitious novel in her possession she
hides it on one of the lower shelves, behind the delf jar of leeches,
perhaps. Sometimes she takes the leeches out and plays with them. At
other times, when she is quite sure of not being disturbed by Dr.
Faunthorpe, she amuses herself by taking down sundry bottles and
making up prescriptions of her own. Thus:--
Syrup poppies, 1 oz.
Honey, lots.
Cons. roses, ½ oz.
Peppermint, 1 drachm.
Tamarinds, 2 oz.
Aqua pura, 4 oz.
This afternoon, however, she has a particular reason for preferring
the surgery to her usual happy hunting-grounds among the gooseberry
bushes. Faithful to her promise to Sibyl, she makes the surgery
window her post of observation, so that if the young man she expects
should approach by the front door she may be ready to receive him,
and cut off all communication with Hester. Should he come to the
garden wall, on the other hand, as on his previous visit, there can
be no harm done, as the wall adjoining the lane is beyond Hester’s
ken. With infinite diplomacy Jenny has contrived to get Marion out
of the way for the whole day by persuading her to take the train
to Krampston and visit her old schoolfellow, Maria Harrison, the
Krampston Wesleyan minister’s daughter, with whom Marion has kept
up some semblance of friendship, although the tastes of the two
young ladies are widely at variance, Miss Harrison being, as becomes
her, of a serious turn of mind, while Marion is to the last degree
frivolous. If there is one thing which Marion enjoys more than
another in Maria’s society it is the opportunity which it gives her
to talk over Sibyl, whose goings on, gay apparel, and chariots and
horses, Miss Harrison contemplates with the disapproving eye of
the Hebrew prophets. Jeremiah himself did not denounce the foolish
daughters of Israel with more vigour than Miss Harrison exhibits
towards her old schoolfellow.
Thus it is that whenever Marion is particularly offended with Sibyl
she is always in the humour for a visit to Miss Harrison, whose
home, though unpretentious in its character, and situated in an
obscure by way of the busy port of Krampston, is comfortable in its
arrangements, and of a hospitable turn. The five o’clock tea at the
minister’s table is a plentiful and substantial meal, which makes an
excellent substitute for dinner, and renders supper a superfluity.
Jenny, turning to account this idiosyncrasy of her elder sister’s,
has persuaded Marion that she owes Miss Harrison a visit, and that
to-day is a good opportunity for the settlement of that debt. Marion
has allowed herself to be persuaded, has put on her best bonnet, and
departed for Krampston in the one o’clock train, meaning to have a
good look at the shops, which means a two hours’ perambulation of
the principal streets, before proceeding to Miss Harrison’s paternal
dwelling.
‘You needn’t expect me till you see me,’ says Marion at departing.
‘For if there’s an evening service at Little Bethel I shall be
obliged to go, though if there are two people in the Scriptures I
dislike more than another it’s Ahab and Jezebel, and they always crop
up in Mr. Harrison’s sermons.’
Jenny has thus made the coast clear. It is Hester’s day for cleaning
the kitchen and outhouses, a day upon which the Miss Faunthorpes
must either open the door to patient or casual visitor, or encounter
Hester’s wrath, that faithful servant having a temper which is
aggravated by hearthstoning difficult corners and awkward steps, and
exasperated to fever point by scrubbing worm-eaten old floors, which
‘never do one no credit.’
Jenny is quite sure that Hester will not appear till she brings in
the tea-tray, scarlet of visage and perspiring, and puts it on the
table with a bang and a clatter, exclaiming, ‘There now, you’ve got
your tea, and don’t come worrying for anything else.’
It is between three and four--the sleepiest hour in the slumberous
balmy day, and Jenny basks in the sunshiny surgery window, with
folded arms, watching the wasps and vagabond bees bouncing their
stupid heads against the roses in the dusty front garden. It is the
very hour in which Sibyl and Mr. Trenchard are returning from the
How, and the first day of Jenny’s watch.
Just as the old minster clock with its mellow tongue chimes the
half-hour a dusty wayfarer comes in sight, and Jenny cries out loud,--
‘It’s the very man, by all that’s wonderful! but dressed like a
gentleman this time; and oh, how nice he looks!’
Yes, it is the man she saw in the lane two winters ago, tired,
footsore, out at elbows. To-day he is as well clad as any man in
Redcastle, and he walks as if he had only come from the station.
He looks about him doubtfully for a minute or so, as if unfamiliar
with the front of Dr. Faunthorpe’s house, then sees the name upon the
brass plate, and approaches boldly, opens the gate, and comes in.
‘If Marion or Hester were in the way now it would be all UP,’ Jenny
says to herself.
Before the stranger can ring she has opened the door, and stands face
to face with him upon the threshold.
‘You’re the very person I wanted to see,’ exclaims Alexis Secretan as
Jenny confronts him, her big round eyes staring their hardest; ‘I’m
lucky in finding you in the way.’
‘Luckier than you know of,’ thinks Jenny. ‘Are you a patient?’ she
demands aloud. ‘If you are, uncle’s out, and you can’t have any
medicine till after seven o’clock. Between seven and nine in the
evening are his hours, or before nine in the morning.’
‘Nonsense, child! You must remember me, surely.’
Jane Faunthorpe’s face expresses a total blankness. She shakes her
head stolidly.
‘Perhaps I look a little more decent to-day than I did one winter
afternoon two years and a half ago,’ says Alexis, with a laugh, ‘but
I’m the man who spoke to you across the garden wall. Do you remember
now?’
‘I have a faint recollection,’ replies Jenny, with a languid
_hauteur_, which is very fairly imitated from Sibyl. ‘Come into the
surgery, young man, if you please.’
Alexis laughs at the mode of address, and follows her down a step
into that temple of the healing art.
Jenny enjoys the situation, and means to make the most of it. She
looks at the stranger critically, as he drops into one of the frayed
horsehair chairs, where parish patients are accustomed to sit
awaiting Dr. Faunthorpe’s opinion as the fiat of fate--the opinion
rarely going beyond the statement that the patient is not so well as
he might be, and that his condition will be improved by the medicine
which Dr. Faunthorpe is about to give him. If, after this, the
patient goes home and dies, it is his lookout. The parish has done
all it can for him.
‘I want to know all about your sister Sibyl,’ says Alexis, looking
round the shabby room, and thinking that this home of his wife’s
uncle’s is not much better than Mrs. Bonny’s one pair front in Dixon
Street, Chelsea. ‘Is she at home?’
Jane shakes her head dolefully, and heaves a sigh which would do
credit to an actress of transpontine melodrama.
‘I was in hopes you had come to tell us something about her,’ she
says, ‘for it’s a hard thing to have one’s eldest sister wandering
about the world no one knows where.’
‘You mean to tell me that you don’t know where she is at this present
time!’ exclaims Alexis.
‘That’s precisely the fact. She was governessing in Jersey when we
heard from her last, but that’s full ten months ago, and she’s too
much of a rolling stone to have stayed as long as that in one place.
Especially as she told us that the lady had red hair and used to fly
into passions,’ adds Jenny, with a graphic touch that she thinks will
give reality to her narrative.
‘What was the lady’s name?’
‘Mrs. Yokohama Gray,’ says Jenny on the spur of the moment,
reminiscent of the advertisement of a certain dress fabric which she
has perused with keenest interest.
‘Yokohama,’ repeats Alexis, ‘that’s rather a queer surname.’
‘Well, it was very _like_ that, if not that exactly.’
‘Jersey,’ says Alexis, thoughtfully, ‘when last you heard of your
sister she was in Jersey, and that was ten months ago?’
Jenny counts her fingers meditatively, and appears to enter upon an
abstruse calculation.
‘Exactly ten months,’ she answers finally.
‘Could you show me your sister’s letter?’
‘It’s torn up. Uncle Robert never keeps his letters.’
‘But is not Dr. Faunthorpe anxious about your sister? It seems such a
strange thing for him to be ignorant of her fate.’
‘Of course it is. But Sibyl’s a strange girl. Uncle Robert has had
many a sleepless night on her account. I dare say we shall get a
letter from her some day, telling us that she has gone with a lady to
Peru, or Kamstchatka, or some of those hot climates where mosquitoes
devour you all night, and alligators hide themselves under your
bolster.’
Alexis sighs wearily.
‘I should like to see your uncle,’ he says, ‘he might tell me more.’
‘Not a bit of it,’ replies Jenny, who has posed herself gracefully on
a corner of the surgery table and swings her leg to and fro, as if
rather admiring the shabby leather boot at the end of it, deficient
of every alternate button. ‘Uncle Robert couldn’t tell you a word
more than I’ve told you. In fact, he mightn’t tell you quite as much.’
‘It’s hard to be left in the dark like this,’ says Alexis.
‘It’s hard upon us, but I can’t see that it matters much to you,’
remarks Jenny. ‘If you are ever so deeply in love with Sibyl, she
isn’t so much to you as she to us.’
‘Isn’t she?’ exclaims Alexis. ‘Suppose I tell you that she is more to
me than she is to any one else in the world, and that I am determined
not to be kept in ignorance of her present position. She is my wife,
Miss Faunthorpe, and the law of the land, as well as the law of God
which preceded that law, gives a husband custody of his wife.’
‘Gracious goodness!’ ejaculates Jenny, slipping off the angle of the
table, and recovering her equilibrium with a struggle, ‘do you mean
that my sister Sibyl is a married woman?’
‘She is my wife. An unfaithful wife, for she deserted me because I
was poor. Yet I am weak enough to love her still, and I will go to
the end of the world to find her.’
‘My!’ exclaims Jenny. ‘This is the awfullest thing I ever heard of.’
‘You can understand therefore that I have some right to make
inquiries about your sister, and that I am justified in insisting
upon seeing your uncle Robert.’
‘Oh, but you mustn’t,’ cries Jenny, with overwhelming energy. ‘You
mustn’t breathe one syllable about your marriage to uncle Robert. It
would be the ruin of all of us if you did. Don’t you know that we are
no better than paupers dependent upon his charity? He’d turn Marion
and me out of doors if he knew that Sibyl had married without his
consent. You don’t know what a man he is. Our innocence wouldn’t help
us. He’d wash his hands of the whole lot of us.’
‘That would be a very vindictive course of action.’
‘Uncle Robert is vindictive,’ exclaims Jenny. ‘He doesn’t know
what it is to forgive. Do you suppose he’d ever get over Sibyl’s
ingratitude? He never would, and he’d wreak his vengeance upon
unoffending Marion and still more unoffending me, for I’m not old
enough to go and get married clandestinely, if I wanted to.’
‘I had no idea your uncle was such a Tartar.’
‘Sibyl ought to have told you. I thought when a person married a
person they always described their relations to that person.’
‘I had an impression that Dr. Faunthorpe was quite an easy-going
little man,’ says Alexis.
‘Ah, Sibyl may have felt it her duty to make the best of him. You see
he gives us the bread we eat, and one ought to be thankful for one’s
daily bread even if it’s two days old, and scrapy as to butter. We
don’t ask for butter in our prayers, you see.’
‘And you expect me to leave this place without making any further
inquiries about my wife?’ demands Alexis.
‘What’s the use of inquiring when you’ve had all the information any
one can give you here?’ asks Jane, with a practical air. ‘You’d much
better go to Jersey and inquire there.’
‘Yet you say Sibyl is likely to have left Jersey by this time.’
‘More than likely. She was always fond of change. She may have gone
to Calcutta, or St. Petersburg, or Hong Kong, or Scarborough, or
anywhere where governesses are wanted. But you might trace her _from_
Jersey, you know. It would be a good starting-point.’
‘You tell me that she has never been home since she first left this
place to go to Mrs. Hazleton.’
‘Never,’ says Jenny, so resolutely that Alexis ought to know she is
telling a falsehood.
‘Well, if I can do myself no good by seeing your uncle----’
‘And are sure to do us a lot of harm,’ interjects Jenny.
‘I may as well go away without seeing him, and trust to my own wits
for finding your sister.’
‘Decidedly,’ replies Jenny. ‘A clever young man like you can’t be
long at a loss.’
‘Good-bye, Miss Faunthorpe.’
‘You’d better call me Jenny, if you’re my brother-in-law.’
‘Good-bye, Jenny; thou hast comforted me marvellous much. I must go
and try my luck elsewhere.’
‘If there was anything in this way I could do for you,’ says Jenny,
waving her hand in the direction of the shelves, ‘the surgery is at
your service. I know the bottles as well as uncle does. Anything from
syrup of squills to corrosive supplement. Uncle sends a good deal of
that to his parish patients, and I believe it cures them, but I’m not
quite sure whether they take it externally or internally.’
‘There’s one little blue bottle up there that might be useful to me,’
says Alexis, with a touch of bitterness.
He points to a dark blue bottle that stands in a corner by itself on
the topmost shelf in a recess by the fireplace, and away from the
light. A bottle with a gilt label.
‘Gracious!’ cries Jenny. ‘That’s prussic acid--deadly poison.’
‘A short cut out of a man’s troubles, Jenny. But I suppose a man who
takes that way is something of a poltroon, and I’m not disposed to
try it yet awhile. Good-bye, Jenny.’
‘Good-bye, brother-in-law. I’m really very sorry for you, and I hope
things will come right in the end. You may kiss me if you like, as we
are such near relatives.’
Thus privileged, Alexis imprints a brotherly kiss upon Jane’s
forehead, and with a final sigh of disappointment departs.
CHAPTER V.
‘WILL FORTUNE NEVER COME WITH BOTH HANDS FULL?’
Baffled where he had expected to succeed, Alexis Secretan is at a
loss what to do next. No doubt of Jenny’s truthfulness presents
itself to his mind, youthful candour beamed in that open countenance
of hers. How could he imagine the craft of the serpent in a child who
seemed simple as the sucking dove?
What is he to do? Go to Jersey and hunt for Mrs. Yokohama Gray on
the chance of finding Sibyl still with that lady, despite Jenny’s
assertion of her sister’s fickleness? This seems the most obvious
course for him to take, and he loses no time in taking it. The
journey from Redcastle in Yorkshire to the Channel Islands is a long
one, and it is only on the third day after his interview with Jane
Faunthorpe that Alexis finds himself at St. Helier.
Vain are his inquiries for Mrs. Yokohama Gray, or for any Mrs. Gray
with a name approaching Yokohama in sound. He finds a Mrs. Gray pure
and simple, but she is a laundress, and certainly not in a position
to afford the luxury of a governess for her children. Alexis pursues
his inquiry in every quarter likely to afford information. He sees
postmasters, lodging-house keepers, librarians, and tries to obtain
tidings of any lady with a pretty governess residing in the Island.
Sibyl might be remembered for her pretty face, he thinks, where her
name was unknown or forgotten.
All his efforts are vain. He starts upon various false scents, wastes
a great deal of time and trouble, and leaves the island at last,
thoroughly dispirited.
What more is there for him to do? Nothing assuredly, unless he can
extort the secret of his wife’s whereabouts from that inflexible
young woman, Jane Dimond. It seems such a hard thing to have Sibyl’s
letter in his pocket, to know that she is within a day’s post, and
yet not be able to find her. At Southampton, while he is loitering
about waiting for the train that is to take him back to London,
he remembers that he has or ought to have a kinswoman living in
the neighbourhood of Winchester. A maiden lady, his father’s first
cousin, has lived all her life on a small estate near that cathedral
city. He remembers spending a month at Cheswold Grange with his
father and mother during one of those rare visits which they made to
their native country. He was a child at this time, and it had struck
him since that his father must have had some stronger motive than
family affection in coming over to England to visit a quiet maiden
lady, living in an out-of-the-way village.
His father had possibly some idea of securing Miss Secretan’s fortune
for himself or his boy. Philip Secretan was assuredly the last of men
to degrade himself by courting a wealthy relative, but he may have
thought it his duty to his boy to keep on friendly terms with the
owner of the only estate remaining to the family.
As years went on Mr. Secretan had grown more indolent in his habits,
and less inclined to cross the channel, but one of his farewell
injunctions to Alexis when the young man last visited him had
reference to Matilda Secretan.
‘Go and spend a few days with your cousin Matilda now and then,
Alex,’ said the father. ‘She was very fond of you when you were a
little boy, and I know she’ll be pleased to see you now you’ve grown
into a fine young man. It’s a quiet, out-of-the-way place for you to
visit, but you will be made much of by the old lady, and I dare say
you can get a little shooting there in October. Lord Starborough’s
preserves are close by, and your cousin was always on good terms with
her neighbours.’
Alexis promised most dutifully, and was always intending to perform;
but the visit to Miss Secretan was a business so easy to accomplish
that it was deferred indefinitely. Alexis thought it would be a
pity to go earlier than October, on account of Lord Starborough’s
pheasants, and three Octobers came and went without his finding
leisure for the visit. Then came the sale of his commission, and he
felt he should hardly like to face his cousin Matilda under such
awkward circumstances. He would have to explain things, and he
hated explanations. Next came his entanglement in Cupid’s fatal net,
and he had not a spare thought for Miss Secretan. Then followed his
marriage and rapid descent in the social scale. He had sore need of
a friend in those days; but as he had neglected his cousin Matilda
in his brief day of prosperity, he could not approach her in his
destitution. He might stoop to ask a favour of aunt Gorsuch, at whose
house he had been a familiar guest, but he could not beg of Miss
Secretan, to whom he was a stranger. He had a faint recollection of
her as an old lady with silvery hair in corkscrew curls, a high nose,
delicate peach-bloom cheeks, a slim straight figure, and a dress of
rich black silk, like a clergyman’s presentation gown. That she had
been very kind to him, and that his life had been made particularly
pleasant to him at Cheswold Grange, he could remember distinctly. He
remembered telling Sibyl about his rich maiden cousin, as they sat
by the fire in Dixon Street one November evening, building castles
in a brief interval of hopefulness. He had described that childish
visit to Cheswold, and his girl-wife had been fascinated by his
picture of the pretty English country house and gardens, the meadows,
and the trout-stream in which he had made his juvenile attempts at
fly-fishing.
‘Why shouldn’t your cousin leave you her estate, Alex?’ Sibyl had
said eagerly. ‘Wouldn’t that be a happy thing?’
‘A very happy thing, love, but not a likely turn of the wheel by any
means,’ he had answered. ‘I have never seen my cousin since I was
ten years old. Whatever chances I had in that direction have been
forfeited by my neglect.’
‘Upon my word, Alexis, you seem to have delighted in throwing away
fortune,’ Sibyl had answered, with a touch of anger. And after that
she had given way to low spirits for the rest of the evening, and had
talked of Cheswold Grange as a property that must have come to her
husband if he had not wilfully flung away his prospect of inheritance.
To-day Alexis, sorely perplexed which way to turn in the maze of
life, is inclined to dwell upon the memory of his boyish pleasures at
Cheswold. He is so near the quiet old place, within twenty miles at
most. Why should he not go and see Matilda Secretan? He can approach
her without degradation now that he is a prosperous, money-earning
man. He has no thought of that possible inheritance. It is not in his
nature to calculate upon a thing of that kind; but, being so utterly
alone in the world just now, he feels that it would do him good to
grasp the hand of a relative--to receive kindness and sympathy from
one who had known his father and mother.
The train that was to have carried him to London conveys him to
Winchester. At the station he is told that Cheswold is three miles
from the city, so he determines to walk the distance. It is between
four and five in the afternoon when he turns out of the High Street
into the quiet country road which is to take him to Cheswold. Light
showers have refreshed the verdure, the low water meadows are looking
their greenest, and the grassy hills yonder shut out the world beyond
this fertile valley, and give a look of security and repose to the
landscape, so simply rustic, so thoroughly English in its character.
An hour later, and Alexis stands at the entrance to the village
churchyard, a turnstile at a corner of the wall. He remembers this
very path across the churchyard as a short cut to the Grange; and
after nearly twenty years’ absence the scene comes back to his memory
as vividly as if he had left the place but yesterday. Yes, there
stands the old yew tree, whose widely stretching boughs rustle and
creak against the window by the pulpit in boisterous weather. No
busy work of restoration is going on here. The greenish glass of the
old diamond-paned casements has not been exchanged for the brilliant
colouring of the modern glass-painter. The rough-cast walls are
unchanged.
There is the wooden dial that used to mark the flight of time when he
was a boy. There stands the old family tomb, neglected, forgotten,
under its ivy shroud.
He lingers by the gate for some few minutes in a contemplative mood,
looking dreamily at the well-remembered picture. Then he turns the
stile and goes in.
He crosses the churchyard, looking idly at the tombstones on either
side the path, and within a few paces of the lych-gate he is brought
to a standstill by a tablet that tells him his visit to his cousin
has been deferred too long.
A massive granite slab, surmounted by a cross in white marble, bears
this inscription:--
IN MEMORY OF
MATILDA,
ONLY DAUGHTER AND HEIRESS OF MARK HORATIO SECRETAN,
Who died at Cheswold Grange, August 14th, 186--,
AGED EIGHTY-TWO YEARS
Matilda Secretan has been dead exactly a year, and the friendly grasp
of a kindred hand which Alexis has hoped for is not for him.
‘Poor old lady,’ he sighs. ‘Well, she has lived her life, and a good
long one. An easy, harmless, passionless existence, full of creature
comforts and village dignity. She was a great person in Cheswold.
Perhaps it is wiser to play at greatness in a rural village than to
struggle to be really great amidst the press of men--pleasant to be
born and die on one’s own estate, to lie in one’s shroud in the same
room in which one was rocked in one’s cradle--to look out with our
dying eyes upon the green fields in which we learned to walk, our own
fields, not gained by toil or greed, or overreaching our fellow-men,
but coming to us naturally as the blossoms come to the apple trees in
our orchard. Yes, it must be a peaceful, pleasant life, affording no
opportunity for sin. Satan must have a bad time among small landed
proprietors. Poor cousin Matilda! I wonder who has come in for her
property?’
The Grange lies within ten minutes’ walk, just on the outer edge of
the village. Alexis crosses the green, with its duck-pond, its groups
of ancient elms before the good old village inn, with the ‘Rising
Sun,’ looking very much like a careful representation of a mustard
plaster, swinging from the signpost. A low white house this village
inn, with a sloping thatch and a wonderful display of intensely red
geraniums in intensely red flower-pots, a perfect blaze of scarlet
floriculture.
Beyond the green and the ‘Rising Sun’ the road is shaded by fine
old timber, and has a secluded look, as if one had strayed unawares
into a gentleman’s park. The hedgerows are so neatly cut, the grass
margin of the road looks as if it had been mowed and rolled. There
is a pleasant odour of pine woods. A little further on there comes
an opening in the wooded screen, and across a running brook Alexis
sees the wide park-like meadow which lies in front of Cheswold
Grange. A sunk fence divides the grass land from the old-fashioned
Grange garden; and to the left of the long low old house, with its
many gables, its dovecotes and bell-turret, lies the orchard, whose
treasures are guarded by a thick holly hedge of two centuries’ growth.
How well Alexis remembers the house! a hospitable dwelling in the
days of his boyhood, but somewhat gloomy of aspect now. Everything
has a neglected air. He can see that even at a distance.
‘I suppose Miss Secretan’s heir despises the old place,’ he thinks,
‘and suffers the Grange to go to ruin, while he squanders the revenue
of the land in London. I wonder who the fellow is? Some Low Church
parson, perhaps, or smooth-tongued doctor, who got to the blind side
of cousin Matilda at the last.’
He is at the lodge gate by this time. Even the lodge has a decayed
air, a broken pane conspicuous in the parlour window, paint
blistered, a bit of rotten gutter hanging from an angle of the roof.
‘It looks like an Irish squireen’s place in the bad old times fifty
years ago,’ thinks Alexis.
The lodgekeeper’s wife is spreading out the weekly wash on the
sunward side of a quickset hedge, and to this busy housewife Alexis
addresses himself.
‘You’ve a pretty place here,’ he begins, with the casual air of an
uninterested stranger. ‘Pity it shouldn’t be kept up a little better.’
‘Ah, it is a pity,’ answers the woman, shaking her head over the
family linen. ‘Things was very different in Miss Secretan’s time.’
She says this with the conviction that every one upon earth--the
wandering stranger included--must know all about Miss Secretan. They
may not have had the honour of that lady’s acquaintance, but she must
be known to them by reputation as one of the magnates of the land,
just as Disraeli and Gladstone are known.
‘She was a good mistress?’ hazards Alexis.
‘Ah,’ sighs the woman, seeming to wring her hands as she wrings out
a garment before unfurling it on the hedge, ‘few like her. I won’t
say but what she was near. A lady that wouldn’t allow the waste of
a candle end, and wore a dress from year’s end to year’s end--but a
silk as might stand alone. And them as is nearest towards theirselves
is oftentimes kindest to others. Miss Secretan was a kind friend to
many. She could do more kindness with sixpence than some people can
do with half a crown. And she left a very pretty property. A pity it
should go into Chancery.’
‘Is it in Chancery?’ asks Alexis, warmly interested.
‘Well, I can’t say as it is azackley, but it’s something that way,
I believe. You see, Miss Secretan, she makes her will a good twenty
year ago, and she leaves all her property to a favourite nephew, or
cousin, I’m not certain which, in trust for him if she should die
before he came of age, but he was to have it handed over to him clear
of everythink if he was past twenty-one. And she never altered that
will. She had thoughts of altering it, I’ve heard Mrs. Bodlow, the
housekeeper, say, because of her nephew not paying her the attention
she expected; but once having taken a good bit of trouble to make her
will, she didn’t care about beginning all over again. “I’ll wait,”
says she--as I had it from Mrs. Bodlow,--“and I dare say,” she says,
“as one of these odd days,” says she, “he’ll remember me,” she says,
“and come and see me,” says she; “and if not,” says she, “I’m hale
and hearty still,” she says, “and there’s time enough to alter my
will,” says she, which Mrs. Bodlow repeated to me word batum while
she was lying a corpse in that room with the three windows as you may
see from here.’
Alexis has turned from red to pale and pale to red again during the
progress of this prolix relation. The lodgekeeper’s wife only pauses
for breath ere she pursues her argument.
‘So the will was let stand,’ she resumes, ‘and Miss Secretan didn’t
so much as trouble herself to find out whether the young man was
living or dead; and lo and behold! when the will was made known,
the heir was nowheres to be found. I believe the lawyers and such
like did all as was proper, and he was advertised to his advantage
in the newspapers continual, but he never answered none of the
advertisements, which he couldn’t have failed to do if he was alive
and could write--unless he’d gone out to Horsetralyer and turned
butcher like that simple-’arted young gentleman as you read of in the
newspapers. Howsomedever, there’s the property, belonging to no one,
as you may say, and things going to ruin. There’s one gardener kept
to grub about a bit, where there used to be two men and a by at work
constant, and there’s a pore ’elpless old woman in the ’ouse, with
’ardly strength to open a shutter and let in a breath of hair, so
you may guess as the moths are having their free will of the damass
curtings and such like.’
‘You didn’t hear the name of the heir,’ says Alexis, interrogatively.
‘Not his chrisen name. His other name was the same as hern. “I’ll
have a Secretan to come after me if I can,” she says, and Mrs. Bodlow
told me as she believed it was mostly on account of the name as Miss
Secretan left that young man the property.’
Alexis tries his hardest to still the troubled beating of his heart,
tries to persuade himself that it is too soon to feel the flush and
pride of sudden unexpected fortune. Matilda Secretan may have had
other cousins, or nephews, he tells himself. He is not particularly
well posted in the family history, having heard his father prose
about his kindred with youth’s heedless ear. He tells himself it is
too soon to be glad, yet he feels as if he were lord of the soil. He
stands within the gate, and he plants his foot firmly on the ground.
‘I wonder if I am standing on my own land?’ he thinks. ‘I feel as if
there were a glow in the soil that communicates itself to my blood.
It is the land that has belonged to my race for three hundred years.’
The fact that for the space of a year no one has come forward to
claim the property encourages the supposition that he himself is the
missing heir.
‘Would it be possible for me to see the house? he inquires, seized
with a feverish desire to examine the mansion which may or may not be
his.
‘I dare say if you was to offer the old lady a trifle, she wouldn’t
mind letting you see it, sir. She’s a little hard of hearing.’
‘Suppose I offer you five shillings to begin with,’ suggests Alexis,
dropping two half-crowns into the matron’s hand. ‘You might take me
up to the house and make things square with the old lady.’
The lodgekeeper’s face beams all over with delight. ‘I’m sure I’m
much beholden to you, sir. I’ll dry my hands directly minute, and
step up to the great house with you.’
The Grange has been ‘the great house’ at Cheswold for generations.
‘Oh, Sibyl,’ thinks Alexis as he walks along the grassy path under
the elms, ‘if you had only waited for brighter days, how happy we
might have been! You abandon me in order to seek fortune, and you
don’t seem to have won it yet. Fortune falls into my lap unsought.’
The fact of his wife’s desertion seems harder to him in the face of
this sudden turn of fortune’s wheel than it has seemed before. That
prosperity should come to him thus, and find him a lonely man!
If this estate of Cheswold has been actually left him, shall he lure
his wife back to him by a golden bait? Shall he win from his altered
fortunes the boon that has been refused to a husband’s entreaty? No,
a thousand times no. ‘If she comes back to me ever she shall return
to the pauper she abandoned,’ he tells himself. ‘She shall come back
for love of me her husband, not to be mistress of Cheswold Grange.’
Yet how proud he would be, having won her back to her duty, to
point to this peaceful old English home, and say, ‘I am no longer
an adventurer and a beggar. All this is ours, and our children’s
after us!’ He has quite made up his mind by this time that he is
the missing heir, and that these elms which screen him from the low
western sun are his very own.
Cheswold Grange upon this August evening has a mouldy smell, and
wears the gloomy and somewhat ghostly aspect of a house whose
shutters are for the most part closed against air and sunshine. But
it is a good old house notwithstanding. The rooms are large, the
staircase is wide and substantial, with fine carved oak balusters,
an open gallery above with numerous doors, suggestive of ample
accommodation for a family. The quaint old furniture remains just as
Miss Secretan left it. Chairs and sofas are carefully shrouded in
holland, and the dust lies thick upon the old rosewood tables, the
Canton porcelain, and the crystal chandeliers, whose half-burned wax
candles shed their light upon the vanished mistress of the Grange.
‘Nothing has been touched,’ says Mrs. Cramp, of the lodge, as she
follows Alexis and the old woman in charge from room to room.
‘Everythink is the same as in Miss Secretan’s time, except that when
she was living you couldn’t have found a grain of dust in the place
if you’d offered a five-pound note for it.’
After having looked at the house Alexis explores stables and gardens.
