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An August Sunday afternoon in the north side of Dublin. Epitome of
all that is hot, arid, and empty. Tall brick houses, browbeating each
other in gloomy respectability across the white streets; broad
pavements, promenaded mainly by the nomadic cat; stifling squares,
wherein the infant of unfashionable parentage is taken for the daily
baking that is its substitute for the breezes and the press of
perambulators on the Bray Esplanade or the Kingstown pier. Few towns
are duller out of the season than Dublin, but the dulness of its north
side neither waxes nor wanes; it is immutable, unchangeable, fixed as
the stars. So at least it appears to the observer whose impressions
are only eye-deep, and are derived from the emptiness of the streets,
the unvarying dirt of the window panes, and the almost forgotten type
of ugliness of the window curtains.
But even an August Sunday in the north side has its distractions
for those who know where to seek them, and there are some of a
sufficiently ingenuous disposition to find in Sunday-school a social
excitement that is independent of fashion, except so far as its slow
eddies may have touched the teacher's bonnet. Perhaps it is peculiar
to Dublin that Sunday-school, as an institution, is by no means
reserved for children of the poorer sort only, but permeates all
ranks, and has as many recruits from the upper and middle as from the
lower classes. Certainly the excellent Mrs. Fitzpatrick, of Number O,
Mountjoy Square, as she lay in mountainous repose on the sofa in her
dining-room, had no thought that it was derogatory to the dignity of
her daughters and her niece to sit, as they were now sitting, between
the children of her grocer, Mr. Mulvany, and her chemist, Mr. Nolan.
Sunday-school was, in her mind, an admirable institution that at one
and the same time cleared her house of her offspring, and spared her
the complications of their religious training, and her broad, black
satin-clad bosom rose and fell in rhythmic accord with the snores
that were the last expression of Sabbath peace and repose.
It was nearly four o'clock, and the heat and dull clamour in the
schoolhouse were beginning to tell equally upon teachers and scholars.
Francie Fitzpatrick had yawned twice, though she had a sufficient
sense of politeness to conceal the action behind her Bible; the
pleasure of thrusting out in front of her, for the envious regard of
her fellows, a new pair of side spring boots, with mock buttons and
stitching, had palled upon her; the spider that had for a few
quivering moments hung uncertainly above the gorgeous bonnet of Miss
Bewley, the teacher, had drawn itself up again, staggered, no doubt,
by the unknown tropic growths it found beneath; and the silver ring
that Tommy Whitty had crammed upon her gloved finger before school, as
a mark of devotion, had become perfectly immovable and was a source
of at least as much anxiety as satisfaction. Even Miss Bewley's powers
of exposition had melted away in the heat; she had called out her
catechetical reserves, and was reduced to a dropping fire of questions
as to the meaning of Scriptural names, when at length the
superintendent mounted the rostrum and tapped thrice upon it. The
closing hymn was sung, and then, class by class, the hot, tired
children clattered out into the road.
On Francie rested the responsibility of bringing home her four
small cousins, of ages varying from six to eleven, but this duty did
not seem to weigh very heavily on her. She had many acquaintances in
the Sunday-school, and with Susie Brennan's and Fanny Hemphill's arms
round her waist, and Tommy Whitty in close attendance, she was in no
hurry to go home. Children are, if unconsciously, as much influenced
by good looks as their elders, and even the raw angularities of
fourteen, and Mrs. Fitzpatrick's taste in hats, could not prevent
Francie from looking extremely pretty and piquante, as she held forth
to an attentive audience on the charms of a young man who had on that
day partaken of an early dinner at her Uncle Fitzpatrick's house.
Francie's accent and mode of expressing herself were alike
deplorable; Dublin had done its worst for her in that respect, but
unless the reader has some slight previous notion of how dreadful a
thing is a pure-bred Dublin accent, it would be impossible for him to
realise in any degree the tone in which she said:
"But oh! Tommy Whitty! wait till I tell you what he said about the
excursion! He said he'd come to it if I'd promise to stay with him the
whole day; so now, see how grand I'll be! And he has a long black
mustash!" she concluded, as a side thrust at Tommy's smooth, apple
cheeks.
"Oh, indeed, I'm sure he's a bewty without paint," returned the
slighted Tommy, with such sarcasm as he could muster; "but unless you
come in the van with me, the way you said you would, I'll take me
ring back from you and give it to Lizzie Jemmison! So now!"
"Much I care!" said Francie, tossing her long golden plait of hair,
and giving a defiant skip as she walked; "and what's more, I can't get
it off, and nobody will till I die! and so now yourself!"
Her left hand was dangling over Fanny Hemphill's shoulder, and she
thrust it forward, starfish-wise, in front of Tommy Whitty's face. The
silver ring glittered sumptuously on its background of crimson silk
glove, and the sudden snatch that her swain made at it was as much
impelled by an unworthy desire to repossess the treasure as by the
pangs of wounded affection.
"G'long ye dirty fella'!" screamed Francie, in high good-humour, at
the same moment eluding the snatch and whirling herself free from the
winding embrace of the Misses Hemphill and Brennan; "I dare ye to
take it from me!"
She was off like a lapwing down the deserted street, pursued by the
more cumbrous Tommy, and by the encouraging yells of the children, who
were trooping along the pavement after them. Francie was lithe and
swift beyond her fellows, and on ordinary occasions Tommy Whitty, with
all his masculine advantage of costume and his two years of
seniority, would have found it as much as he could do to catch her.
But on this untoward day the traitorous new side spring boots played
her false. That decorative band of white stitching across the toes
began to press upon her like a vice, and, do what she would, she knew
that she could not keep her lead much longer. Strategy was her only
resource. Swinging herself round a friendly lamp-post, she stopped
short with a suddenness that compelled her pursuer to shoot past her,
and with an inspiration whose very daring made it the more delirious,
she darted across the street, and sprang into a milk-cart that was
waiting at a door. The meek white horse went on at once, and, with a
breathless, goading hiss to hasten him, she tried to gather up the
reins. Unfortunately, however, it happened that these were under his
tail, and the more she tugged at them the tighter he clasped them to
him, and the more lively became his trot. In spite of an
inexpressible alarm as to the end of the adventure, Francie still
retained sufficient presence of mind to put out her tongue at her
baffled enemy, as, seated in front of the milk-cans, she clanked past
him and the other children. There was a chorus, in tones varying from
admiration to horror of, "Oh! look at Francie Fitzpatrick!" and then
Tommy Whitty's robuster accents, "Ye'd better look out! the milkman's
after ye!"
Francie looked round, and with terror beheld that functionary in
enraged pursuit. It was vain to try blandishments with the horse, now
making for his stable at a good round trot; vainer still to pull at
the reins. They were nearing the end of the long street, and Francie
and the milkman, from their different points of view, were feeling
equally helpless and despairing, when a young man came round the
corner, and apparently taking in the situation at a glance, ran out
into the road, and caught the horse by the bridle.
"Well, upon my word, Miss Francie," he said, as Miss Fitzpatrick
hurriedly descended from the cart. "You're a nice young lady! What on
earth are you up to now?"
"Oh, Mr. Lambert—" began Francie; but having got thus far in her
statement, she perceived the justly incensed milkman close upon her,
and once more taking to her heels, she left her rescuer to return the
stolen property with what explanations he could. Round the corner she
fled, and down the next street, till a convenient archway offered a
hiding-place, and sheltering there, she laughed, now that the stress
of terror was off her, till her blue eyes streamed with tears.
Presently she heard footsteps approaching, and peering cautiously
out, saw Lambert striding along with the four Fitzpatrick children
dancing round him, in their anxiety to present each a separate
version of the escapade. The milkman was not to be seen, and Francie
sallied forth to meet the party, secretly somewhat abashed, but
resolved to bear an undaunted front before her cousins.
The "long black mustash," so adroitly utilised by Francie for the
chastening of Tommy Whitty, was stretched in a wide smile as she
looked tentatively at its owner. "Will he tell Aunt Tish?" was the
question that possessed her as she entered upon her explanation. The
children might be trusted. Their round, white-lashed eyes had
witnessed many of her exploits, and their allegiance had never
faltered; but this magnificent grown-up man, who talked to Aunt Tish
and Uncle Robert on terms of equality, what trouble might he not get
her into in his stupid desire to make a good story of it? "Botheration
to him!" she thought, "why couldn't he have been somebody else?"
Mr. Roderick Lambert marched blandly along beside her, with no wish
to change places with anyone agitating his bosom. His handsome brown
eyes rested approvingly on Francie's flushed face, and the thought
that mainly occupied his mind was surprise that Nosey Fitzpatrick
should have had such a pretty daughter. He was aware of Francie's
diffident glances, but thought they were due to his good looks and
his new suit of clothes, and he became even more patronising than
before. At last, quite unconsciously, he hit the dreaded point.
"Well, and what do you think your aunt will say when she hears how
I found you running away in the milk-cart?"
"I don't know," replied Francie, getting very red. "Well, what will
you say to me if I don't tell her?"
"Oh, Mr. Lambert, sure you won't tell mamma!" entreated the
Fitzpatrick children, faithful to their leader. "Francie'd be killed
if mamma thought she was playing with Tommy Whitty!"
They were nearing the Fitzpatrick mansion by this time, and Lambert
stood still at the foot of the steps and looked down at the small
group of petitioners with indulgent self-satisfaction.
"Well, Francie, what'll you do for me if I don't tell?"
Francie walked stiffly up the steps.
"I don't know." Then with a defiance that she was far from feeling,
"You may tell her if you like!"
Lambert laughed easily as he followed her up the steps.
"You're very angry with me now, aren't you? Well, never mind, we'll
be friends, and I won't tell on you this time."
The east wind was crying round a small house in the outskirts of an
Irish country town. At nightfall it had stolen across the grey expanse
of Lough Moyle, and given its first shudder among the hollies and
laurestinas that hid the lower windows of Tally Ho Lodge from the too
curious passer-by, and at about two o'clock of the November night it
was howling so inconsolably in the great tunnel of the kitchen
chimney, that Norry the Boat, sitting on a heap of tur by the kitchen
fire, drew her shawl closer about her shoulders, and thought
gruesomely of the Banshee.
The long trails of the monthly roses tapped and scratched against
the window panes, so loudly sometimes that two cats, dozing on the
rusty slab of a disused hothearth, opened their eyes and stared, with
the expressionless yet wholly alert scrutiny of their race. The
objects in the kitchen were scarcely more than visible in the dirty
light of a hanging lamp, and the smell of paraffin filled the air.
High presses and a dresser lined the walls, and on the top of the
dresser, close under the blackened ceiling, it was just possible to
make out the ghostly sleeping form of a cockatoo. A door at the end of
the kitchen opened into a scullery of the usual prosaic, not to say
odorous kind, which was now a cavern of darkness, traversed by twin
green stars that moved to and fro as the lights move on a river at
night, and looked like anything but what they were, the eyes of cats
prowling round a scullery sink.
The tall, yellow-faced clock gave the gurgle with which it was
accustomed to mark the half-hour, and the old woman, as if reminded of
her weariness, stretched out her arms and yawned loudly and dismally.
She put back the locks of greyish-red hair that hung over her
forehead, and, crouching over the fireplace, she took out of the
embers a broken-nosed teapot, and proceeded to pour from it a mug of
tea, black with long stewing. She had taken a few sips of it when a
bell rang startlingly in the passage outside, jarring the silence of
the house with its sharp outcry. Norry the Boat hastily put down her
mug, and scrambled to her feet to answer its summons. She groped her
way up two cramped flights of stairs that creaked under her as she
went, and advanced noiselessly in her stockinged feet across a landing
to where a chink of light came from under a door.
The door was opened as she came to it, and a woman's short thick
figure appeared in the doorway.
"The mistress wants to see Susan," this person said in a rough
whisper; "is he in the house?"
"I think he's below in the scullery," returned Norry; "but, my Law!
Miss Charlotte, what does she want of him? Is it light in her head she
is?"
"What's that to you? Go fetch him at once," replied Miss Charlotte,
with a sudden fierceness. She shut the door, and Norry crept
downstairs again, making a kind of groaning and lamenting as she went.