It is dark by the time his inspection is finished, and he makes up
his mind to spend the night at the ‘Rising Sun’ in Cheswold village.
He feels attached to the place already.
‘Is there much land belonging to the Grange?’ he inquires of Mrs.
Cramp, the old woman in charge being little more than a dummy, and
Mrs. Cramp serving as interpreter.
‘I can’t say how many acres, sir, though I dare say my husband might
know if he was at home. There’s Baker’s farm, and there’s the Hollow
farm and the Hill farm--that must be a good bit altogether. Miss
Secretan was lady of the manor.’
This is pleasant to hear. Alexis gratifies the deaf caretaker with
his bounty, and goes back to the gate with Mrs. Cramp, who enlarges
upon the beauties of the place, and asks him if he has any idea of
taking the property if it should be to let.
‘Chancery might just as well let the great house, you see, sir, if it
was only for the sake of having it took care of. It would be all the
better for the heir if he should come to claim his own. It went to my
heart to see things so dusty. And I hope, sir, if you should have any
thoughts of the place you’ll keep on me and my good man at the lodge.
We served Miss Secretan faithful above eleven years.’
‘I won’t displace you, Mrs. Cramp, you may rely on it, if I should
ever come to be master of Cheswold Grange. Good night. Oh, by the
way,’ he adds, just as he is turning to go, ‘do you happen to know
the name of Miss Secretan’s lawyer?’
‘Mr. Scrodgers, of Winchester, sir. Scrodgers and Son it is now.’
‘Thanks. Good night again.’
‘He must be thinking of taking the place,’ muses Mrs. Cramp, ‘or he
wouldn’t want to see Mr. Scrodgers.’
Alexis finds the ‘Rising Sun’ a comfortable old hostelry of a
primitive style. Dinner resolves itself into tea and eggs and bacon,
but the eggs and bacon are admirable, the home-made loaf delicious,
and the cream-jug which accompanies the teapot suggests a land
flowing with milk and honey. The parlour in which the traveller
enjoys this homely meal is clean and bright, and adjoins the bar so
closely that Alexis can carry on a conversation with the landlord as
he takes his refreshment. From this gentleman he hears that Cheswold
Grange is one of the nicest little estates in the county, worth
fifteen hundred a year at the lowest computation, and that Miss
Secretan was a careful old lady, and must have saved money.
‘How could she spend much, you see, sir? living in her quiet way,
never leaving home from year’s end to year’s end, growing her own
meat, and making her own butter, and having everything in a ring
fence, as you may say. Ah, there’ll be a pretty tidy bit of rhino for
that young man to come into if they ever find him.’
That young man--or the young man who supposes himself to be the
heir--feels a thrill of satisfaction at the idea, and is somewhat
impatient for to-morrow morning and an interview with Messrs.
Scrodgers and Son.
‘Do you know much about Mr. Scrodgers of Winchester, the old lady’s
solicitor?’ asks Alexis.
‘Not much, sir, I’m happy to say. I keeps aloof from that cattle.
Not as I’ve ever heard any harm of Scrodgers and Son, but they’re
all tarred with the same brush, to my mind. If you’ve got a bit of
freehold property, they wants you to mortgage it just to give them
something to do. If you’ve got a bit of property to leave, they wants
you to throw it into hodge-podge, just to give them the ’andling of
it, and if they can get you into Chancery body and bones, they do
it, for the good of trade. No lawyers for me, sir, but I believe as
lawyers go, Scrodgers and Son are very decent fellows.’
Alexis sleeps peacefully that night, better than he has slept since
he landed in the port of London and is closeted with Mr. Scrodgers
the elder early next morning, in the quiet front parlour of a
substantial old house in a side street in Winchester. The office has
a respectable and well-to-do look, and Mr. Scrodgers is white-bearded
and venerable enough for an abbot. The grave cathedral overshadows
his dwelling, and increases the respectability of his surroundings.
Alexis has sent in his card:--
ALEXIS SECRETAN,
Agent for Messrs. Keel & Skrew,
SIDNEY.
The lawyer receives him politely, with a manner that is half
friendly, half suspicious.
‘May I ask what Mr. Secretan I have the pleasure of addressing?’ he
inquires, looking at the card.
‘I don’t quite know how you would wish me to describe myself. I am
the son of Philip Secretan, who died at Nice in 1858, and who was
first cousin of Miss Secretan of Cheswold Grange. I come to you,
Mr. Scrodgers, to inquire about my cousin’s will. I have been in
Australia for the last two years, acting as agent for a house in the
City, and I only became aware of my cousin Matilda’s death yesterday
evening.’
‘This is very serious,’ says Mr. Scrodgers, looking at Alexis as
if he should like to convict him as an impostor. ‘And pray how did
you come to hear of Miss Secretan’s demise yesterday evening, not
having heard of it prior to that time? May I ask how the intelligence
reached you finally?’
Mr. Scrodgers rubs his hands complacently after this address, and
fixes Alexis with his large gray eyes, which are of the protuberant
order.
‘The knowledge came to me in the simplest possible manner. I went
over to Cheswold intending to pay my cousin a visit, and found her
name on a tombstone in the churchyard.’
‘Are you quite sure, sir, that the fact of Miss Secretan’s death
did not become known to you in Australia, and did not influence your
return to this country?’ inquires the lawyer, severely.
‘If you think me an impostor, Mr. Scrodgers, I will thank you to say
so plainly, and I will take means to establish my identity. This
beating about the bush is as insulting to my understanding as it is
to my honour.’
‘This is a very serious business, Mr. Secretan, a good deal more
serious than you may suppose. We are entrusted with a great
responsibility, sir. If we err it must be on the side of caution.’
‘You mean that my cousin Matilda left the whole of her property to
Alexis Secretan, and you doubt whether I am the man, although I put
his name upon my card.’
‘It would be for you to establish your identity, Mr. Secretan.’
‘Nothing more easy. My father’s solicitors, Messrs. Gull and Sharpe,
of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, have been familiar with every stage of my
existence up to the time when I sold my commission, about five years
ago. They hold all family documents--certificates of baptism, and
so on. My father was a careless man as to business matters, but he
had infinite faith in his lawyers, and he committed all papers of any
significance into their charge.’
‘Messrs Gull and Sharpe are a most respectable firm,’ answers Mr.
Scrodgers, with a reverential expression of countenance, as if so
old-established a firm ought to be spoken of with awe.
‘I refer you to them for my identification,’ says Alexis, ‘and I
shall be obliged if you will let them have a copy of my cousin’s
will. I shall go to them directly I get back to London, and take all
necessary steps under their advice.’
‘I have not offended you, I hope, Mr. Secretan, by my business-like
manner of discussing this question. I had the honour to enjoy Miss
Secretan’s confidence for many years, and I am naturally----’
‘Very naturally--quite proper. Good morning, Mr. Scrodgers. Please
lose no time about the copy of my cousin’s will.’
‘The original document is in Doctors’ Commons.’
‘Ah, then, Gull and Sharpe will be able to get me a copy. Good
morning.’
Alexis leaves the dull old office elated. He knows all that he wanted
to know--knows that he is lord of Cheswold Grange; that he need
never go back to Australia; that his agency for Keel and Skrew is at
an end; that he is an Englishman of landed estate--a gentleman by
fortune as he is a gentleman by birth.
He is eager to get back to London, if it were only to communicate his
good fortune to the friend of his adversity, Richard Plowden.
‘Dear old Dick! how glad he will be! He shall have an acre of ferns
at Cheswold, and his mother need never let lodgings any more unless
she likes.’
There is one thought that touches him most deeply,--the thought of
the child whose face he has never seen.
CHAPTER VI.
STARTLING INFORMATION.
Aided by Messrs. Gull and Sharpe, of the Fields, who put all things
in train for him, and take him under their parchment wing with
affectionate protection, Alexis has no difficulty in proving his
right to Cheswold Grange, and all those messuages and tenements and
various holdings thereto appertaining. It is a comfortable estate to
inherit, for Miss Secretan has been an admirable woman of business,
and has managed everything with fostering care which has beautified
and enriched all it touched. The land--save five-and-thirty acres
of home farm, park-like pasturage all of it--is let on long leases
to tenants who are contented with their holdings, and do not grudge
labour or money on improvements. The gardens, the house, the stables,
need only a little care to restore them to that perfection of elegant
precision and graceful order which distinguished them during Miss
Secretan’s lifetime. Alexis takes a singular mode of restoring
things, and one which wins him much favour from the inhabitants
of Cheswold and its immediate neighbourhood. He contrives, with
considerable trouble to himself, to get back all his cousin’s old
servants,--the butler or indoor servant, pompous as the ruler over
a retinue of powdered footmen, yet with only one small underling in
the shape of a knife-boy; Mrs. Bodlow, the cook and housekeeper,
who had served Miss Secretan five-and-twenty years; the middle-aged
housemaid, who had polished every article of furniture in the
low-ceiled bedchambers so often that each had become an object of
affection and pride to her; the gardeners, who knew every apple
tree, every plum and peach, nectarine and apricot on the old red
walls; the coachman, who had driven Miss Secretan about in the
old-fashioned barouche, a serviceable vehicle yet, and in the old
green pony chaise, and had ultimately subsided into drawing her along
the shady lanes in a Bath chair. Alexis feels a pride in restoring
the scattered household--in seeing every bit of furniture, every
quaint old ornament assume its proper place. How intensely had
Matilda Secretan studied the fitness of things before she so placed
them--the Chelsea shepherdess at this angle, the Wedgwood teapot on
that shelf, that figure of Quin as Falstaff in Bow china to balance
Kitty Clive in Worcestershire ware, and so on to the end of the
modest collection. Alexis remembers how his childish eyes had gloated
on the old china--how those household treasures had seemed to him
more beautiful than anything he had ever seen before. He remembers
the garden--the broad gravel walk leading to a Dutch summerhouse, in
red brick, with stained glass windows--the orange trees in square
green tubs ranged along the closely shorn grass that had once served
as a bowling-green. The place is very dear to him, for it recalls the
happiest days of his childhood.
Before the elms in the avenue have quite lost their summer green in
the early days of a fine September, Alexis is established at the
Grange; the old servants have come back, and everything is in order.
Full of delight in his new possessions the master of Cheswold Grange
invites Richard Plowden to come and shoot his partridges.
‘They are my partridges,’ he adds, ‘though they feed on my tenants’
corn for the most part. Come and have a pop at them, Dick,’--an
invitation which startles Mr. Plowden, who has never fired a gun in
his life.
Dick comes to Cheswold Grange, however, and gladly, not to pop at the
partridges, but to rejoice in the sight of his old friend and patron,
basking in prosperity’s sunshine.
‘I always felt you must be born to good luck, Captain Secretan----’
‘Call me Alex, Dick, or I shall hit you.’
‘Well, then, Alex. There was something so bright and genial about
you. It seemed as if you couldn’t long be under a cloud.’
‘Did it, Dick? The cloudy weather lasted quite long enough though,
old fellow, and the clouds are not gone yet. It’s a hard thing to
have this beautiful place, and not be able to bring my baby boy here,
and establish him in the home which is to be his when I am dead and
gone.’
‘Have you told your wife of your altered fortunes?’ inquires Dick.
‘Not a word. She shall know me only as the pauper she deserted, or I
will at best own to the wages of a hard-working clerk. She shall come
back to my poverty, Dick, if she and I are ever to be reunited--not
to my wealth. How pretty she would look at the head of this table, by
the way!’
They are lounging over their wine after dinner, the diamond-cut
decanters reflected in the polished mahogany as in dark water, golden
egg-plums from the western wall, and peaches from the southern,
nestling among dark green leaves in heart-shaped dishes of old Derby
china.
‘Yes, I dare say,’ says Dick, more inclined to blame than to praise
the absent wife.
‘You never saw her, Dick. A pity. She is so lovely--a woman created
for happiness and prosperity, not for toil and care. And in marrying
me she wedded poverty and sorrow. It was very hard for her. I ought
to have been more considerate. Can I wonder that she grew weary of
the struggle--that she tried to cut the knot that bound her to my
misfortunes? Poor child!’
‘Poor you, I think, to have wedded such a piece of selfish
prettiness,’ says Dick.
‘Don’t be hard upon her, Dick. Fortune was too unkind in those days.
The outlook was so black. If there had been a glimmer of hope on our
horizon she would have stayed with me, I’ve no doubt. Think of her
now, drudging as a governess, hiding her beauty in some back parlour,
or second-floor nursery--toiling for a pittance, while I enjoy all
the comforts of this dear old place. That’s hard to think of, isn’t
it, old fellow?’
‘Merely retributive justice,’ answers Dick, sturdily. ‘But are you
sure that she is a governess now?’
‘I have every reason to suppose so. Her last letter tells me that
she is on the high road to fortune--fortune which she and I are to
share. Taking this in conjunction with the information I got from her
sister, I can only imagine that she is in the employment of some rich
person likely to leave her money.’
‘Rather an ignoble position that,’ says Dick,--‘waiting for dead
men’s shoes.’
Alexis sighs, and pours out another glass of his cousin’s well-kept
La Rose.
‘What are you going to do to find her?’ asks Richard.
‘I’ve put the business in the hands of a very clever man in London,
to whom my lawyers recommended me. In the abstract I hate the idea of
a private inquiry office, but in my particular case I can’t get on
without one. My man is to find out Sibyl’s whereabouts by hook or by
crook. Once found, and face to face with her, I don’t think I should
be long in bringing her to reason. She must have changed very much if
she has ceased to love me.’
Dick ventures no reply to this. He has a very poor opinion of his
friend’s wife, thinks her stony-hearted, nay, almost inhuman, and in
his idea Alexis Secretan’s future happiness would be best secured by
Sibyl’s being kept at a distance. What could be sweeter than life in
this old country house, among these fertile gardens, these park-like
meadows? and why disturb the serenity of the atmosphere by bringing a
woman here? The lovelier she is, the more trouble she is likely to
bring. Was it not Helen’s beauty which overturned a world?
Mr. Secretan’s new life is assuredly so full of pleasantness, that if
it were possible for him to forget the wife he has loved, or to cease
from longing for the son he has never seen, he might reasonably take
his ease and enjoy the pleasures of a tranquil mind. Cheswold seems
to him just one of the most delightful places on the surface of this
earth. It is set in a landscape of rural beauty, fertile, luxuriant,
like a picture of Constable’s. There is plenty of sport, a good
pack of foxhounds in the neighbourhood, to which Alexis subscribes
liberally. There are pleasant neighbours, who hasten to call upon the
inheritor of Cheswold Grange, and are eager to make themselves useful.
Mr. Secretan finds himself received with such peculiar cordiality by
fathers and mothers of goodly families of grown-up daughters that
he takes an early opportunity to let it be known that he is that
worst of detrimentals, a husband without a wife. He tells one of his
new friends, in the strictest confidence, that he is temporarily
separated from his wife in consequence of some family quarrel, but
he hopes for reunion before very long; and in a week everybody within
twenty miles of Cheswold knows all about it. The disappointment is
rather severe for the parents of marriageable daughters, some of whom
have been hanging rather long on hand, like the winter pears on the
wall. Mr. Secretan is not a great catch in the matrimonial market, of
course. A pretty old house and grounds and from fifteen hundred to
two thousand a year. A very moderate alliance, but a comfortable and
a respectable one, think the anxious parents. And then Miss Secretan
has always ranked high among her neighbours. There is an odour of
sanctity about the Grange.
‘A pity the young fellow should have made such a mess of himself,’
remark the fathers. The mothers go so far as to call it a shame. The
daughters feel a sense of loss, and are not quite so amiable to Mr.
Secretan the next time he takes them in to dinner.
Old friends whom he knew in his days of youthful extravagance
find him out, and rejoice in his restored fortunes. A couple
of old brother officers crop up in the neighbourhood. Colonel
Churton settled and sobered into a country gentleman, great in the
cultivation of mangold and turnips; Major Tollinson, who breeds prize
cattle, which help to eat the colonel’s roots;--these are full of
warmest friendliness.
It seems to Alexis as if he had never been poor. He has spent some of
his cousin’s accumulated cash in the payment of his debts--debts of
honour and tradesmen’s bills have alike been repaid, with five per
cent. interest in every case. There is now no one living who can say
he has lost money by Alexis Secretan.
‘What a pleasant feeling it is, Dick!’ says Alexis, as he pockets the
last receipt, “with respectful thanks.” ‘I really feel as if I had
only just reached my proper number of inches, as if I had been half
a head shorter than I ought to be for the last six years. There is
a springiness in my step, too. Ah, Dick, this is the real worth of
money--“the glorious privilege of being independent.’”
Alexis has settled down comfortably in the rooms he has chosen for
himself, and begins to feel as if he had lived at the Grange all
his life by the time the first frosts sparkle on the grass, and the
leaves fall fast from the good old trees, and lie thick in grove
and glade, despite of gardeners and wheelbarrows. He has put up new
bookshelves in the library, where Miss Secretan’s favourite poets
and divines, in neat calf or vellum bindings, make but a small
appearance, and has filled them with the books he loves, a truly
cosmopolitan collection. He has bought himself a couple of clever
hunters, and a useful covert hack, which he can also drive in a
dogcart. He has shot over the stubbles, and in the preserves of his
noble neighbour, Lord Starborough, and has had two or three good runs
with the foxhounds. He has made a large circle of new acquaintances,
and renewed several old friendships. But in all this time he has had
no tidings of Sibyl.
He has, it is true, received numerous letters from the private
inquiry office, some promising speedy success, others asking some
questions of detail, which might help to confirm a suspicion, or
establish its falsehood, some declaring that the inquirer is on the
right track. But the result has been failure. So far private inquiry
has effected nothing.
Despairing of ever succeeding by this means, Alexis inserts an
advertisement, which he means to be his final appeal to his obdurate
wife.
‘Dixon Street, Chelsea.--I refuse to write to you through the
faithful servant in L---- Street. I consider such indirect
communication degrading to you and to me. I have no sympathy with
your schemes. I decline any share in fortune so won. I claim you
by my sacred right as your husband. You need not fear starvation,
or even the pinch of poverty. I have obtained employment which
will enable me to keep my wife and child in decent comfort.
Come back, and be assured of my fondest affection. Prolong our
separation, and it may become eternal.’
This advertisement is quickly answered by another, beginning with the
watchword, Dixon Street.
‘Wait and hope. A little patience, and we shall be reunited. You
cannot wish for reunion more earnestly than I do. The fabric
which has taken more than two years to build must not be
destroyed by a moment of impatience.’
Alexis inserts a second advertisement.
‘Dixon Street.--Give me the custody of our son, and I will be
content.’
To which the answer is one word--
‘Impossible.’
On this Mr. Secretan loses temper, and love gives way to resentment.
‘Heartless, inexorable!’ he says to himself. ‘She loves money better
than she loves me. The sordid desire to inherit some weak-minded
old woman’s wealth is stronger with her than duty or affection. Is
she worth all the pain I have suffered for her? Is she worthy the
constancy I have given her?’
The answer to these questions is a decided negative. His love for
his wife has been a foolish, unreasoning passion, wasted upon an
unworthy object. He now determines to forget that cold and cruel
wife, and to enjoy all the pleasures of his new position; and in the
various employments and engagements of country life his days glide
by smoothly and pleasantly until the approach of Christmas. It is now
three years since Sibyl left him. He dines with Colonel Churton one
bright frosty evening, just a week before the Christian festival.
The colonel’s spacious old house, Longley Mead, is full of guests,
military and civil, young people, middle-aged people, elderly people,
pretty girls, with portly mothers and portlier fathers.
They sit down, about thirty, to dinner, in a fine oak-paneled
dining-room, and the board is a merry and noisy one. Quiet flirtation
is going on doubtless in some quarters under cover of the general
talk and laughter, the cross-firing of respectable old jokes,
the remarkable anecdotes of horses, dogs, foxes, and birds; the
discussion of that last troublesome case at petty sessions, and a
good deal more genuine county talk. The banquet is long and splendid;
but at last the ice puddings have made their round, the liqueurs
have followed in fairy goblets, golden-starred, the hothouse grapes
have been admired, and the ladies have left the ruder sex to draw up
to the host’s end of the long table, and enter upon that serious
discussion of the merits of various Burgundies and Bordeaux, which
appears to afford so much delight to the masculine mind.
‘You used to be a pretty good judge of claret in your time,
Secretan,’ says the colonel, cheerily, ‘give me your candid opinion
of that Margaux.’
‘About as good a judge of claret as he was of a pretty woman,’ says
Major Tollinson, while Alexis gravely sips the Château Margaux, ‘and
he had a wonderful eye for beauty.’
‘Oh, come, now,’ remonstrates the colonel, ‘Secretan was never a
ladies’ man. He left that kind of thing to you, Tollinson.’
‘Oh, I grant that he was too lazy a beggar to play croquet on
a blazing July afternoon, or to dance attendance at picnics or
tea-fights, or make himself useful at a school feast, carrying
baskets of buns and jugs of boiling tea. But he was a great admirer
of the sex for all that, and at a county ball he always got the most
dances with the prettiest women.’
‘A nice clean wine,’ says Alexis, ignoring these remarks.
‘Talking of pretty women,’ says a young man who sits furthest from
the host, ‘I think I had the pleasure of meeting one of the prettiest
girls you could ever hope to see, down in Yorkshire the week before
last.’
The word Yorkshire catches the ear of Alexis. So large a county must
needs be rich in female beauty; but he remembers that Redcastle is in
Yorkshire, and thinks of Sibyl. Or perhaps it is that instinct which
in some moments of our lives warns us that some word vital to our
interests is about to be spoken.
‘Plenty of pretty women in Yorkshire,’ says the host, incuriously.
‘How did you find the grouse this year, Danvers? You were staying
somewhere near the moors, I suppose.’
‘No, I was in rather a poor country for grouse. I was at Mr.
Holford’s place between Hillsborough and Redcastle.’
‘Alexis grows pale, and refills his glass with a hand that shakes a
little.
‘May we ask for the beauty’s name?’ he says.
‘She is a Miss Faunthorpe--an heiress, I believe. At least, there’s a
rich old East Indian party she goes about with, and I conclude she’s
to have his money, by-and-bye. I met her at a dinner at Sir Wilford
Cardonnel’s, and the rumour is that Sir Wilford is going to marry
her. He’s uncommonly sweet upon her, that’s a fact patent to the
meanest comprehension.’
Alexis tries to check the tumultuous beating of his heart, tries to
steady himself and compose his countenance, and by a great effort
succeeds.
Why should this be his false wife? asks the voice of reason. Sibyl
has a grown-up sister whom he has never seen, a sister who may be
as lovely as herself, although his wife always disparaged Marion’s
charms. Or this Miss Faunthorpe may belong to some other family--nay,
must so belong, since she is spoken of as an heiress.
‘You have roused my warmest interest in this Yorkshire beauty,’ he
says, with assumed languor. ‘Could you not draw upon your powers so
far as to describe her to us?’
‘Yes, by all means. Indulge us with a little word-painting; give us a
verbal photograph of your beauty,’ says Colonel Churton.
‘Who can describe the indescribable?’ exclaims Mr. Danvers, pleased
at having made himself the object of general attention, after having
languished in the shade during the rest of the entertainment.
‘Picture to yourselves----’
‘Oh, come, we want you to do the picturing----’
‘Imagine an oval face framed in dark brown hair, loosely braided--I
believe that’s the word, isn’t it? Hair with a glimmer of gold and a
natural ripple, eyes of darkest brown, complexion ivory pale, save
when excitement flushes the cheek with a lovely pink, like the inside
of those pomegranates; features almost Grecian.’
‘Sounds rather like a face in a fashion plate,’ says Major Tollinson.
‘I’d rather hear of a _retroussé_ nose, red hair and freckles, or a
tawny little gipsy with murderous black eyes.’
‘Not to admire Miss Faunthorpe would be to despise perfection,’ says
Mr. Danvers, slightly offended.
‘You haven’t told us her Christian name,’ says Alexis.
‘It fits her to a nicety, for there is a mystic look about her pale
face and dark brown eyes. Her name is Sibyl.’
‘And she is going to be married to a Yorkshire baronet?’
‘Sir Wilford Cardonnel, one of the wealthiest land owners in the
West Riding. Mind, I don’t say the match is a settled thing. It
hasn’t been formally announced, you know; people haven’t begun to
congratulate her; but the marriage is talked of. I dare say the local
papers will get hold of it soon. “We understand,” &c.’
‘And there is a rich uncle in question?’ asks Alexis. He has
recovered his self-command by this time, and makes the inquiry with
the air of a man who only talks for the sake of keeping up the
conversation.
‘Yes, a shrivelled old fellow, who eats any amount of Nepaul pepper.
An artful old bird! Looks as if he had made his money in slaves, or
opium, or something contraband. Sort of man who would have done well
in Warren Hastings’ time, when John Company had things all his own
way in the East.’
‘Do you remember his name?’
‘Let me see--hum--ha--er--er--Travers--no--rather an odd name.
Trinder. No. Trenchard. Yes, that’s it. Stephen Trenchard. Pretty
niece called him sometimes uncle Stephen, sometimes uncle Trenchard.’
‘Stephen Trenchard,’ repeats Alexis, staring blankly at the tall
epergne in front of him.
This is a shock he was not prepared for. Stephen Trenchard, his
father’s bitter enemy. The man whose arts disinherited him, Alexis,
while yet unborn. The man whom his family religion taught him to
execrate. And it was this man’s niece--a daughter of this detested
race--he had married. It was to court and cherish his father’s enemy
that his wife had left him.
‘This is the fortune she is to inherit and we are to share. This is
the scheme of her life. It is for Stephen Trenchard’s ill-gotten
wealth I am to wait. It is for this I am to be patient and trust her.
And she shows herself so true to her trust that common rumour gives
her to another man. It is time for me to make an end of this farce of
fidelity.’
CHAPTER VII.
TOWN TALK.
Before the close of the next day Alexis is once more in Redcastle.
This time, however, he goes straight to the chief inn, or hotel, as
it proudly calls itself,--the institution which supports and sustains
the languishing spirits of the half-dozen or so of idle young men
who adorn Redcastle by their residence. The hotel affords them a
porch, or portico, in which to lounge and gossip with one another,
or for want of more aristocratic company, with the landlord of the
establishment, who appears to have nothing to do, from morn till dewy
eve, but stand on his threshold and survey the varieties of life
as presented by Below Bar and the market-place, where a pedestrian
may be seen to pass once in five minutes, and a vehicle of some
description may be reckoned upon once in half an hour. Besides this
portico, or school of conversation, which is in a manner a free
institution, the ‘Coach and Horses’ furnishes its patrons with a
bar in which to imbibe mild admixtures of soda water and brandy,
appetising sherry and bitters, or the more economic refreshment of a
glass of ale, while two lively barmaids, gifted with a considerable
power of repartee, stimulate the native youth to intellectual effort.
On one side of the hotel is the billiard-room, where awful contests
of skill go on under the shaded lamps, and money is won and lost.
On the other side is the reading room, where, besides a variety
of useful information in the way of Bradshaw’s guides, the county
history, almanacks, and time tables, the lounger may enjoy literature
as fresh as the day before yesterday’s _Evening Standard_, or a
_Punch_ not quite three weeks old.
At the ‘Coach and Horses,’ Alexis deposits his small valise this
dark December evening at five o’clock, the universal tea-time among
the burgesses and lower classes of Redcastle, the witching hour at
which Mrs. Stormont and her friends discuss the morals and finances
of their neighbours over harlequin cups of orange pekoe. He has come
to the hotel in order to draw breath before swooping down upon that
false wife of his, and with a view, perhaps to making himself better
acquainted with the ground he stands upon. From Mr. Danvers he may
have heard something less or something more than the truth. Here, in
the place she inhabits, he is likely to make himself acquainted with
the best or the worst that men and women can say of her.
He bitterly resents the falsehoods told him by Jenny Faunthorpe
nearly six months ago. That instance of juvenile depravity is only a
new proof of the bad blood that flows in the veins of the Trenchards.
Alexis looks upon it as hereditary vice.
‘They are all cold-hearted and false alike,’ he tells himself. ‘The
man robbed my father of his rights, and wore a smooth face all the
time, and pretended to be his friend. The child looks in my face and
lies to me. Who could have suspected a child of such falsehood?’
Being set upon by an elderly waiter, and besought to order his
dinner, Mr. Secretan expresses a provoking indifference to that meal.
He will have anything they like to give him in an hour’s time. A
private sitting-room? Yes, by all means, and a good fire. He will go
for a walk while his dinner is preparing. And, by the way, which is
Mr. Trenchard’s house?
‘Mr. Trenchard’s house? Lancaster Lodge.’ The waiter mentions it with
respect in his tone. ‘Straight up the street, sir, and through the
Bar. It is the third house on your left above Bar. You can’t miss
it, sir. A noble-looking mansion, with a lodge entrance. One of the
finest houses in Redcastle.’
Alexis strolls up the street in the winter dusk. Lamps gleam redly
behind fanlights. There is a rosy fire-glow on some of the windows.
The respectability of the scene strikes the stranger. It is so
different from that dilapidated, untidy end of the town in which Dr.
Faunthorpe’s house is situated.
‘So my wife has a rich uncle as well as a poor one; and she came
back to her native town to pay her court to the rich man, not to
seek a homely shelter with the poor one. And she knew that she was
my enemy’s niece, and had not candour or courage enough to tell me
the truth. It suited her humour better to leave me in a sneaking
fashion, and fasten herself on to the wealth of a scoundrel.’
So muses the outraged husband as he walks up the street, and under
the old Gothic archway. Yes, there is Lancaster Lodge--ponderous,
gloomy, looking like a moneyed man’s house. There is no gleam of
light in the upper windows, and the wall hides the lower. A jail or a
reformatory would look more cheerful.
‘Is she happy within those walls?’ he asks, ‘or is she like an
enchanted princess shut up in a golden prison? She has bartered all
things for the hope of wealth--honour, truth, affection--just as her
uncle did before her.’
He has no mind to lose much time before standing face to face with
his wife; but he wishes first to hear what the townspeople have to
tell about her. How much truth is there in that rumour of an intended
marriage? How much encouragement has she given to her admirer? At the
‘Coach and Horses’ they are likely to be well informed of all the
local gossip, and at the ‘Coach and Horses’ he intends to make his
inquiries.
He is shown into a sitting-room, spacious enough for a party of
twelve, and brilliantly illuminated. The number of glasses, various
in colour and shape, which adorn the dinner-table, might be taken to
imply that he is expected to drink deeply of the ‘Coach and Horses’
wine.
On receiving his modest order of a pint of claret, the waiter sweeps
off champagne and hock glasses in a low-spirited way, and relieves
his disappointment with a faint cough.