Miss Charlotte walked with a heavy step to the fireplace. A lamp
was burning dully on a table at the foot of an old-fashioned bed, and
the high foot-board threw a shadow that made it difficult to see the
occupant of the bed. It was an ordinary little shabby bedroom, the
ceiling, seamed with cracks, bulged down till it nearly touched the
canopy of the bed. The wall paper had a pattern of blue flowers on a
yellowish background; over the chimney shelf a filmy antique mirror
looked strangely refined in the company of the Christmas cards and
discoloured photographs that leaned against it. There was no sign of
poverty, but everything was dingy, everything was tasteless, from the
worn Kidderminster carpet to the illuminated text that was pinned to
the wall facing the bed.
Miss Charlotte gave the fire a frugal poke, and lit a candle in the
flame provoked from the sulky coals. In doing so some ashes became
imbedded in the grease, and taking a hair-pin from the ponderous mass
of brown hair that was piled on the back of her head, she began to
scrape the candle clean. Probably at no moment of her forty years of
life had Miss Charlotte Mullen looked more startlingly plain than now,
as she stood, her squat figure draped in a magenta flannel
dressing-gown, and the candle light shining upon her face. The night
of watching had left its traces upon even her opaque skin. The lines
about her prominent mouth and chin were deeper than usual; her broad
cheeks had a flabby pallor; only her eyes were bright and untired, and
the thick yellow-white hand that manipulated the hair-pin was as deft
as it was wont to be.
When the flame burned clearly she took the candle to the bedside,
and, bending down, held it close to the face of the old woman who was
lying there. The eyes opened and turned towards the overhanging face:
small dim, blue eyes, full of the stupor of illness, looking out of
the pathetically commonplace little old face with a far-away
perplexity.
"Was that Francie that was at the door?" she said in a drowsy voice
that had in it the lagging drawl of intense weakness.
Charlotte took the tiny wrist in her hand, and felt the pulse with
professional attention. Her broad perceptive finger-tips gauged the
forces of the little thread that was jerking in the thin network of
tendons, and as she laid the hand down she said to herself, "She'll
not last out the turn of the night."
"Why doesn't Francie come in?" murmured the old woman again in the
fragmentary, uninflected voice that seems hardly spared from the
unseen battle with death.
"It wasn't her you asked me for at all," answered Charlotte. "You
said you wanted to say good-bye to Susan. Here, you'd better have a
sip of this."
The old woman swallowed some brandy and water, and the stimulant
presently revived unexpected strength in her.
"Charlotte," she said, "it isn't cats we should be thinking of now.
God knows the cats are safe with you. But little Francie, Charlotte,
we ought to have done more for her. You promised me that if you got
the money you'd look after her. Didn't you now, Charlotte? I wish I'd
done more for her. She's a good little thing—a good little thing—"
she repeated dreamily.
Few people would think it worth their while to dispute the
wandering futilities of an old dying woman, but even at this eleventh
hour Charlotte could not brook the revolt of a slave.
"Good little thing!" she exclaimed, pushing the brandy bottle
noisily in among a crowd of glasses and medicine bottles, "a strapping
big woman of nineteen! You didn't think her so good the time you had
her here, and she put Susan's father and mother in the well!"
The old lady did not seem to understand what she had said.
"Susan, Susan!" she called quaveringly, and feebly patted the
crochet quilt.
As if in answer, a hand fumbled at the door and opened it softly.
Norry was standing there, tall and gaunt, holding in her apron, with
both hands, something that looked like an enormous football.
"Miss Charlotte!" she whispered hoarsely, "here's Susan for ye. He
was out in the ashpit, an' I was hard set to get him, he was that
wild."
Even as she spoke there was a furious struggle in the blue apron.
"God in Heaven! ye fool!" ejaculated Charlotte. "Don't let him go!"
She shut the door behind Norry. "Now, give him to me."
Norry opened her apron cautiously, and Miss Charlotte lifted out of
it a large grey tom-cat.
"Be quiet, my heart's love," she said, "be quiet."
The cat stopped kicking and writhing, and, sprawling up on to the
shoulder of the magenta dressing-gown, turned a fierce grey face upon
his late captor. Norry crept over to the bed, and put back the dirty
chintz curtain that had been drawn forward to keep out the draught of
the door. Mrs. Mullen was lying very still; she had drawn her knees up
in front of her, and the bedclothes hung sharply from the small point
that they made. The big living old woman took the hand of the other
old woman who was so nearly dead, and pressed her lips to it.
"Ma'am, d'ye know me?"
Her mistress opened her eyes.
"Norry," she whispered, "give Miss Francie some jam for her tea
to-night, but don't tell Miss Charlotte."
"What's that she's saying?" said Charlotte, going to the other side
of the bed. "Is she asking for me?"
"No, but for Miss Francie," Norry answered.
"She knows as well as I do that Miss Francie's in Dublin," said
Charlotte roughly; "'twas Susan she was asking for last. Here, a'nt,
here's Susan for you."
She pulled the cat down from her shoulder, and put him on the bed,
where he crouched with a twitching tail, prepared for flight at a
moment's notice.
He was within reach of the old lady's hand, but she did not seem to
know that he was there. She opened her eyes and looked vacantly round.
"Where's little Francie? You mustn't send her away, Charlotte; you
promised you'd take care of her; didn't you, Charlotte?"
"Yes, yes," said Charlotte quickly, pushing the cat towards the old
lady; "never fear, I'll see after her."
Old Mrs. Mullen's eyes, that had rested with a filmy stare on her
niece's face, closed again, and her head began to move a little from
one side to the other, a low monotonous moan coming from her lips with
each turn. Charlotte took her right hand and laid it on the cat's
brindled back. It rested there, unconscious, for some seconds, while
the two women looked on in silence, and then the fingers drooped and
contracted like a bird's claw, and the moaning ceased. There was at
the same time a spasmodic movement of the gathered-up knees, and a
sudden rigidity fell upon the small insignificant face.
Norry the Boat threw herself upon her knees with a howl, and began
to pray loudly. At the sound the cat leaped to the floor, and the hand
that had been placed upon him in the only farewell his mistress was
to take, dropped stiffly on the bed. Miss Charlotte snatched up the
candle, and held it close to her aunt's face. There was no mistaking
what she saw there, and, putting down the candle again, she plucked a
large silk handkerchief from her pocket, and, with some hideous
preliminary heavings of her shoulders, burst into transports of noisy
grief.
A Damp winter and a chilly spring had passed in their usual mildly
disagreeable manner over that small Irish country town which was
alluded to in the beginning of the last chapter. The shop windows had
exhibited their usual zodiacal succession, and had progressed through
red comforters and woollen gloves to straw hats, tennis shoes, and
coloured Summer Numbers. The residents of Lismoyle were already
congratulating each other on having "set" their lodgings to the
summer visitors; the steamer was plying on the lake, the militia was
under canvas, and on this very fifteenth of June, Lady Dysart of Bruff
was giving her first lawn-tennis party.
Miss Charlotte Mullen had taken advantage of the occasion to emerge
from the mourning attire that since her aunt's death had so misbecome
her sallow face, and was driving herself to Bruff in the phæton that
had been Mrs. Mullen's, and a gown chosen with rather more view to
effect than was customary with her. She was under no delusion as to
her appearance, and, early recognising its hopeless character, she had
abandoned all superfluities of decoration. A habit of costume so
defiantly simple as to border on eccentricity had at least two
advantages; it freed her from the absurdity of seeming to admire
herself, and it was cheap. During the late Mrs. Mullen's lifetime
Charlotte had studied economy. The most reliable old persons had, she
was wont to reflect, a slippery turn in them where their wills were
concerned, and it was well to be ready for any contingency of
fortune. Things had turned out very well after all; there had been
one inconvenient legacy—that "Little Francie" to whom the old lady's
thoughts had turned, happily too late for her to give any practical
emphasis to them—but that bequest was of the kind that may be
repudiated if desirable. The rest of the disposition had been
admirably convenient, and, in skilled hands, something might even be
made of that legacy. Miss Mullen thought a great deal about her legacy
and the steps she had taken with regard to it as she drove to Bruff.
The horse that drew her ancient phæton moved with a dignity befitting
his eight and twenty years; the three miles of level lake-side road
between Lismoyle and Bruff were to him a serious undertaking, and by
the time he had arrived at his destination, his mistress's active mind
had pursued many pleasant mental paths to their utmost limit.
This was the first of the two catholic and comprehensive
entertainments that Lady Dysart's sense of her duty towards her
neighbours yearly impelled her to give, and when Charlotte, wearing
her company smile, came down the steps of the terrace to meet her
hostess, the difficult revelry was at its height. Lady Dysart had cast
her nets over a wide expanse, and the result was not encouraging. She
stood, tall, dark, and majestic, on the terrace, surveying the
impracticable row of women that stretched, forlorn of men, along one
side of the tennis grounds, much as Cassandra might have scanned the
beleaguering hosts from the ramparts of Troy; and as she advanced to
meet her latest guest, her strong clear-eyed face was perplexed and
almost tragic.
"How do you do, Miss Mullen?" she said in tones of unconcealed
gloom. "Have you ever seen so few men in your life? and there are five
and forty women! I cannot imagine where they have all come from, but
I know where I wish they would take themselves to, and that is to the
bottom of the lake!"
The large intensity of Lady Dysart's manner gave unintended weight
to her most trivial utterance, and had she reflected very deeply
before she spoke, it might have occurred to her that this was not a
specially fortunate manner of greeting a female guest. But Charlotte
understood that nothing personal was intended; she knew that the
freedom of Bruff had been given to her, and that she could afford to
listen to abuse of the outer world with the composure of one of the
inner circle.
"Well, your ladyship," she said, in the bluff, hearty voice which
she felt accorded best with the theory of herself that she had built
up in Lady Dysart's mind, "I'll head a forlorn hope to the bottom of
the lake for you, and welcome, but for the honour of the house you
might give me a cup o' tay first!"
Charlotte had many tones of voice, according with the many facets
of her character, and when she wished to be playful she affected a
vigorous brogue, not perhaps being aware that her own accent scarcely
admitted of being strengthened.
This refinement of humour was probably wasted on Lady Dysart. She
was an Englishwoman, and, as such, was constitutionally unable to
discern perfectly the subtle grades of Irish vulgarity. She was aware
that many of the ladies on her visiting list were vulgar, but it was
their subjects of conversation and their opinions that chiefly brought
the fact home to her. Miss Mullen, au fond, was probably no less
vulgar than they, but she was never dull, and Lady Dysart would
suffer anything rather than dulness. It was less than nothing to her
that Charlotte's mother was reported to have been in her youth a
national schoolmistress, and her grandmother a bare-footed country
girl. These facts of Miss Mullen's pedigree were valued topics in
Lismoyle, but Lady Dysart's serene radicalism ignored the inequalities
of a lower class, and she welcomed a woman who could talk to her on
spiritualism, or books, or indeed on any current topic, with a point
and agreeability that made her accent, to English ears, merely the
expression of a vigorous individuality. She now laughed in response
to her visitor's jest, but her eye did not cease from roving over the
gathering, and her broad brow was still contracted in calculation.
"I never knew the country so bereft of men or so peopled with
girls! Even the little Barrington boys are off with the militia, and
everyone about has conspired to fill their houses with women, and not
only women but dummies!" Her glance lighted on the long bench where
sat the more honourable women in midge-bitten dulness. "And there is
Kate Gascogne in one of her reveries, not hearing a word that Mrs.
Waller is saying to her—"
With Lady Dysart intention was accomplishment as nearly as might
be. She had scarcely finished speaking before she began a headlong
advance upon the objects of her diatribe, making a short cut across
the corner of a lawn-tennis court, and scarcely observing the havoc
that her transit wrought in the game. Charlotte was less rash. She
steered her course clear of the tennis grounds, and of the bench of
matrons, passed the six Miss Beatties with a comprehensive "How are
ye, girls?" and took up her position under one of the tall elm trees.
Under the next tree a few men were assembled, herding together for
mutual protection after the manner of men, and laying down the law to
each other about road sessions, the grand jury, and Irish politics
generally. They were a fairly representative trio; a country gentleman
with a grey moustache and a loud voice in which he was announcing that
nothing would give him greater pleasure than to pull the rope at the
execution of a certain English statesman; a slight, dejected-looking
clergyman, who vied with Major Waller in his denunciations, but
chastenedly, like an echo in a cathedral aisle; and a smartly dressed
man of about thirty-five, of whom a more detailed description need not
be given, as he has been met with in the first chapter, and the six
years after nine-and-twenty do little more than mellow a man's taste
in checks, and sprinkle a grey hair or two on his temples.
Miss Mullen listened for a few minutes to the melancholy pessimisms
of the archdeacon, and then, interrupting Major Waller in a fine
outburst on the advisability of martial law, she thrust herself and
her attendant cloud of midges into the charmed circle of the smoke of
Mr. Lambert's cigarette.
"Ho! do I hear me old friend the Major at politics?" she said,
shaking hands effusively with the three men. "I declare I'm a better
politician than any one of you! D'ye know how I served Tom Casey, the
land-leaguing plumber, yesterday? I had him mending my tank, and when
I got him into it I whipped the ladder away, and told him not a step
should he budge till he sang 'God save the Queen!' I was arguing there
half an hour with him in water up to his middle before I converted
him, and then it wasn't so much the warmth of his convictions as the
cold of his legs made him tune up. I call that practical politics!"
The speed and vigour with which this story was told would have
astounded anyone who did not know Miss Mullen's powers of narration,
but Mr. Lambert, to whom it seemed specially addressed, merely took
his cigarette out of his mouth, and said, with a familiar laugh:
"Practical politics, by Jove! I call it a cold water cure. Kill or
cure like the rest of your doctoring, eh! Charlotte?"
Miss Mullen joined with entire good-humour in the laugh that
followed.
"Oh, th' ingratitude of man!" she exclaimed. "Archdeacon, you've
seen his bald scalp from the pulpit, and I ask you, now, isn't that a
fresh crop he has on it? I leave it to his conscience, if he has one,
to say if it wasn't my doctoring gave him that fine black thatch he
has now!"
The archdeacon fixed his eyes seriously upon her; Charlotte's
playfulness always alarmed and confused him.
"Do not appeal to me, Miss Mullen," he answered, in his refined,
desponding voice; "my unfortunate sight makes my evidence in such a
matter worth nothing; and, by the way, I meant to ask you if your
niece would be good enough to help us in the choir? I understand she
sings."
Charlotte interrupted him.
"There's another of you at it!" she exclaimed. "I think I'll have
to advertiss it in the Irish Times that, whereas my first cousin,
Isabella Mullen, married Johnny Fitzpatrick, who was no relation of
mine, good, bad, or indifferent, their child is my first cousin once
removed, and not my niece!"
Mr. Lambert blew a cloud of smoke through his nose.
"You're a nailer at pedigrees, Charlotte," he said with a patronage
that he knew was provoking; "but as far as I can make out the
position, it comes to mighty near the same thing; you're what they
call her Welsh aunt, anyhow."
Charlotte's face reddened, and she opened her wide mouth for a
retort, but before she had time for more than the champings as of a
horse with a heavy bit, which preceded her more incisive repartees,
another person joined the group.
"Mr. Lambert," said Pamela Dysart, in her pleasant, anxious voice,
"I am going to ask you if you will play in the next set, or if you
would rather help the Miss Beatties to get up a round of golf? How do
you do, Miss Mullen? I have not seen you before; why did you not bring
your niece with you?"
Charlotte showed all her teeth in a forced smile as she replied, "I
suppose you mean my cousin, Miss Dysart? she won't be with me till the
day after to-morrow."
"Oh, I'm so sorry," replied Pamela, with the sympathetic politeness
that made strangers think her manner too good to be true; "and Mr.
Lambert tells me she plays tennis so well."
"Why, what does he know about her tennis playing?" said Charlotte,
turning sharply towards Lambert.
The set on the nearer court was over, and the two young men who had
played in it strolled up to the group as she spoke. Mr. Lambert
expanded his broad chest, gave his hat an extra tilt over his nose,
and looked rather more self-complacent than usual as he replied:
"Well, I ought to know something about it, seeing I took her in
hand when she was in short petticoats—taught her her paces myself,
in fact."
Mr. Hawkins, the shorter of the two players who had just come up,
ceased from mopping his scarlet face, and glanced from Mr. Lambert to
Pamela with a countenance devoid of expression, save that conferred
by the elevation of one eyebrow almost to the roots of his yellow
hair. Pamela's eyes remained unresponsive, but the precipitancy with
which she again addressed herself to Mr. Lambert showed that a
disposition to laugh had been near.
Charlotte turned away with an expression that was the reverse of
attractive. When her servants saw that look they abandoned excuse or
discussion; when the Lismoyle beggars saw it they checked the flow of
benediction and fled. Even the archdeacon, through the religious halo
that habitually intervened between him and society, became aware that
the moment was not propitious for speaking to Miss Mullen about his
proposed changes in the choir, and he drifted away to think of
diocesan matters, and to forget as far as possible that he was at a
lawn-tennis party.
Outside the group stood the young man who had been playing in the
set with Mr. Hawkins. He was watching through an eyeglass the limp
progress of the game in the other court, and was even making
praiseworthy attempts to applaud the very feeble efforts of the
players. He was tall and slight, with a near-sighted stoop, and
something of an old-fashioned, eighteenth century look about him that
was accentuated by his not wearing a moustache, and was out of
keeping with the flannels and brilliant blazer that are the
revolutionary protest of this age against its orthodox clothing. It
did not seem to occur to him that he was doing anything unusual in
occupying himself, as he was now doing, in picking up balls for the
Lismoyle curate and his partner; he would have thought it much more
remarkable had he found in himself a preference for doing anything
else. This was an occupation that demanded neither interest nor
conversation, and of a number of disagreeable duties he did not think
that he had chosen the worst.
Charlotte walked up to him as he stood leaning against a tree, and
held out her hand.
"How d'ye do, Mr. Dysart?" she said with marked politeness. All
trace of combat had left her manner, and the smile with which she
greeted him was sweet and capacious. "We haven't seen you in Lismoyle
since you came back from the West Indies."
Christopher Dysart let his eyeglass fall, and looked apologetic as
he enclosed her well-filled glove in his long hand, and made what
excuses he could for not having called upon Miss Mullen.
"Since Captain Thesiger has got this new steam-launch I can't call
my soul my own; I'm out on the lake with him half the day, and the
other half I spend with a nail-brush trying to get the blacks off."
He spoke with a hesitation that could hardly be called a stammer,
but was rather a delaying before his sentences, a mental rather than a
physical uncertainty.
"Oh, that's a very poor excuse," said Charlotte with loud
affability, "deserting your old friends for the blacks a second time!
I thought you had enough of them in the last two years! And you know
you promised—or your good mother did for you—that you'd come and
photograph poor old Mrs. Tommy before she died. The poor thing's so
sick now we have to feed her with a baby's bottle."
Christopher wondered if Mrs. Tommy were the cook, and was on the
point of asking for further particulars, when Miss Mullen continued:
"She's the great-great-grandmother of all me cats, and I want you
to immortalise her; but don't come till after Monday, as I'd like to
introduce you to my cousin, Miss Fitzpatrick; did you hear she was
coming?"
"Yes, Mr. Lambert told us she was to be here next week," said
Christopher, with an indescribable expression that was not quite
amusement, but was something more than intelligence.
"What did he say of her?"
Christopher hesitated; somehow what he remembered of Mr. Lambert's
conversation was of too free and easy a nature for repetition to Miss
Fitzpatrick's cousin.
"He—er—seemed to think her very—er—charming in all ways,"
he said rather lamely.
"So it's talking of charming young ladies you and Roddy Lambert are
when he comes to see you on estate business!" said Charlotte archly,
but with a rasp in her voice. "When my poor father was your father's
agent, and I used to be helping him in the office, it was charming
young cattle we talked about, and not young ladies."
Christopher laughed in a helpless way.
"I wish you were at the office still, Miss Mullen; if anyone could
understand the Land Act I believe it would be you."
At this moment there was an upheaval among the matrons; the long
line rose and broke, and made for the grey stone house whose windows
were flashing back the sunlight through the trees at the end of the
lawn-tennis grounds. The tedious skirmish with midges, and the strain
of inactivity were alike over for the present, and the conscience of
the son of the house reminded him that he ought to take Miss Mullen
in to tea.
There was consternation among the cats at Tally Ho Lodge; a
consternation mingled with righteous resentment. Even the patriarchal
Susan could scarcely remember the time that the spare bedroom had
been anything else than an hospital, a nursery, and a secure
parliament house for him and his descendants; yet now, in his old age,
and when he had, after vast consideration of alternatives, allocated
to himself the lowest shelf of the wardrobe as a sleeping place, he
was evicted at a moment's notice, and the folded-away bed curtains
that had formed his couch were even now perfuming the ambient air as
they hung out of the window over the hall door. Susan was too
dignified to give utterance to his wounded feelings; he went away by
himself, and, sitting on the roof of the fowl-house, thought
unutterable things. But his great-niece, Mrs. Bruff, could not
emulate his stoicism. Followed by her five latest kittens, she strode
through the house, uttering harsh cries of rage and despair, and did
not cease from her lamentations until Charlotte brought the whole
party into the drawing-room, and established them in the waste-paper
basket.
The worst part about the upheaval, as even the youngest and least
experienced of the cats could see, was that it was irrevocable. It was
early morning when the first dull blow of Norry's broom against the
wainscot had startled them with new and strange apprehension, and
incredulity had grown to certainty, till the final moment when the
sight of a brimming pail of water urged them to panic-struck flight.
It may be admitted that Norry the Boat, who had not, as a rule, any
special taste for cleanliness, had seldom enjoyed anything more than
this day of turmoil, this routing of her ancient enemies. Miss
Charlotte, to whom on ordinary occasions the offended cat never
appealed in vain, was now bound by her own word. She had given orders
that the spare room was to be "cleaned down," and cleaned down it
surely should be. It was not, strictly speaking, Norry's work. Louisa
was house and parlour-maid; Louisa, a small and sullen Protestant
orphan of unequalled sluggishness and stupidity, for whose capacity
for dealing with any emergency Norry had a scorn too deep for any
words that might conveniently be repeated here. It was not likely
that Louisa would be permitted to join in the ardours of the campaign,
when even Bid Sal, Norry's own special kitchen-slut and
co-religionist, was not allowed to assist.
Norry the Boat, daughter of Shaunapickeen, the ferryman (whence her
title), and of Carroty Peg his wife, was a person with whom few would
have cared to co-operate against her will. On this morning she wore a
more ferocious aspect that usual. Her roughly-waving hair, which had
never known the dignity of a cap, was bound up in a blue duster,
leaving her bony forehead bare; dust and turf-ashes hung in her
grizzled eyebrows, her arms were smeared with blacklead, and the skirt
of her dress was girt about her waist, displaying a petticoat of
heavy Galway flannel, long thin legs, and enormous feet cased in
countrymen's laced boots. It was fifteen years now, Norry reflected,
while she scrubbed the floor and scraped the candle drippings off it
with her nails, since Miss Charlotte and the cats had come into the
house, and since then the spare room had never had a visitor into it.
Nobody had stayed in the house in all those years except little Miss
Francie, and for her the cot had been made up in her great-aunt's
room; the old high-sided cot in which her grandmother had slept when
she was a child. The cot had long since migrated into the spare room,
and from it Norry had just ejected the household effects of Mrs.
Bruff and her family, with a pleasure that was mitigated only by the
thought that Miss Francie was a young woman now, and would be likely
to give a good deal more trouble in the house than even in the days
when she stole the cockatoo's sopped toast for her private
consumption, and christened the tom-cat Susan against everyone's
wished except her great-aunt's.