The dinner is served in very good style, the elderly waiter receiving
the dishes at the door from his subordinate, and sliding about the
room stealthily, as if he were attending to the wants of a dying
traveller, whose ebbing breath he was appointed to watch.
Alexis dawdles over his fish, and dallies with his cutlet and tomato
sauce.
‘Do you see much of Mr. Trenchard?’ he asks.
‘Mr. Trenchard, sir? No, sir. Mr. Trenchard is a very reserved kind
of gentleman. He is much sought after in Redcastle, and I believe
he do attend a good many dinner parties among first-class people;
but as to playing billiards in our room downstairs, or taking his
glass of wine, or brandy and soda, he is quite the last kind of
gentleman. Besides which, one may say that his age precludes that
sort of thing, although we have older gentlemen than Mr. Trenchard in
our billiard-room. But he has a very fine table of his own, you see,
sir; indeed, I may say he drawed off one of our best customers with
his table--young Mr. Stormont, which used to come here almost every
evening, a poor player, but a genteel young man. Very much taken with
Mr. Trenchard’s niece he is, but there’s not much hope for him in
that quarter,’ adds the waiter, as he lowers the cover on the cutlet
dish, with a twirl of his arm like a movement in the broadsword
exercise.
‘Why not?’ asks Alexis.
‘Because the young lady looks higher, sir; as well she may, seeing
that Mr. Frederick Stormont hasn’t one sixpence to rub against
another, as the saying is. Miss Faunthorpe is a beauty, sir--a
regular beauty; and she’s been told of it often enough, I’ll lay,
to know how to set a right value on herself. And then the old
gentleman’s sure to leave her his money. He’s adopted her, you see,
sir. There’s other nieces down town, but this one’s his fancy, and
he’s adopted her. Everybody knows she’s to come into all his money.
And now they say Sir Wilford Cardonnel’s going to marry her, and
she’ll hold her head as high as any in the West Riding, for there
isn’t a finer gentleman than Sir Wilford between here and York.’
‘Who says that she is to be married to Sir Wilford?’
‘Everybody, sir, it’s town talk. There’s been plenty said about it
downstairs in the billiard-room. They’ve chaffed young Mr. Stormont
about it, and he do look uncommon miserable, poor young gentleman,
when they go on at him, and tell him he’s missed his chance with Miss
Faunthorpe. “And if you don’t marry an heiress, whatever are you to
do to get your living, Fred?” says they. “Blest if I know,” says he.
“I’ll tell you what, Fred,” says Mr. Staples, the Vet, “you’ll have
to eat that horse of yours, or he’ll have to eat you. It’ll come to
that sooner or later, for you’ll never be able to keep him.” “I’m
afraid it will,” answers Mr. Stormont, as meek as a lamb.’
Alexis is not warmly interested in the impression which Sibyl’s
intended marriage--or the rumour of such an intention--may have made
upon Frederick Stormont. He is more concerned in its effect upon
himself.
‘And pray what kind of man is this Stephen Trenchard?’ he asks
presently. ‘Is he liked in your town?’
‘I don’t know about liking,’ replies the waiter, dubiously; ‘the
townspeople would hardly go to take such a liberty. He’s very much
looked up to.’
‘Does he or the young lady--this pretty niece of his--do much good in
the place?’
‘Mr. Trenchard subscribes to our local charities, sir. Good, in the
sense of districk visiting, or Sunday school teaching, or anything in
that line, the young lady does not do. Her position raises her above
that, you see, sir.’
‘I understand. Active benevolence of that kind occupies a lower
level.’
‘Decidedly, sir. Young persons who have less call upon their time
can naturally devote themselves to school teaching and such like.
Miss Faunthorpe moves in the highest society--she visits a great
deal. It would be quite out of the question----’
‘That she should trouble herself about the welfare of her inferior
fellow-creatures. Of course. Well, I’ll go and call at Lancaster
Lodge. It’s rather late; but as a traveller I may be excused that
informality.’
‘You know Mr. Trenchard, sir?’ exclaims the waiter, alarmed lest he
should not have expressed himself carefully enough about that great
man, although he has echoed those accents of adulation which prevail
in Redcastle whenever Stephen Trenchard is mentioned.
‘My father knew him--intimately,’ replies Alexis.
It is between seven and eight when he rings the bell at the lodge
gate of Mr. Trenchard’s mansion, a fine winter’s night. The stars are
shining on lawn and plane trees, shrubbery and empty flower-beds, as
the lodgekeeper shows Mr. Secretan the way to the solemn pillared
doorway.
Here a footman in livery, warned by the lodgekeeper’s bell, receives
the stranger. Very silent is the lamplit hall, where a bust of
Wellington, on a porphyry pedestal, keeps company with a bust of Pitt
the younger, on a column of malachite. Crimson cloth curtains hang
before the tall doors, and keep the draught from the chilly East
Indian.
‘Is Mr. Trenchard at home?’ asks Alexis, ‘and can I see him on
particular business?’
He has come to this house determined to keep no bounds--to exercise
a husband’s authority to the uttermost, if that stretch of power be
needed--to claim his wife from his father’s deadliest foe, Stephen
Trenchard. Scarcely worth the claiming, perhaps, with that false
blood in her veins. But some remnant of the old faithful love still
lingers in his breast. If she will come back to him--if she will
surrender all hope of her uncle’s ill-gotten wealth, and come back to
him, believing him still one of the humble toilers in life’s great
hive, he will take her back to his heart of hearts, and cherish her
for all his life to come.
CHAPTER VIII.
BETWEEN LOVE AND GOLD.
The footman surveys the stranger doubtfully, and rings a bell to
summon Podmore the butler, feeling unequal to cope single-handed with
this eruption of an unknown visitor at eight o’clock in the evening.
‘Mr. Trenchard is not very well, sir. He is confined to his room, in
fact; but if your business is anything important----’
Here Podmore comes to the subordinate’s relief. He enters on the
scene with a stately slowness, breathing heavily, having just been
awakened from the pleasant slumber of repletion in front of the fire
in the servants’ hall, where buttered toast, eggs and ham, the daily
papers, and a quiet game at cribbage are his evening solace.
‘Mr. Trenchard is indisposed, sir,’ he observes, severely, as if the
stranger ought to have been aware of the fact; ‘but if you wish I
can carry him a message.’ The intruder looks like a gentleman, and
Podmore remembers that other mysterious visitor of last summer, who
came and went like the wind, no one knowing whence or whither.
‘If Miss Faunthorpe is at home and will see me, I need not trouble
Mr. Trenchard,’ replies Alexis after a moment’s consideration. ‘Be
kind enough to give her my card.’
Podmore stifles a yawn, and receives the card on a salver, which he
takes from the hall table, and carries into the drawing-room, where
Sibyl is sitting in solitary grandeur dreaming over a volume of
Tennyson.
‘A gentleman, ma’am, wishes to see Mr. Trenchard, but I told him
my master was indisposed. Would you favour him with a few minutes’
conversation, ma’am?’
‘Is that the gentleman’s card?’ inquires Sibyl, languidly.
‘Yes, ma’am.’
Sibyl takes up the morsel of pasteboard with the tips of her fingers,
and that elegant air of listlessness which is so provoking to Marion.
She looks at the name a little curiously, notwithstanding her
languor, for it strikes her suddenly that this visitor of to-night
may be her uncle’s mysterious guest of the race night. One glance at
the card shows her the name of all others most appalling to her, and
yet there is, in that first moment of surprise, a thrill of rapture
in the thought that the one man she loves is near her.
‘Where is he?’ she cries, starting up from her easy chair with a
display of animation that awakens Podmore’s suspicions.
‘In the ’all, ma’am. Shall I show him in?’
‘Certainly.’
‘How fortunate that uncle Trenchard should be out of the way
to-night!’ thinks Sibyl, too bewildered by the one startling fact
of her husband’s coming to be able to take in at a glance all the
consequences of such an event.
Stephen Trenchard has been slightly ailing during the last week,
and has kept himself hermetically sealed, as it were, against east
winds in the seclusion of his bedchamber. He has suffered from such
trifling indispositions, touches of cold and rheumatism, several
times during the late autumn and early winter, and Mrs. Stormont is
confirmed in her opinion that dear Mr. Trenchard is breaking fast,
or, as the colonel puts it, in the friendly gossip across the walnuts
and the wine, ‘there can be no doubt the old fellow is going off the
hooks.’
Podmore ushers Mr. Secretan into the drawing-room and retires,
leaving husband and wife standing some yards apart, face to face.
Yes, there she stands. The wife lost so long, regretted so
bitterly--there she stands, unchanged by care or sorrow, far lovelier
than when he saw her last with the pinch of poverty on her cheek,
and the wan pallor of care tarnishing the ivory whiteness of her
complexion. She stands before him to-night the focus of all that is
fairest in the luxurious room: amid all the upholsterer’s gilding
and colour she is the brightest spot. She is pale as marble, but the
large dark eyes shine with a vivid light as she stretches out her
hands to Alexis, as if in fondest welcome.
‘Alex!’ she cried, ‘Alex! you have found me, in spite of all my
care--found me too soon.’
She is ready to throw herself upon his breast and pour out her
pent-up love in sobs and kisses, but his countenance does not invite
this gush of feeling. He surveys her with a look in which there is
more contempt than anger. ‘Yes, I have found you,’ he says; ‘found
you in the comfortable nest which you discovered for yourself when
you turned your back upon starvation and me;--found you in the house
of my father’s deadly enemy--of mine--for before I could speak
plainly I had learned to hate him;--yes, Mrs. Secretan, I have found
you, and the clue to your mystery.’
‘Alexis, you are too cruel. It was for your sake as much as for my
own I came here. Yes, as Heaven hears and judges me, I thought of
your happiness as much as of my own. Why should we both starve, when
there was my uncle’s fortune waiting for me to claim my share of it?
I knew that he was an old man--that we could not have many years to
wait.’
‘And you left me to think you false, dishonoured, or dead, while you
played out this paltry game of waiting for a dead man’s shoes.’
‘I spoke as plainly as I dared in my farewell letter. I was obliged
to act secretly, knowing your prejudice against my uncle.’
‘Don’t give my sentiment so mild a name. It is hatred--or at best a
sovereign contempt.’
‘He has been so good to me, Alexis,’ pleads Sibyl.
‘No doubt. Vipers and scorpions and other noxious reptiles are kindly
to their offspring, I dare say. You are of his own treacherous blood.
There is sympathy between you.’
‘Alexis, how can you be so cruel? Did you come here only to torture
me?’
‘I came here to discover whether you are my wife or no. I came to
offer you your choice between Mr. Trenchard’s fortune--a fortune
founded on treachery, remember--and my love. I am ready to forgive
all I have suffered at your hands,--your desertion of me in my
bitterest need, my suspense and pain of these three years past--if
you will place your hand in mine to-night, and leave this hateful
house, and abandon all hope of profiting by its master’s bounty.’
‘And my uncle is dying, perhaps,’ Sibyl thinks despairingly. ‘In a
few weeks I might inherit his fortune.’
‘The choice is simple,’ says Alexis. ‘You cannot have much difficulty
in deciding either way. On one side your uncle’s garnered wealth, a
million perhaps, there is no limit to the opportunities of a man who
begins unscrupulously. On the other side my affection, a husband you
once pretended to love----’
‘Pretended! Oh, Alexis, what more real than my love? When have I ever
ceased to love you? If you could only know----’
‘I know nothing except that after three years’ severance I find you
here, my enemy’s adopted daughter, the centre of all those fine
things which women of small minds value. I ask you, as many a man has
asked many a woman before to-day, to leave all unreservedly for my
sake. I do not ask you to return to starvation remember, or to the
genteel adventurer’s hand-to-mouth existence. I have learned to earn
my daily bread. The pinch of poverty need touch you no more.’
‘Not till health fails you, or we grow old,’ returns Sibyl. ‘I know
what the workers for their daily bread have to look forward to when
that day comes. The workhouse or the river. Alexis, for pity’s sake,
be reasonable. If my uncle Trenchard’s fortune was founded on money
that ought to have been your father’s--he makes the story tell
against your father, mind--so much the more reason that it should
come to you and me when he is dead. He is past seventy, and his
health has been failing during the last few months. He cannot live
much longer, and I am as certain as I can be of anything that he
means to leave me the bulk of his fortune. Why should I throw away
such a chance?’
‘Simply because money so obtained would be odious to me, as it should
be to you. You are as false to Stephen Trenchard as you have been to
me. Your presence in this house is a fraud. Do you think your uncle
would leave his money to the wife of Philip Secretan’s son?’
‘Perhaps not,’ falters Sibyl. ‘But for his money to come back to
you would be an act of restitution. Providence works in that way
sometimes.’
‘Providence never works through lies and hypocrisies. I want none of
Stephen Trenchard’s money; all of it tainted with fraud and lying,
I’ll warrant. I want you, the penniless girl I married four years
ago. I had no thought of a fortune when I asked you to be my wife,
Sibyl. I have no thought of a fortune now.’
‘No, Alex. You were always reckless, and your recklessness brought us
to the threshold of starvation, and would bring us there again, no
doubt, if I let you have your way.’
‘That means you are not coming with me. You hold by your rich uncle
in preference to your husband.’
‘Alex, I love you with all my heart. You are never absent from my
thoughts; the hope of our reunion is the one hope that brightens my
life.’
‘I will believe that if you put your hand in mine and say, “I am
yours, husband, come weal or woe.” I might claim you, by law,
remember--claim you as my chattel. But I am too proud to do that. You
must follow me freely or not at all. You shall have your choice.’
‘In a few months my uncle may be dead. I will come to you then.’
‘I will not have you then, neither you nor your ill-gotten wealth.
Revel in it, fatten on it, but you shall be no wife of mine unless
you leave this house with me to-night.’
‘It would be too great a folly to abandon every chance when success
seems so near.’
‘You decide for the rich uncle?’
‘Alex!’ cries Sibyl, wringing her hands, ‘how can you be so cruel to
me? Can’t you understand that it is for your sake as much as for my
own that I want to be rich?’
‘I cannot, for I have told you plainly that I despise wealth so won.
I see you have made your choice, and I have now only one thing more
to settle before I leave you to the fulfilment of your destiny. What
have you done with our child?’
‘He is in safe keeping.’
‘I can believe that, but it is not quite enough. I want the custody
of him.’
‘How could you take care of so young a child--a boy of scarcely three
years old?’
‘I would take excellent care of him.’
‘He would be a burden to you.’
‘I should not think him a burden.’
‘Alexis!’ exclaimed Sibyl, bursting into tears, ‘I have deceived you.
I did not like to tell you the truth. Our boy is dead. He died within
a week of his birth.’
‘Heartless woman! you have fooled me with a false hope. I have built
all my schemes of future happiness upon that child, and now you tell
me he is dead. Which am I to believe, your letter or your assertion
of his death?’
‘I have no motive for deceiving you in this matter. You offer to
take the charge of him off my hands. If he lived I should be glad to
accept such an offer.’
‘Perhaps, for you who have so little of a wife’s affection cannot
have much of the maternal instinct.’
‘Alexis!’ she cries, despairingly.
She runs to him and throws herself into his arms, and sobs upon his
breast, distracted between love and ambition. The glittering prize
seems too near for her to let it go. She cannot bring herself to say
farewell fortune, welcome love. She clings to her husband as if she
could not part with him, yet means all the while to be steadfast in
her devotion to Stephen Trenchard and his money.
‘Alexis, if you would only be patient! Let me stay with my uncle to
the end. It is not far off. Every one tells me he has not long to
live. Trust in my devotion to you, my fidelity.’
‘Yes, trust in your devotion, your fidelity, while the town gossips
are busy with the rumour of your approaching marriage with Sir
Wilford Cardonnel.’
‘The merest folly. Sir Wilford has done me the honour to admire
me, and my uncle has given him some little encouragement. You have
nothing to fear from such a rival, Alexis, or from any rival. My
heart belongs to you. My love has never wavered.’
‘And as a proof of this unwavering love you refuse to leave this
house, all this crimson satin and gilding, for the humble home which
I can offer you.’
‘I refuse to throw away a fortune which only a lunatic would consent
to sacrifice,’ replies Sibyl, with a touch of impatience.
The worthy Podmore enters at this juncture to replenish the fire. He
approaches the hearth with slow and ponderous steps, taking note of
all he sees on his passage, Sibyl’s agitated, tear-stained face, her
visitor’s pale and angry looks.
‘Good-bye, Miss Faunthorpe,’ says Alexis, while the butler is
doctoring the fire with deliberate care, as if every flame were a
precious life in danger of extinction. ‘I think I’ve explained all I
wish you to convey to your uncle.’
‘Yes,’ she falters.
‘Good night.’
‘Good night. Are you going to leave Redcastle soon?’
‘By the first train to-morrow morning.’
‘Good-bye.’
She would give much to say more--to entreat him once again to be
patient and to look forward to their reunion later--to accept her
by-and-bye, burdened with the weight of Stephen Trenchard’s wealth.
But the astute Podmore, having heard the note of leave-taking, waits
to show the visitor out, and Alexis is presently escorted to the
hall door as if by the warder of a prison.
He goes out of that house well-nigh heartbroken, though pride has
enabled him to bear himself quietly enough, and even to make light of
his disappointment.
‘I loved her so well that it is hard to find her worthless,’ he tells
himself. ‘Not one spark of generous feeling--all sordid greed of
gain. Had I told her of my altered fortunes she would have come to
me. Yes, she might, perhaps, have surrendered Stephen Trenchard’s
larger wealth. But I thank God I had resolution enough to keep that
secret. And so good-bye, my dream of domestic life, my hope of an
heir to inherit my name. I stand alone henceforth, wifeless with a
wife, childless though a child has been born to me, whose baby face I
was not permitted to see.’
CHAPTER IX.
SIR WILFORD HAS HIS OWN WAY.
When her husband is gone, and the full significance of that meeting
and parting comes home to her, Sibyl feels as if all the hope and
glory of her life were departed with him. She does not repent her
decision. Were Alexis to offer her the same choice again she would
decide in exactly the same manner. In her limited way of looking
at the question there is no possibility of arriving at any other
determination. It would seem to her utterly unreasonable, an act
of absolute lunacy to throw away a fortune which is ready to drop
into her lap, for which she has waited patiently, living her false
life, suppressing the truer instincts of her heart and mind for
nearly three years. She wonders that a man of the world can demand
such a sacrifice, can cling to so foolish a prejudice as hereditary
hatred, and even carry that passion so far as to hate his enemy’s
money. To her mind the inheritance of Stephen Trenchard’s fortune by
Alexis Secretan’s wife appears a wise and beneficent settlement of
an old debt. No doubt her uncle Stephen was right, and that Philip
Secretan was a spendthrift who deserved to be disinherited. His
father’s fortune held over, quadrupled, increased tenfold perhaps, in
Stephen’s prudent hands, would pass to Alexis, and justice would be
done to the dead father through the living son.
Sibyl cannot believe that Alexis will be obdurate when the hour of
her freedom comes with Stephen Trenchard’s death.
‘No, I will not despair,’ she says to herself, drying her tearful
eyes, and looking at her white face in the glass over the low marble
chimney-piece. ‘Cruel as he was to-night, he loves me too well to
repudiate me by-and-bye when I am free to return to him. Poor fellow!
How could he reject fortune if it were mine to give him; he, who has
suffered the sharp stings of poverty, and who has to work for his
daily bread? How could he turn his back upon the bright new life that
would lie before us if my uncle’s money were mine--not life within
the four walls of a handsome dungeon, like this house, but life
wherever earth is loveliest--in Paris, in Italy, sailing in our yacht
on the Mediterranean, free as birds, without a care or a thought
except how to get the most pleasure out of our youth and wealth and
freedom?’
Comforted by reflections like these, Sibyl calms herself, and
prepares to continue her part of ministering angel to Stephen
Trenchard. Illness makes the old man irritable, and the character is
not the easiest in the world to perform.
She trembles at the thought of what would happen if her uncle and her
husband were to meet--of what might have happened this very evening
but for Mr. Trenchard’s most fortunate indisposition. What limit
would there be to the old man’s fury if he were to discover that he
had been cheated of his affection--that the niece he had loved and
favoured was the wife of his enemy’s son? That revelation would have
destroyed her hopes, beggared her of that golden chance which seems
to her scarcely less than the actual possession of his fortune.
She has no easy part to play this evening when she goes up to
her uncle’s room, and finds him sitting by his fire awake and
watchful--the _Times_ lying uncut on the little table beside his
capacious arm-chair.
‘What have you been doing all the evening, child?’ he asks testily.
‘I’ve been waiting for you to read me the City article--waiting
upwards of an hour by that clock,’ he adds, with a glance at the
gilded timepiece on the mantel shelf.
‘I’m so sorry, dear uncle. I thought you were asleep.’
‘You might have taken the trouble to come and ascertain the fact. I
have not closed my eyes since Podmore brought me my beef tea. Who is
this gentleman, pray, who has detained you so long?’
Sibyl is unprepared for this question. She had hoped her uncle would
have known nothing about that untimely visitor.
‘A gentleman uncle?’
‘Yes. Podmore told me you had a gentleman with you. Some one who
wanted to see me on particular business, and, being told that I was
ill, asked to see you instead. What did the fellow want?’
‘He wanted you to subscribe to a fund for building a new church at
Krampston, uncle,’ replies Sibyl, with a desperate plunge. Some lie
she must needs invent, no matter what shape it took. ‘Some new sect,
if I understood him rightly. I told him I did not think you would
care to subscribe, but that he might call again, if he liked, when
you are well.’
‘Humph! You might have given him a decided negative at once. There
are churches enough in the world, and new sects enough, without my
squandering money on the fools who want more. The fellow was with you
a long time. Why couldn’t you get rid of him sooner?’
‘He insisted upon showing me plans, and a list of subscribers, and he
told me a good deal about the church.’
‘You ought to know how to keep such fellows at a distance. Some
swindler, no doubt. And he was with you nearly an hour, according to
Podmore.’
‘Shall I read you the City article, uncle Trenchard?’ asks Sibyl,
anxious to end this embarrassing discussion.
She seats herself a little way behind Mr. Trenchard’s chair, well in
the shadow.
‘Yes, you can read, but come nearer the lamp, child; it makes me
uncomfortable to know that you are straining your eyes in the dark
there.’
Sibyl obeys reluctantly, fearing that the traces of agitation may
still disfigure her countenance. Luckily, the lamp has a velvet shade
which casts the light on the paper in her hand, and not on the face
bending over it.
Mr. Trenchard scans her curiously, notwithstanding. His suspicions
have been aroused by that evening visitor--a handsome young man,
according to Podmore, a lover, perhaps, and that story of the
Krampston Church all a fable. Mr. Trenchard has employed too much
fiction in the course of his own career to be easily deluded by a
figment of the female brain.
He says nothing, however, content to suspect, and to keep his
suspicions to himself for the present.
He languishes for some days more under the burden of what Dr. Mitsand
calls a slight bronchial attack, and in about a week is able to come
downstairs again, and seems almost as active and alert as ever, Sibyl
thinks, wondering whether there is really any foundation for that
idea about his ‘breaking up.’
Dr. Mitsand is Mr. Trenchard’s medical attendant. It is not to be
supposed that the precious life of a millionaire could be trusted to
poor little Dr. Faunthorpe, who has the care of the parish, and goes
his rounds in a positively disreputable pony carriage. Dr. Mitsand’s
neat single brougham and fine pair of bay cobs are a standing
evidence of his respectability and his skill. If he were not a clever
doctor how could he afford those cobs?
‘Wonderful constitution, your uncle’s, Miss Faunthorpe,’ says Dr.
Mitsand, cheerily, on the occasion of his last professional visit.
‘Quite set up again, you see, complexion clearer, eye brighter,
liver in better order. I congratulate you upon having an uncle who
ought to live as long as Lyndhurst or Brougham.’
Sibyl tries to look glad, but her heart sinks at the thought that
this fine constitution of her uncle’s places the hope of reunion with
Alexis very far off.
‘What a miserable situation mine must be when such horrid thoughts
are forced upon me!’ she reflects. ‘I almost wish I were Marion,
dawdling away life in that old house at the bottom of the town,
without a care.’
* * * * *
Sibyl’s cares are rendered heavier just at this time by the marked
attentions of Sir Wilford Cardonnel, attentions which, however
delightful they might be to her vanity in the beginning of things,
have now become hateful to her, the more so as her uncle will
not allow her any way of escape from this entanglement. She sees
before her the inevitable end in a proposal from Sir Wilford, and
her rejection of it, which act of seeming idiocy will doubtless
provoke her uncle’s anger, perhaps forfeit his good graces for ever;
and then all her patience, all her pretty little flatteries and
gentle ministerings to an irritable old man will have been wasted.
She will have grieved and offended her husband, perhaps alienated
his affections--for nothing. She will be bankrupt both ways. These
possibilities occur to her mind sometimes. Difficulties crowd upon
her and hem her in on every side. The dread of Sir Wilford taking
that decisive step, which he evidently intends to take sooner or
later, is always before her; and she has another ever-present fear
in the thought that Alexis may reappear at any moment, and reveal
himself to Stephen Trenchard. There are hours of her life in which
she feels sorely tempted to run away from wealth as she ran away from
poverty; and it is possible that if she had known where to find her
husband she would have acted upon this impulse. But he has vanished
out of her existence. In the fear and confusion of that brief visit
of his she did not even ask his place of abode or mode of life.
Prudence and that deep-rooted worship of wealth which is sometimes
engendered by a long apprenticeship to poverty keeps Sibyl constant
to the rack of her daily difficulties, despite these occasional
longings for escape. She contrives by a certain distance of manner,
which is in no wise ungracious, to defer Sir Wilford’s declaration of
his passion. The bluff and genial baronet is as shy as a girl in the
presence of the woman he loves, and so long as he can enjoy Sibyl’s
society, is in no hurry to precipitate matters. Small as are the
tokens of favour which she has bestowed upon him, Sir Wilford has no
apprehension of being refused by her when it shall please him to ask
the fateful question. He is too good a match for the possibility of a
refusal. It does not enter into his notion of possibilities that he,
Sir Wilford Cardonnel, of The How, could be rejected by any woman out
of the peerage. He is kept at a distance by Sibyl’s coldness, but in
no wise disheartened.
‘I’m in no hurry, you know,’ he says to himself. ‘I like to know
something about a woman before I ask her to be my wife. I should like
to make sure she cared a little about me, in a quiet way. So many
women have thrown themselves at my head, that I like this one all
the better for not going so fast. More likely to be a good stayer,
I should think. I don’t want to win with a rush. I’d rather take my
time and come in quietly.’ Thus muses Sir Wilford in the solitude
of his study--a room chiefly devoted to treatises on the turf and
farriery, whips, single sticks, gloves, favourite bits and bridles,
a small menagerie of stuffed dogs, from Sebastian, the favourite old
hound, defunct at a ripe old age, blind of one eye, and short of one
ear, to Mite, the smallest terrier ever seen in the West Riding, a
minute white animal, with pointed pink paws and a strong likeness to
a rat.
‘I ought to see more of her,’ thinks Sir Wilford. ‘It’s no use asking
her and the old party to dinner, or dining with them. I shall never
make the running that way. I feel as strange with her when I haven’t
seen her for a week or two as if I’d only just been introduced to
her. It’s like beginning our acquaintance over again. I must make
Phœbe ask them here to stay. That’ll be the best plan. A week in the
same house with her will show me what kind of girl she is, better
than a twelvemonth’s morning calling and dining.’
And having made up his mind, Sir Wilford is not slow to act upon his
decision.
‘Hi, Jess, old lady,’ he calls to his favourite, a splendid red
setter, graceful and ladylike enough in her habits to be admitted as
a house dog, though not without protest from Phœbe. Jess vanquishes
Miss Cardonnel’s objections by pretending to adore her, is as artful
as a court favourite, and has as many perquisites.
Sir Wilford goes straight to the morning-room, where his two sisters
employ themselves industriously between breakfast and luncheon,
writing innumerable letters, examining the housekeeper’s weekly
accounts, the head gardener’s book, and other household volumes,
working point lace, practising classical sonatas which reduce them
to the verge of lunacy, and making winter clothing for their various
pensioners.
Christmas is just over, and the Christmas gaieties and benevolences
done with. It is the beginning of the New Year--fine healthy
weather--the ground not too hard for horses or hounds, and Sir
Wilford in good humour with the arrangement of things.
‘Well, Phœbe, what people are you going to ask for Tilberry
steeplechase?’ he inquires, as Miss Cardonnel looks up from her desk,
where she is just declaring herself to remain her dearest Cecilia’s
ever affectionate friend--Cecilia being the fifth dearest friend she
has addressed this morning.
Tilberry steeplechase is an important fixture in this part of the
world. It is a race at which gentlemen jockeys disport themselves.
It comes in the winter, when outdoor amusements are rare. Altogether
Tilberry steeplechase is a benefaction.
‘I’ve written the last of my invitations this morning,’ replies
Phœbe, who is somewhat inclined to forget that she is the prime
minister and not the king, and to commit herself to important
measures without the preliminary formula of consultation with her
sovereign. ‘I have asked General and Mrs. MacTower and Belinda--the
eldest, you know;--and I thought we ought to be civil to the Vicar of
Redcastle for once in a way, so I’ve asked Mr. and Mrs. Chasubel and
the son. He won’t make much difference, and you can put him in the
barracks.’
The barracks is a range of small bedrooms over the offices, devoted
to bachelor visitors of indistinction.
‘Very well; I’ve no objection to the Chasubels. Who else?’
‘The Radnors, and the Vernons, and Cecilia Hawtree.’
‘Too many women,’ says Sir Wilford.
‘Cecilia is my particular friend,’ remarks Miss Cardonnel, with
dignity.
‘Oh, well, let her come.’
‘She is coming the day after to-morrow,’ observes Miss Cardonnel. ‘I
have just written to say I shall send the omnibus to meet her.’
‘What the dooce can one young woman want with a family bus, built to
carry ten?’ exclaims Sir Wilford.
‘She will have her maid,’ replies Miss Cardonnel, ‘and her
portmanteaus.’
‘Ah, boxes enough to load a goods train, I dare say,’ mutters Sir
Wilford. ‘Well, that’s all your list, I suppose?’
‘Yes, Wilford.’
‘Then I’ll give you mine.’
‘Do you want to ask any one else?’ exclaims Miss Cardonnel, with an
injured air. ‘I fancied I had thought of every one you would have
cared about asking.’
‘You’ve thought of a good many I don’t care about.’
‘But, my dear Wilford, I don’t see how I can possibly ask any more.