Norry and the cockatoo were now the only survivors of the old
régime at Tally Ho Lodge, in fact the cockatoo was regarded in
Lismoyle as an almost prehistoric relic, dating, at the lowest
computation, from the days when old Mrs. Mullen's fox-hunting father
had lived there, and given the place the name that was so remarkably
unsuited to its subsequent career. The cockatoo was a sprightly
creature of some twenty shrieking summers on the day that the two
Miss Butlers, clad in high-waisted, low-necked gowns, were armed past
his perch in the hall by their father, and before, as it seemed to the
cockatoo, he had more than half-finished his morning dose, they were
back again, this time on the arms of the two young men who, during the
previous five months, had done so much to spoil his digestion by
propitiatory dainties at improper hours. The cockatoo had no very
clear recollection of the subsequent departure of Dr. Mullen and his
brother, the attorney, with their brides, on their respective
honeymoons, owing to the fact that Mr. Mullen, the agent, brother of
the two bridegrooms, had prised open his beak, and compelled him to
drink the healths of the happy couples in the strongest and sweetest
whisky punch.
The cockatoo's memory after this climax was filled with vague
comings and goings, extending over unknown tracts of time. He
remembered two days of disturbance, on each of which a long box had
been carried out of the house by several men, and a crowd of people,
dressed in black, had eaten a long and clattering meal in the
dining-room. He had always remembered the second of these occasions
with just annoyance, because, in manoeuvring the long box through the
narrow hall, he had been knocked off his perch, and never after that
day had the person whom he had been taught to call "Doctor" come to
give him his daily lump of sugar.
But the day that enunciated itself most stridently from the
cockatoo's past life was that on which the doctor's niece had, after
many short visits, finally arrived with several trunks, and a wooden
case from which, when opened, sprang four of the noisome creatures
whom Miss Charlotte, their owner, had taught him to call "pussies." A
long era of persecution then began for him, of robbery of his food,
and even attacks upon his person. He had retaliated by untiring
mimicry, by delusive invitations to food in the manner of Miss
Charlotte, and lastly, by the strangling of a too-confiding kitten,
whom he had lured, with maternal mewings, within reach of his claws.
That very day Miss Charlotte's hand avenged the murder, and afterwards
conveyed him, a stiff guilty lump of white feathers, to the top of the
kitchen press, from thenceforth never to descend, except when long
and patient picking had opened a link of his chain, or when, on fine
days, Norry fastened him to a branch of the tall laurel that overhung
the pig-stye. Norry was his only friend, a friendship slowly cemented
by a common hatred of the cats and Louisa; indeed, it is probable that
but for occasional conversation with Norry he would have choked from
his own misanthropic fury, helpless, lonely spectator as he was of
the secret gluttonies of Louisa, and the maddening domestic felicity
of the cats.
But on this last day of turbulence and rout he had been forgotten.
The kitchen was sunny and stuffy, the bluebottles were buzzing their
loudest in the cobwebby window, one colony of evicted kittens was
already beginning to make the best of things in the turf heap, and
the leaves of the laurel outside were gleaming tropically against the
brilliant sky, with no one to appreciate them except the pigs. When it
came to half-past twelve o'clock the cockatoo could no longer
refrain, and fell to loud and prolonged screamings. The only result at
first was a brief stupefaction on the part of the kittens, and an
answering outcry from the fowl in the yard; then, after some minutes,
the green baize cross-door opened, and a voice bellowed down the
passage:
"Biddy! Bid Sal!" (fortissimo), "can't ye stop that bird's infernal
screeching?" There was dead silence, and Miss Mullen advanced into the
kitchen and called again.
"Biddy's claning herself, Miss Mullen," said a small voice from the
pantry door.
"That's no reason you shouldn't answer!" thundered Charlotte; "come
out here yourself and put the cockatoo out in the yard."
Louisa, the orphan, a short, fat, white-faced girl of fourteen,
shuffled out of the pantry with her chin buried in her chest, and her
round terrified eyes turned upwards to Miss Charlotte's face.
"I'd be in dhread to ketch him," she faltered.
Those ladies who considered Miss Mullen "eccentric, but so
kind-hearted, and so clever and agreeable," would have been
considerably surprised if they had heard the terms in which she
informed Louisa that she was wanting in courage and intelligence; but
Louisa's face expressed no surprise, only a vacancy that in some
degree justified her mistress's language. Still denouncing her
retainers, Miss Charlotte mounted nimbly upon a chair, and seizing the
now speechless cockatoo by the wings, carried him herself out to the
yard and fastened him to his accustomed laurel bough.
She did not go back to the kitchen, but, after a searching glance
at the contents of the pigs' trough, went out of the yard by the gate
that led to the front of the house. Rhododendrons and laurels made a
dark green tunnel about her, and, though it was June, the beech
leaves of last November lay rotting on each side of the walk. Opposite
the hall door the ground rose in a slight slope, thickly covered with
evergreens, and topped by a lime tree, on whose lower limbs a flock of
black turkeys had ranged themselves in sepulchral meditation. The
house itself was half stifled with ivy, monthly roses, and virginian
creeper; everywhere was the same unkempt profusion of green things,
that sucked the sunshine into themselves, and left the air damp and
shadowed. Charlotte had the air of thinking very deeply as she walked
slowly along with her hands in the pockets of her black alpaca apron.
The wrinkles on her forehead almost touched the hair that grew so low
down upon it as to seem like a wig that had been pulled too far over
the turn of the brow, and she kept chewing at her heavy underlip as
was her habit during the processes of unobserved thought. Then she
went into the house, and, sitting down at the davenport in the
dining-room, got out a sheet of her best notepaper, and wrote a note
to Pamela Dysart in her strong, commercially clear hand.
Afternoon tea had never flourished as an institution at Tally Ho
Lodge. Occasionally, and of necessity, a laboured repast had been
served at five o'clock by the trembling Louisa; occasions on which
the afternoon caller had not only to suffer the spectacle of a
household being shaken to its foundations on her behalf, but had
subsequently to eat of the untempting fruit of these struggles. On the
afternoon, however, of the day following that of the cleansing of the
spare room, timely preparations had been made. Half the round table in
the centre of the drawing-room had been covered with a cloth, and on
it Louisa, in the plenitude of her zeal, had prepared a miniature
breakfast; loaf, butter-cooler, and knives and forks, a truly
realistic touch being conferred by two egg-cups standing in the
slop-basin. A vase of marigolds and pink sweet pea stood behind
these, a fresh heap of shavings adorned the grate, the piano had been
opened and dusted, and a copy of the "Indiana Waltzes" frisked on the
desk in the breeze from the open window.
Charlotte sat in a low armchair and surveyed her drawing-room with
a good deal of satisfaction. Her fingers moved gently through the long
fur at the back of Mrs. Bruff's head, administering, almost
unconsciously, the most delicately satisfactory scratching about the
base of the wide, sensitive ears, while her eyes wandered back to the
pages of the novel that lay open on her lap. She was a great and
insatiable reader, surprisingly well acquainted with the classics of
literature, and unexpectedly lavish in the purchase of books. Her
neighbours never forgot to mention, in describing her, the
awe-inspiring fact that she "took in the English Times and the
Saturday Review, and read every word of them," but it was hinted that
the bookshelves that her own capable hands had put up in her bedroom
held a large proportion of works of fiction of a startlingly advanced
kind, "and," it was generally added in tones of mystery, "many of
them French."
It was half-past five o'clock, and the sharpest of several showers
that had fallen that day had caused Miss Mullen to get up and shut the
window, when the grinding of the gate upon the gravel at the end of
the short drive warned her that the expected guest was arriving. As
she got to the hall door one of those black leather band-boxes on
wheels, known in the south and west of Ireland as "jingles" or inside
cars, came brushing under the arch of wet evergreens, and she ran out
on to the steps.
"Well, my dear child, welcome to Tally Ho!" she began in tones of
effusive welcome, as the car turned and backed towards the doorstep in
the accustomed way, then seeing through the half-closed curtains that
there was nothing inside it except a trunk and a bonnet box, "Where in
the name of goodness is the young lady, Jerry? Didn't you meet her at
the train?"
"I did to be sure," replied Jerry; "sure she's afther me on the
road now. Mr. Lambert came down on the thrain with her, and he's
dhrivin' her here in his own thrap."
While he was speaking there was the sound of quick trotting on the
road, and Miss Mullen saw a white straw hat and a brown billycock
moving swiftly along over the tops of the evergreens. A dog-cart with
a white-faced chestnut swung in at the gate, and Miss Fitzpatrick's
hat was immediately swept off her head by a bough of laburnum. Its
owner gave a shrill cry and made a snatch at the reins, with the idea
apparently of stopping the horse.
"No, you don't," said Mr. Lambert, intercepting the snatch with his
whip hand; "you're going to be handed over to your aunt just as you
are."
Half a dozen steps brought them to the door, and the chestnut
pulled up with his pink nose almost between the curtains of the inside
car. It was hard to say whether Miss Mullen had heard Lambert's
remark, which had certainly been loud enough to enable her to do so,
but her only reply was an attack upon the carman.
"Take your car out o' that, ye great oaf!" she vociferated; "can't
ye make way for your betters?" Then with a complete change of voice,
"Well, me dear Francie, you're welcome, you're welcome."
The greeting was perceptibly less hearty than that which had been
squandered on the trunk and bonnet box; but an emotion réchauffé
necessarily loses flavour. Francie had jumped to the ground with a
reckless disregard of the caution demanded by the steps of a
dog-cart, and stooping her hatless head, kissed the hard cheek that
Charlotte tendered for her embrace.
"Thank you very much, I'm very glad to come," she said, in a voice
whose Dublin accent had been but little modified by the six years that
had lightly gone over her since the August Sunday when she had fled
from Tommy Whitty in the milkman's cart. "And look at me the show I am
without my hat! And it's all his fault!" with a lift of her blue eyes
to Lambert, "he wouldn't let me stop and pick it up."
Charlotte looked up at her with the wide smile of welcome still
stiff upon her face. The rough golden heap of curls on the top of
Francie's head was spangled with raindrops and her coat was grey with
wet.
"Well, if Mr. Lambert had had any sense," said Miss Mullen, "he'd
have let you come in the covered car. Here, Louisa, go fetch Miss
Fitzpatrick's hat."
"Ah, no, sure she'll get all wet," said Francie, starting herself
before the less agile Louisa could emerge from behind her mistress,
and running down the drive.
"Did you come down from Dublin to-day, Roddy?" said Charlotte.
"Yes, I did," answered Mr. Lambert, turning his horse as he spoke;
"I had business that took me up to town yesterday, so it just happened
that I hit off Francie. Well, good evening. I expect Lucy will be
calling round to see you to-morrow or next day."
He walked his horse down the drive, and as he passed Francie
returning with her hat he leaned over the wheel and said something to
her that made her shake her head and laugh. Miss Charlotte was too
far off to hear what it was.
It was generally felt in Lismoyle that Mr. Roderick Lambert held an
unassailable position in society. The Dysart agency had always been
considered to confer brevet rank as a country gentleman upon its
owner, apart even from the intimacy with the Dysarts which it
implied; and as, in addition to these advantages, Mr. Lambert
possessed good looks, a wife with money, and a new house at least a
mile from the town, built under his own directions and at his
employer's expense, Lismoyle placed him unhesitatingly at the head of
its visiting list. Of course his wife was placed there too, but
somehow or other Mrs. Lambert was a person of far less consequence
than her husband. She had had the money certainly, but that quality
was a good deal overlooked by the Lismoyle people in their admiration
for the manner in which her husband spent it. It was natural that
they should respect the captor rather than the captive, and, in any
case, Mr. Roderick Lambert's horses and traps were more impressive
facts than the Maltese terrier and the shelf of patent medicines that
were Mrs. Lambert's only extravagances.
Possibly, also, the fact that she had no children placed her at a
disadvantage with the matrons of Lismoyle, all of whom could have
spoken fearlessly with their enemies in the gate; it deprived
conversation with her of the antiphonal quality, when mother answers
unto mother of vaccination and teething-rash, and the sins of the
nursery-maids are visited upon the company generally.
"Ah, she's a poor peenie-weenie thing!" said Mrs. Baker, who was
usually the mouth-piece of Lismoyle opinion, "and it's no wonder that
Lambert's for ever flourishing about the country in his dog-trap, and
she never seeing a sight of him from morning till night. I'd like to
see Mr. Baker getting up on a horse and galloping around the roads
after bank hours, instead of coming in for his cup of tea with me and
the girls!"
Altogether the feeling was that Mrs. Lambert was a failure, and in
spite of her undoubted amiability, and the creditable fact that Mr.
Lambert was the second husband that the eight thousand pounds ground
out by her late father's mills had procured for her, her spouse was
regarded with a certain regretful pity as the victim of circumstance.
In spite of his claims upon the sympathy of Lismoyle, Mr. Lambert
looked remarkably well able to compete with his lot in life, as he sat
smoking his pipe in his dinner costume of carpet slippers and oldest
shooting coat, a couple of evenings after Francie's arrival. As a
rule the Lamberts preferred to sit in their dining-room. The hard
magnificence of the blue rep chairs in the drawing-room appealed to
them from different points of view; Mrs. Lambert holding that they
were too good to be used except by "company," while Mr. Lambert truly
felt that no one who was not debarred by politeness from the power of
complaint would voluntarily sit upon them. An unshaded lamp was on the
table, its ugly glare conflicting with the soft remnants of June
twilight that stole in between the half-drawn curtains; a tumbler of
whisky and water stood on the corner of the table beside the
comfortable leather-covered armchair in which the master of the house
was reading his paper, while opposite to him, in a basket chair, his
wife was conscientiously doing her fancy work. She was a short woman
with confused brown eyes and distressingly sloping shoulders; a woman
of the turkey hen type, dejected and timorous in voice, and an
habitual wearer of porous plasters. Her toilet for the evening
consisted in replacing by a white cashmere shawl the red knitted one
which she habitually wore, and a languid untidyness in the pale brown
hair that hung over her eyes intimated that she had tried to curl her
fringe for dinner.
Neither were speaking; it seemed as if Mr. Lambert were placidly
awaiting the arrival of his usual after-dinner sleep; the Maltese
terrier was already snoring plethorically on his mistress's lap, in a
manner quite disproportioned to his size, and Mrs. Lambert's crochet
needles were moving more and more slowly through the mazes of the
"bosom friend" that she was making for herself, the knowledge that
the minute hand of the black marble clock was approaching the hour at
which she took her post-prandial pill alone keeping her from also
yielding to the soft influences of a substantial meal. At length she
took the box from the little table beside her, where it stood between
a bottle of smelling-salts and a lump of camphor, and having sat with
it in her hand till the half hour was solemnly boomed from the
chimney-piece, swallowed her pill with practised ease. At the slight
noise of replacing the box her husband opened his eyes.
"By the way, Lucy," he said in a voice that had no trace of
drowsiness in it, "did Charlotte Mullen say what she was going to do
to-morrow?"
"Oh, yes, Roderick," replied Mrs. Lambert a little anxiously,
"indeed, I was wanting to tell you—Charlotte asked me if I could
drive her over to Mrs. Waller's to-morrow afternoon. I forgot to ask
you before if you wanted the horses."
Mr. Lambert's fine complexion deepened by one or two shades.
"Upon my soul, Charlotte Mullen has a good cheek! She gets as much
work out of my horses as I do myself. I suppose you told her you'd do
it?"
"Well, what else could I do?" replied Mrs. Lambert with tremulous
crossness; "I'm sure it's not once in the month I get outside the
place, and, as for Charlotte, she has not been to the Waller's since
before Christmas, and you know very well old Captain couldn't draw
her eight miles there and eight miles back any more than the cat."
"Cat be hanged! Why the devil can't she put her hand in her pocket
and take a car for herself?" said Lambert, uncrossing his legs and
sitting up straight; "I suppose I'll hear next that I'm not to order
out my own horses till I've sent round to Miss Mullen to know if she
wants them first! If you weren't so infernally under her thumb you'd
remember there were others to be consulted besides her."
"I'm not under her thumb, Roderick; I'll beg you'll not say such a
thing," replied Mrs. Lambert huffily, her eyes blinking with
resentment. "Charlotte Mullen's an old friend of mine, and yours too,
and it's a hard thing I can't take her out driving without remarks
being passed, and I never thought you'd want the horses. I thought you
said you'd be in the office all to-morrow," ended the poor turkey hen,
whose feathers were constitutionally incapable of remaining erect for
any length of time.
Lambert did not answer immediately. His eyes rested on her flushed
face with just enough expression in them to convey to her that her
protest was beside the point. Mrs. Lambert was apparently used to
this silent comment on what she said, for she went on still more
apologetically:
"If you like, Roderick, I'll send Michael over early with a note to
Charlotte to tell her we'll go some other day."
Mr. Lambert leaned back as if to consider the question, and began
to fill his pipe for the second time.
"Well," he said slowly, "if it makes no difference to you, Lucy,
I'd be rather glad if you did. As a matter of fact I have to ride out
to Gurthnamuckla to-morrow, on business, and I thought I'd take
Francie Fitzpatrick with me there on the black mare. She's no great
shakes of a rider, and the black mare is the only thing I'd like to
put her on. But, of course, if it was for your own sake and not
Charlotte's that you wanted to go to the Waller's, I'd try and manage
to take Francie some other day. For the matter of that I might put her
on Paddy; I daresay he'd carry a lady."
Mr. Lambert's concession had precisely the expected effect. Mrs.
Lambert gave a cry of consternation.
"Roderick! you wouldn't! Is it put that girl up on that mad little
savage of a pony! Why, it's only yesterday, when Michael was driving
me into town, and Mr. Corkran passed on his tricycle, he tore up on
to his hind heels and tried to run into Ryan's public house! Indeed,
if that was the way, not all the Charlottes in the world would make me
go driving to-morrow."
"Oh, all right," said Lambert graciously; "if you'd rather have it
that way, we'll send a note over to Charlotte."
"Would you mind—" said Mrs. Lambert hesitatingly. "I mean, don't
you think it would be better if—supposing you wrote the note? She
always minds what you say, and, I declare, I don't know how in the
world I'd make up the excuse, when she'd settled the whole thing, and
even got me to leave word with the sweep to do her drawing-room
chimney that's thick with jackdaws' nests, because the family'd be
from home all the afternoon."
"Why, what was to happen to Francie?" asked Lambert quickly.
"I think Charlotte said she was to come with us," yawned Mrs.
Lambert, whose memory for conversation was as feeble as the part she
played in it; "they had some talk about it at all events. I wouldn't
be sure but Francie Fitzpatrick said first she'd go for a walk to see
the town—yes, so she did, and Charlotte told her what she was going
for was to try and see the officers, and Francie said maybe it was, or
maybe she'd come and have afternoon tea with you. They had great
joking about it, but I'm sure, after all, it was settled she was to
come with us. Indeed," continued Mrs. Lambert meditatively; "I think
Charlotte's quite right not to have her going through the town that
way by herself; for, I declare, Roderick, that's a lovely girl."
"Oh, she's well able to take care of herself," said Lambert, with
the gruff deprecation that is with some people the method of showing
pleasure at a compliment. "She's not such a fool as she looks, I can
tell you," he went on, feeling suddenly quite companionable; "the
Fitzpatricks didn't take such wonderful care of her that Charlotte
need be bothering herself to put her in cotton wool at this time of
day."
Mrs. Lambert crocheted on in silence for a few moments, inwardly
counting her stitches till she came to the end of the row, then she
withdrew the needle and scratched her head ruminatingly with it.
"Isn't it a strange thing, Roderick, what makes Charlotte have
anyone staying in the house with her? I never remember such a thing to
happen before."
"She has to have her, and no thanks to her. Old Fitzpatrick's been
doing bad business lately, and the little house he's had to take at
Bray is a tight fit for themselves and the children; so, as he said to
me, he thought it was time for Charlotte to do something for her own
cousin's child, and no such great thanks to her either, seeing she got
every halfpenny the old woman had."
Mrs. Lambert realised that she was actually carrying on a
conversation with her husband, and nervously cast about in her mind
for some response that should be both striking and stimulating.
"Well, now, if you want my opinion," she said, shutting both her
eyes and shaking her head with the peculiar arch sagacity of a dull
woman, "I wouldn't be surprised if Charlotte wasn't so sorry to have
her here after all. Maybe she thinks she might snap up one of the
officers—or there's young Charley Flood—or, Roderick!" Mrs.
Lambert almost giggled with delight and excitement—"I wouldn't put
it past Charlotte to be trying to ketch Mr. Dysart."
Roderick laughed in a disagreeable way.
"I'd wish her joy of him if she got him! A fellow that'd rather
stick at home there at Bruff having tea with his sister than go down
like any other fellow and play a game of pool at the hotel! A sort of
chap that says, if you offer him a whisky and soda in a friendly way,
'Th—thanks—I don't c—care about anything at this t—t—time of
day.' I think Francie'd make him sit up!" Mr. Lambert felt his
imitation of Christopher. Dysart's voice to be a success, and the
shrill burst of laughter with which Mrs. Lambert greeted it gave him
for the moment an unusual tinge of respect for her intelligence.
"That's about the size of it, Lucy, what?"
"Oh, Roderick, how comical you are!" responded the dutiful turkey
hen, wiping her watery eyes; "it reminds me of the days when you used
to be talking of old Mr. Mullen and Charlotte fighting in the office
till I'd think I was listening to themselves."
"God help the man that's got to fight with Charlotte, anyhow!" said
Lambert, finishing his whisky and water as if toasting the sentiment;
"and talking of Charlotte, Lucy, you needn't mind about writing that
note to her; I'll go over myself and speak to her in the morning."
"Oh, yes, Roderick, 'twill be all right if you see herself, and you
might say to her that I'll be expecting her to come in to tea."
Mr. Lambert, who had already taken up his newspaper again, merely
grunted an assent. Mrs. Lambert patiently folded her small bony hands
upon her dog's back, and closing her eyes and opening her mouth, fell
asleep in half a dozen breaths.
Her husband read his paper for a short time, while the subdued duet
of snoring came continuously from the chair opposite. The clock struck
nine in its sonorous, gentlemanlike voice, and at the sound Lambert
threw down his paper as if an idea had occurred to him. He got up and
went over to the window, and putting aside the curtains, looked out
into the twilight of the June evening. The world outside was still
awake, and the air was tender with the remembrance of the long day of
sunshine and heat; a thrush was singing loudly down by the seringa
bush at the end of the garden; the cattle were browsing and breathing
audibly in the field beyond, and some children were laughing and
shouting on the road. It seemed to Lambert much earlier than he had
thought, and as he stood there, the invitation of the summer evening
began to appeal to him with seductive force; the quiet fields lay grey
and mysterious under the pale western glow, and his eye travelled
several times across them to a distant dark blot—the clump of trees
and evergreens in which Tally Ho Lodge lay buried.
He turned from the window at last, and coming back into the lamplit
room, surveyed it and its unconscious occupants with a feeling of
intolerance for their unlovely slumber. His next step was the almost
unprecedented one of changing his slippers for boots, and in a few
minutes he had left the house.
Norry the Boat toiled up the back stairs with wrath in her heart.
She had been listening for some minutes with grim enjoyment to cries
from the landing upstairs; unavailing calls for Louisa, interspersed
with the dumb galvanic quiver of a bell-less bellwire, and at last
Francie's voice at the angle half-way down the kitchen stairs had
entreated her to find and despatch to her the missing Protestant
orphan. Then Norry had said to herself, while she lifted the pot of
potatoes off the fire, "Throuble-the-house! God knows I'm
heart-scalded with the whole o' yees!" And then aloud, "She's afther
goin' out to the dhryin' ground to throw out a few aper'rns to
blaych."
"Well, I must have somebody; I can't get my habit on," the voice
had wailed in reply. "Couldn't you come, Norry?"