I’ve filled all the best bedrooms.’
‘Then you must empty some of them. I want you to ask Colonel and Mrs.
Stormont, and that son of theirs on the gray.’
‘But, Wilford, Mrs. Stormont is such a horrid old person--so pushing.’
‘Never mind that. We often have horrid old persons.’
‘And the son,--I don’t know what he’s like off that gray, but he’s
utterly odious on it.’
‘Stupid young cad, rather, but good fun. Be sure you tell him to
bring the gray.’
‘Why should we have the Stormonts to stay with us, Wilford?’ demands
Lavinia, the younger sister, looking up from an easel, upon which she
has been copying a drawing-master’s landscape, and fondly deluding
herself with the idea that she can paint. ‘It’s all very well to ask
them to dinner once in a way, or to a garden party, but why have them
in the house?’
‘Simply because I wish it, Vinnie. I don’t often indulge in whims.
Say that this is one, if you like.’
‘Oh, of course, if you really wish it. But I think it’s rather a
dangerous precedent,’ replies Phœbe. ‘All the Redcastle people will
be expecting to be asked to stay here.’
‘The butchers and bakers and candlestick-makers. Well, they can
go down to their graves in a state of expectation,’ says Sir
Wilford, ‘and now Phœbe, I want you to write a particularly nice
letter--cordial, and all that kind of thing, you know--to Miss
Faunthorpe, asking her and Mr. Trenchard over for the race week.’
‘I ought to have known what was coming,’ exclaims Phœbe.
‘Well, naturally, I shouldn’t be civil to the Stormonts without a
motive. Mrs. Stormont introduced me to Miss Faunthorpe, you see, and
I shouldn’t like the old lady to think I’d make a cat’s-paw of her.’
Phœbe is inwardly rebellious, but too wise to revolt outwardly. She
has seen the sun set on her twenty-ninth birthday, and has been
mistress of the How, the sole and sovereign domestic power, for the
last ten years. It will be a hard thing, to lay down her sceptre,
to retire from that lordly dwelling-place, and to become Miss
Cardonnel of nowhere in particular, a young lady whose non-success
in the matrimonial line sympathizing friends will lament over. And
Phœbe feels that the day when her sceptre must be so resigned is
not very far off, now that Wilford, who has his father’s obstinate
temper, poor dear fellow, has taken a ridiculous fancy to this Miss
Faunthorpe, a mere nobody, with nothing but a pretty face and a rich
uncle to recommend her to notice.
Sir Wilford waits while his sister writes the letter of invitation,
which she is obliged to make much warmer in tone than inclination
would prompt; the baronet looking over her shoulder all the while.
When the letter is in its envelope he surprises Phœbe by taking it
from her and putting it in his pocket.
‘I am going over to Redcastle this afternoon,’ he says, ‘so I can
deliver the letter and bring you back an answer. I should like you to
give Miss Faunthorpe the tapestry room.’
‘My dear Wilford, what are you thinking of? I have ever so many
married couples coming. I must put her in one of the small rooms in
the Kneller gallery.’
‘Oh, very well,’ replies Sir Wilford, ‘she’ll have the pick of the
rooms, perhaps, some of these days.--Hi, Jess, old woman.’
With which awful threat Sir Wilford withdraws, leaving his sisters
free to discuss the calamity that lowers over their house.
CHAPTER X.
MARION IS RAISED TO DISTINCTION.
Sir Wilford, clad in the latest fashion in checks, a rough and fleecy
raiment which his father would have deemed better suited to clothe
his gamekeeper or groom than himself, and mounted on Bull of Bashan,
is a sight to behold this winter afternoon as he trots gaily down
the wide avenue at the How, and emerges therefrom on a bold and open
country. The Bull is a little fresh this afternoon, which, being
interpreted, means that the grooms have been too lazy to take the
superfluous energy out of that amiable animal for the last two days,
whereby the Bull behaves like a quadruped newly introduced to a
strange country, where all sights and sounds, colours and shapes of
objects, lights and shadows, are new to him. He shies ferociously at
every trunk in the long line of elms, and indulges in a serpentine
movement for the length of the avenue. He takes objection to the
colour of the gravel where the road has been mended; and on suddenly
beholding the white gate, which he ought to know as well as his own
manger, recoils on his haunches, and curls himself up into a ball,
and in this shape canters furiously into the road, startling the lazy
waggoner asleep upon his wain, and rousing a flight of rooks from
their afternoon repose by the clatter of his iron shoes. The cawing
of the rooks finishes the Bull altogether, and sends him off like a
maniac, or demoniacally possessed animal; but Sir Wilford having now
got him into the open country is able to ‘take it out of him’ over
a fine stretch of moorland, and brings him back to the high road a
couple of miles further off, a subdued and subjugated beast, willing
to settle into a comfortable trot, which, with an occasional interval
of walking, carries Sir Wilford into Redcastle by afternoon tea-time,
that pleasant hour betwixt day and night, when labour rests, or
should rest, from its cares, and the household music of the kettle
singing on the hob speaks peace to the soul of the weary.
Mr. Trenchard is taking afternoon tea with his two nieces, Sibyl and
Marion, in the firelit drawing-room at Lancaster Lodge, a room which,
like most other rooms, looks its best by that uncertain light, now
gorgeous in the glow of crimson and gold, anon wrapped in shadow.
Marion has been invited to spend the day; the two girls have employed
the short winter afternoon in a review of Sibyl’s last new dresses,
an inspection which has not been conducive to the younger sister’s
peace of mind or good temper.
At the announcement of Sir Wilford Cardonnel however, Marion
brightens a little, and is glad.
‘How lucky he should have called to-day!’ she thinks. ‘Sibyl is
too mean to ask me here on purpose to see him, and now he must be
introduced to me and I can talk about knowing him as well as Sibyl.
What will Maria Harrison say, I wonder, when I tell her that I am
quite intimate with Sir Wilford Cardonnel?’
Marion little knows the mighty honour which fate has reserved for
her--little dreams that by the happy accident of her presence at
Lancaster Lodge this afternoon she is to be raised to a giddy height
of grandeur, from which she will hardly be able to glance downwards
without vertigo.
Sir Wilford is presented to Miss Marion Faunthorpe in due form by
Mr. Trenchard, and the conversation becomes at once general and
sprightly, glancing upon such original topics as the probability of
a hard frost before long, the advantage of the present weather from
a sporting point of view, the health and well-being of the baronet’s
stud, the superlative virtues and capabilities of his latest equine
purchase, the probability of a day’s good racing at Tilberry.
‘You ought to see Tilberry steeplechase,’ says Sir Wilford. ‘Tilberry
Common’s only three miles from the How, you know, and it’s an
uncommonly good day’s sport, gentlemen jocks, and that kind of thing.
I’ve ridden there myself, but I didn’t enter anything this year. You
ought really, you know, Miss Faunthorpe; in point of fact, I came
over here this afternoon on purpose to ask you and Mr. Trenchard to
come and stay with us next week. My sister gave me a letter for you.
She’s dreadfully anxious for you to come, and I think the change of
air would do Mr. Trenchard good. We stand a good bit higher than you
do, you know, and get a sniff off the moors,--remarkably healthy,
that kind of thing, I’m told. Do say yes now, Mr. Trenchard,’ he
urges, handing Sibyl the letter.
‘I’m afraid my dear uncle’s health won’t permit him to leave home,’
answers Sibyl. ‘He has been quite an invalid lately, you know, Sir
Wilford.’
‘All the more reason he should have change of air--brace him up, you
know. Capital thing for invalids, moorland air. And if Miss Mary
Ann----’
‘Marion,’ interjects that young lady. Not even by Sir Wilford
Cardonnel will she submit to be called Mary Ann.
‘If Miss Miriam----’
‘Marion.’
‘I beg your pardon, I’m shaw. If Miss Marion will come I shall be
delighted, and I’m sure my sister will be quite awfully glad.’
Marion blushes crimson with delight at such an invitation.
‘You’re too kind,’ she gasps. ‘I positively doat upon races.’
‘I shouldn’t have thought your passion for them had had time to reach
such a height,’ says Sibyl, sneeringly, ‘since you never were at a
race in your life before last year’s summer meeting.’
She is provoked at Marion’s eagerness to accept an invitation, the
acceptance of which can only bring embarrassment upon her, Sibyl.
‘That means you’ll come,’ exclaims Sir Wilford, answering Marion,
‘and, of course, if you say yes, Miss Faunthorpe can’t say no.
Sisters always think alike--two cherries on one stalk, like Juno’s
swans, together and inseparable, you know; and now we only want Mr.
Trenchard’s acquiescence.’
‘I should be a churl to refuse so hospitable an invitation, and to
deprive these girls of so much pleasure,’ replies Stephen Trenchard.
‘Bravo!’ cries Sir Wilford; ‘then it’s all settled. You’ll come next
Saturday?’
‘I don’t think I could be ready by Saturday,’ murmurs Marion, with
an awful fear upon the subject of her wardrobe, which will need
herculean labours of cutting and contriving, and some expenditure of
cash, before it can be fit for the halls of Cardonnel.
‘Pray, dear uncle, do not think of us,’ says Sibyl, ‘I don’t at all
care about races, and, much as I appreciate Miss Cardonnel’s kind
invitation, I really would rather not accept it, for fear the fatigue
and the excitement should be too much for you.’
‘Nasty thing,’ thinks Marion, ‘she refuses just because I’m invited.’
‘Artful puss,’ thinks Stephen, ‘she keeps him on by holding him off.’
‘Don’t be afraid about your uncle, Miss Faunthorpe,’ says Sir
Wilford, ‘we shall be awfully careful of him.’
‘I’m not quite so decrepid as my niece thinks me,’ says Mr.
Trenchard, ‘and I shall quite enjoy a few days at the How.’
‘That’s glorious,’ cries Sir Wilford. ‘On Saturday, then. You’ll
drive over in time for luncheon? Be sure you bring your habit, Miss
Faunthorpe. I’ve a chestnut mare that will suit you to perfection.
And I can mount you too, Miss Marion, if you like riding?’
‘I positively adore it,’ gushes Marion. ‘Sibyl and I used to take it
in turns to ride uncle Robert’s pony when we were little things. I
was so sorry when the pony grew too small for us.’
Sir Wilford, having settled this important question, and drunk three
cups of tea, chiefly for the pleasure of having his cup and saucer
handed him by Sibyl, departs, leaving the elder sister heavy-hearted,
the younger in a state of wild excitement, which her natural awe of
Stephen Trenchard can hardly subdue.
‘What am I to do about my things, Sibyl?’ she whispers, as the two
girls sit side by side on a sofa by the fire.
‘What things?’
‘My dresses, jackets, gloves, hats, boots, everything. I’ve hardly a
rag that’s fit to wear at the How.’
‘Then you oughtn’t to have accepted the invitation. You might have
seen that you were only asked because you happened to be here, and
Sir Wilford could not very well leave you out.’
‘How unkind of you to say that!’
‘It’s preposterous to accept an invitation when you have no clothes
fit to be worn at the house you’re asked to visit. You ought to have
refused.’
‘Ought I? That’s very nice and sisterly of you, I’m sure. Very much
like twin cherries and Juno’s fiddlesticks. Just the only chance I
ever had of enjoying myself and seeing life,--going into society,
in fact, and a chance that would give me quite a new position in
Redcastle, bring those horrid Stormonts and that disgusting Mrs.
Groshen to their senses; and you expect me to refuse it. It’s
positively unnatural of you, Sibyl.’ And Marion relieves her bursting
heart with a gush of tears.
‘Why, what’s the matter, girl?’ cries Stephen Trenchard, starting
from that placid slumber into which the fire-glow and the subdued
murmur of the girls’ voices have beguiled him. ‘You don’t come here
to cry, I hope, Marion. If we make you unhappy you’d better stay
away.’
Mr. Trenchard is not the kind of man to allow his afternoon repose
to be disturbed by a whimpering niece. His young kinsfolk must make
themselves agreeable if they hope to retain his favour.
‘It’s all Sibyl’s unkindness,’ says Marion, swallowing her sobs in
an unpleasantly convulsive manner. ‘She hasn’t a bit of heart, she
never had. When Sir Wilford Cardonnel has invited me and all, she
throws my poverty in my face, and says I must refuse the invitation
on account of my things.’
‘What does the girl mean by things?’
‘I simply reminded Marion that the invitation gives us very short
notice, and that her wardrobe is hardly fit for visiting at the How.’
‘Oh, is that all?’ exclaims Mr. Trenchard. ‘That shan’t stand in
your way, Marion. You can get whatever you want for this visit at
Carmichael’s, and have it put down to Sibyl’s account.’
‘Oh, uncle, you are too good, too generous,’ gasps Marion, forgetting
how often she has inveighed against Mr. Trenchard’s meanness.
‘Don’t make a fuss, please, Marion,’ says Stephen, closing his eyes
again.
Sibyl is gloomy. She would do much to prevent this visit, were
there any way open to her by which it could be prevented. She
feels that to visit at Sir Wilford’s house is a kind of treason
against her husband. True that the baronet is not yet her declared
admirer, but his admiration is not the less obvious, and the town
gossips have already been busy with her name and Sir Wilford’s. How
provoking uncle Trenchard is--and Marion too! She hates them both,
and preserves a sullen manner towards Marion all the evening, a
sullenness which that young lady imputes to jealousy.
‘Perhaps she thinks that Sir Wilford might be fickle enough to admire
me a little,’ muses Marion, elated beyond measure by the prospect
of her visit, and the idea of getting ‘things’ at Carmichael’s. ‘Of
course Sibyl is the beauty, we all know that; but I flatter myself
I have a little more animation than she has, and in the long run,
fascinating manners are more admired than good looks.’
Fortified thus in her self-esteem Marion departs in the highest
spirits, after having made Sibyl promise to go shopping with her next
morning.
Sibyl makes her preparations for the visit with a heavy heart. She
assists Marion kindly enough now that she has resigned herself to
the inevitable. She lends her sister the aid of her counsel, and
considerably chastens Marion’s taste in colours and patterns, a taste
which inclines to the ‘loud’ and ‘fast,’ large checks, big metal
buttons, yachting jackets, and small pork-pie hats. Sibyl takes
care that her sister shall be dressed like a lady, which may be done
cheaply, and not like a fashion plate, the latter involving lavish
expenditure, and often resulting in disappointment. Sibyl selects
hues which harmonize with Marion’s hair and complexion, and not the
last new colour, which the shopman presses upon her, as if novelty
and beauty were convertible terms.
‘I’m afraid you’ll make me an awful dowdy,’ remonstrates Marion,
who is inclined to object to the combination of rich brown and soft
cream-colour, which Sibyl recommends for a walking costume, and this
languid shade of blue, relieved by ruchings, pipings, and flouncings
of palest salmon, which Sibyl declares will make a lovely dinner
dress.
‘See what Miss Eylett will say to my choice,’ says Sibyl.
‘Oh, of course that old Eylett will side with you. She knows how to
flatter a good customer.’
‘Choose for yourself then, Marion, and be happy.’
‘Well, upon my word, I don’t know what to have,’ says Marion,
surveying the counter, and biting the tip of her gloved forefinger to
assist cogitation. ‘There’s that lovely peach. I should like of all
things, and that heavenly maize. Think of it trimmed with black lace.’
‘Charming for a brunette, but odious for a blonde And to trim it
properly you would want at least fifty pounds’ worth of lace.’
‘That apple-green brocade, then, with the lovely rosebuds.’
‘Admirable for a dowager, but quite unsuited to you.’
‘I wonder if uncle Trenchard would mind my having a ruby velvet? I
have always fancied a ruby velvet.’
‘With a diamond tiara, of course. Most appropriate for a country
surgeon’s niece, especially when he’s the parish doctor.’
‘Well, I suppose you’d better choose. I’ll have the blue and salmon,
but it’s a horrid thin silk.’
‘Quite good enough for an evening dress, which will be done for when
its freshness is gone.’
So Marion finally accepts Sibyl’s superior judgment. Her purchases
include a pretty gray merino for mornings and walking, a rich brown
silk, the pale blue dinner dress, and a handsome black cloth jacket,
garments which are judiciously bought for something less than thirty
pounds. With these materials the two girls drive straight to Miss
Eylett, who, with much persuasion from Sibyl, is induced to promise
the three dresses for Saturday morning.
‘And now all you have to do is to get Hester to wash and iron your
white muslins,’ says Sibyl, ‘so that you may have some simple dresses
for the quiet evenings. I’ll lend you a sash or two.’
‘Upon my word, Sib, you’re quite a darling. What made you so
disagreeable last night?’
‘I don’t want to go to the How, and I was vexed with you and uncle
Trenchard for snapping at the invitation.’
‘Don’t want to go to the How!’ cries Marion, with as much
astonishment as if Sibyl had said she didn’t wish to go to heaven.
‘Don’t want to go to the How, when it’s the grandest chance you ever
had in your life, and people are beginning to say that you can be
Lady Cardonnel if you like.’
‘People are idiots and busybodies. I don’t want to be Lady Cardonnel,
or Lady anybody else.’
‘Sibyl, don’t be so affected!’ exclaims Marion, disgusted by a
repudiation which she believes thoroughly insincere.
Mr. Trenchard’s carriage deposits Marion at the shabby old house
beyond the minster, and Jenny comes rushing out into the wintry
air--last year’s tartan frock a good deal too short for those
obtrusive legs of hers--to kiss Sibyl, to the disgust of the
coachman, who looks upon this branch of his employer’s family as a
low lot.
‘That’s the worst of living with these here novvo riches,’ he
complains to John the footman. ‘They may climb the ladder of fortune
theirselves, but they leave their relations a-grovellin’ at the
bottom.’
‘What do you mean by novvo riches?’ inquires the simple John.
‘Well, parwennoos, stoopid, if you must ’av the wernackerler.’
Hester and Jenny Faunthorpe have rather a hard time of it for
the rest of this important week, Hester at the wash-tub and the
ironing-board, Jane engaged in darning stockings and sewing on tapes
and buttons, her sister’s wardrobe requiring more small repairs than
are consistent with a notion of order and industry in its owner.
‘Well, you have let your things go to seed, Marion,’ remarks Jane.
‘If it hadn’t been for this visit of yours I should think you must
have dropped to pieces altogether before long.’
‘You’re an impertinent chit,’ exclaims Marion, frowning over a
complicated darn.
‘Well, you might be civil when I’m toiling like a slave for you.’
‘You may help me or leave it alone, just as you please. It’s no
pleasure to be under an obligation to you.’
‘As far as inclination goes, I’d much rather leave it alone,’ replies
the argumentative Jane, ‘but for the credit of the family I shall
do my best to prevent you going into society with your heels coming
through your stockings. But I can’t help saying that I think you’d
find it better for the health of your stockings to darn them before
they come to this;’ and Jenny emphasizes her remark by thrusting her
hand through a yawning chasm in the stocking she is operating upon.
‘Keep your opinions to yourself, and don’t make the holes bigger by
sticking your enormous hand through them,’ says Marion.
‘This is a grateful world,’ murmurs Jane, resignedly.
Dr. Faunthorpe is pleased at the idea of his younger niece’s
pleasure, though the visit to the How will drag a pound or two out of
his scantily furnished purse, pounds already engaged for tax or water
rate, as the case may be, and the subtraction of which will throw
his financial arrangements out of gear for ever so long. But Robert
Faunthorpe is one of those good little men whose mission upon this
earth seems to be to suffer and be patient, if not to suffer and be
strong. Nay, is there not exceeding strength in this quiet patience,
this placid endurance of loss and deprivation, this uncomplaining
surrender of all that the selfish live for? Humboldt wisely says
that if every man is said to have his own destiny in his hands, that
saying must be read to mean, not that he has the power to alter fate,
but rather the power to make the best of bad fortune, and by his
gentle acceptance of ill to transmute evil into good. Deprivations,
small acts of self-abnegation which would have hurt another man,
gave Dr. Faunthorpe a pleasant feeling, a genial sense of warmth and
comfort in the region of the heart, which had the effect of whisky
toddy or any other comfortable stimulant.
CHAPTER XI.
AT THE HOW.
Saturday shows bright and fair, a fine winter day, hoar frost on
the hedges. The roads are dry, but not too hard for the horses; the
minster towers stand out, sharply defined against the clear cold
blue; rooks are screaming loud in the ragged elm boughs; robins
singing merrily; a blithe day in the new born-year, a day which
inspires Redcastle with the idea that trade is brisker than it has
been, and things in general looking up, so potent is the influence of
fine weather.
Never has Marion Faunthorpe felt so proud or happy as when her
uncle’s carriage calls for her and her boxes, and she takes her seat
opposite Mr. Trenchard, who, by right divine of his threescore years
and ten, occupies the post of honour wrapped to the chin in sable,
and with a tigerskin rug over his knees.
‘Did you shoot that tiger yourself, dear uncle?’ asks Marion, bent on
making herself agreeable.
‘No, child,’ replies the dear uncle rather snappishly, ‘I had
something better to do in India than to shoot tigers.’
‘But it’s very nice shooting big game, isn’t it, uncle? Some people
go to India on purpose for that, don’t they?’
‘Fools do, perhaps. There’s no accounting for their taste.’
The little surgeon has come out to the gate to see his niece off.
Nay, he has actually stolen an hour from the parish in order to
behold the glory of her departure. He seems as pleased to see her
happiness as if he himself were going to the How, and at the last
moment the girl feels touched.
‘You dear, darling old uncle,’ she says, hanging round his neck, and
forgetting the possibility of damage to her new hat, ‘how good you
always are!--always--always--always, and I’m an ungrateful wretch.’
‘My love, you are not ungrateful, and you have very little to be
grateful for.’
‘Everything you mean, uncle Robert. I shall think of you ever so many
times a day at the How; and if the dinners are very nice I shall so
wish you could be with us.’
‘Thank you, my dear. I shall think of you, and miss you very much.’
‘I’m going to keep house,’ exclaims Jenny, lolling against the gate,
and swaying to and fro distractingly as she talks; ‘and make tea and
all; nobody to tell me not to take too much butter; and Hester will
give us my favourite puddings, I know, if I quill her cap borders.’
So after embracing the doctor in this demonstrative fashion, Marion
enters the carriage with tears in her eyes, to the aggravation of
Stephen Trenchard, who hates tears and fuss and emotion of all kinds,
except the thrill of delight which accompanies a successful stroke of
business.
‘Crying again,’ he exclaims testily. ‘What’s the matter now?’
‘There’s nothing the matter, dear uncle. Only I’m so happy; and I
felt a little overcome at leaving uncle Robert.’
‘It’s a pity you should leave him at all if the parting is so
pathetic,’ sneers Mr. Trenchard.
‘Oh, Sibyl, I’ve had such a nice little note from Miss Cardonnel to
confirm Sir Wilford’s invitation,’ says Marion; and she exhibits a
formal note, in which the polite Phœbe expresses her satisfaction
at having heard from her brother that Miss Marion Faunthorpe has
promised to accompany her sister on Saturday.
The drive is delightful for any one with an unburdened mind, and even
Sibyl feels the sweetness of the clear winter air, and determines to
make the best of an awkward concatenation of events. After all, it
is better to be lolling in uncle Trenchard’s carriage on one’s way
to a delightful old country house than to be grinding at French or
German verbs in Mrs. Hazleton’s cheerless second-floor schoolroom,
badly warmed by a fire that seems always made of the dullest coals
that ever came from the bosom of the earth. And all this is but the
filling up of a gap in her life. This chasm of time bridged over
and she will be with Alexis once more, and they will have uncle
Trenchard’s money to spend and be happy ever afterwards. She has
persuaded herself that let Alexis make what protestations he pleases
in the present, he will take her to his heart again gladly when the
fitting time comes.
‘And in the meantime there is no use in my moping and making myself
miserable,’ reflects Sibyl, her spirits elevated by atmospheric
influences, and the prospect of being the object of general
admiration.
‘I wonder if there will be many people there?’ she speculates
presently.
‘People with titles,’ suggests Marion; ‘a duke perhaps. I should like
to see a duke--or a duchess. That would be better still. Think of her
dresses, Sib. Mustn’t they be magnificent!’
Sibyl smiles the languid smile of contempt at her sister’s simplicity.
‘As if there were a sliding scale for the toilet,’ she says. ‘Why,
cotton spinners’ wives dress as well as duchesses now-a-days. They
employ the same milliners, and pay their bills quicker.’
‘It’s dreadful to think of,’ replies Marion. ‘It seems like turning
things topsy-turvy, you know.’
They are at the How by this time, a domain which Marion enters
open-eyed and dumb with awe. Sir Wilford comes out into the porch to
receive them, and gives directions about their luggage, and makes
himself generally busy. Then he calls out Phœbe and introduces Marion
to her, at which Marion, being almost tongue-tied by shyness, says,
‘Thank you.’
‘You show the Miss Faunthorpes their rooms, Phœbe,’ says the
hospitable baronet; but this is a length to which Miss Cardonnel will
not go, though she conducted her dearest Cecilia to her apartment
half an hour ago with her arm round Cecilia’s severely trained waist.
‘Perker knows all about the rooms,’ she says, whereupon appears
the essence of respectability in a black silk gown and smart cap,
otherwise Mrs. Perker the housekeeper.
Sibyl and Marion follow this personage up the broad oak staircase to
a long perspective of corridor, in which Mrs. Perker opens two doors
next each other, and reveals twin bedchambers neatly furnished with
maple and chintz.
‘I thought you two ladies would like to be next each other,’ remarks
the housekeeper obligingly, as if the choice of the rooms were
entirely her own.
‘We do, very much,’ exclaims Marion, who regains her power of speech
in this inferior presence. ‘I’m very glad I’m to be near Sibyl. I
should be awfully afraid of ghosts in this great rambling house.’
Mrs. Perker smiles condescendingly, as if she were a superior order
of being, accustomed to large houses and family spectres.
‘It is a rambling old place,’ she says, ‘but I shouldn’t fancy myself
in one of your fine lightsome modern houses, all glare and gilding.’
‘And there is a ghost, I dare say,’ says Marion, with thrilling
interest.
The housekeeper screws up her lips and smiles significantly, as if
she could, and if she would, tell of as many apparitions as appear in
the tragedy of ‘Macbeth.’
‘There has never been a ghost owned to at the How,’ she says, ‘and
I wouldn’t breathe the name of such a thing in Miss Cardonnel’s
hearing, but people _have_ been frightened--strangers. It may have
been rats, or it may have been the wind. I can’t say. But there are
friends of the family who wouldn’t sleep in this corridor, no, not
for a thousand pounds.’
Marion shudders, and almost wishes herself back in the shabby old
house at the end of Redcastle.
‘So here are your rooms, young ladies, opening into each other.’
‘How nice!’ exclaims Marion.
Never in her life has she felt more warmly attached to Sibyl than she
does at this moment.
Fires burn cheerily in both rooms, and each apartment has that
thoroughly comfortable and convenient air only to be seen in a
well-ordered country house, and altogether distinct from the
cheerless precision of an hotel bedchamber.
There is the nice little writing-table, with all things needful for
correspondence, in front of the fire; the easy chair; the candles,
and pincushion, and a hothouse flower or two in a slender glass on
the dressing-table. All smiles a welcome to the stranger--not Miss
Cardonnel’s welcome, by the way, but Mrs. Perker’s.
‘I’ve given your maid a nice room on the second floor, within easy
reach of this, ma’am,’ says the housekeeper, at which Marion’s eyes
open wide with wonder.
‘I have no maid,’ replies Sibyl, unabashed by that humiliating fact;
‘I am accustomed to wait upon myself.’
‘Indeed, ma’am. Some young ladies prefer it, I know. For my own part
I couldn’t bear anybody fidgeting about me. And if you should require
any assistance Miss Cardonnel’s maid will be very happy.’
‘Thanks, no, my sister can help me if I want her.’
And Sibyl proceeds to open her handsome portmanteaus, while Marion
contrives to stand before the shabby receptacle which contains her
property, lest the scrutinizing eye of Mrs. Perker should behold its
dilapidation.
The housekeeper bustles off, and leaves the two girls to themselves.
‘It’s rather like going to school again, isn’t it, Sibyl?’ inquires
Marion, whose spirits have sunk a little, oppressed by the unfamiliar
splendours of the How. ‘I feel just as I did the day we went to Miss
Worries, and I can’t help fancying we shall be told off into our
different classes when we go downstairs.’
The sound of the luncheon-bell reminds the sisters that they have no
time to waste, and they go downstairs together presently, conscious
that they are looking nice enough to face even unfriendly criticism.
Sir Wilford is lounging in the hall, and they go in to luncheon under
his wing. Fred Stormont is near the dining-room door, and rushes to
meet Sibyl and her sister; and Mrs. Stormont gives a friendly bow
from the other end of the table, where she sits among the stately
matrons and the bald-headed fathers of the land; and they begin to
feel themselves more at home, as Marion whispers to her sister.
The conversation at luncheon runs more continuously upon the present
company’s absent brothers and sisters, and cousins, and nieces, and
sons and daughters-in-law, than is quite congenial to the feelings
of a stranger totally unacquainted with these relations, but Marion
manages to get up a little talk about nothing particular with Fred
Stormont, which, beheld from afar, looks like flirtation, and causes
the young man’s anxious mother to put up her gold eye-glass and look
at him through it, wondering how that silly Frederick can be so
ridiculous as to waste his attentions upon the wrong sister.
‘I suppose Mr. Trenchard will leave the girl five thousand pounds or
so,’ thinks Mrs. Stormont, ‘but what would be the use of that to a
young man with Fred’s expensive habits?’
CHAPTER XII.
TILBERRY STEEPLECHASE.
The guests assembled at the How soon divide themselves into sections
or groups, like the various members of the lower animal creation.
Mr. and Mrs. Chasubel draw around them the more seriously minded of
the younger visitors,--Lavinia Cardonnel; Cecilia Hawtree, who has a
poetical mind, and is Anglican to the verge of Romanism; Laura and
Mary Radnor, who are great upon church decoration and choir singing;
and some others. General Mactower attracts the young men, as it were,
into a focus of sporting talk, varied with anecdotes of the London
world, which, according to the General, is about as vile a world as
could well exist without calling down a burning fiery rain for its
destruction. Sir Wilford contrives to be attentive to all his guests,
but shows himself so particular in his devotion to Sibyl that other
people cannot afford to be uncivil to her, even were they disposed
to snub so lovely a girl.
The matrons and their daughters admit the fact of Miss Faunthorpe’s
beauty, but with certain reservations. They admire her complexion,
but opine that its transparent purity of tint argues a consumptive
tendency.