As we have said, Norry ascended the stairs with wrath in her heart,
as gruesome a lady's-maid as could well be imagined, with an apron
mottled with grease spots, and a stale smell of raw onions pervading
her generally. Francie was standing in front of the dim looking-glass
with which Charlotte chastened the vanity of her guests, trying with
stiff and tired fingers to drag the buttons of a brand new habit
through the unyielding buttonholes that tailors alone have the gift
of making, and Norry's anger was forgotten in prayerful horror, as her
eyes wandered from the hard felt hat to the trousered ankle that
appeared beneath the skimpy and angular skirt.
"The Lord look down in pity on thim that cut that petticoat!" she
said. "Sure, it's not out in the sthreets ye're goin' in the like o'
that! God knows it'd be as good for ye to be dhressed like a man
altogether!"
"I wouldn't care what I was dressed like if I could only make the
beastly thing meet," said Francie, her face flushed with heat and
effort; "wasn't I the fool to tell him to make it tight in the waist!"
The subsequent proceedings were strenuous, but in the end
successful, and finally Miss Fitzpatrick walked stiffly downstairs,
looking very slender and tall, with the tail of the dark green
habit—she had felt green to be the colour consecrated to sport—
drawn tightly round her, and a silver horse-shoe brooch at her throat.
Charlotte was standing at the open hall door talking to Mr. Lambert.
"Come along, child," she said genially, "you've been so long
adorning yourself that nothing but his natural respect for the
presence of a lady kept this gentleman from indulging in abusive
language."
Charlotte, in her lighter moods, was addicted to a ponderous
persiflage, the aristocratic foster-sister of her broader peasant
jestings in the manner of those whom she was fond of describing as
"the bar purple."
Mr. Lambert did not trouble himself to reply to this sally. He was
looking at the figure in the olive-green habit, that was advancing
along the path of sunlight to the doorway, and thinking that he had
done well to write that letter on the subject of the riding that
Francie might expect to have at Lismoyle. Charlotte turned her head
also to look at the radiant, sunlit figure.
"Why, child, were you calling Norry just now to melt you down and
pour you into that garment? I never saw such a waist! Take care and
don't let her fall off, Roddy, or she'll snap in two!" She laughed
loudly and discordantly, looking to Mr. Lambert's groom for the
appreciation that was lacking in the face of his master; and during
the arduous process of getting Miss Fitzpatrick into her saddle she
remained on the steps, offering facetious suggestions and warnings,
with her short arms akimbo, and a smile that was meant to be jovial
accentuating the hard lines of her face.
At last the green habit was adjusted, the reins placed properly
between Francie's awkward fingers, and Mr. Lambert had mounted his
long-legged young chestnut and was ready to start.
"Don't forget Lucy expects you to tea, Charlotte," he said as he
settled himself in his saddle.
"And don't you forget what I told you," replied Charlotte, sinking
her voice confidentially; "don't mind her if she opens her mouth wide,
it'll take less to shut it than ye'd think."
Lambert nodded and rode after Francie, who, in compliance with the
wishes of the black mare, had hurried on towards the gate. The black
mare was a lady of character, well-mannered but firm, and the mere
sit of the saddle on her back told her that this was a case when it
would be well to take matters into her own control; she accordingly
dragged as much of the reins as she required from Francie's helpless
hands, and by the time she had got on to the high road had given her
rider to understand that her position was that of tenant at will.
They turned their backs on the town, and rode along the dazzling,
dusty road, that radiated all the heat of a blazing afternoon.
"I think he did you pretty well with that habit," remarked Lambert
presently. "What's the damage to be?"
"What do you think?" replied Francie gaily, answering one question
with another after the manner of her country.
"Ten?"
"Ah, go on! Where'd I get ten pounds? He said he'd only charge me
six because you recommended me, but I can tell him he'll have to wait
for his money."
"Why, are you hard up again?"
Francie looked up at him and laughed with unconcern that was not in
the least affected.
"Of course I am! Did you ever know me that I wasn't?"
Lambert was silent for a moment or two, and half unconsciously his
thoughts ran back over the time, six years ago now, when he had first
met Francie. There had always been something exasperating to him in
her brilliant indifference to the serious things of life. Her high
spirits were as impenetrable as a coat of mail; her ignorance of the
world was at once sublime and enraging. She had not seemed in the
least impressed by the fact that he, whom up to this time she had
known as merely a visitor at her uncle's house, a feature of the
Lawn-Tennis tournament week, and a person with whom to promenade
Merrion Square while the band was playing, was, in reality, a country
gentleman, a J. P., and a man of standing, who owned as good horses
as anyone in the country. She even seemed as impervious as ever to the
pathos of his position in having thrown himself and his good looks
away upon a plain woman six or seven years older than himself. All
these things passed quickly through his mind, as if they found an
accustomed groove there, and mingled acidly with the disturbing
sub-consciousness that the mare would inevitably come home with a
sore back if her rider did not sit straighter than she was doing at
present.
"Look here, Francie," he said at last, with something of asperity,
"it's all very fine to humbug now, but if you don't take care you'll
find yourself in the county court some fine day. It's easier to get
there than you'd think," he added gloomily, "and then there'll be the
devil to pay, and nothing to pay him with; and what'll you do then?"
"I'll send for you to come and bail me out!" replied Francie
without hesitation, giving an unconsidered whack behind the saddle as
she spoke. The black mare at once showed her sense of the liberty by
kicking up her heels in a manner that lifted Francie a hand's-breadth
from her seat, and shook her foot out of the stirrup. "Gracious!" she
gasped, when she had sufficiently recovered herself to speak; "what
did he do? Did he buck-jump? Oh, Mr. Lambert—" as the mare,
satisfied with her protest, broke into a sharp trot, "do stop him, I
can't get my foot into the stirrup!"
Lambert, trotting serenely beside her on his tall chestnut, watched
her precarious bumpings for a minute or two with a grin, then he
stretched out a capable hand, and pulled the mare into a walk.
"Now, where would you be without me?" he inquired.
"Sitting on the road," replied Francie. "I never felt such a horrid
rough thing—and look at Mrs. Lambert looking at me over the wall!
Weren't you a cad that you wouldn't stop him before."
In the matter of exercise, Mrs. Lambert was one of those people who
want but little here below, nor want that little long. The tour of the
two acres that formed the demesne of Rosemount was generally her
limit, and any spare energy that remained to her after that
perambulation was spent in taking weeds out of the garden path with a
lady-like cane-handled spud. This implement was now in her gauntletted
hand, and she waved it feebly to the riders as they passed, while
Muffy stood in front of her and barked with asthmatic fury.
"Make Miss Fitzpatrick come in to tea on her way home, Roderick"
she called, looking admiringly at the girl with kind eyes that held no
spark of jealousy of her beauty and youth. Mrs. Lambert was one of
the women who sink prematurely and unresistingly into the sloughs of
middle-age. For her there had been no intermediary period of anxious
tracking of grey hairs, of fevered energy in the playing of
lawn-tennis and rounders; she had seen, with a feeling too sluggish
to be respected as resignation, her complexion ascend the scale of
colour from passable pink to the full sunset flush that now burned in
her cheeks and spanned the sharp ridge of her nose; and she still, as
she had always done, bought her expensive Sunday bonnet as she would
have bought a piece of furniture, because it was handsome, not because
it was becoming. The garden hat which she now wore could not pretend
to either of these qualifications, and, as Francie looked at her, the
contrast between her and her husband was as conspicuous as even he
could have wished.
Francie's first remark, however, after they had passed by, seemed
to show that her point of view was not the same as his.
"Won't she be very lonely there all the afternoon by herself?" she
asked, with a backward glance at the figure in the garden hat.
"Oh, not she!" said Lambert carelessly, "she has the dog, and
she'll potter about there as happy as possible. She's all right." Then
after a pause, in which the drift of Francie's question probably
presented itself to him for the first time, "I wish everyone was as
satisfied with their life as she is"
"How bad you are!" returned Francie, quite unmoved by the gloomily
sentimental roll of Mr. Lambert's eyes. "I never heard a man talk such
nonsense in my life!"
"My dear child," said Lambert, with paternal melancholy, "when
you're my age—"
"Which I sha'n't be for the next fifteen years—" interrupted
Francie.
Mr. Lambert checked himself abruptly, and looked cross.
"Oh, all right! If you're going to sit on me every time I open my
mouth, I'd better shut up."
Francie with some difficulty brought the black mare beside the
chestnut, and put her hand for an instant on Lambert's arm.
"Ah now, don't be angry with me!" she said, with a glance whose
efficacy she had often proved in similar cases, "you know I was only
funning."
"I am not in the least angry with you," replied Lambert coldly,
though his eyes turned in spite of himself to her face.
"Oh, I know very well you're angry with me," rejoined Francie, with
unfeigned enjoyment of the situation; "your mustash always gets as
black as a coal when you're angry."
The adornment referred to twitched, but its owner said nothing.
"There now, you're laughing!" continued Francie, "but it's quite
true; I remember the first time I noticed, that was the time you
brought Mrs. Lambert up to town about her teeth, and you took places
at the Gaiety for the three of us—and oh! do you remember—"
leaning back and laughing whole-heartedly, "she couldn't get her teeth
in in time, and you wanted her to go without any, and she wouldn't,
for fear she might laugh at the pantomime, and I had promised to go to
the Dalkey Band that night with the Whittys, and then when you got up
to our house and found you'd got the three tickets for nothing, you
were so mad that when I came down into the parlour I declare I thought
you'd been dyeing your mustash! Aunt Tish said afterwards it was
because your face got so white, but I knew it was because you were in
such a passion."
"Well, I didn't like chucking away fifteen shillings a bit more
than anyone else would," said Lambert.
"Ah, well, we made it up, d'ye remember," said Francie, regarding
him with a laughing eye, in which there was a suspicion of sentiment;
"and after all you were able to change the tickets to another night,
and it was 'Pinafore,' and you laughed at me so awfully, because I
cried at the part where the two lovers are saying good-bye to each
other, and poor Mrs. Lambert got her teeth in in a hurry to go with
us, and she couldn't utter the whole night for fear they'd fall out."
Perhaps the allusions to his wife's false teeth had a subtly
soothing effect on Mr. Lambert. He never was averse to anything that
showed that other people were as conscious as he was of the disparity
between his own admirable personal equipment and that of Mrs.
Lambert; it was another admission of the great fact that he had thrown
himself away. His eyebrows and moustache became less truculent, he
let himself down with a complacent sarcasm on Francie's method of
holding her whip, and, as they rode on, he permitted to himself the
semi-proprietary enjoyment of an agent in pointing out boundaries,
and landmarks, and improvements.
They had ridden at first under a pale green arch of road-side
trees, with fields on either side full of buttercups and dog-daisies,
a land of pasture and sleek cattle, and neat stone walls. But in the
second or third mile the face of the country changed. The blue lake
that had lain in the distance like a long slab of lapis lazuli, was
within two fields of them now, moving drowsily in and out of the
rocks, and over the coarse gravel of its shore. The trees had
dwindled to ragged hazel and thorn bushes; the fat cows of the
comfortable farms round Lismoyle were replaced by lean, dishevelled
goats, and shelves and flags of gray limestone began to contest the
right of the soil with the thin grass and the wiry brushwood. We have
said gray limestone, but that hard-worked adjective cannot at all
express the cold, pure blueness that these boulders take, under the
sky of summer. Some word must yet be coined in which neither blue nor
lilac shall have the supremacy, and in which the steely purple of a
pigeon's breast shall not be forgotten.
The rock was everywhere. Even the hazels were at last squeezed out
of existence, and inland, over the slowly swelling hills, it lay like
the pavement of some giant city, that had been jarred from its
symmetry by an earthquake. A mile away on the further side of this
iron belt, a clump of trees rose conspicuously by the lake side, round
a two-storied white house, and towards these trees the road wound its
sinuous way. The grass began to show in larger and larger patches
between the rocks, and the indomitable hazels crept again out of the
crannies, and raised their low canopies over the heads of the
browsing sheep and goats. A stream, brown with turf-mould, and fierce
with battles with the boulders, made a boundary between the stony
wilderness and the dark green pastures of Gurthnamuckla. It dashed
under a high-backed little bridge with such excitement that the black
mare, for all her intelligence, curved her neck, and sidled away from
the parapet towards Lambert's horse.
Just beyond the bridge, a repulsive looking old man was sitting on
a heap of stones, turning over the contents of a dirty linen pouch.
Beside him were an empty milk-can, and a black and white dog which
had begun by trying to be a collie, and had relapsed into an
indifferent attempt at a grey-hound. It greeted the riders with the
usual volley of barking, and its owner let fall some of the coppers
that he was counting over, in his haste to strike at it with the long
stick that was lying beside him.
"Have done! Sailor! Blasht yer sowl! Have done!" then, with honeyed
obsequiousness, "yer honour's welcome, Mr. Lambert."
"Is Miss Duffy in the house?" asked Lambert.
"She is, she is, yer honour," he answered, in the nasal mumble
peculiar to his class, getting up and beginning to shuffle after the
horses, "but what young lady is this at all? Isn't she very grand,
God bless her!"
"She's Miss Fitzpatrick, Miss Mullen's cousin, Billy," answered
Lambert graciously; approbation could not come from a source too low
for him to be susceptible to it.
The old man came up beside Francie, and, clutching the skirt of her
habit, blinked at her with sly and swimming eyes.
"Fitzpathrick is it? Begob I knew her grannema well; she was a fine
hearty woman, the Lord have mercy on her! And she never seen me
without she'd give me a shixpence or maybe a shillin'."
Francie was skilled in the repulse of the Dublin beggar, but this
ancestral precedent was something for which she was not prepared. The
clutch tightened on her habit and the disgusting old face almost
touched it, as Billy pressed close to her, mouthing out
incomprehensible blessings and entreaties. She felt afraid of his red
eyes and clawing fingers, and she turned helplessly to Lambert.
"Here, be off now, Billy, you old fool!" he said; "we've had enough
of you. Run and open the gate."
The farm-house, with its clump of trees, was close to them, and its
drooping iron entrance gate shrieked resentfully as the old man
dragged it open.
Miss Julia Duffy, the tenant of Gurthnamuckla, was a woman of few
friends. The cart track that led to her house was covered with grass,
except for two brown ruts and a narrow footpath in the centre, and
the boughs of the sycamores that grew on either side of it drooped
low as if ignoring the possibility of a visitor. The house door
remained shut from year's end to year's end, contrary to the usual
kindly Irish custom; in fact, its rotten timbers were at once
supported and barricaded by a diagonal beam that held them together,
and was itself beginning to rot under its shroud of cobwebs. The
footpath skirted the duckpond in front of the door, and led round the
corner of the house to what had been in the palmy days of
Gurthnamuckla the stableyard, and would through its weedy heaps of
dirt to the kitchen door.
Julia Duffy, looking back through the squalors of some sixty years,
could remember the days when the hall door used to stand open from
morning till night, and her father's guests were many and thirsty,
almost as thirsty as he, though perhaps less persistently so. He had
been a hard-drinking Protestant farmer, who had married his own
dairywoman, a Roman Catholic, dirty, thriftless, and a cousin of Norry
the Boat; and he had so disintegrated himself with whisky that his
body and soul fell asunder at what was considered by his friends to be
the premature age of seventy-two. Julia had always been wont to go to
Lismoyle church with her father, not so much as a matter of religious
as of social conviction. All the best bonnets in the town went to the
parish church, and to a woman of Julia's stamp, whose poor relations
wear hoods and shawls over their heads and go to chapel, there is no
salvation out of a bonnet. After old John Duffy's death, however,
bonnets and the aristocratic way of salvation seemed together to rise
out of his daughter's scope. Chapel she despised with all the fervour
of an Irish Protestant, but if the farm was to be kept and the rent
paid, there was no money to spare for bonnets. Therefore Julia, in
defiance of the entreaties of her mother's priest and her own parson,
would have nothing of either chapel or church, and stayed sombrely at
home. Marriage had never come near her; in her father's time the
necessary dowry had not been forthcoming, and even her ownership of
the farm was not enough to counterbalance her ill-looks and her pagan
habits.
As in a higher grade of society science sometimes steps in when
religion fails, so, in her moral isolation, Julia Duffy turned her
attention to the mysteries of medicine and the culture of herbs. By
the time her mother died she had established a position as doctor and
wise woman, which was immensely abetted by her independence of the
ministrations of any church. She was believed in by the people, but
there was no liking in the belief; when they spoke to her they called
her Miss Duffy, in deference to a now impalpable difference in rank as
well as in recognition of her occult powers, and they kept as clear of
her as they conveniently could. The payment of her professional
services was a matter entirely in the hands of the people themselves,
and ranged, according to the circumstances of the case, from a score
of eggs or a can of buttermilk, to a crib of turf or "the makings" of
a homespun flannel petticoat. Where there was the possibility of a fee
it never failed; where there was not, Julia Duffy gave her "yerreb
tay" (i.e., herb tea) and Holloway's pills without question or
hesitation.
No one except herself knew how vital these offerings were to her.
The farm was still hers, and, perhaps, in all her jealous, unsunned
nature, the only note of passion was her feeling for the twenty acres
that, with the house, remained to her of her father's possessions.
She had owned the farm for twenty years now, and had been the
abhorrence and the despair of each successive Bruff agent. The land
went from bad to worse; ignorance, neglect, and poverty are a
formidable conjunction even without the moral support that the Land
League for a few years had afforded her, and Miss Duffy tranquilly
defied Mr. Lambert, offering him at intervals such rent as she
thought fitting, while she sub-let her mossy, deteriorated fields to
a Lismoyle grazier. Perhaps her nearest approach to pleasure was the
time at the beginning of each year when she received and dealt with
the offers for the grazing; then she tasted the sweets of ownership,
and then she condescended to dole out to Mr. Lambert such payment "on
account" as she deemed advisable, confronting his remonstrances with
her indisputable poverty, and baffling his threats with the recital of
a promise that she should never be disturbed in her father's farm,
made to her, she alleged, by Sir Benjamin Dysart, when she entered
upon her inheritance.
There had been a time when a barefooted serving-girl had suffered
under Miss Duffy's rule; but for the last few years the times had been
bad, the price of grazing had fallen, and the mistress's temper and
the diet having fallen in a corresponding ratio, the bond-woman had
returned to her own people and her father's house, and no successor
had been found to take her place. That is to say, no recognised
successor. But, as fate would have it, on the very day that "Moireen
Rhu" had wrapped her shawl about her head, and stumped, with cursings,
out of the house of bondage, the vague stirrings that regulate the
perambulations of beggars had caused Billy Grainy to resolve upon
Gurthnamuckla as the place where he would, after the manner of his
kind, ask for a wallet full of potatoes and a night's shelter. A week
afterwards he was still there, drawing water, bringing in turf,
feeding the cow, and receiving, in return for these offices, his board
and lodging and the daily dressing of a sore shin which had often
coerced the most uncharitable to hasty and nauseated almsgiving. The
arrangement glided into permanency, and Billy fell into a life of lazy
routine that was preserved from stagnation by a daily expedition to
Lismoyle to sell milk for Miss Duffy, and to do a little begging on
his own account.
Gurthnamuckla had still about it some air of the older days when
Julia Duffy's grandfather was all but a gentleman, and her drunken
father and dairymaid mother were in their cradles. The tall sycamores
that bordered the cart track were witnesses to the time when it had
been an avenue, and the lawn-like field was yellow in spring with the
daffodils of a former civilisation. The tops of the trees were thick
with nests, and the grave cawing of rooks made a background of mellow,
serious respectability that had its effect even upon Francie. She
said something to this intent as she and Lambert jogged along the
grass by the track.
"Nice!" returned her companion with enthusiasm, I should think it
was! I'd make that one of the sweetest little places in the country if
I had it. There's no better grass for young horses anywhere, and
there's first-class stabling. I can tell you you're not the only one
that thinks it's a nice place, he continued, "but this old devil that
has it won't give it up; she'd rather let the house rot to pieces over
her head than go out of it."
They rode past the barricaded hall door, and round the corner of
the house into the yard, and Lambert called for Miss Duffy for some
time in vain. Nothing responded except the turkey cock, who answered
each call with an infuriated gobble, and a donkey, who, in the dark
recesses of a cow-house, lifted up his voice in heartrending
rejoinder. At last a window fell down with a bang in the upper story,
and the mistress of the house put out her head. Francie had only time
to catch a glimpse of a thin, dirty face, a hooked nose, and unkempt
black hair, before the vision was withdrawn, and a slipshod step was
heard coming downstairs.
When Miss Duffy appeared at her kitchen door she had flung a shawl
round her head, possibly to conceal the fact that her crinkled mat of
hair held thick in it, like powder, the turf ashes of many sluttish
days. Her stained and torn black skirt had evidently just been
unpinned from about her waist, and was hitched up at one side, showing
a frayed red Galway petticoat, and that her feet had recently been
thrust into her boots was attested by the fact that their laces
trailed on the ground beside her. In spite of these disadvantages,
however, it was with a manner of the utmost patronage that she greeted
Mr. Lambert.
"I would ask you and the young leedy to dismount," she continued in
the carefully genteel voice that she clung to in the wreck of her
fortunes, "but I am, as you will see," she made a gesture with a
dingy hand, "quite 'in dishabilly' as they say; I've been a little
indisposed, and—"
"Oh, no matter, Miss Duffy," interrupted Lambert, "I only wanted to
say a few words to you on business, and Miss Fitzpatrick will ride
about the place till we're done."
Miss Duffy's small black eyes turned quickly to Francie.
"Oh, indeed, is that Miss Fitzpatrick? My fawther knew her
grandfawther. I am much pleased to make her acquaintance."
She inclined her head as she spoke, and Francie, with much
disposition to laugh, bowed hers in return; each instant Miss Duffy's
resemblance, both in feature and costume, to a beggar woman who
frequented the corner of Sackville Street, was becoming harder to
bear with fortitude, and she was delighted to leave Lambert to his
tête-à-tête and ride out into the lawn, among the sycamores and
hawthorns, where the black mare immediately fell to devouring grass
with a resolve that was quite beyond Francie's power to combat.
She broke a little branch off a low-growing ash tree, to keep away
the flies that were doing their best to spoil the pleasure of a
perfect afternoon, and sat there, fanning herself lazily, while the
mare, with occasional impatient tugs at the reins and stampings at
the flies, cropped her way onwards from one luscious tuft to another.
The Lismoyle grazier's cattle had collected themselves under the trees
at the farther end of the lawn where a swampy pool still remained of
the winter encroachments of the lake. In the sunshine at the other
side of the wall a chain of such pools stretched to the broad blue
water, and grey limestone rocks showed above the tangle of hemlock
and tall spikes of magenta foxgloves. A white sail stood dazzlingly
out in the turquoise blue of a band of calm, and the mountains on the
farther side of the lake were palely clothed in thinnest lavender and
most ethereal green.
It might have been the unexpected likeness that she had found in
Julia Duffy to her old friend the beggar woman that took Francie's
thoughts away from this idyll of perfected summer to the dry, grey
Dublin streets that had been her uttermost horizon a week ago. The
milkman generally called at the Fitzpatricks' house at about this
hour; the clank of his pint measure against the area railings, even
his pleasantries with Maggie the cook, relative to his bestowing an
extra "sup for the cat," were suddenly and sharply present with her.