‘And what a dreadful thing for poor Sir Wilford to marry a
consumptive wife, my dear!’ says Mrs. Radnor, in an awful voice.
‘And to have consumptive children,’ adds her daughter Laura.
‘Poor little dears,’ exclaims Miss Hawtree, compassionating the
sorrows of these unborn infants in advance. ‘I think it quite wicked
of consumptive people to marry, don’t you, Mrs. Radnor?’
‘Yes, my love, there ought to be a law against it.’
‘What pretty manners Miss Faunthorpe has!’ remarks Mrs. Vernon, whose
daughter possesses every attraction except good looks and agreeable
manners,--‘so sweet, so caressing. But don’t you think--I hardly
like to say it, for it sounds so uncharitable, and I should be the
last to say anything uncharitable after dear Mr. Chasubel’s moving
discourse this morning,--don’t you think she seems rather artful?’
‘As deep as Garrick,’ says the outspoken Mrs. Radnor.
‘She actually seems to discourage Sir Wilford’s attentions, quite
pretends to avoid him, makes believe to prefer ladies’ society, when
we all know that she must be delighted at the idea of making such a
brilliant match.’
‘When we know that the girl is brought here on purpose to marry
him,’ rejoins Mrs. Radnor. ‘The old uncle has set his heart upon
it, of course, and will leave her the whole of his property, to the
detriment of her two sisters; there’s another girl at Redcastle, Mrs.
Stormont tells me. Very unjust, I call it.’
This conversation takes place on Sunday afternoon, in a cosy circle
round the morning-room fire, while Sibyl and some of the younger
guests are walking in the park. Sunday evening affords an opportunity
for the display of musical genius, or talent, as the case may be;
and after the daughters of the land have done the most they can with
Miss Lindsay’s sacred ballads, Beethoven, Mozart, Mendelssohn, and
Chopin, Sibyl takes her turn at the instrument, and surpasses all her
forerunners, not so much by the brilliancy of her singing or playing
as by the thought and feeling which pervade both. In the long empty
days at Lancaster Lodge her piano has been her friend and companion,
the confidante of all her vague regrets and fears,--her sorrowful
love for her absent husband. Memory and hope have spoken to her in
many a tender strain of Mozart’s, in the deeper pathos of Beethoven,
or Mendelssohn’s dreamy melody.
Sir Wilford Cardonnel knows very little about music, save that of his
hounds giving tongue in the chill morning air that blows over heath
and moor, but he is not the less pleased that Sibyl should excel in
the musical line. His future wife ought to be an accomplished person.
He is glad, too, that she should ‘take the shine’ out of Phœbe and
Vinnie, neither of them highly gifted by Apollo, though both have
laboured hard, and flourish at a quickish pace through unmelodious
fantasias, arpeggio-ing up and down the piano with a movement which
their brother calls a rough gallop.
Altogether Sibyl is a success at the How. No one can dispute that.
Marion looks on and wonders at her sister’s calm acceptance of the
general homage. She wears her honours as to the manner born, while
Marion feels overpowered with shyness all through that aristocratic
Sabbath; and says ‘Thank you,’ for everything, from an introduction
or a compliment, to the too hasty removal of her plate by an
all-accomplished serving-man.
By Monday morning, however, even Marion is quite at her ease, save
for an inward awe of Phœbe and Lavinia who, behind their brother’s
back, give her a little of the _de haut en bas_ manner by which
intrusive commoners are crushed. But Fred Stormont takes her under
his protection, and finding Sibyl unapproachable amidst her various
admirers, consoles himself with a mild flirtation with Marion, to
which even his watchful parent reconciles herself, reflecting that,
after all, a dower of five thousand pounds--or possibly ten--is
better than nothing, and that, no heiress being forthcoming, dear
Frederick might make Marion happy by proposing to her.
After breakfast on Monday there is a general inspection of the
stables, at which even Mr. Chasubel, the High Church parson,
assists, and in the course of which he entertains the company with
anecdotes of his hard riding days at Oxford, and his prowess in the
hunting-field. The horses are led out for admiration, and the guests
commit themselves to various opinions, at which the nether lips of
the Yorkshire grooms work convulsively in the respectful endeavour to
avoid a grin.
Tuesday is the race day, and there is a consultation as to how
people are to go: the faster of the party--including all the young
ladies--inclining to the saddle, the middle-aged and portly being
satisfied with a seat on the drag, or in Miss Cardonnel’s barouche.
‘You will ride, of course?’ says Sir Wilford to Frederick.
‘Oh, by all means; I shall go on the Dutchman. Here he is, poor old
fellow, looking as fresh as paint.’
An officious boy has just led the bony gray into the quadrangle,
where every eye is now directed to him.
‘Why, where the deuce did you get that beast from, Cardonnel?’ cries
General Mactower, as the lad whisks off the Dutchman’s checked
raiment, and exhibits his angular haunches and dejected neck. ‘Never
saw such a screw in your stable.’
‘It’s Mr. Stormont’s horse,’ says the boy, grinning.
‘Beg your pardon, Stormont,’ says the General. ‘I dare say he looks
better in action. Very good for leather, no doubt.’
‘He may not be much to look at,’ says Fred, wounded yet apologetic,
‘but he’s a devil to go.’
‘Ah, I dare say, those bony ones are sometimes.’
‘Well, Stormont, you’ll ride the Dutchman,’ resumes Sir Wilford,
‘that’s capital. You can take care of Miss Marion Faunthorpe.’
‘Delighted, I’m sure,’ gasps Fred, with an inward sinking. He knows
too well that on the Dutchman he has enough to do to take care of
himself, and that a whole hunting-field might be spilt around him
without his being able to afford help to the fallen.
‘You haven’t ridden much lately, I think you told me, Miss Marion,’
says Sir Wilford to that young lady, who has been going into raptures
about all the horses with long manes and sleek skins.
‘Not since I was quite a little thing, but I idolize riding.’
‘And you’ll not be afraid to ride to Tilberry to-morrow. It’s a nice
quiet road.’
‘I shall like it of all things.’
‘Very well, Chanter, you must find me a safe mount for this young
lady. She hasn’t been riding much lately.’
‘One of the old ones, eh, Sir Wilford?’
‘Yes, old and steady. But something good to look at, you know.’
‘There’s Brown Fixture, Sir Wilford, an uncommon good ’oss, and as
safe as a church.’
‘Yes, Fixture’ll do, nothing like an old steeplechaser.’
‘Fixture’s as steady as a Christian,’ says the groom, ‘and such a
memory too, nobody’d think how that ’oss do remember. He ain’t
forgot the day he bolted with Jem Kirk, tho’ it’s nigh seven year
ago. He never do pass that corner o’ th’ ’eath but what ’e’ll prick
up his old ears, and stick ’em back’ards and give a bit of a quiver,
as if he’d like to have another lark.’
‘He mustn’t have any larks with Miss Faunthorpe,’ says Sir Wilford.
‘Lor, bless you, no, Sir Wilford, that’s seven year ago. Fixture’s as
steady as a house. The smallest of our boys rides him beautiful.’
‘Well, Miss Marion, I think you’ll be safe on Fixture, especially
with Stormont to take care of you.’
Marion looks gratefully at Frederick, with a vague idea that he is
going to escort her with a leading rein, and that under his care she
would be safe upon the winner of the Leger.
‘And now let’s have a look at Juno,’ says Wilford. ‘That’s the mare I
mean for you, Miss Faunthorpe, and I think every one will allow she’s
a perfect beauty. My sister Phœbe wants her badly, but I’m afraid of
Phœbe’s eleven stone.’
That substantially built damsel gives her brother an indignant look
at this brutal remark, which could only come from one’s own flesh and
blood.
‘When I want a horse I shan’t ask you to choose him for me, Wilford,’
she says.
Juno is led forth and unveiled--a chestnut, glossy as the nut itself
when it bursts from its green casing, and beautiful in form, with a
small head and a Greek profile--ox-eyed like her mighty namesake.
‘How lovely!’ exclaim all the young ladies, envying Sibyl.
This selection of the best horse in the stud for Miss Faunthorpe
is tantamount to a proposal, thinks every one, and from this time
forward Sibyl is regarded as the future Lady Cardonnel, and honoured
accordingly.
Has he or has he not proposed? the council of matrons ask one another
by-and-bye in the comfortable morning-room where they have assembled
to write their letters and read the newspapers.
The majority opine that the offer has been made and accepted, and
that Mr. Trenchard is here to arrange about settlements.
‘Phœbe Cardonnel must know,’ hazards Mrs. Chasubel, this conversation
taking place in the absence of the Miss Cardonnels, who are playing
billiards with their younger guests.
‘She may, but she’s such a reserved girl, there’s no getting anything
out of her; and as it’s evident that she and Lavinia hate the idea of
their brother’s marrying, it’s a subject we can’t approach very well.’
‘I feel sure he has proposed,’ says Mrs. Radnor. ‘He looks as if it
was a settled thing.’
‘He may have settled it all in his own mind, but not yet declared
himself,’ responds Mrs. Chasubel. ‘He must know that there is no
chance of rejection.’
Mrs. Chasubel is right. Sir Wilford is fixed as fate, but has not yet
found an opportunity to ask the fatal question. Sibyl is always in a
crowd. She contrives to avoid anything approaching a _tête-à-tête_.
And a man can hardly propose during a game of pyramids, or on a
crowded drag with a spirited team in his hand, or as he hands his
beloved a cup of tea at kettledrum time, or on the stairs, or in
church.
Sir Wilford bides his time, therefore, and is patient.
The important Tuesday is a fine clear day, with a high wind, but no
frost. Tilberry Races begin at half-past one, so there is no time for
luncheon at the How, and a necessity for picnic baskets on the drag,
very much to the delight of all the younger guests, who prefer to
take their refreshment uncomfortably out of doors to the commonplace
convenience of the dining-room.
At a quarter before one the horses and carriages are brought round
to the porch, and Marion, in a borrowed habit and a chimney-pot
hat, which is balanced rather hazardously on a small mountain of
padded hair, awaits, with some faint apprehension, her first ride on
anything larger than Tommy, the old pony.
She has not yet seen Brown Fixture, and as she stands on the top step
with Fred Stormont at her side she surveys the animals timorously.
There is Juno, satin-skinned and proud of bearing, arching her
graceful neck, and gazing pensively at the company with her ox-eyes,
pawing the ground a little with one delicate hoof, as if eager to
take flight. And here is Sibyl, looking her prettiest, a small,
slender prettiness, in neatly fitting riding habit, and hat poised at
exactly the right angle.
Sir Wilford is at hand to mount her, and there is the usual careful
adjustment of stirrup and skirt, curb and snaffle.
‘I wonder which is my horse?’ says Marion, with an appealing look at
Mr. Stormont.
‘Which is Fixture, boy?’ asks Fred of an attendant lad.
‘This here, sir,’ answers the youth.
‘This here’ is the animal in his charge, a tall brute, with a neck
a yard long, and, in the language of the stable, too much daylight
underneath.
‘Good gracious!’ cries Marion, appalled at the aspect of this animal,
‘am I to go up there?’
‘He’s a big one, isn’t he?’ responds Fred. ‘Capital stride I should
think, get over plenty of ground in his gallop. Looks like an old
steeplechaser, doesn’t he?’
‘He looks very dreadful,’ says Marion dubiously.
‘Oh, you needn’t be afraid of him. He’s steady enough, depend upon
it. Sir Wilfred’s head man wouldn’t put you on an unsafe horse.’
‘I hope not,’ says Marion. ‘But you’ll take care of me, won’t you,
Mr. Stormont?’
‘I’ll do my best,’ answers Fred. ‘Ah, here’s the Dutchman, rather
fresh, I’m afraid.’
This last remark has reference to an uncouth attempt of the Dutchman
to back into an adjacent shrubbery, on being dragged out of which he
entangles himself clumsily with the other horses.
The drag and barouche have driven off by this time, and everybody is
mounted except Marion and her swain.
Mounting Marion upon Fixture is not the easiest operation in
mechanics. She gives a tremendous spring, but always at the wrong
moment, and after two or three false starts she is hoisted to a level
with Fixture’s saddle, only to remain there suspended in mid air
until allowed to slide gently to earth again.
‘I’m afraid I’m not a good hand at mounting a lady,’ murmurs the
patient Frederick, after he has made himself almost apoplectic in
the endeavour and now an experienced groom comes forward, tells
Marion exactly at what angle to put her left leg, and throws her up
into the saddle as if she were a ball.
‘Gracious!’ she exclaims, ‘I’m here at last, but oh, how high it is!’
She surveys the earth beneath her with a sense of awe; it is like
being on a mountain top, and not half so safe. She gives a little cry
of surprise when Fixture begins to move, as if motion were the last
thing one might expect from a horse.
The rest of the riders have gone down the avenue, Sir Wilford riding
Bull of Bashan, and keeping close beside Sibyl on Juno.
Frederick now clambers upon the Dutchman, who to the last moment
struggles to elude his half-proprietor, as if desirous to prove that
a horse cannot serve two masters. Fixture caracoles gently upon the
gravel sweep while Fred is mounting, but even these gentle movements
strike terror to the unaccustomed soul of Marion.
‘I’m afraid he’s very spirited,’ she remarks to one of the grooms.
‘Lord, mum, he’s nigh twelve year old, there’s none too much spent in
him. You’d best ride him on the curb if you’re any ways timid.’
‘Which is the curb?’ inquires Marion.
The man shows her, and adjusts her reins, which she has been
clutching in her right hand in an inextricable tangle.
‘But do you think I can manage him with the reins in my left hand?’
she asks. ‘It seems so left-handed, I’m afraid I shan’t have any
power over him.’
‘You can hold on with both hands if you’re timersome, miss, but the
lighter you handle Fixture the better. He’s got a very nice mouth,
and he don’t stand being sawed at. Ride him on the curb if you like,
but let your ’and foller ’is ’ed.’
This language is as dark as Hebrew to Marion. She has but one
thought, and that is that she would fain be at rest in the barouche
or the drag, nay, safe at home in the obscurity of domestic life,
with cross Hester and impertinent Jane. Anywhere, anywhere, off the
back of Brown Fixture, who has just caught sight of some obnoxious
object, and has made himself into an arch from which Marion feels as
if she were sliding.
Fred has now brought the Dutchman so far into subjection as to turn
his nose towards the avenue, and Fixture being clutched and jerked
in the same direction by Marion, the two set out, as uncomfortable
a couple as ever enjoyed the delights of equestrian exercise. When
they are well out of ear-shot the grooms and boys burst into a
simultaneous guffaw.
‘After this we must have some beer,’ says the head man. ‘I’m blest if
ever I see such a brace o’ cockneys. I ain’t had such a laugh since
Chrizzlemas.’
Fixture proves himself worthy of his reputation, and goes down the
avenue with amiable sobriety, nay, would be perfect in his conduct
were it not for that brute the Dutchman, who shies at sight of a
rabbit, wheels round altogether at sight of a rook, and otherwise
disgraces himself by convulsive movements and collapses which disturb
Fixture’s equanimity, though he evidently regards them with contempt.
The brown horse behaves so well, however, that when they have walked
down the avenue and emerged upon the road, Marion begins to feel
quite easy in her mind, and to think that after all she really does
doat upon riding.
But for the Dutchman’s evil example Fixture would behave admirably
all the way to Tilberry, a nice level road, with little to alarm a
reasonable equine mind. The Dutchman is, however, a creature without
reasonableness of mind, and contrives to see objects of horror in the
clearest road, whereby Marion is every now and then startled from her
equanimity by a sudden bouncing of Mr. Stormont’s horse against hers,
a movement by which she narrowly escaped being pushed into a ditch.
‘Isn’t your horse a little wrong in his mind, Mr. Stormont?’ she
asks, after one of these encounters. ‘He puts his ears back in such a
dreadful way, and starts and plunges so awfully.’
‘Only high spirit,’ replies Fred, ‘all thoroughbreds do it.’
‘Then I think I’d rather ride an unthoroughbred,’ says Marion.
When they have walked for about half a mile Frederick suggests a
gentle trot, to which proposal Marion acquiesces smilingly. But the
very beginning of the gentle trot makes her breathless, and she finds
herself jerked about in her saddle in a most ferocious way. She holds
on to the reins, however, with both hands, and endures stoutly, till
Fred, in charity, reins in the Dutchman, whereupon Fixture stops as
if some spring had been touched in his internal economy, and nearly
pitches Marion out of the saddle by the suddenness of his stoppage.
‘I’m afraid you don’t quite enjoy trotting,’ says Fred.
Marion pants for a little while, struggling with the innumerable
hair-pins which sustain her pyramid of plaits, before she can recover
breath enough to answer.
‘I dare say it’s very nice,’ she replies at last, ‘but it jerks one,
don’t you think? Perhaps Fixture is not a good trotter?’
‘I think if you were to rise with him, and sit a little more in the
middle of your saddle, you might find it more comfortable,’ suggests
Frederick.
‘Do you think so? I’ll try next time.’
Fred endeavours to explain the theory of trotting, which, although he
has not quite conquered the practice, is firmly impressed upon his
mind.
‘Now,’ he says, flattering himself that he has made it all clear,
‘suppose we try again?’
A shake of the reins makes the Dutchman lunge violently forward as if
he wanted to dash his brains out upon the road, and starts Fixture
in a really delightful trot, if poor Marion only knew it. She bobs
up and down as if she were bathing, but when she rises the horse
doesn’t, and the effect is even more jerky than before. She is just
beginning to despair, when the red glow of a cottage fire, shining
through an open door, appals the Dutchman’s soul, and sends him into
a wild canter, in which Fixture immediately joins. The horses tear
along the road like the herd of swine driven down a steep place, and
Marion, frightened, but rather enjoying the swinging pace, finds
herself rising in her saddle as high as anyone could desire.
Inspired by the clatter of their hoofs the brutes rush on for some
distance, Fred as powerless to pull up the Dutchman as he would be
to stop a steam engine at express pace, or stay the passage of the
north wind. When the horses have had enough they stop.
‘I think I rose pretty well then,’ remarks Marion, self-complacently.
‘Just now, when you were cantering?’
‘Yes.’
‘But you oughtn’t rise in the canter, you know,’ says Fred. ‘You must
sit as if you were part of your horse; ‘sit down on him and ride
him,’ as the jockeys say.’
‘Good gracious! It’s very puzzling,’ exclaims Marion.
‘All practice. You must contrive to ride more.’
‘Yes, I should like it above all things. Uncle Trenchard has bought
Sibyl a horse. But I am not so favoured.’
‘Ah, it’s a good thing to be the favourite, isn’t it?’
That canter has brought them nearly to the racecourse. They overtake
the rest of their party, Sibyl looking as cool and comfortably upon
Juno as if she were sitting in her favourite easy chair at Lancaster
Lodge, while Marion is painfully conscious that the last half-hour’s
unaccustomed exercise has made an object of her.
‘How have you enjoyed your ride?’ asks Sibyl, coming to her side.
‘Oh, pretty well,’ replies Marion, rather crossly. ‘I’m not
accustomed to riding, like you, you know I haven’t a horse of my own.
Isn’t my hair dreadful?’
‘It’s rather rough. But that doesn’t matter.’
‘Oh, not in the least--to you.’
‘How do you like Fixture?’ asks Sir Wilford, coming up to them.
‘Very well, thank you. But I think he uses the wrong legs when he
trots.’
Tilberry racecourse is a long strip of meadow land by the side of a
river, rather a dreary scene on a gray winter’s day, were it not for
the carriages, horses, tax carts, and various vehicles which enliven
it, and the eager crowd on foot.
Sir Wilford and his party are the most important group upon the
ground, the rest of the assembly consisting chiefly of tenant farmers
and their families, with a sprinkling of the Redcastle tradespeople,
and a few smart carriages belonging to the manufacturing classes,
chiefly noticeable for the newness of their harness, the splendour of
their liveries, and the indifferent quality of their horses.
Sir Wilford pats Fixture’s neck with a friendly air as he stands
beside Marion.
‘Poor old Fixture. Capital fellow he used to be six or seven years
ago. I’ve ridden him many a time over this very course. Won a cup
with him once, poor old chap. I wonder if he remembers?’
‘Where’s the steeple, Sir Wilford?’ asks Marion, looking round at the
landscape.
‘The what?’
‘The steeple. It’s a steeplechase, isn’t it?’
Sir Wilford smiles at the damsel’s innocence.
‘Steeplechase--across country, you know, and all that. There’s no
necessity for a steeple.’
‘Oh, I thought you chose a steeple, and then rode straight to it,
over hedges and ditches, and everything.’
‘We’ve sunk the steeple. But we go over the hedges and ditches.
There’s the saddling bell. Yes, Fixture does remember.’
‘I wish he didn’t,’ says Marion nervously, as the animal pricks up
his ears, and begins to curvet in a restless manner, which makes it
rather difficult to hold him.
The equestrians are drawn up in a line by the side of the racecourse.
There are no railings to divide the course from the rest of the
meadow. It is only marked out by a line of sods turned up by the
spade, and a post at intervals. The timber jumps are by no means
desperate, and are well guarded by furze bushes; the water jump is a
muddy ditch about twenty feet broad.
‘I wish you’d hold him for me,’ says Marion, appealing to Mr.
Stormont. ‘He’s been so dreadfully excited since that bell rang.’
Fred clutches at Fixture’s rein for a minute or so, and tries at
the same time to soothe the Dutchman, who has just expressed his
antipathy to a very small child in a pinafore, eating a large piece
of parliament.
Fixture shuffles about a little, and then seems to grow calm. Sir
Wilford and his party ride up and down, impatient for the beginning
of the sport. Marion and her protector keep together by the course.
The bell rings again, louder this time. There is a gust of excitement
in the very wind. The signal is given, the gaily coloured jackets
blaze out against the cold gray sky, the horses are off with a
rush--Fixture following them.
He has stood like a statue to see them go by, then, as they passed
him, he has gathered himself together, and pursued them like a
maniac. The old steeplechaser has not forgotten his trade.
There is a cry of horror from Sir Wilford and his party, a roar--half
terror, half laughter--from the crowd, as Marion is borne along, her
arms frantically encircling the animal’s neck, her plaits flying in
the wind, her shrill shrieks ringing out upon the air. She drops
something at every stage of her journey. First her whip, then her
handkerchief, then her hat, then one of the plaits, an artificial
enrichment which she has deemed a necessary appendage to a very good
head of hair. On flies Fixture, struggling for a place, feeling
that he must win or perish in the attempt. Marion, with her face
buried in his mane, sees nothing, knows nothing, except that she is
miraculously holding on somehow, and that sudden death is imminent.
The timber jump is before them, and the spectators hold their
breaths, anticipating a fearful fall, perhaps a deadly one, when Sir
Wilford gallops across on Bull of Bashan, and contrives to catch
Fixture’s bridle just as he his lifting himself to the leap.
The old steeplechaser swings on one side and lands Marion comfortably
on the turf, where she lies motionless till kindly hands raise her.
She is only stunned, and comes to her senses after a minute or so to
find herself the centre of a sympathetic crowd.
‘Poor dear!’ says a woman, ‘she did hold on well, didn’t she? It was
beautiful.’
Sibyl is on the scene by this time, and dismounts to assist the
fallen one.
‘You’re not hurt, are you, dear?’ she inquires, anxiously.
‘I don’t know whereabouts it is,’ replies Marion, clutching
her dishevelled plaits, ‘but I feel as if I was all but
killed--somewhere.’
Brandy flasks are produced, and the sufferer is persuaded to take
two or three sips of the spirit.
‘Back all right, I hope,’ says Sir Wilford, who has delivered over
the excited Fixture to a groom.
‘I feel as limp as if it was broken,’ replies Marion. ‘When did I
fall? was it the day before yesterday, or longer ago than that?’
‘My love, it was just this minute.’
‘Then I’ve had a long dream,’ replies Marion, putting her hand
to her head; ‘such a long dream. I feel as if I had been riding
steeplechases on horrid runaway horses for the last three weeks.’
‘I shall never forgive myself for putting you on Fixture,’ says Sir
Wilford, with a conscience-stricken air, ‘but I really thought he was
the quietest old horse in the stable.’
‘Oh, I don’t mind it a bit,’ answers Marion, who enjoys being the
object of general attention. ‘In fact, I rather like it. It’s very
exciting, you know.’
‘Uncommonly,’ mutters Sir Wilford, who has had as bad a fright as he
ever experienced in his life. ‘I thought you were done for when he
came to that fence. If it hadn’t been for the Bull--well, we won’t
talk about it.’
Here a small boy brings Marion the fallen plait of false hair, which
looks something like a defunct snake as he hands it to her, whereat
there is a faint titter.
After twisting herself about a little in the arms of her supporters,
Marion announces that she has no bones broken, to her knowledge.
‘My spine may go all wrong to-morrow, and make me a cripple for
life,’ she says, ‘but I think I can walk now.’
‘Shall I mount you again, ma’am?’ asks the groom, who is holding
Fixture. That quadruped is bathed in perspiration, stands like a
block of wood, and droops his head despondently as if fully aware
that he has made a fool of himself. ‘You might ride him home safe
enough, ma’am. He’s quiet now.’
‘What, get upon _him_ again?’ cries Marion. ‘No, thank you.’
‘Bring her to the barouche,’ says Sir Wilford, and Marion is led to
that vehicle, where the Miss Cardonnels inform her that they have
been suffering agonies of anxiety on her behoof, though neither they
nor Mrs. and Miss Radnor have left their seats.
‘We knew we could be no use,’ Phœbe remarks, apologetically, ‘and we
should have only increased the confusion if we had come to you.’
‘It’s such a dangerous thing to ride when one is not used to it,’
remarks Vinnie, soothingly. ‘Wilford ought to have known better than
to put you on that dreadful old horse.’
Marion, who felt herself a person of importance amidst the crowd on
the race course, shrinks into dire insignificance amongst these fine
ladies in the carriage. She is screwed in, bodkin, between Phœbe and
Mrs. Radnor. She knows she is looking an object in her battered hat
and disordered tresses, and she can see nothing whatever of the race.
The four ladies talk their usual family talk of uncles and cousins,
nephews and nieces, and people they know; discuss the domestic
affairs of the niece who is just married; review the prospects of the
nephew who is going to marry; talk about the cousin who has just
had a baby, and the unjust will of the uncle lately deceased; until
Marion absolutely wishes herself away from these privileged ones, and
thinks how nice it would be to be reading a novel on the parlour sofa
at uncle Robert’s, the sofa wheeled cosily up to the fire, and Jenny
kneeling on the hearth toasting muffins.
‘If my back _is_ broken, it’ll be a comfort to be a doctor’s niece,’
she tells herself consolingly.
It is dusk when the last race is run, and the How party turn their
faces homeward. A three-mile ride in the winter twilight lies between
them and kettledrum; an excellent opportunity for a _tête-à-tête_
with Sibyl, thinks Sir Wilford, who has found it impossible to secure
half an hour of that young lady’s society at the How. There she is
always surrounded.
He contrives to leave the course close at her side, and to keep
well in front of the other equestrians. Bull is quiet enough now,
and quite content to lapse into a lazy walk, having been indulged
with half a dozen tearing gallops across the level ground near the
racecourse. Juno and Bull step side by side, solemnly as a pair of
Flemish funeral horses, which have never done anything but ‘black
work’ since they were foaled.
It is a fine level road, a copse on one side, the moor upon the
other. Wintry stars begin to twinkle in the gray, cottage fires gleam
now and then across the road.
‘Now is my time,’ thinks Sir Wilford.
‘I hope you are not frightened at riding in the dark,’ he begins,
with a gush of originality.
‘Not at all. In the first place I don’t call this gray twilight
darkness, and in the second place I feel myself quite safe in your
care.’
‘I am glad of that,’ says Sir Wilford. ‘I am very glad you feel
yourself safe with me, Sibyl.’
This is the casting of the die. After this utterance of her Christian
name Sir Wilford feels he has committed himself to the deed. Receding
now were as difficult as to go on.
‘Yes, Sibyl, I am glad, for I want to be your protector all the days
of my life. I want this dear little hand,’ taking the hand that
droops carelessly at her side, with gold-handled whip lightly held,
‘I want this hand for mine. Oh, I think you must have seen ever so
long ago that I love you. I have made no secret of my attachment,
Sibyl. You are the first woman I ever met that I would care to make
mistress of the How--you are the only woman I ever have asked--the
only woman I ever shall ask to be my wife.’
‘Oh, stop, stop, Sir Wilford! Not one word more!’ cries Sibyl.
‘Forgive me for having let you say so much.’
While he has been talking she has decided on her course. A bold
step, but the only one open to her. This young man is honourable,
generous-minded. She will, she must trust him with her secret.
‘Forgive you, Sibyl, for what?’
‘Forgive me, if you ever can. I have been so wrong. I have acted so
meanly. Forgive me for not having understood you better, for not
having told you the truth about myself. I have led you on perhaps,
most unwillingly, but still I may have led you on to make this
generous offer.’
‘Generous be hanged!’ cries the impetuous Sir Wilford. ‘There’s no
generosity in a man trying to get the thing he most desires. Don’t
talk about leading me on, Sibyl. Of course, you led me on--that is
to say, you couldn’t help seeing that I love you to distraction, and
you’ve let me go on loving you. There’s no leading a fellow on in
that. You’re like one of the stars up yonder, and just let yourself
be admired. But you’re not going to reject me, Sibyl. I can’t believe
that.’
He does not believe it. Upon his own personal merits he has formed
no decided opinion. He knows that he is tolerably good-looking, does
justice to his tailor’s handiwork, rides straight to hounds, and is
free from vice. But he puts himself out of the scale altogether, and
reckons upon his position and surroundings. That there is any woman
in Yorkshire who would refuse to be mistress of the How and the How
stables is more than he can believe.
‘You won’t reject me, Sibyl?’ he repeats.
‘Indeed, Sir Wilford, I have no alternative. I can make you but one
answer.’
‘And that is----’
‘No.’
‘Oh, come, you can’t mean it, Sibyl.’
‘I do mean it.’
‘You’re in love with some other fellow. Not that cur, Fred Stormont,
I hope?’
‘If I thought about Mr. Stormont at all I should detest him.’
‘Who is it, then?’
‘Sir Wilford, will you keep a secret if I confide one to you?’
‘Have I any claim to be considered a gentleman?’
‘Yes, yes, I know I may trust you.’
‘Go on,’ says Sir Wilford, sunk in gloom.
‘You know very little of my history, I think, Sir Wilford,’ begins
Sibyl, in a low but steady voice, ‘although you have done me the
greatest honour in your power to confer upon me. Perhaps all you
know is that I have been adopted by my uncle Stephen, and that he is
likely to leave me a fortune. I have no certainty that he will do so,
but I have every reason to believe it.’
‘Yes, yes. I know all about that.’
‘But you do not know, perhaps, that when my uncle came from India I
was absent from Redcastle. I had gone to London to get my living as
a governess. It was a dreary life, and would have seemed drearier,
I dare say, but for one event which happened to diversify it. I was
weak enough to fall in love with a gentleman who had as little to
marry upon as I had.’
‘Poor child! Passing fancy--romantic attachment. You’ll outlive that,
Sibyl.’
‘It will outlive me, for we contrived to make the bond lasting.
Without the knowledge of any of my family I was foolish enough to get
married! The man I married is the son of Mr. Trenchard’s worst enemy.
My only chance of inheriting my uncle’s fortune was the concealment
of my marriage. I have therefore contrived to keep the secret, and
you are the first to whom I have ever revealed it. If you betray me I
am ruined.’
‘Betray you! What do you take me for?’ cries Sir Wilford. ‘You are a
married woman, and your husband is living?’
‘Yes.’
‘And he suffers you to keep up this deception--to stoop to this
meanness. Forgive me----’
‘For calling things by their right names--yes, I forgive you. There
are no words too hard for my conduct; and yet, perhaps, if you could
measure the depth of misery I had sunk into before I made up my mind
to try for uncle Trenchard’s fortune, even you might pity me.’
‘Pity! Yes, Sibyl, I pity you with all my heart; but I can’t help
despising your husband.’
‘Do not despise him. What I have done has been done without his
knowledge or consent. He only traced me to my present home a very
little while ago, and he then told me that he would repudiate me and
my fortune when the day came for me to possess it.’
‘And yet you continue the deception?’
‘Would it not be positive idiocy to abandon it just now, when the end
is in all probability very near? My uncle has not many years to live.’
‘He looks rather shaky, poor old fellow--liver, I dare say.’
‘Why should I make a revelation that would be a shock to him, and
do no good to any one else? If my husband really loves me he will be
true to me as I am to him, and all will be well for us by-and-bye.’
‘And you’ll secure the old man’s money,’ says Sir Wilford. ‘Trust a
woman for looking after the main chance.’
‘You despise me, Sir Wilford,’ falters Sibyl humiliated.
‘No, no; nothing of the kind. Only when one comes to talk of money
it takes a little of the bloom off, you know. I had looked up to you
as an angel--something quite ethereal, you know. And when one comes
down to pounds, shillings, and pence--well, it’s rather a long way to
come, you know.’
‘You’ll keep my secret?’
‘Consider it buried in the deepest grave that ever was dug.’
‘And if you are tempted to despise, if you do despise me, as I fear
you must, try to remember that you have never known what it is to be
poor, that there is a depth of misery; abject fear for to-morrow’s
bread; the dread of being turned out of one’s wretched shelter into
the street, the horror of being clothed in rags, driven to the
workhouse. Consider that you have never known these things. I have,
and my deception grew out of them. If I told the truth to-morrow I
might have to go back to all those unforgotten horrors. If I play my
part steadily to the end, I may secure a happy future for my husband
and myself.’
‘Upon my word it’s a very trying position, Miss Faunthorpe, and I
feel for you with all my heart. It would have been kinder to me if
you had given me a hint of the truth a little sooner, and spared
me--well, spared me a very bitter disappointment. Yet I can but thank
you for having trusted me at the last.’
‘One word more, Sir Wilford. Pray do not let my uncle suppose that
you have asked me to be your wife. He would never forgive me for my
rejection of you.’
‘I’ll take care of that. He shall think me the most miserable object
in creation--a male flirt--a man who dangles about a pretty woman
meaning nothing but his own amusement. I’ll bear the brunt of the
old gentleman’s anger, Miss Faunthorpe, rely upon it; and if ever you
want a friend, remember that, in spite of his disappointment, Wilford
Cardonnel is yours to the death!’
CHAPTER XIII.
JOEL PILGRIM.
That evening after Tilberry races is the gayest night there has yet
been at the How. There is a dinner party, matrons and maidens wear
their finest dresses, each assuming that one last and newest fashion
which the Princess Metternich, or some one of equal importance, has
made the rage in Paris. Even poor Marion, revived by strong tea and
an hour’s comfortable slumber, puts on her blue and salmon dinner
dress, and feels that she is looking lovely.
Yet, although most of the ladies at the How are tolerably satisfied
with their own appearance, there is none among them who would venture
to deny Sibyl Faunthorpe’s claim to that apple of discord from whose
pips sprang Troja’s fall, and the slaughter of many heroes. She
is paler than usual this evening, but her eyes are bright with a
feverous excitement, and there is more brilliancy in her pallor than
in other women’s carnation.
Mr. Trenchard observes that look of unusual excitement, and sees that
the hand which waves the large white fan trembles a little now and
then. He has heard from some friendly gossips how Sir Wilford and
Sibyl rode on ahead of all the others during the return home, and he
draws his own conclusions from Sibyl’s suppressed agitation and this
fact. The baronet has proposed, he tells himself. Sibyl is to all
intents and purposes mistress of fortune and the How. Mr. Trenchard
rejoices in this consummation as if it took a load off his mind. He
smiles sweetly upon his niece, and once, when he is near her for a
few minutes before they go to dinner, he ventures to hint at his
thoughts.
‘How pretty you are looking, my pet!’ he whispers, ‘but a little
over-excited. You have something to tell me, haven’t you?’
‘Nothing out of the common, dear uncle,’
‘What, not about your ride home? Come, you see a little bird has been
before you.’
‘Little birds are generally more inventive than veracious, uncle.’
And at this point the bachelor appointed to that honour offers
Sibyl his arm, and the procession files off to the dining-room. The
long drawing-room, once a chapel, is at its fullest about an hour
after dinner. Sibyl has just risen from the piano, where she has
played Chopin and Schumann to the delight, real or affected, of her
auditory. Stephen Trenchard stands with his back to the low marble
chimney-piece, surveying the room in which his lovely niece forms so
important a feature, flattering himself with the fancy that this room
will be hers before long, that she will be its acknowledged mistress
as she is now its queen.
He looks round for Sir Wilford, wondering not to see that captive of
love exhibiting his fetters more conspicuously, but Sir Wilford is
standing on the hearth-rug at the other end of the room--there are
two fireplaces in the drawing-room--talking hunting talk with a brace
of rubicund sportsmen who look as if their systems were permeated
with old port.
While Mr. Trenchard is wondering that Sir Wilford should hold
himself thus aloof from the object of his devotion, the butler throws
open a distant door, and announces--
‘Mr. Joel Pilgrim.’
Everybody looks up at the announcement, and at the entrance of the
person to whom the name belongs. The name is strange to all ears
save Mr. Trenchard’s. The person is a stranger to all eyes save Mr.
Trenchard’s and Sibyl’s.
Not a welcome announcement, by any means, judging by the sudden angry
look that darkens Stephen Trenchard’s countenance, spreading over it
an additional shade of sallowness, deepening the bistre beneath his
eyes, hardening the lines about his mouth.
He crosses the room hurriedly, and takes the stranger by the hand.
‘My dear Pilgrim, what brings you here? At so late an hour, too.’
‘I have to apologize for what must naturally appear an intrusion,’
replies Mr. Pilgrim, in a voice which is peculiarly soft and
conciliatory, ‘but the commercial man’s habitual selfishness is my
only excuse--if a vice can be an excuse for a solecism. I wanted to
see you to ask your advice upon an affair of considerable moment.
I went to Redcastle, found you were staying here, and hired a fly
to bring me on. The roads were dark, the horse slow, and the flyman
stupid. Thus I am above an hour later than I need have been, though
in any case I must have been late, as I only reached Redcastle at
seven o’clock.’
‘You might have waited till to-morrow,’ says Mr. Trenchard,
unappeased by this apology.
‘I was too anxious to wait. I hope Sir Wilford Cardonnel and his
family will pardon my impertinence.’
He looks towards Sir Wilford, who has come forward at the
announcement of a guest.
‘Very happy to see any friend of Mr. Trenchard’s,’ says the
good-natured baronet. ‘I’m afraid you have had a cold drive.’
‘It is not particularly warm upon your moors for a man born in
Calcutta.’
‘Have you dined, by the way?’
‘I dined by the way. I stopped in Redcastle just long enough to dine.’
‘You mustn’t go back to-night,’ says Sir Wilford, hospitably. ‘You
can have your chat with your friend Mr. Trenchard in the library, and
then come back to us to finish the evening. I’ll order a room to be
got ready for you.’
‘You are really too good,’ replies Mr. Pilgrim, hesitating, and with
a glance at Mr. Trenchard.
‘But you have no valise,’ interjects Stephen Trenchard, ‘impossible
for you to stay. Come to the library, and I’ll soon settle this
business for you.’
Mr. Pilgrim smiles a subdued smile, murmurs his grateful
acknowledgment of Sir Wilford’s kindness, and bows himself out after
Stephen Trenchard. There is a general sense of relief among the
company when that sleek head and swarthy face are withdrawn from
their midst.
‘What a peculiar-looking person!’ exclaims Mrs. Stormont, who is
sitting near Sibyl.
‘What an unpleasant-looking person!’ responds the outspoken Mrs.
Radnor.
‘Do you know him, Sibyl?’ inquires Mrs. Stormont.
‘I have seen him--once before. He is an Indian friend of my uncle’s.’
‘He has never stayed at Lancaster Lodge, I think,’ hazards Mrs.
Stormont.
‘No, he has never stayed there. He only called one evening on
business.’
‘He must live in the neighbourhood then, I suppose?’
‘I should hardly think so.’
Curiosity has been awakened by this late visitor. There is something
out of the common in his appearance, and Mr. Trenchard’s vexation at
his coming has been tolerably apparent to every one.
Mr. Trenchard and his friend are closeted in the library for about an
hour, then a bell rings, and the stranger is conducted back to his
fly, whose departing wheels are heard in the drawing-room half an
hour after all other guests have gone, and just as the house party
are bidding one another good night. It is a quarter past twelve.
‘I wonder Mr. Trenchard has not let that poor man stay,’ says
Mrs. Stormont; ‘a nasty drive back to Redcastle at this time of
night--such a horrid road after dark,--and those flymen are tipsy
half their time.’
‘Perhaps Mr. Trenchard wouldn’t much care if the man were turned over
into a ditch,’ rejoins Mrs. Radnor. ‘He’s the most unpleasant-looking
person I ever saw. Did you see how those black eyes of his seemed to
take us all in? He’s just my idea of a Thug.’
Mrs. Stormont has no very clear notion of Thugs, but admits that the
stranger’s expression has impressed her unfavourably.
At breakfast the next morning there is general surprise when Mr.
Trenchard announces his intention of returning to Redcastle in the
course of the day. He has had letters from India which demand his
attention--he has some property over there which the Government
talk of buying,--and it will be very advantageous for him if
the transaction comes off. It is a matter which requires prompt
negotiation.
‘I am extremely sorry to curtail such a pleasant visit, especially on
account of these girls,’ he adds.
The Misses Cardonnel express their deep regret, but do not urge
Mr. Trenchard to reconsider his decision. Sir Wilford expresses
his sorrow, but even he does not press his guests to remain, much
to the surprise of the lookers on, who speculate curiously on Mr.
Trenchard’s motive for going, and Sir Wilford’s reason for taking his
sweetheart’s departure so easily.
‘Don’t you see that it’s all settled between them?’ says Mrs. Radnor
to Mrs. Chasubel. ‘He has made her an offer and been accepted, and I
dare say the old man wants to consult his lawyers about settlements.
He’ll give her a fortune on her marriage, no doubt.’
Sibyl is very glad to go, though she feels much more comfortable in
Sir Wilford’s society now that he and she understand each other.
Marion is bitterly disappointed at this abrupt termination to her
visit, and is inclined to grumble about the money wasted on those
lovely dresses, till she reflects that the money was not hers, and
that it is something to have secured the dresses. There will be some
pleasure in disporting herself before Maria Harrison in that brown
silk costume. So the sisters go upstairs and pack, aided, or in some
measure hindered, by Miss Cardonnel’s maid, whose services that young
lady politely offers for the occasion. Mrs. Perker is rewarded for
her civilities, morning cups of tea and other small attentions, and
before luncheon all is ready for departure. Mr. Trenchard has sent
a groom to Redcastle to order his carriage to fetch him at three
o’clock. Sir Wilford is absent from the luncheon table for the first
time since the coming of his guests. Phœbe and Lavinia are unusually
cheerful; indeed, Sibyl fancies that there is a general accession
of cheerfulness among the feminine portion of the community. The
gentlemen, on the other hand, deplore Miss Faunthorpe’s departure
with a flattering vehemence. They declare that a star is about to
vanish from their sky, and a good deal more to the same effect. Even
Mr. Chasubel has admired Sibyl, and has told people in confidence
that she is the image of a Madonna by Guido in the Vatican, a nice
way of telling people that he has been in Rome, and is an art critic
in his way. Fred Stormont sits next to Marion and bewails his loss.
‘We ought to have gone out riding together ever so many times more,’
he says. ‘I should have made you a first-rate horsewoman,’ an
assertion that savours of rashness when it is remembered that Mr.
Stormont has not yet succeeded in making himself a capable horseman.
At three o’clock Mr. Trenchard’s carriage is at the door, the
portmanteaus are in, the servants fed, and all things ready. Just at
this last moment Sir Wilford appears, looking very much like his own
gamekeeper, in velveteen coat, cords, and leather gaiters, and with
his gun in his hand.
‘I hope you’ll all excuse me for forgetting the luncheon-bell,’ he
says to the company generally, most of whom have come out into the
hall to say good-bye to Mr. Trenchard and his nieces. ‘The birds were
very wild, and Glenny and I forgot the progress of the enemy. I made
quite a rush home to say good-bye to Mr. Trenchard.’
‘It will not be a long parting, I hope,’ replies Stephen Trenchard.
‘You must come and dine with us directly you are free.’
‘I shall be charmed. Good-bye, Miss Faunthorpe.’
Sibyl and Sir Wilford shake hands, at least thirty pair of eyes
watching the operation. They shake hands in a formal and orthodox
manner, and no one can detect so much as a secret pressure--love’s
Masonic grip. He leads her to the carriage, and when she is seated,
and the coachman has gathered up the reins, he leans over for the
last word, and one last pressure of the little hand he had hoped to
make his own.
‘Trust me,’ he says. ‘You have almost broken my heart, but you may
trust me.’
Mr. Trenchard is silent and gloomy throughout the homeward drive.
Sibyl, although glad to be separated from Sir Wilford, looks forward
despondently to the solitude and monotony of her life at Lancaster
Lodge after the gaiety and variety of the last few days. At the How
she has not had leisure for sad thoughts! no time for self-reproach,
regret, and all the illness that attends her selfish course. She has
been the centre of an admiring circle, her vanity gratified to the
uttermost, and life has seemed one round of pleasure.
Marion is loquacious as usual, and rattles on with her criticisms
upon the How and its visitors, from Mrs. Radnor’s exaggerated
aquiline nose, which always blushed after luncheon, ‘as if it was
ashamed of belonging to any one who drank so much sherry,’ says
Marion, to the Miss Vernons’ high-heeled boots, ‘in which I know they
suffer agonies,’ adds Marion.
Neither Stephen Trenchard nor Sibyl responds to these remarks, but
the babble runs on intermittingly till they come to the lower end of
the town, and to uncle Robert’s green garden gate.
Jenny, the omnipresent, rushes out at the sound of the carriage
wheels, her hair flying in the wind, and receives her sister with
a volley of ‘goodness graciouses,’ and ‘sure to goodnesses,’
and numerous embraces which are like the gambadoes of an infant
hippopotamus, or the friskings of a friendly sea-lion.
Mr. Trenchard gives a sigh of relief when Marion and her boxes have
been deposited; nor is Sibyl sorry to dispense with her sister’s
vivacious society.
‘You will find a visitor at my house, Sibyl,’ says Stephen
Trenchard, as they drive towards the Bar, ‘a visitor whom I expect
you to treat with all consideration, as he is a particular friend of
mine.’
‘Mr. Pilgrim, uncle?’ asks Sibyl, startled.
‘Yes, Mr. Pilgrim. I did not wish him to take advantage of Sir
Wilford’s hospitality, nor did I want him to go back to London
without proper entertainment, so I invited him to spend a week or so
at Lancaster Lodge.’
‘And that was the reason you left the How so soon?’
‘That and other reasons influenced me. There is that property I spoke
about at luncheon.’
‘To be sure; I forgot that.’
‘I hope my leaving so suddenly has not been a disappointment to you,
Sibyl?’
‘Not at all, dear uncle.’
‘And that I have in no way prevented the triumph which I fully
expected you to win. Pray be candid with me, my dear child. Sir
Wilford has proposed to you, and you have accepted him? You ought
to have hastened to tell me of an event which you know must give me
unalloyed pleasure.’
‘My dear uncle, I have nothing to tell. I am as far from being Lady
Cardonnel as ever I was in my life.’
‘I’m very sorry to hear it. What was Sir Wilford talking about when
you rode home from Tilberry together last night? Mr. Stormont told me
that you and he rode ahead of the others.
‘We were talking about the commonest subjects in the world, uncle.
Horses, races, Marion’s adventure on Fixture, and the merits of
Juno--the mare I was riding.’
‘Humph! I fully made up my mind that he had taken that opportunity of
proposing to you.’
‘I am sorry you should feel disappointed, uncle. But I really don’t
understand why you should wish me to marry. It’s not very flattering
to me.’
‘You ought to understand, child. My time is growing short, and I
should like to see you established in a brilliant position before I
go.’
‘My position will be brilliant enough when I am in possession of your
wealth,’ thinks Sibyl, but she acknowledges her uncle’s anxiety for
her welfare with a tender murmur, expressive of the desire that he
should live for ever.
Mr. Pilgrim comes out to the door to receive Mr. Trenchard and his
niece, and for the first time in her life Sibyl touches his hand. It
is curiously soft and flaccid, and gives her an unpleasant sensation,
as if she had touched some strange animal, some member of the stoat
or mole tribe.
‘So glad to see you back!’ he says to Mr. Trenchard, in the blandest
voice. ‘I was afraid the attractions of that fine old country
house----’
‘You ought to know that when I say a thing I abide by it,’ answers
Mr. Trenchard, curtly. ‘Mr. Pilgrim, my niece, Miss Faunthorpe.’
‘If you knew how I have been longing for this opportunity, Miss
Faunthorpe.’
‘Don’t waste time on compliments, Joel; Sibyl will scarcely have time
to change her dress for dinner.’
Sibyl runs upstairs to her room, cheerful with blazing fire and
lighted candles--a very different chamber to return to from that dark
first-floor front of Mrs. Bonny’s, where one had to grope for lucifer
match and candlestick in the winter dusk. Yet so unreasonable a
thing is human nature, that on this January evening Sibyl would
gladly exchange these luxurious surroundings of hers for the one pair
room in Chelsea, could the wheel of time make a backward revolution
and give her back her husband’s confidence and love.
This stranger’s presence has impressed her disagreeably. There is
something in her uncle’s manner to Mr. Pilgrim, and in Mr. Pilgrim’s
manner to her uncle, that inspires distrust. The evening at Lancaster
Lodge is very quiet and dreary after the life and bustle of the How.
Mr. Trenchard and his Indian friend retire to the study after dinner
to talk business, and Sibyl is left alone with her books and piano.
She finds comfort in neither, and perhaps, were Alexis to appear
before her to-night on the same errand that brought him to Redcastle
a few weeks ago, she would exchange all her chances of wealth to
follow his uncertain fortunes.
CHAPTER XIV.
ALEXIS COMES TO GRIEF.
That interview at Redcastle has embittered Alexis Secretan’s feelings
towards his mercenary wife. Love has given place to contempt. A woman
who could set the hope of wealth against her fidelity to him is
unworthy of another thought of his.
He goes back to Cheswold reckless, angry, wounded to the core of his
heart, and he tells himself that he is indifferent to his wife’s
fate, that he cares not if he never see her false face again.
The blow that has hit him hardest, he thinks, is the knowledge of his
boy’s death. That son whose fair young face he has pictured in many a
day-dream--seen vividly in many a vision of his sleep,--the son who
was to inherit Cheswold in the days to come--the son for whose sake
it would have been go proud and pleasant a labour to add field to
field, and extend the boundaries of that modest manor--this unknown
but fondly loved son is lost to him, nay, has never lived save as
the infant of a day old. The chubby yearling, the bonny boy of two
summers, whose image, limned by fancy, has been almost a living thing
for him, has had no existence.
The loss of this shadow hangs upon him heavily. He is no longer the
gay young squire who enjoyed the novel pleasures of wealth and social
status. He is gloomy and absent-minded, and avoids all intercourse
with his neighbours, save in the hunting-field, where he rides like a
man who holds his neck as a trifle not worth his care.
In this desolation of his mind he turns to two sources for
comfort--the first, his faithful friend, Richard Plowden, whom he
detains at Cheswold for an unlimited period, to the peril of the
Brompton fernery; the second, his stable, to which he devotes himself
a good deal at this time.
His two hunters are considered the handsomest animals and the
straightest goers in this part of the country, and his reputation is
advanced among the rustic population by his reckless riding.
‘I know you’ll come to grief some of these days, Alexis,’ says the
faithful Dick, who looks on his friend’s proceedings with much dread.
‘Blokus, the gardener, told me yesterday that you ride with what he
calls a “plaguey loose rein,” and that you don’t know the country
well enough to run such risks. I don’t like that tall brute of yours
a bit.’
‘Not Bayard?’ exclaims Alexis, who resents this abuse of his last
acquisition, a fine bay horse, sixteen two and a half, and described
at Tattersall’s as the cleverest thing in hunters. ‘Why, he’s the
best horse I ever rode. Such a mouth! You might ride him with a skein
of silk.’
‘But you see you haven’t ridden many horses,’ responds the prudent
Richard. ‘You’re half a foreigner. You haven’t been brought up
like these country squires, who have spent half their lives in the
pigskin. It is pigskin, isn’t it?’
‘Yes, Dick. And do you suppose I didn’t ride when I was in the army,
and hunt into the bargain? and do you suppose I didn’t ride in the
colonies, where a man thinks nothing of forty miles in the saddle?’
‘I don’t know anything about the colonies, Alex, but you weren’t
brought up to following the hounds, like these Hampshire gentlemen,
and I feel wretched every day you ride that new horse of yours,
expecting to see you brought home on a shutter.’
‘And if I were, Dick, would it matter to any one except you?’
‘Alex!’ cries Dick, reproachfully.
‘Yes, old fellow, I know you’d be sorry, but not so sorry as the
heir-at-law would be glad. Who is my heir-at-law, by the way? I must
make a will, Dick. Some part of all these good things of ours must go
to the only being I care for.’
‘His wife,’ thinks the simple-minded Dick.
Alexis rides over to Winchester that very afternoon, and is closeted
for an hour with Mr. Scrodgers, the lawyer, to whom he gives
instructions for a concise and simple will.
He leaves his real estate to his next of kin on his father’s side
who shall bear the name of Secretan, or, in the absence of any such
Secretan, to his next of kin on his mother’s side, exclusive of Mrs.
Gorsuch and her children, who shall assume the name of Secretan.
‘I feel myself bound to do this much out of reverence for the good
old name,’ he says, ‘out of gratitude to my cousin Matilda, who
honoured the name in my unworthy person. But my personal property I
shall leave to the one friend whose sincerity I am assured of, and
who stood by me when I was at the bottom of the ladder. I owe it
perhaps to him that Miss Secretan’s bequest found me an honest man,
and not a blackguard or a swindler.’
‘Very right, very proper,’ murmurs Mr. Scrodgers, wondering whether
he is to be put down for a mourning ring, or a legacy of a hundred
guineas or so. He is old, and Alexis is young, it is true, whereby
the chances of his inheriting any such legacy seem slender. But then
Mr. Scrodgers is careful of himself, and these young men hunt, and
drink more brandy and soda than is good for them, and shoot with
new-fangled guns, and drive tandem with untried horses after dark.
There might be a chance of his getting the legacy, should so proper
an idea occur to his client. But Alexis furnishes his instructions
without remembering the claims of Mr. Scrodgers. He leaves Richard
Plowden all his personal property, furniture, books, horses, and
pictures.
‘They ought to realize enough to make that honest fellow independent
for the rest of his days,’ thinks Alexis, ‘and now if Bayard makes
an end of me some fine morning, I shall at least have done one good
thing in my life.’
Mr. Scrodgers drives over to the Grange next morning in his highly
respectable four-wheeled chaise, and the will is executed, but Mr.
Secretan tells his friend nothing about its contents, nor is Richard
Plowden curious. There breathes not on this earth a less mercenary
creature. He is grateful beyond measure for his friend’s affection,
proud and happy that his presence at the Grange can give pleasure to
Alexis. He plods on at his school books every morning in the snug
quietude of the study, and in the afternoon takes long and solitary
walks, while Alexis spends his days in the hunting-field.
The neighbourhood is full of rustic beauty, even in winter, and
Richard, who has spent almost all the days of his life amidst a
wilderness of brick and mortar, is delighted with these country
lanes, these noble old trees, beautiful in their leafless majesty,
these grassy hills crowned with dark pine trees, the blue river that
winds through the green valleys, these peaceful English homesteads
nestling in sheltered spots, and here and there a picturesque old
water-mill, with a big brown wheel that never seems to go round.
Like many lame people Dick can get over a good deal of ground, and
get along as fast as those who have the full use of their legs. He
grows strong in this pure air, and gets young again. His complexion
loses its sickly tint. Those transparent hands of his lose much of
their delicacy.
‘If you go on in this way, Dick, I shall find my refined and
intellectual friend of the Brompton Road developing into a
Hampshire chawbacon,’ says Alexis, jocosely, as they breakfast
together luxuriously, in front of a blazing wood fire, one hunting
morning,--the master of the Grange arrayed in pink and tops ready for
the day’s sport, Dick in a comfortable suit of gray homespun.
‘I do so enjoy your lovely scenery,’ replies Dick. ‘There’s only one
thing makes me uneasy.’
‘Your mother----’
‘No, it’s not about mother herself. She has some extra good lodgers
in the drawing-room floor, and is as happy as the day is long. What
I’m afraid of is that she’ll give the ferns too much water. Mother
has such an idea of watering plants. She thinks the more you drench
them the better they grow, and she’s rather self-opinionated in those
matters, dear soul. I tremble for my polypodium.’
‘I’m glad it isn’t any other kind of Polly you tremble for, Dick,’
replies Alexis. ‘What a close old fellow you are, by the way! you’ve
never told me anything about your experience in that tender passion
which makes fools of the wisest of us sooner or later.’
‘Simply because I have had nothing to tell.’
‘Nonsense! Were you never in love?’
‘Never. I have admired feminine loveliness and goodness in the
abstract, but it never came near enough to me to tempt me to fall in
love with it.’
‘Happy man!’ exclaims Alexis. ‘To escape love is to shun man’s worst
peril;--
‘For soon or late Love is his own avenger.’
It is the middle of February, one of those days on which the mists of
morning linger on the face of the land, as if they loved it. Gleams
of sun pierce that silvery veil, and the westerly breeze seems rather
autumnal than wintry. The two friends part in excellent spirits,
Alexis riding off gaily on his covert hack, Titmouse, a pretty little
gray mare. Bayard has been sent on before.
‘How’s the bay this morning, Joe?’ asks Mr. Secretan as he mounts.
‘Fresh as paint, sir, but I thinks as you did ought to have ’ad him
hexercised a bit yesterday.’
‘Nonsense, Joe! I don’t care a straw for a horse when all the spirit
has been taken out of him. That boy of yours gallops like the deuce
when he gets the chance, I know. I don’t care about having Bayard
spoiled that way.’
‘I hopes Bay-hard won’t spoil you,’ mutters the groom, as Titmouse
carries his master down the drive.
‘I hope you’re not afraid of that bay horse, Marshall,’ says Richard,
when Titmouse and her rider are out of sight.
‘No, sir, I ain’t afraid of no ’oss going, and I don’t say there’s
any ’arm in Bay-hard. But the ’oss is young and silly, and my
master--well, I ain’t going to be disrespectuous to so good a master
as him, or I should say he’s young and silly too.’
‘But he’s a good rider, isn’t he?’
‘He’s a good ’and at sittin’ on a ’oss, Mr. Plowden, but there’s
summot more nor that wanted to make a good rider.’
This conversation, superadded to honest Dick’s own fears, makes
him feel rather uncomfortable; but when he has started on his
rustic ramble the sun shines out of the mist, the west wind is so
balmy and caressing, earth is altogether so lovely in her wintry
garb, that Dick’s spirits rise, and he tells himself that a bold
brave fellow like Alexis is not the kind of man to come to harm in
the hunting-field. It is your timid rider rather who is liable to
misfortune.
So Dick goes his way, and his way of late has generally been the same
way.
There is a tiny village about three miles from Cheswold--a village
so small that compared with it Cheswold is quite an important
settlement. This other village consists of a cluster of labourers’
cottages, with whitewashed walls, thatched roofs steeply sloping,
and long strips of garden which would be quite an acquisition to
many a suburban villa. There is a queer little old church at which
there is service every alternate Sunday afternoon, and there are
a water-mill and a homestead with a farm of about thirty acres
appertaining thereto. This mill is the chief feature of the scene,
and it is to the mill that Dick has come. It is a picturesque old
place, big water-wheel, gurgling mill-race, and placid pool. The
willows that lean across the water look centuries old. The low white
dwelling-house, with its steeply sloping thatch, its white plastered
walls crossed and recrossed by timbers painted black, must have
been here in the days of Elizabeth. The snowdrops peeping over the
tall box border yonder are half a century old, and have spread and
multiplied in the shelter of the southern wall. There is a roomy old
porch with wooden benches, and it is in this porch that Dick takes
his rest after his three miles walk.
It is about a month since he came here one biting January
afternoon--the roads white with snow, the hedges loaded with a fine
crop of icicles, the ditches ice-bound, and black as ink. On so
cold a day it surprised him a little to see a girl of delicate and
refined appearance at work with garden scissors and basket in the
little bit of ground in front of the homestead by the mill. She was
plainly dressed in a gray stuff gown and black apron, and wore a
little scarlet shawl tied across her chest, but her head was bare--a
very pretty head, Dick thought, with dark brown hair, that made a
rippling line across the forehead, and was gathered in a loose knot
at the back. He was not quite clear in his mind as to whether the
fair gardener was pretty or not. Her features belonged to no regular
type; her nose was neither severely Grecian nor commandingly Roman,
but rather inclined to the _retroussé_, but it was an inoffensive
nose at worst. Her complexion, heightened to a rich bloom by the
nipping air, was a thing for poets to rave about--for painters to
vainly imitate. Her eyes were dark gray, with thick black lashes; her
eyebrows dark and strongly marked; her mouth beautiful, though Dick
was not wise enough to know it. He only saw that her smile was sweet,
and his chief impression was of a look of goodness which pervaded the
face--or so he thought. She looked so amiable that he, the shyest of
men, ventured to address her.