The younger Fitzpatrick children would be home from school, and would
be raging through the kitchen seeking what they might devour in the
interval before the six o'clock dinner, and she herself would probably
have been engaged in a baking game of tennis in the square outside
her uncle's house. She felt very sorry for Aunt Tish when she thought
of that hungry gang of sons and daughters and of the evil days that
had come upon the excellent and respectable Uncle Robert, and the
still more evil days that would come in another fortnight or so, when
the whole bursting party had squeezed themselves into a little house
at Bray, there to exist for an indefinite period on Irish stew,
strong tea, and a diminished income. There was a kind of understanding
that when they were "settled" she was to go back to them, and blend
once more her five and twenty pounds a year with the Fitzpatrick
funds; but this afternoon, with the rich summer stillness and the
blaze of buttercups all about her, and the unfamiliar feeling of the
mare's restless shoulder under her knee, she was exceedingly glad
that the settling process would take some months at least. She was not
given to introspection, and could not have said anything in the least
interesting about her mental or moral atmosphere: she was too
uneducated and too practical for any self-communings of this kind; but
she was quite certain of two things, that in spite of her affection
for the Fitzpatricks she was very glad she was not going to spend the
summer in Dublin or Bray, and also, that in spite of certain
bewildering aspects of her cousin Charlotte, she was beginning to have
what she defined to herself as "a high old time."
It was somewhere about this period in her meditations that she
became aware of a slight swishing and puffing sound from the direction
of the lake, and a steam-launch came swiftly along close under the
shore. She was a smart-looking boat, spick and span as white paint
and a white funnel with a brass band could make her, and in her were
seated two men, one, radiant in a red and white blazer, was steering,
while the other, in clothes to which even distance failed to lend
enchantment, was menially engaged in breaking coals with a hammer. The
boughs of the trees intervened exasperatingly between Francie and
this glittering vision, and the resolve to see it fully lent her the
power to drag the black mare from her repast, and urge her forward to
an opening where she could see and be seen, two equally important
objects.
She had instantly realised that these were those heroes of romance,
"the Lismoyle officers," the probabilities of her alliance with one of
whom had been the subject of some elegant farewell badinage on the
part of her bosom friend, Miss Fanny Hemphill. Francie's acquaintance
with the British army had hitherto been limited to one occasion when,
at a Sandymount evening band, "one of the officers from Beggars' Bush
Barracks"—so she had confided to Miss Hemphill—had taken off his
hat to her, and been very polite until Aunt Tish had severely told
him that no true gentleman would converse with a lady without she was
presented to him, and had incontinently swept her home. She could see
them quite plainly now, and from the fact that the man who had been
rooting among the coals was now sitting up, evidently at the behest of
the steersman, and looking at her, it was clear that she had attracted
attention too. Even the black mare pricked her ears, and stared at
this new kind of dragon-fly creature that went noisily by, leaving a
feathery smear on the air behind it, and just then Mr. Lambert rode
out of the stableyard, and looked about him for his charge.
"Francie!" he called with perceptible impatience; "what are you at
down there?"
The steam-launch had by this time passed the opening, and Francie
turned and rode towards him. Her hat was a good deal on the back of
her head, and her brilliant hair caught the sunshine; the charm of
her supple figure atoned for the crookedness of her seat, and her eyes
shone with an excitement born of the delightful sight of soldiery.
"Oh, Mr. Lambert, weren't those the officers?" she cried, as he
rode up to her; "which was which? Haven't they a grand little steamer?"
Lambert's temper had apparently not been improved by his
conversation with Julia Duffy; instead of answering Miss Fitzpatrick
he looked at her with a clouded brow, and in his heart he said, "Damn
the officers!"
"I wondered which of them was the captain," continued Francie; "I
suppose it was the little fair one; he was much the best dressed, and
he was making the other one do all the work."
Lambert gave a scornful laugh.
"I'll leave you to find that out for yourself. I'll engage it won't
be long before you know all about them. You've made a good start
already."
"Oh, very well," replied Francie, letting fall both her reins in
order to settle her hat; "some day you'll be asking me something, and
I won't tell you, and then you'll be sorry."
"Some day you'll be breaking your neck, and then you'll be sorry,"
retorted Lambert, taking up the fallen reins.
They rode out to the gate of Gurthnamuckla in silence, and after a
mile of trotting, which was to Francie a period of mingled pain and
anxiety, the horses slackened of their own accord, and began to pick
their way gingerly over the smooth sheets of rock that marked the
entry of the road into the stony tract mentioned in the last chapter.
Francie took the opportunity for a propitiatory question.
"What were you and the old woman talking about all that time? I
thought you were never coming."
"Business," said Lambert shortly; then viciously, "if any
conversation with a woman can ever be called business."
"Oho! then you couldn't get her to do what you wanted!" laughed
Francie; "very good for you too! I think you always get your own way."
"Is that your opinion?" said Lambert, turning his dark eyes upon
her; "I'm sorry I can't agree with you."
The fierce heat had gone out of the afternoon as they passed along
the lonely road, through the country of rocks and hazel bushes; the
sun was sending low flashes into their eyes from the bright mirror of
the lake; the goats that hopped uncomfortably about in the enforced
and detested tête-à-tête caused by a wooden yoke across their necks,
cast blue shadows of many-legged absurdity on the warm slabs of
stone; a carrion crow, swaying on the thin topmost bough of a
thorn-bush, a blot in the mellow afternoon sky, was looking about him
if haply he could see a wandering kid whose eyes would serve him for
his supper; and a couple of miles away, at Rosemount, Mrs. Lambert was
sending down to be kept hot what she and Charlotte had left of the
Sally Lunn.
Francie was not sorry when she found herself again under the trees
of the Lismoyle highroad, and in spite of the injuries which the
pommels of the saddle were inflicting upon her, and the growing
stiffness of all her muscles, she held gallantly on at a sharp trot,
till her hair-pins and her hat were loosed from their foundations, and
her green habit rose in ungainly folds. They were nearing Rosemount
when they heard wheels behind them; Lambert took the left side of the
road, and the black mare followed his example with such suddenness,
that Francie, when she had recovered her equilibrium, could only be
thankful that nothing more than her hat had come off. With the first
instinct of woman she snatched at the coils of hair that fell down
her back and hung enragingly over her eyes, and tried to wind them on
to her head again; she became horribly aware that a waggonette with
several people in it had pulled up beside her, and, finally, that a
young man with a clean-shaved face and an eyeglass was handing her her
hat and taking off his own.
Holding in her teeth the few hair-pins that she had been able to
save from the wreck, she stammered a gratitude that she was far from
feeling; and when she heard Lambert say, "Oh, thank you, Dysart, you
just saved me getting off," she felt that her discomfiture was
complete.
Christopher Dysart was a person about whom Lismoyle and its
neighbourhood had not been able to come to a satisfactory conclusion,
unless indeed, that conclusion can be called satisfactory which
admitted him to be a disappointment. From the time that, as a shy,
plain, little boy he first went to a school, and, after the habit of
boys, ceased to exist except in theory and holidays, a steady
undercurrent of interest had always set about him. His mother was so
charming, and his father so delicate, and he himself so conveniently
contemporary with so many daughters, that although the occasional
glimpses vouchsafed of him during his Winchester and Oxford career
were as discouraging as they were brief, it was confidently expected
that he would emerge from his boyish shyness when he came to take his
proper place in the county and settle down at Bruff. Thus Lady
Eyrefield, and Mrs. Waller, and their like, the careful mothers of
those contemporaneous daughters, and thus also, after their kind, the
lesser ladies of Lismoyle.
But though Christopher was now seven and twenty he seemed as far
from "taking his place in the county" as he had ever been. His
mother's friends had no particular fault to find with him; that was a
prominent feature in their dissatisfaction. He was quite good-looking
enough for an eldest son, and his politeness to their daughters left
them nothing to complain of except the discouraging fact that it was
exceeded by his politeness to themselves. His readiness to talk when
occasion demanded was undisputed, but his real or pretended dulness
in those matters of local interest, which no one except an outsider
calls gossip, made conversation with him a hollow and heartless
affair. One of his most exasperating points was that he could not be
referred to any known type. He was "between the sizes," as shopmen say
of gloves. He was not smart and aggressive enough for the soldiering
type, nor sporting enough for the country gentleman, but neither had
he the docility and attentiveness of the ideal curate; he could not
even be lightly disposed of as an eccentricity, which would have been
some sort of consolation.
"If I ever could have imagined that Isabel Dysart's son would have
turned out like this," said the Dowager Lady Eyrefield in a moment of
bitterness, "I should not have given myself the trouble of writing to
Castlemore about taking him out as his secretary. I thought all those
functions and dinner parties would have done something for him, but
though they polished up his manners, and improved that most painful
and unfortunate stutter, he's at heart just as much a stick as ever."
Lismoyle was, according to its lights, equally nonplussed. Mrs.
Baker had indeed suggested that it was sending him to these grand
English universities, instead of to Trinity College, Dublin, that had
taken the fun out of him in the first going off, and what finished him
was going out to those Barbadoes, with all the blacks bowing down to
him, and his liver growing the size of I don't know what with the
heat. Mrs. Corkran, the widow of the late rector of Lismoyle, had,
however, rejoined that she had always found Mr. Dysart a most
humble-minded young man on the occasions when she had met him at his
cousin Mrs. Gascogne's, and by no means puffed up with his rank or
learning. This proposition Mrs. Baker had not attempted to dispute,
but none the less she had felt it to be beside the point. She had not
found that Christopher's learning had disposed him to come to her
tennis parties, and she did not feel humility to be a virtue that
graced a young man of property. Certainly, in spite of his humility,
she could not venture to take him to task for his neglect of her
entertainments as she could Mr. Hawkins; but then it is still more
certain that Christopher would not, as Mr. Hawkins had often done,
sit down before her, as before a walled town, and so skilfully entreat
her that in five minutes all would have been forgiven and forgotten.
It was perhaps an additional point of aggravation that, dull and
unprofitable though he was considered to be, Christopher had
amusements of his own in which the neighbourhood had no part. Since he
had returned from the West Indies, his three-ton cutter with the big
Una sail had become one of the features of the lake, but though a red
parasol was often picturesquely visible above the gunwale, the
knowledge that it sheltered his sister deprived it of the almost
painful interest that it might otherwise have had, and at the same
time gave point to a snub that was unintentionally effective and
comprehensive. There were many sunny mornings on which Mr. Dysart's
camera occupied commanding positions in the town, or its outskirts,
while its owner photographed groups of old women and donkeys,
regardless of the fact that Miss Kathleen Baker, in her most becoming
hat, had taken her younger sister from the schoolroom to play a showy
game of lawn-tennis in the garden in front of her father's villa, or
was, with Arcadian industry, cutting buds off the roses that dropped
their pink petals over the low wall on to the road. It was quite
inexplicable that the photographer should pack up his camera and walk
home without taking advantage of this artistic opportunity beyond a
civil lift of his cap; and at such times Miss Baker would re-enter
the villa with a feeling of contempt for Mr. Dysart that was almost
too deep for words.
She might have been partially consoled had she known that on a June
morning not long after the latest of these repulses, her feelings were
fully shared by the person whom, for the last two Sundays, she had
looked at in the Dysart pew with a respectful dislike that implied the
highest compliment in her power. Miss Evelyn Hope-Drummond stood at
the bow-window of the Bruff drawing-room and looked out over the
gravelled terrace, across the flower-garden and the sunk fence, to the
clump of horse chestnuts by the lake-side. Beyond these the cattle
were standing knee-deep in the water, and on the flat margin a pair
of legs in white flannel trousers was all that the guest, whom his
mother delighted to honour, could see of Christopher Dysart. The
remainder of im wrestled beneath a black velvet pall with the
helplessly wilful legs of his camera, and all his mind, as Miss
Hope-Drummond well knew, was concentrated upon cows. Her first visit
to Ireland was proving less amusing than she had expected, she
thought, and as she watched Christopher she wished fervently that she
had not offered to carry any of his horrid things across the park for
him. In the flower-garden below the terrace she could see Lady Dysart
and Pamela in deep consultation over an infirm rose-tree; a
wheelbarrow full of pans of seedlings sufficiently indicated what
their occupation would be for the rest of the morning, and she felt it
was of a piece with the absurdities of Irish life that the ladies of
the house should enjoy doing the gardener's work for him. The strong
scent of heated Gloire de Dijon roses came through the window, and
suggested to her how well one of them would suit with her
fawn-coloured Redfern gown, and she leaned out to pick a beautiful
bud that was swaying in the sun just within reach.
"Ha—a—ah! I see ye, missy! Stop picking my flowers! Push, James
Canavan, you devil, you! Push!"