‘Rather a cold day for gardening,’ he said.
‘I don’t find it so,’ she answered, smiling. ‘If my poor arbutus
can stand the cold, I don’t think it will hurt me;’ and she went on
snipping off dead leaves, and smartening the garden by those little
touches which maintain order and beauty even at a flowerless season.
‘We shall soon have the snowdrops,’ she said, cheerfully.
‘Ah,’ said Dick, ‘they bloom about this time of year, do they?’
He had made himself acquainted with the habits of ferns, but had
very vague notions about flowers. The girl looked at him wonderingly,
and then, as he walked a little way further, contemplating the
picture of mill-wheel and water, she perceived that slight lameness
from which he suffered.
‘Would you like to rest after your walk?’ she asked, timidly. ‘You
have come some distance, perhaps?’
‘From Cheswold.’
‘That’s a good three miles. Our porch is quite at your service if you
would like to sit down.’
She opened the gate as she spoke, and Dick walked in. He felt as
if he could not for worlds have resisted the invitation, so he
went in, very shyly, and seated himself on the bench in the porch.
The door was open, and opened straight into the neatest, prettiest
sitting-room Dick had ever seen--or, at any rate, ever remembered
having seen--in his life. Everything was so bright and fresh, the
brass fender, the cheerful fire, the old cups and saucers on the
mantelpiece, the white ceiling, the painted walls, the chintz-covered
sofa and chairs, the small round table with neatly arranged piles of
books--not show books, but looking rather like volumes in the daily
use of a student--and a drawing-board--actually a drawing-board,
the old engravings, the little cabinet of shells in the corner
yonder. All the furniture in the room might hardly have realized
five-and-twenty pounds at an auction, but the general effect was
delightful to Richard Plowden’s eye and mind.
The young lady--he felt sure now that she was a young lady, in spite
of her homely dress and that lazy old water-wheel--went on with her
gardening, nailed up stray shoots here and there against the plaster
wall, and took no more notice of Dick than if he had been a hundred
miles away. Dick was much too shy to make conversation, so he sat in
silence, lazily watching the girl’s graceful figure as it moved about
the garden, in a pleasant reverie.
Presently there came a sound from within--a small shrill voice
calling ‘mammie.’ An inner door opened, and a little toddling thing,
just emerged from babyhood, came running out to the porch.
At sight of Dick it screamed as if it had seen lions, and stood
stock still, paralyzed with terror--a significant evidence that a
stranger was a rare bird at Dorley Mill.
The girl ran to him, took him up in her arms, and smothered him with
kisses.
‘Mammie!’ said Dick to himself. ‘Then this charming girl is a married
woman! I didn’t observe the wedding ring.’
He glanced at the hands which were clasped round the child. No, there
was no ring there.
‘What a dear little--thing!’ he said, doubtful about the sex.
‘Yes, he is a darling little fellow.’
‘Your nephew, I suppose?’
‘No,’ and the girl’s cheek crimsoned, ‘he’s an adopted child.’
This was all Dick ever heard about the boy. He might have known more
perhaps had he been curious enough or audacious enough to inquire,
but he was neither. Yet he wondered a little, adopted children being
rarities, to have stumbled upon one in the tiny village of Dorley.
He came to Dorley several times, finding this particular walk the
most picturesque of all his wanderings, and he rested for half an
hour, or even longer, in the porch, while Linda Challice, he had
found out her name in due course, sat at work in the pretty parlour
and chatted with him pleasantly, quite at her ease. There was
something about Richard Plowden which made people friendly with him
at once.
They talked about the country, which Linda knew by heart, and about
London, which was a strange and wonderful city she had never beheld.
They talked of books and flowers and ferns, and by this time they had
become as familiar as friends of long standing.
Linda had never invited Mr. Plowden to come beyond the porch,
however. She was not quite sure whether her grandfather, a funny
little old man, who was always in a floury condition on week days,
would approve of such a step on her part.
And now, on this fine February morning, Dick makes his appearance,
rosy with his brisk walk, and takes his accustomed seat in the porch.
‘If you come to Dorley some Sunday afternoon,’ says Linda, after a
little while, ‘you can make grandfather’s acquaintance. He’s always
in the mill on week days.’
‘He seems a kind old gentleman,’ says Dick, who had received a
friendly nod from the little miller.
‘He is kindness itself. There never was such an indulgent
grandfather.’
‘And you have lived with him----’
‘All my life. My mother was his only daughter. She married an artist
who came to Dorley to fish and sketch one summer. She was very
pretty, they say.’
‘I can easily believe it,’ murmured Dick.
‘Oh, much prettier than I!’ says Linda, blushing, ‘if you are trying
to pay me a compliment. I have a portrait of her in my room, painted
by my father. It was quite a love match, and I dare say people
said my father had degraded himself by marrying a country miller’s
daughter, for he was what people call a fashionable artist, and might
have made a very different marriage. But they were very happy, and
I believe my father was almost broken-hearted when my mother died a
few months after my birth. I suppose he didn’t quite know what to do
with me, poor fellow, so when my grandfather and grandmother offered
to take care of me he consented to my being brought up by them until
I was old enough to go to school. I was a sickly baby, they say, and
that decided him. Well, my good grandmother brought me down here
within a month of my mother’s death, and it has always seemed as if I
was born here, for I can remember no other place. My first memories
are of the garden and the mill--the big black wheel and the foaming
race--and those snowdrops growing within the box border.’
‘And you were sent to school----’
‘Never. Before the school time came my poor father had died in Italy.
He had earned a great deal of money at one time, but his reputation
had not lasted as long as his life, and he left very little behind
him. I never went to any school except the little village day school,
where I learned to read and write; and if it had not been for the
last Vicar of Cheswold--a dear old man--I must have grown up in
ignorance. But one day when he came over to see my grandfather he
heard my father’s name mentioned, and was interested in me directly.
He was a great admirer of my father’s pictures. He asked how I was
being educated, and when he found that I was not being educated at
all, he offered to give me a couple of hours’ instruction twice
a week if I would go as far as Cheswold Vicarage. I was only too
glad--for I was fifteen years old at this time, and felt the burden
of my ignorance,--and for four years I was that dear old man’s pupil.
He taught me Latin, French, and Italian, and gave me the best books
in his library to read. I owe it to him that I never wasted an hour
upon a worthless book. He was indeed a friend. His memory is dearer
to me than words can tell.’
Dick listens with profoundest interest, and is about to express his
admiration of the good vicar, when a noise in the distance startles
Linda and him. It is the sound of several voices talking in excited
tones. Linda throws down her work and follows Dick to the garden
gate. A labourer in a smock-frock comes running round the corner, by
the brief row of cottages which the inhabitants dignify with the name
of street.
‘What’s the matter, John?’ asks Linda; ‘anything wrong with your
children?’
‘No, miss, they be right enough, but there’s a accident yonder with
some gentlemen hunting, a young gent chucked over an ’edge, among the
rushes in that there ditch just beyond your grandfeyther’s field.’
‘Is he much hurt?’
‘His arm’s broke, and there’s somethink wrong inside of ’im, miss,
some of his internal bones scrunched, I’m afeard, for he’s been
a-spittin’ blood like one o’clock.’
‘What are they going to do with him, poor fellow?’
‘The other gents is a-bringin’ him ’ere, miss, and I ran on afore to
tell ’ee.’
Dick is pale as death. Those terrible presentiments of his! have
they been cruelly verified? He can scarcely find voice to ask the
question,--
‘Do you know who the gentleman is?’
‘One on ’em said it were the young squire of Ches’old.’
CHAPTER XV.
FALLEN BY THE WAYSIDE.
Yes, Richard Plowden’s prognostications of evil are realized. Not
quite so fatally as they might have been, however, for Dick had seen
in a vision of woe the figure of his friend stretched on a shutter,
pulseless, lifeless, the generous heart at rest for ever. The figure
which the gentlemen of the hunt carry along the narrow path by the
mill-pool holds happily the spark of life still, but so white is the
face lying on the huntsman’s scarlet shoulder that poor Dick, running
out to meet his friend, gives a cry of horror.
‘Is he dead?’ he asks, distractedly.
‘Not a bit of it. He’s only fainted. I’m afraid there’s a few of his
ribs broken. Do you belong to Benfield’s?’
Mr. Benfield is the miller.
‘No, but I’ve just come from there, they are getting ready for him.
He’s my dearest friend. Where’s the nearest doctor?’
‘None nearer than Cheswold. One of the men has ridden off after him.’
They carry Alexis to the pretty old house beside the mill, and up
a single flight of shallow oak stairs to the best bedchamber, the
freshest and brightest of rooms, with two broad latticed windows
overlooking the mill-stream and the willows, with their background of
green hills. A man might find worse quarters than these in the hour
of distress. Even in the midst of his grief Dick glances round the
room admiringly, and thinks what a treasure old Benfield, the miller,
has in his granddaughter, for it is Linda’s taste, of course, which
beautifies his home.
They lay Alexis on the pure white counterpane, and Linda sponges his
temples with eau de Cologne, until presently the heavy eyelids are
lifted, and the patient looks about him wonderingly.
He recognises Dick, and fancies himself at home at the Grange.
This young woman in gray is one of the housemaids, no doubt. How
soft and white her hand is! He did not think he had so pretty a
servant in his staff.
‘Well, old fellow,’ he says faintly, and with a wan smile, ‘you were
right. Such a cockney as I oughtn’t to go across country with your
born Nimrods. Bayard’s youth and silliness sent me flying over rather
a stiff bit of timber, and I’m afraid Bayard himself is demolished.
By Jove, it was a thundering smash! I wonder if I have any bones
whole? I feel as if they were all broken up in short lengths, like
barley-sugar.’
‘Thank God you can make a joke of it,’ exclaims Dick. ‘But you
mustn’t talk. You’ve been spitting blood, you know.’
‘I thought there was something unpleasant going on internally.
How did they contrive to bring me home? I haven’t the slightest
recollection of the transit.’
‘Home?’ echoes Dick, puzzled.
‘Yes. I am at home, am I not? Or how do I find you by my side?’
‘By a fortunate accident, dear old fellow. You are at Dorley Mill,
close by the place where you fell, and in good hands, I am sure. And
now not another word till the doctor has seen you.’
Old John Benfield, the miller, who has left his work on hearing of
the accident, comes in at this moment, carrying a steaming glass of
brandy and water, which he believes to be a specific for all earthly
ills.
‘Sup it up, sir,’ he says; and Alexis is about to comply, when a firm
hand takes away the glass.
‘Not on any account, grandfather. He has been spitting blood.’
‘All the more reason why he should have something warm and
comforting,’ says Mr. Benfield.
‘You must get him some cold brandy and water, grandfather.’
‘Very well, little lass, it’s always for you to order and me to
obey;’ and the old gentleman departs to perform his hospitable duty.
‘Dick,’ says Alexis presently, ‘I should feel happier in my mind if
you’d go and see what has become of that poor beast, Bayard.’
‘I’ll go, Alex. But I execrate the brute. If I were to hear that all
his four legs were broken I shouldn’t care.’
‘Nonsense, Dick! The beast is only young and silly. We were both too
ambitious--wanted to fly too high.’
Richard leaves the sufferer unwillingly, and goes in quest of the
bay. It is not long before he discovers the horse, a good deal
chipped and knocked about, but in no wise seriously damaged, in the
stable of the one small inn which adorns Dorley village--a house
which you would hardly recognise as one of public entertainment, were
it not for a dingy board above the front door--said door having sunk
into the yielding soil of Dorley in a despondent and one-sided manner.
Standing in the semi-darkness of a dilapidated stable, principally
inhabited by cocks and hens, Bayard wears the dejected and hang-dog
aspect of a horse that knows he has committed himself. He gives a
deprecatory snort at the sight of Richard, and comports himself
altogether in a submissive and even crouching manner.
‘Ah,’ says Dick, looking at him as ferociously as it is possible for
the mildest of men to look--‘ah, you murderer! I wish there was a law
for hanging such as you.’
He hurries back to Alexis, and tells him that the brute is all right.
‘Not a bone broken. He only broke your bones, the beast.’
The Cheswold doctor comes presently, having driven over at a slashing
pace to so important a patient. Richard supports his friend during
the medical examination, which is slow and painful.
The ribs are much hurt, one bone has been pressed inwards, whence the
blood-spitting. It is altogether a serious case.
‘I should like you to see Krysis, of Winchester,’ says Mr. Skalpel,
the local surgeon. ‘I shall not set the arm till to-morrow. There is
a little swelling, and there’s a slight tendency to inflammation.
I’ll send a lotion, which must be applied continually. You ought to
have a trained nurse, by the way.’
‘I’d as soon have a ghoul,’ says Alexis, at which the surgeon fears
his mind is beginning to wander. ‘I detest hired nurses.’
‘Can’t I nurse him?’ asks Dick. ‘I’m strong and wakeful, and I’ll
obey your instructions to the letter.’
‘You might be of use undoubtedly, but I think a skilled hospital
nurse----’
‘Send me to an infirmary at once,’ cries Alexis, peevishly. ‘I won’t
have a hospital hag near me.’
‘See how the suggestion irritates him,’ says Dick. ‘Could not his old
housekeeper come over from the Grange?’
‘That might do. Yes, she nursed Miss Secretan, I know. I’ll call as I
go home and tell her to come over.’
‘Do nothing of the kind,’ exclaims Alexis. ‘I’ll have no old women
pottering about me till they come to lay me out. Mrs. Bodlow’s a very
good soul in her place--makes an admirable curry, and fries potatoes
to perfection; but I won’t have her at my bedside in the middle of
the night. I’d as soon wake up and see the witches in “Macbeth.”’
‘Nervous temperament, very,’ murmurs the surgeon.
‘Let Dick--my friend here--nurse me, and no one else,’ says Alexis.
The surgeon gives way. The servant of the house will no doubt be able
to assist. All may be well. It would not do to offend such a patient,
and this promises to be a long business--a very long business--if it
is to result in recovery. There is a possibility of the case being
brought to a sad and sudden ending.
Mr. Skalpel takes Dick out on to the stairs.
‘It is not a hopeless case?’ falters Dick, almost breaking down.
‘Hopeless, my dear sir! far from that. But I will not disguise from
you that it is very serious. There are grave dangers. The greatest
care is needed. Much must depend on the state of the blood. Mr.
Secretan is a person of steady habits--or, to put it plainly, not a
drinking man, I hope; not given to the pernicious practice which our
modern slang calls “pegging”?’
‘Half a bottle of claret at and after dinner is about the extent of
his dissipation.’
‘That’s a good hearing. We shall pull him through, but remember that
good nursing is the main point. If you find yourself unequal to the
task we must get a trained nurse--foolish prejudice, very--not old
hags by any means. Many of them nice-looking young women.’
Downstairs Mr. Skalpel sees Linda, and inquires as to the possibility
of assistance in the sick room.
‘I’m quite ready to give my help, if I can be of any use,’ says
Linda, cheerfully.
‘No one better,’ replies the surgeon; ‘it was your good nursing that
got your grandfather through that bad attack of bronchitis last
winter. He’d have been in his grave but for you.’
‘Dear old grandfather!’ says Linda, affectionately.
‘But you mustn’t over-exert yourself, you know. I don’t want two
patients instead of one.’
‘Don’t be afraid, Mr. Skalpel. Elizabeth will help me.’
Elizabeth is the maid of all work, a buxom girl who seems to be in a
perpetual state of expansion, for her gowns are always too small for
her, a girl with a brickdust complexion, big black eyes like damsons,
a double chin, and a countenance expressive of supreme good nature.
‘Humph,’ says Mr. Skalpel; ‘I don’t know about Elizabeth. Elizabeth
has enough to do to take charge of that troublesome adopted son of
yours.’
Rather a queer look comes over the doctor’s face as he speaks of the
child--a look of some feeling closely akin to dislike.
‘Trot is never troublesome,’ replies Linda, and again her colour
brightens as it did when Richard Plowden questioned her about the
boy’s relationship to herself.
CHAPTER XVI.
GOOD SAMARITANS.
For many weary days and nights the patient fluctuates between
improvement and retrogression. The business is a long one, as Mr.
Skalpel prophesied. Alexis approaches that mysterious border-land
which lies between life and death. Mind and memory are dark. He sees
shadowy forms at his bedside,--sees the unreal more often than the
real, knows not where he is or what he is, and slowly awakening at
last, as from one long troubled dream--a dream of almost infinite
duration and of wondrous variety--he feels like a child new born to
life, seeking dimly to decipher the unknown characters of a strange
alphabet.
Who is this with the gentle face, the mild and thoughtful eyes,
shadowy hair, and soft white hands, who ministers to him so
patiently, whose voice has such a soothing influence?
Is it his wife? A flash of sudden hope quickens the throbbing of his
heart; he tries to raise himself up in his bed, when a strong hand
restrains him, and a familiar voice says,--
‘Alexis, dear old fellow, be careful. Mr. Skalpel says you mustn’t
exert yourself.’
It is no longer winter. The lattices are open, and through the
tender green of the willows smiles the blue April sky. Birds are
singing--there is a perfume of violets in the room--blessed heralds
of spring. Yes, there they are, violets and primroses on the
dressing-table--violets and primroses on the little table by his bed.
Oh, welcome spring--welcome sense of new-created life in his own
frame!
‘It was good of you to come to me,’ he murmurs, with half-closed
eyes, ‘good of you to nurse me. All forgotten, all forgiven. We shall
be very happy now, Sibyl.’
He thinks his wife is at his side,--a melancholy delusion, which
makes Richard Plowden very uncomfortable.
‘My dear Alexis,’ he says soothingly, ‘it is not Sibyl; we didn’t
know where to send for her. The lady who has nursed you was a
stranger to you until the day of your accident, but if she had been
your sister she could not have done more.’
Alexis closes his eyes with a heavy sigh.
‘She is very good,’ he murmurs resignedly, ‘and I have reason to be
grateful. I took her for my wife--a foolish mistake. I ought to have
known better. But I am afraid my mind has been wandering a little.’
He turns restlessly on his pillow, opens his eyes again, and looks
wonderingly round.
‘Violets!’ he exclaims. ‘How good of you to get me violets at this
time of year! What a blue sky for February!’
‘February!’ cries Richard. ‘My dear fellow, it is the nineteenth of
April.’
‘April? And I have been lying here----’
‘A little over two months.’
Alexis feels inexpressibly shocked at this revelation. What! the days
and nights have been passing, sunrise and sunset, moons waning, and
he has been lying there like a log, or like a madman, full of strange
fancies, and unconscious of the flight of time. This loss of two
months seems to him in some wise terrible. It is as if he had been
lying dead.
‘I suppose I have been very ill,’ he says at last.
‘Very ill, dear boy; so near death’s door that we have often feared
the door would open and you would pass the threshold. Thank Heaven,
we were able to keep you fast on this side. You have to thank Miss
Challice for your life,--there never was such a nurse.’
‘You forget that you have done more than half the nursing, Mr.
Plowden,’ remonstrates Linda, who sits with her face somewhat
shrouded by the dimity bed-curtain.
‘I----, nothing of the kind. I’ve tried to obey your instructions,
but at best I’m a clumsy assistant.’
‘You are the best of fellows,’ says Alexis, stretching out his feeble
hand to clasp his friend’s. ‘As for Miss Challice,’ he continues,
‘I haven’t the faintest idea who she is, or how she comes to be
interested in me; but I’m intensely grateful.’
He falls asleep after this, and slumbers peacefully for some hours.
When he awakes it is tea-time, the lattices are closed, and a young
moon shines in through the diamond panes. A fire burns cheerfully in
the old-fashioned fireplace opposite the foot of the bed. Firelight
and moonbeams shine into the room, flashes of silver and gleams of
ruddy gold light up the old furniture, the cups and saucers and the
old silver teapot on the round table by the fire. They shine, too, on
a quiet figure by the hearth, the graceful form of a girl dressed in
gray, who has fallen asleep in an old bamboo arm-chair by the hearth.
‘That’s Miss----Whatshername, I suppose,’ Alexis says to himself.
‘Curious business, very. Where am I, I wonder? This hardly looks like
the Grange.’
He tries to raise himself into a sitting position, in order the
better to inspect the premises. The process is painful enough to
wring a groan from him, and the groan awakens his nurse.
‘You mustn’t do that,’ says the gentle voice which has argued and
pleaded with him so often in his delirium, but which seems quite
unknown to him to-night. ‘You mustn’t try to sit up yet awhile.’
‘Not yet awhile,’ repeats Alexis. ‘I’ve been ill over two months, and
I’m getting better--I believe you will. I am getting better.’
‘You are much better--you are getting well very fast.’
‘Oh, this is getting well very fast, is it? And after two months I
am not to try to raise myself in my bed. Do you know, it strikes me
that’s getting well rather slowly.’
‘You mustn’t be impatient. The injury to your ribs brought on
inflammation of the lungs. You have been in great danger.’
‘And you--a stranger--have nursed me?’
‘Not a stranger. Providence brought you to our door; you are our
neighbour.’
‘“Which of these, think you?”’ murmurs Alexis. ‘Yes, you have been
verily my neighbour, in the Gospel sense of the word. How shall I
ever thank you enough, Miss----.’
‘Challice,’ says Linda, as he pauses at a loss for the name. ‘Believe
me, Mr. Secretan, I need no thanks. My grandfather and I are very
happy to have been of use to you.’
‘Dick Plowden says you have saved my life. Where is Dick, by the way?’
‘He has gone to lie down for a short time. He has had very little
rest of late, poor fellow. And now shall I give you some tea?’
‘Yes, if you will be so good. I should like some tea.’
She pours out a cup and brings it to him, and raises his head upon
the heaped-up pillows which sustain his weary frame, and puts the
cup to his lips. It is a curious sensation for him, this awakening
to life; curious to look into this strange face in the uncertain
firelight, to hear this gentle voice, to feel the soft touch of these
white womanly hands.
‘If this were but my wife, it would indeed be awakening to new life
and new happiness,’ he thinks, and the thought that another can so
minister to him while his wife treads her selfish way, ignorant of
his pain, is very bitter.
‘I think I could hold the teacup myself,’ he says, and he makes the
attempt feebly, with a tremulous hand.
‘Capital!’ exclaims Linda. ‘How strong you are getting!’
‘Oh, this is getting strong, is it?’ enquires Alexis. ‘I should like
to have seen myself when I was weak. I must have been a pleasing
spectacle.’
He falls asleep by-and-bye in the firelight, and sleeps long, for he
has at this stage of his illness a wonderful capacity for sleep. When
he awakes the fire is burning low, and the dim glimmer of a night
lamp suggests some sepulchral hour betwixt night and morning. Richard
Plowden occupies the easy chair by the fire.
‘Where is Miss--Miss--Challice?’ asks the invalid.
‘In bed, and sound asleep, I hope. She has sat up night after night
to watch you, Alex.’
‘She is very good.’
‘She is an angel, or as near an approach to the angelic as one can
hope to meet with upon earth,’ replies Richard, with enthusiasm.
‘Who is she, Dick? and by what concatenation of events do I find
myself in a strange house, watched over by a strange young lady?’
Richard explains.
‘Indeed. This is Dorley Mill, and my fair nurse is the miller’s
granddaughter. If I were a bachelor now, this might be the opening
scene of a charming romance. But I should have taken that young lady
for something superior to a miller’s granddaughter; she has an air of
refinement.’
‘She belongs by inheritance to the world of art. Her father was a
painter.’
‘Challice--yes, I remember, I have seen pictures of his. He died
young, I think.’
‘He did, and left this young lady an orphan.’
Mr. Secretan, finding himself able to sit up in bed, and hold a glass
or a cup, during the next two or three days shows great anxiety to
be taken back to the Grange. He is anxious to resume the business
of life--to see his horses, his gardens, to be within reach of his
library. He is quite horrified when Mr. Skalpel informs him that he
is likely to be obliged to remain at Dorley Mill for three weeks or a
month before he will be strong enough to bear the shaking involved in
the easiest journey.
‘You need not be in a hurry to leave,’ says the surgeon, ‘you have
been well taken care of, I am sure.’
‘I should be an ungrateful hound if I were to forget that for a
moment,’ replies Alexis, ‘but I should really like to relieve this
house of my presence; I have given so much trouble.’
‘That is all past,’ says Linda. ‘Our only trouble was the fear that
you would not recover.’
‘Mr. Benfield must consider me an intolerable nuisance.’
‘He does nothing of the kind,’ says Dick; ‘he is looking forward to
your going downstairs as if it were some grand holiday.’
Alexis sighs. The comforts and indulgences of a sick room pall upon
his active temperament. But he resigns himself to the inevitable, and
Linda and Richard do their utmost to make his life happy.
Now that bodily strength begins slowly to return he suffers from
extreme mental depression. He feels as if this coming back to life
were something of a mistake, that it might have been better to have
slipped quietly through the dark portal. He feels that he has
nothing to live for, neither wife nor child. No kith nor kin, only
the beaten round of a prosperous man’s existence.
‘I who have tasted the bitter cup of poverty ought to find
contentment in prosperity,’ he tells himself; but as the days
lengthen slowly to their lingering close he is not content.
‘He’s dreadfully low-spirited,’ says Dick to his assistant nurse.
‘What are we to do to cheer him up a little?’
Linda sighs and looks doubtful; but in the course of the afternoon
she brings up some of her favourite books, Shakespeare, Tennyson,
Dickens, and offers to read to the invalid.
He is delighted. Any relief is welcome that will take him away from
his own thoughts. He chooses the ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream,’ and Linda
reads at his bidding.
‘We’ll have one of the tragedies when I’m stronger,’ he says. ‘I
couldn’t stand “Hamlet” or “Lear” yet awhile.’
From this time forward the reading becomes an institution. Linda
is a good reader, her voice round and full, her emphasis always
intelligent. Alexis makes a closer acquaintance with Tennyson than he
has ever made before now, and renews his boyish delight in Dickens.
In about a week after that first reading he is well enough to go
downstairs to the cheerful parlour, but not without support from
Richard’s sustaining arms. There is no longer any talk of his going
back to the Grange yet awhile. He knows his own weakness now, and is
resigned to the tedium of a slow recovery.
‘You are all so good to me,’ he says, with tears in his eyes, ‘I
should be a fool to wish myself away from you.’
It is a sunny afternoon in early May when he goes downstairs for
the first time. Linda has done her uttermost to make the room
bright and cheerful. There are flowers, sweet spring flowers on the
chimney-piece, table, and chiffonier; violets, primroses, hyacinths,
narcissus, pale monthly roses from the southern wall. A fire burns
gaily in the old-fashioned grate; for the invalid is chilly, and
May sunshine uncertain. The invalid’s couch has been arranged in
the cosiest corner by the fire; snow-white pillows, Berlin wool
coverlet, knitted by Linda’s own hands as a Christmas present for
her grandfather. The brown wainscot walls are brightened with
water-colour landscapes in a higher style of art than Alexis would
have expected to find at Dorley Mill; but he learns by-and-bye that
they are all the work of Linda’s pencil.
‘What a pretty room!’ cries Alexis, when he is established on his
sofa, ‘and what a pretty picture that water-mill makes against the
blue sky! I feel ever so much better for the change.’
He enjoys the novelty of the apartment as much as if he had come into
a new country, and his spirits begin to rise immediately.
‘Now I feel that I am really getting well,’ he says.
It is three o’clock in the afternoon. Mr. Benfield is to come in at
five to tea, and there is to be quite a grand tea-drinking in honour
of Mr. Secretan’s convalescence. The simple-hearted old man is almost
as delighted at his guest’s recovery as if the Squire of Cheswold
were his son.
Linda seats herself in her favourite chair by the open window. Dick
places himself by the foot of the couch. The invalid lies in a lazy
silence, looking out at the willows and the mill-stream, and the
green hills beyond. How lovely nature seems to him after his nights
of pain and darkness!
Presently he hears a small voice calling ‘mammie,’ and a small hand
making ineffectual attempts to turn the handle of the door. Linda
runs to open the door, and the prettiest child Alexis ever remembers
to have seen runs into the room.
He has soft golden curls all over his small head, rosy cheeks, bold
brown eyes, and the open, confiding look of a child that has been
reared in love’s tender keeping. He clings to Linda’s dress.
‘Mammie, mammie dear,’ he cries, ‘Trot wants oo, Trot nenner sees oo
now. Oo viz de genlamum?’
‘The gentleman has been very ill, darling, and he wanted me more than
Trot does.’
‘Oo tell tory. Trot want oo allvis.’
‘You had Elizabeth to take care of you, pet. Elizabeth is very kind.’
‘See isn’t. Me hate Lithabess.’
‘Oh, you naughty boy. Look, Trot, this is the sick gentleman. Go and
shake hands.’
‘Me won’t. Me hate the genlamum.’
‘Oh, Trot!’
‘Cause he keeps oo away from Trot.’
‘But he won’t do that any more, Trot,’ says Alexis, delighted with
this infantile grumbler. ‘Come to me, my little man, and let’s make
friends. See what I’ve got here!’
And Alexis produces his watch, that unfailing resource of a man who
wants to amuse a child.
At sight of the watch and jingling bunch of lockets and seals the
little one’s eyes open their widest, and he creeps a little nearer
the enemy.
‘I don’t like oo,’ he says, ‘but I’ll look at oor watch.’
With this protest he goes close up to Alexis, and allows himself to
be entertained.
‘What a darling little fellow!’ says Alexis. ‘A nephew of yours, I
suppose, Miss Challice?’
‘No, he is no relation. He is a little boy my grandfather adopted.’
‘How good of him! The son of an old friend, I conclude.’
‘No. We adopted him to save him from the workhouse.’
‘Ah, that is like you--just as you took me in to save me from death.’
Alexis does not like to ask any further questions, yet he would be
glad to know more about this fascinating little fellow, who soon
grows friendly and familiar, and nestles his golden head in the
invalid’s waistcoat, and plays with the seals and lockets.
Presently the miller comes in to tea, and the table is spread with
a simple feast, new-laid eggs, cream, cakes of Linda’s manufacture,
and strawberry jam, which Elizabeth, the maid of all work, secretly
believes to be the best strawberry jam in Hampshire.
Trot sits up in his high chair at the table, and behaves very
prettily, though he disposes of more bread and jam, and follows it
up with more cake than Alexis can suppose beneficial to his internal
economy; but then Mr. Secretan has seen very little of children and
their ways.
Henceforward Trot is a wonderful favourite with him. He allows
the little fellow to come into his room at all times and seasons,
he sends Dick to Winchester for a cargo of picture-books, and Trot
sits upon the invalid’s bed for hours together looking at the
pictures, and demanding explanations thereof. When the pictures have
been explained to Trot by Alexis, Trot insists on explaining them
over again to the explainer, and lays down the law about them and
philosophises upon them in a delightful way.
Never before has Alexis had any dealings with a child. It is a new
experience to him. The little fellow amuses him for hours together.
The thought that his own son might have grown into just such a boy
as this seems a bond of union between him and Trot. The boy grows
wondrous fond of him, and places him second only to mammie in his
measure of love.
‘Have you had Trot long?’ Alexis asks one day of Linda.
‘Ever since he was a fortnight old.’
‘What a charge for you! His parents are dead, of course?’
‘I know nothing about his parents.’
‘Indeed! Poor little waif and stray. If you were not so very fond of
him I should beg him of you, and make him my son and heir.’
‘I couldn’t bear to part with him. You are not in earnest, of course,
but even if you were, and offered him the greatest advantages, I
don’t think I could bring myself to part with him. I have suffered so
much for his sake. Perhaps that is why I love him so dearly.’
‘Suffered? But how?’
‘Pray do not ask me. I cannot possibly tell you. It is all past and
gone now, and I try to forget it. But it was very bitter.’
This sets Alexis thinking, and the thoughts that come of it trouble
him. He sees but one solution of the enigma, and that is one which
casts the shadow of disgrace on Linda Challice. Can she, this gentle,
lovable girl, with her fair innocent face, be something less pure
and perfect than he has believed her? The suspicion pains him as
keenly as if she were his sister or his plighted wife. He lies awake
for many a weary hour pondering over this painful question. For a
little while even his heart turns from poor Trot, who is distressed
at finding his new friend less kind, but Trot soon makes himself
beloved again. Whatever misery this little brown-eyed boy may have
unconsciously occasioned, Alexis cannot help loving him.
CHAPTER XVII.
BITTER ALMONDS.
From January to May is rather a lengthy period for a friendly visit,
but although the hawthorns are flowering in Redcastle woods, and
May is nearly ended, Joel Pilgrim is still at Lancaster Lodge. He
has taken up his abode there as if he meant to stay for the rest of
his life, Sibyl thinks. She has grown tired of waiting to hear of
his approaching departure. He talks about going sometimes but never
definitely. He must go back to India before very long, he says, and
Sibyl languishes for him to fix the date. He goes up to London on
business now and then, but returns in a few days, and makes himself
more insufferable than ever.
Sibyl has never hated any one as she detests this man. His presence
makes life a burden to her. The luxurious tranquillity of her
existence, the reposeful days, the pleasures of wealth, are all
poisoned by Mr. Pilgrim’s company, and yet he treats her with the
utmost politeness, with deference even, and obviously admires her to
enthusiasm. This admiration is the most painful part of the business.
‘If he only hated me as I hate him we might get on very well
together,’ thinks Sibyl; ‘but, as it is, the creature gives me the
sensation of living in a glass case with a boa constrictor.’
Mr. Pilgrim does not enter Redcastle society, though the _élite_ are
quite ready to take him by the hand in the fulness of their love for
Stephen Trenchard. Mr. Pilgrim is of a reserved temper, and prefers
the tranquillity of Lancaster Lodge to the dwellings of strangers.
He dines well, and drinks deeply after dinner, but the wine makes no
more impression upon him than upon the decanters. Mr. Trenchard and
he are often closeted together in business conference, but they never
talk business before Sibyl. She has a vague idea that Mr. Pilgrim is
a merchant, and that his house of business is in Calcutta, but she
has no knowledge of his merchandise.
One day Mr. Trenchard complains to her, and with some bitterness, of
her coolness to Joel Pilgrim.
‘I think I have been kind enough to you to deserve that you should
be civil to any friend of mine, Sibyl,’ he says, ‘and yet you are
positively rude to Mr. Pilgrim.’
‘I am not intentionally so, uncle Trenchard.’
‘Then your notion of good manners must be a very curious one.
Nonsense, Sibyl! you can be winning enough, fascinating enough, when
you please. Yet to this young man----’
‘Young!’ echoes Sibyl. ‘He must be five-and-thirty if he’s a day.’
‘No matter, child, he is a young man to me. For him, I say--the son
of my oldest friend--you have nothing but cold looks and insulting
speeches. It is very hard upon me, Sibyl.’
‘My dear uncle, I did not know you were so fond of this Mr. Pilgrim.
I have fancied sometimes that his visit was rather a trouble to you.’
‘I have been worried about his affairs now and then. The man himself
is very dear to me.’
‘Then I will try to be more polite to him, my dear uncle, for your
sake.’
‘I want you to try something more than that Sibyl. You discouraged
Sir Wilford Cardonnel’s attentions, for some inscrutable reason of
your own--don’t deny it, girl, you must have discouraged him for I
know he was over head and ears in love with you, and now he only
makes a formal call once in six weeks. You might have had the first
position in this part of the world if you had chosen, but you did not
so choose. I saw you fling away your chance, and I did not reproach
you. But now I come to something that touches me closer. Joel--the
only son of my----’ he pauses with a curious smile--‘only friend,
Joel Pilgrim, a man of strong brain and strong feelings, has fallen
in love with you. Not a butterfly passion like Sir Wilford’s, mind
you, to be blown aside by a breath of yours, but an enduring love.
Now I have set my heart on seeing Joel and you man and wife.’
‘Why should you be so anxious to see me married, uncle Trenchard? You
wanted me to marry Sir Wilford, and now you want me to marry this
Mr. Pilgrim, with Indian blood in his veins.’
‘I wanted you to marry Sir Wilford because he could give you a great
position. I want you to marry Joel because Joel is dear to me, and to
see you two united would be to secure the happiness of the only two
people I love.’
‘Don’t be angry with me, uncle Trenchard, but I had as soon you told
me a serpent loved me as this Mr. Pilgrim.’
She feels that in speaking thus frankly she runs the risk of
offending her uncle. For once in her life she is truthful. Her uncle
is less angry than she had expected.
‘Nonsense, child!’ he says carelessly. ‘You are full of prejudice.
You must learn to think better of my friend’s son.’
‘Is he the son of that friend whose death distressed you so much,
uncle?’ asks Sibyl.
‘What death? When?’
‘One evening last summer, when you read the announcement in the
paper.’
Mr. Trenchard looks at her curiously for a moment.
‘Yes, yes,’ he says, ‘that was the man.’
From this time Joel Pilgrim is more open in his attentions. He
follows Sibyl like her shadow, rides with her, drives with her,
walks in the garden, plays billiards with her, stands beside the
piano when she plays or sings, reads the books she reads, associates
himself with every hour of her day and every pursuit of her life. She
knows not what it is to be alone. She takes the utmost pains, in a
quiet way, to let Mr. Pilgrim see that his attentions are odious to
her. She never favours him with an encouraging look or word, yet he
pursues his course doggedly, like a man who comes from a land where
women’s opinions and inclinations go for nothing.
People in Redcastle are not slow to talk of Mr. Pilgrim just as
they talked of Sir Wilford Cardonnel. It is now evident to the mind
of Redcastle that Sir Wilford has cooled and fallen off in his
attentions, and that this Anglo-Indian, with his dark face and sleek
hair--a real Hindoo, perhaps, some people suggest--is to be Miss
Faunthorpe’s husband.
‘They wouldn’t go out riding together if it wasn’t a settled thing,’
says Mrs. Groshen to Mrs. Stormont, ‘and in _my_ day it was not
considered correct for a young lady to go out alone with her engaged
husband. But young ladies are changed.’
‘It’s money, I suppose,’ remarks Mrs. Stormont, thinking of the
main question and not of details. ‘I have no doubt this Calcutta
merchant is immensely rich, and Mr. Trenchard wishes to unite the two
fortunes. I thought Sibyl looked very unhappy the last time I called.
If she had been allowed to follow her own inclinations things would
have taken a very different turn. I don’t think she ever had such a
genuine liking for any one as for my Fred.’
‘She didn’t show it much in her manner,’ says Mrs. Groshen, smiling
amiably.
‘She is not a girl to let every one read her feelings,’ retorts Mrs.
Stormont. ‘What is that some one says in a play about wearing one’s
heart outside one’s dress? She’s not that sort of girl. But I know
she liked Fred. I sincerely pity her, poor child.’
The Stormonts see less of Mr. Trenchard and his niece after Joel
Pilgrim’s advent. This strange guest of the old man’s, who will
not go out visiting, even to the best people in Redcastle, seems a
stumblingblock to social intercourse. Mr. Trenchard has also taken to
refusing invitations, and Sibyl is dull and spiritless, and is even
losing her beauty, Mrs. Groshen remarks, with a touch of satisfaction.
‘Those brilliant complexions go off so soon,’ she says. ‘I’ll tell
you what it is, my dear, you may depend upon it that things are not
quite right at Lancaster Lodge. There’s something underhanded going
on there.’
‘But what?’ inquires Mrs. Stormont, bursting with curiosity, for
the solemnity of her friend’s countenance implies a spirit that has
penetrated Mr. Trenchard’s secrets.
‘I don’t know what,’ replies Mrs. Groshen, in the most disappointing
way, ‘but I have an instinct that tells me there is something wrong.’
‘There is an atmosphere of gloom in the house, I admit. I feel sure
that girl is being forced into a distasteful engagement.’
So gossips Redcastle, and not altogether without foundation, for the
gloom deepens in Stephen Trenchard’s house, a gloom which is not to
be enlivened by upholsterer’s work in the way of gilding and crimson
tabouret, or by luxurious dinners served on porcelain and silver, or
by fine raiment, or any of the things that Stephen Trenchard’s money
or credit can buy.
If it were not for one wicked hope, Sibyl would assuredly fly the
hateful abode that holds Joel Pilgrim, but that evil hope nerves her
to remain.
Mr. Trenchard has been showing signs of rapid decay. The east
winds of March and April have withered him. Dr. Mitsand talks less
confidently of his patient’s fine constitution, and urges extreme
care. He expatiates on the perils of our treacherous climate, and
suggests that Mr. Trenchard shall spend next winter in the south of
France.
Stephen Trenchard has grown nervous and fretful. He complains of
sleepless nights, and his failing appetite is obvious to all his
household.
Do not these signs betoken the beginning of the end?
‘I will stay,’ Sibyl says to herself, and she fancies there is
something almost heroic in the resolution. ‘However loathsome that
man makes himself, I will wait for the end. Perhaps his passion for
me is only a pretence, after all--a trap to catch me. If he can prove
me disobedient, or force me to run away, he may induce my uncle to
alter his will, and leave _him_ everything. That may be his plan--a
deep-laid plot to ruin me.’
Robert Faunthorpe dines with his rich brother-in-law about once in
six months, a purely ceremonial visit, which is irksome to both men,
though uncle Stephen is very civil, and uncle Robert enjoys the
unwonted gratification of an excellent dinner and rare old wine. On
the occasion of his last visit, near the end of April, Dr. Faunthorpe
sees so marked a change in his brother-in-law that he goes home full
of it, and tells Marion that he does not think her uncle is long for
this world.
‘What a shame!’ says Marion, meaning Sibyl’s conduct, and not her
uncle’s decline; ‘and here have I been estranged from him all the
days of his life. It’s a hard thing to be plotted out of one’s
expectations by a designing sister.’
‘My love, we have no reason to suppose that Mr. Trenchard will act
unjustly in the matter of his will,’ remonstrates the mild little
doctor.
‘Oh dear no, he has acted so very justly all along; never put Sibyl
over my head, never dropped me after taking me up. Oh, of course not!’
To satire so subtle as this Dr. Faunthorpe finds no reply. He only
sighs gently, and comforts himself with a pinch of snuff.
Sibyl spends more time at the parish doctor’s house just now than she
has been used to do. It is the only place where Joel Pilgrim does not
accompany her, and on this account it seems to her a haven of refuge.
She is more amiable to Marion than of old, more friendly to Hester,
more affectionate to Jenny. She feels happier--or at least more at
peace--in the shabby old parlour, or the shabbier surgery, than
anywhere else.
Jenny, enlightened by Alexis, knows her sister’s secret, and is
therefore a person to be conciliated. She has sworn eternal
fidelity, however, and has never given so much as a hint of the truth
to Marion.
It is a comfort to Sibyl in this time of trouble to lay her weary
head on Jenny’s substantial shoulder and talk hopefully of the days
to come, when she and Alexis are to be reunited.
‘He threatened never to forgive me,’ says Sibyl, ‘but I don’t think
he will keep his word.’
‘I’m sure he won’t if you do your hair the new way,’ answers Jenny,
with conviction. ‘It makes you look lovely.’
On Sibyl’s next visit Marion is full of Mr. Trenchard’s declining
health, and talks about his death as if it were a settled business,
appointed to come off within a given time.
‘You will be grand, Sibyl! Shall you keep Lancaster Lodge and the
carriages? If I were you I should let the house furnished and go
on the Continent. Travelling is so delightful, and if you wanted a
companion you might take one of your sisters.’
‘How can you talk so horribly, Marion?’ exclaims Sibyl. ‘Who says
uncle Trenchard is going to die?’
‘Uncle Robert says he’s not going to live long, and I suppose that’s
pretty much the same thing, only a nicer way of putting it. Uncle
Robert ought to know, as a doctor. He generally knows about the
parish patients. When he says they’re going to get better they don’t
always do it, but when he says they’re going to die they always bear
him out. He’s very lucky in _that_.’
‘You are the most dreadful girl, Marion.’
‘Well, you needn’t colour up and look pleased. That’s quite as bad
as talking horribly. I’ve a franker disposition than you, and I say
things straight out. I suppose he’ll leave Jenny and me something
for mourning, out of respect to himself. I shall have a corded black
silk, thick enough to stand alone. I always looked my best in black.’
‘Did uncle Robert think that uncle Stephen looked very ill when he
dined with us the other day?’ asks Sibyl, thoughtfully.
‘Of course he did, or he wouldn’t have said it. We say what we mean
at this end of the town. They’re more polite above Bar, and the more
they say a thing the less they mean it. Mrs. Stormont told me she had
taken a tremendous fancy to me when she thought I was uncle Stephen’s
favourite.’
‘Don’t be so bitter, Marion.’
‘If you had to have your boots soled and heeled twice over by a
clumsy country cobbler you’d be bitter,’ replies the injured Marion.
Finding this young lady’s temper inclining to acidity Sibyl slips
away to Jenny’s favourite retreat--the surgery, where she finds the
damsel seated on the hearth-rug busy at needlework, and performing
wonders in the way of stocking-darning.
Sibyl flings herself into Dr. Faunthorpe’s easy chair in a despondent
attitude, and sits there in moody silence, much to Jenny’s
discomfiture.
‘You might say “how d’ye do?” to one,’ she remonstrates.
‘I beg your pardon, Jenny. It was mere absence of mind.’
‘Oh, that’s what you call absence of mind above Bar. Hereabouts we
call it rudeness.’
‘Don’t be cross, Jenny. I’m very unhappy.’
‘I thought so,’ replies Jane, astutely, ‘you’ve come to see us so
much oftener than you used to do, a sure sign that you are miserable.
Are you unhappy about _him_?’
‘About whom?’
‘Oh, you know; my brother-in-law.’
‘Partly about him, and partly for other reasons. I am worried to
death.’
‘But uncle Trenchard will die soon,’ says Jenny, cheerily, ‘and then
all will come right. We shall go into mourning, and be great swells.’
‘Jenny, you really mustn’t talk so.’
‘What’s the harm?’
‘You mustn’t talk of poor uncle Stephen’s death as if it were an
event we were all looking forward to.’
‘But we are,’ replies Jenny. ‘I’m sure Marion does nothing but talk
about her mourning, and how she’ll have it made. I’m sick of hearing
of corded silks and para----what’s its name?--and bugled fringe. I
shan’t have bugled fringe; it catches in everything, and one can’t
help scrunching the bugles. It’s too great a temptation.’
‘Uncle Trenchard is weak and ailing, but he may live for years.’
‘No, he mayn’t. Not if uncle Robert knows his business. He says he
doesn’t think uncle Trenchard will last the summer out. And then we
shall come in for anything he has left us. Won’t that be jolly! I’d
rather he didn’t die till the end of the summer. The dusty roads
would so spoil our mourning.’
‘Jane, you are a perfect ghoul.’
‘Oh, it’s all very well for you to be grand and indifferent. You’ve
had the use of his money all along. We are looking forward to coming
into a small slice of it. If I’m not made a ward in Chancery and my
money all tied up we’ll have hot suppers every night.’
‘Do stop that senseless chatter. Where does uncle Robert keep the
laudanum? I’ve a racking toothache.’
‘That’s why you look so miserable, I suppose. All the poisons are on
that top shelf,’ and Jenny points to the topmost shelf in the darkest
corner of the surgery, on which the quick eye of Alexis espied the
blue bottle labelled prussic acid.
If Jenny were not so deeply engaged with the complicated
dilapidations of her stocking she would clamber upon the doctor’s
step-ladder and bring down the laudanum, but she goes on with her
darning, and leaves Sibyl to get the bottle from its dusty repository.
Sibyl ascends the step-ladder, and descends again with a bottle in
her hand, takes an empty phial from a drawer, and pours some of the
fluid from the larger bottle into it, dexterously and quickly.
‘What a smell of bitter almonds!’ cries Jenny. ‘You’ve got the wrong
bottle! That’s prussic acid!’
Quickly as she starts to her feet Sibyl has reascended the ladder,
and replaced the blue bottle in its corner before she can reach her.
‘It’s all right, Jenny. I know laudanum from prussic acid. What a
fidgety, officious child you are!’
‘I never knew laudanum to smell like bitter almonds,’ remonstrates
Jenny, unconvinced. ‘Show me the bottle you put in your pocket.’
‘I shall do nothing of the kind. Go on with your work, and don’t be
ridiculous.’
Jenny mounts the ladder, and examines the shelf that holds Dr.
Faunthorpe’s small collection of poisons. The laudanum and the
prussic acid are in bottles of the same colour, but the prussic acid
is inverted in a gallipot. Each is in its usual place, but Jane’s
quick eye perceives that while the laudanum bottle has its coating of
dust undisturbed the dust has been rubbed off the prussic acid bottle.
‘I hope you are not doing anything dreadful, Sibyl,’ she remarks
solemnly. ‘Tampering with poison is a dangerous thing.’
‘I have only taken a few drops of laudanum for my toothache.’
‘Well, I suppose I ought to believe you, as you’re my elder sister.
But I can’t understand that smell of bitter almonds.’
‘All your fancy, I assure you, Jenny. And now let’s be good friends,
and have a nice talk. Don’t try to mend those holes. I will buy you
some new stockings the next time I go to Carmichael’s.’
‘You’re a dear!’ exclaims the volatile Jenny, forgetting all about
that odour of bitter almonds.
The sisters seat themselves side by side in the window seat, and talk
of the future, Sibyl’s future, which means reunion with Alexis. They
will be rich, happy. Jenny is to live with them, and have a pony to
ride.
‘And shall we have hot suppers?’ inquires Jenny.
‘What a vulgar child you are! Of course not. We shall dine at eight.’
‘That’s rather the same thing under another name,’ says Jenny.
CHAPTER XVIII.
VILLAGE SLANDER.
The days glide by at Dorley Mill. Oh how gently, oh how sweetly, in
what innocent rustic delights, in simple, childlike pleasures, shared
and sanctified by the perpetual presence of a child! The willows
have unfolded their tender young leaves. The white blossoms of the
orchards have come and gone like all earth’s fairest things, too
brief, too transitory. The lazy cattle revel in golden pastures; the
pine trees on the hill-tops put forth pale green shoots at the ends
of their dark old boughs. It is the time of buttercups and young
lambs, trout-fishing, and all delights of early summer, and it has
brought along with it fair nights and days, healing and strength, to
Alexis Secretan.
Yet, strange to say, now that he is so much better, and nearly well
enough to bear the journey to the Grange, he is no longer impatient
to return thither.
‘My life will be so dull without Trot,’ he says. ‘I’m afraid I have
fallen in love with Trot.’
And then he sighs deeply, and lapses into one of those despondent
moods which come upon him sometimes.
Linda bends very low over her work, and she too sighs, but so softly
that the sigh reaches no ear but Richard Plowden’s, who sits close
beside her worktable.
Alexis is well enough to go out of doors and walk a little way,
assisted by his cane on one side, and on the other by Linda or
Richard. They take it in turns to accompany him in these brief walks;
and Linda shows him all the beauties of nature to be seen within a
few hundred yards of the mill. They all sit out of doors a good deal
in the balmy June weather, and Linda takes her work and books to the
rustic bench under the willows, and Alexis has many an afternoon nap,
lulled by the babble of the mill-stream.
But the day comes at last when Mr. Skalpel, who, if he has erred at
all, has erred on the side of caution, pronounces that his patient is
quite well enough to bear the journey home.
‘And I do not say you could not have borne it a fortnight ago,’ adds
the surgeon, ‘but I knew you to be particularly well off here, and
one cannot be too careful.’
‘Yes, I am very well off here,’ says Alexis, with a smothered sigh.
‘However, since you are well enough to walk the length of the village
you are certainly well enough to bear a three-mile drive, and we have
no excuse for keeping you here any longer.’
‘No, I have no excuse for remaining,’ says Alexis, thoughtfully.
‘Six weeks ago you were in a great hurry to go home. I could hardly
persuade you to be patient.’
‘Six weeks ago I was ill and fretful. Since then I have domesticated
myself here, and now I feel as if Dorley Mill were home. Mr. Benfield
and his granddaughter are so good to me; and this little fellow,’
adds Alexis, laying his hand on the golden head of Trot, who lies
at his feet with an open picture-book spread out before him, ‘this
little one and I have grown such friends that I don’t know what I
shall do without him.’
‘Ah,’ says Mr. Skalpel, waxing grave, ‘poor little boy.’
‘You speak as if he were no favourite of yours.’
‘He is not,’ replies the surgeon. ‘He has caused too much scandal to
be a favourite of mine.’
‘What do you mean by scandal?’
‘Well, Mr. Secretan, country people are censorious. It’s a very
unworthy feeling on their part, but you’ll find that country people
_are_ censorious.’
‘I have discovered the same failing in London people occasionally,’
remarks Alexis.
‘And if anything happens which is not quite open and on the
surface, country people are apt to take a narrow view of it. Now
Mr. Benfield’s adoption of this boy has given rise to some very
unpleasant reports.’
‘Why should it do so? Is it not an act of charity, a most
praiseworthy act?’
‘Possibly, possibly, my dear Mr. Secretan. That is the way in which I
have always endeavoured to see it, but one can’t get other people to
look at the thing with the same largeness of view. There is my wife
now, an admirable woman; Miss Challice was a great favourite of hers
before the appearance of this child; she would have done anything for
her; but since this baby came on the scene my wife has quite turned
against the poor girl, will hardly allow her name to be mentioned in
her presence.’
‘That seems rather hard.’
‘It is hard, but it is human nature. There are some sharp angles in
human nature. It isn’t all Hogarth’s line of beauty. You see this
child made his appearance in a most mysterious way. If he had dropped
from the moon it couldn’t have been more sudden, and we know no more
about his origin than we do of a moonstone.’
‘Then people have talked unpleasantly about Miss Challice, I infer.’
‘They have, Mr. Secretan. There have been hard things said in the
village with reference to that child. The village mind is coarse, and
the village vocabulary is limited. Spades are called spades.’
‘And your villagers can hatch a lie out of their foul imaginations,’
says Alexis, in a tone that quite startles the placable doctor.
‘I have always stood up for Miss Challice,’ he says, ‘I have always
defended her.’
‘I am sorry there should be any need for defence,’ replies Alexis,
sternly. ‘I am sorry the people of Dorley and its neighbourhood
should be such savages and idiots as not to recognise purity when
they see it. I have lived nearly six months under the roof that
shelters Miss Challice, and if she is not pure and perfect among
women I have no power to recognise womanly purity and goodness.’
‘I am entirely with you there, Mr. Secretan, yet I cannot help
regretting that this child should have ever been brought here to
occasion a scandal. There is a secret of some kind about his origin,
and wherever there is a secret there is always food for slander. I am
sorry because I know Miss Challice has suffered.’
‘What, the slanders have reached her ears?’
‘Yes, on some occasions, and they have made her very unhappy.’
‘Poor girl! Yet when I offered to adopt Trot, she would not hear of
such a thing.’
‘I dare say not. The little fellow has wound himself about her heart,
no doubt. They were always a soft-hearted race, these Benfields. The
old man has been an encourager of tramps and beggars, too easy by
half. It doesn’t do, Mr. Secretan.’
‘Benevolence? No, it seems a failure in this life.’
This conversation with the surgeon makes a strong impression upon
Alexis. Instead of going downstairs to the sitting-room where Richard
and Linda are expecting him, he remains in his own room all the
afternoon, keeping the child for his companion. The little fellow
will amuse himself for an hour together, playing about the room in
his quiet little way, and perfectly happy.
Alexis looks at him with infinite compassion.
‘Poor little waif, what is to be your fate in the years to come?’
he asks himself. ‘You cannot always have the calm shelter of Dorley
Mill. The day will come when you will have to go out into the world
to fight the battle of life--nameless, perhaps friendless, unless I
am living to befriend you. Poor child, I would give much to know your
history, and yet there are questions I dare not ask. There is always
the horrible doubt, the lurking fear that this village scandal may
contain some grain of truth.’
He is disinclined for Linda’s society that evening, and goes out at
sunset for a solitary stroll, with no support but his cane. It is the
first time he has walked without the help of Linda or Richard.
He goes down to the willow-shaded path, contemplates the simple
pastoral landscape in a thoughtful mood, scarcely seeing the objects
he gazes at, and then strolls past that brief row of old-fashioned
cottages which constitutes the village of Dorley.
Some men are standing before the little public-house, and one of them
seems considerably amused in a quiet way at the appearance of Alexis,
pale and wan still, and leaning heavily on his cane.
‘He don’t look up to much yet, do he?’ says one of these village
worthies when Alexis has passed, but before he is out of hearing.
‘No,’ says the man who grinned. ‘He looks a rare sight. Yon’s the
rich gentleman at the mill. Miss Challice’s new lovyer.’
‘Who says he’s her sweetheart?’ asks the other.
‘Well, folks don’t say it, may be, but they knows it pretty well, I
should think.’
‘That’s the young woman that’s got the ’dopted child,’ says the
facetious man’s friend.
The humorist is a drunkard and ne’er-do-well, who has been refused
employment at the mill, and is bitter against Mr. Benfield and his
household.
‘’Dopted child!’ he says, with his coarse laugh, raising his voice on
purpose that Alexis may hear him. ‘There’s many sech ’dopted children
in these parts, but we calls ’em by another name. We calls ’em----’
He has just time to utter a blasphemous adjective, but not the
substantive that is to follow it, for the adjective is thrust back
between his teeth, as it were, by a blow which strikes him on the
mouth and seems to loosen every tooth in his head. It is astonishing
how hard a weak man can hit when his arm is impelled by such passion
as moves Alexis to-night. He staggers from the recoil of his own
blow, and might fall were it not for a bystander’s friendly arm
stretched out to support him.
‘Sarve him right,’ says one of the sufferer’s companions, as he
stands before them, a piteous object, pouring his blood upon the
dusty ground, as in a libation to the great mother. ‘He didn’t ought
to have gone and said anything agen Miss Challice. She be a good
friend to the poor folks.’
The injured man growls out some threat about ‘summonsing’ and ‘the
beak.’
‘Summon me before whom you please,’ replies Alexis. ‘I shall think
this evening’s work cheap at five pounds.’
Alexis goes back to the mill curiously moved by what has happened.
‘Why do I feel insult to her so keenly?’ he asks himself. ‘Is it that
she is more to me than I dare avow even to my own heart? Is there
peril for my future peace in this quiet home that has sheltered my
sickness and pain? Your fault, Sibyl, your fault. You have left your
place to be occupied by another. Whatever evil befalls me is your
work. Let it be my care that I bring no evil upon the good Samaritans
who have succoured me in my weakness. Mr. Skalpel is right, I have no
excuse for remaining at Dorley another day. But before I go I would
give much to learn the secret of that child’s adoption.’
He is not a little enfeebled by his act of violence and the passion
that accompanied it. His heart beats violently, and he is barely
strong enough to get back to the mill, where he arrives in a state
of extreme exhaustion, and so pale as to frighten Linda and Richard
almost as much as if his ghost had returned instead of himself.
‘How ill you are looking, Mr. Secretan!’ says Linda anxiously, when
she has arranged the pillows on his sofa and brought him a tumbler of
claret and water. ‘You have been walking too fast, and alone.’
‘I am sorry I look so ill,’ replies Alexis, ‘for Mr. Skalpel tells me
I am quite well, and I am to go home to-morrow.’
‘To-morrow?’
‘Yes; there is no excuse for my being a burden to you any longer.’
‘You have never been a burden,’ answers Linda, in a very low voice.
Her face is hidden from Alexis, but not from Richard Plowden, who in
their daily companionship has learned the meaning of that thoughtful
countenance all too well. He reads her secret there to-night, and the
knowledge pierces him to the heart.
END OF VOL. II.
J. and W. Rider, Printers, 14, Bartholomew Close, London.
Transcriber’s Notes
Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
silently corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences
within the three volumes of this work and consultation of external
sources. Some hyphens in words have been silently removed and
some silently added when a predominant preference was found in
the original work. Except for those changes noted below, original
spellings in the text and inconsistent or archaic usage have been
retained.
Page 25: “musn’t we” replaced with “mustn’t we”.
Page 41: “be a n’ypocrite” replaced with “be an ’ypocrite”.
Page 69: “at St. Heliers” replaced with “at St. Helier”.
Page 95: “old office elate” replaced with “old office elated”.
Page 153: “McTower and Belinda” replaced with “MacTower and
Belinda”.
Page 153: “we ooght to” replaced with “we ought to”.
Page 154: “and her portmanteaux” replaced with “and her
portmanteaus”.
Page 236: “Mrs. Parker” replaced with “Mrs. Perker”.
Page 237: “the servants feed” replaced with “the servants fed”.
Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
public domain.
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