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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!"
A bath-chair, occupied by an old man in a tall hat, and pushed by a
man also in a tall hat, had suddenly turned the corner of the house,
and Miss Hope-Drummond drew back precipitately to avoid the uplifted
walking-stick of Sir Benjamin Dysart.
"Oh, fie, for shame, Sir Benjamin!" exclaimed the man who had been
addressed as James Canavan.
"Pray, cull the rose, miss," he continued, with a flourish of his
hand; "sweets to the sweet!"
Sir Benjamin aimed a backward stroke with his oak stick at his
attendant, a stroke in which long practice had failed to make him
perfect, and in the exchange of further amenities the party passed out
of sight. This was not Miss Hope-Drummond's first meeting with her
host. His bath-chair had daily, as it seemed to her, lain in wait in
the shrubberies, to cause terror to the solitary, and discomfiture to
tête-à-têtes; and on one morning he had stealthily protruded the
crook of his stick from the door of his room as she went by, and all
but hooked her round the ankle with it.
"Really, it is disgraceful that he is not locked up," she said to
herself crossly, as she gathered the contested bud, and sat down to
write letters; "but in Ireland no one seems to think anything of
anything!"
It was very hot down in the garden where Lady Dysart and Pamela
were at work; Lady Dysart kneeling in the inadequate shade of a
parasol, whose handle she had propped among the pans in the
wheelbarrow, and Pamela weeding a flower-bed a few yards away. It was
altogether a scene worthy in its domestic simplicity of the Fairchild
Family only that instead of Mr. Fairchild, "stretched on the grass at
a little distance with his book," a bronze-coloured dachshund lay
roasting his long side in the sun; and also that Lady Dysart, having
mistaken the young chickweed in a seedling pan for the asters that
should have been there, was filling her bed symmetrically with the
former, an imbecility that Mrs. Sherwood would never have permitted in
a parent. The mother and daughter lifted their heads at the sound of
the conflict on the terrace.
"Papa will frighten Evelyn into a fit," observed Pamela, rubbing a
midge off her nose with an earthy gardening glove; "I wish James
Canavan could be induced to keep him away from the house."
"It's all right, dear," said Lady Dysart, panting a little as she
straightened her back and surveyed her rows of chickweed; "Christopher
is with her, and you know he never notices anyone else when
Christopher is there."
Lady Dysart had in her youth married, with a little judicious
coercion, a man thirty years older than herself, and after a long and,
on the whole, extremely unpleasant period of matrimony, she was now
enjoying a species of Indian summer, dating from six years back, when
Christopher's coming of age and the tenants' rejoicings thereat, had
caused such a paroxysm of apoplectic jealousy on the part of
Christopher's father as, combining with the heat of the day, had
brought on "a stroke." Since then the bath-chair and James Canavan had
mercifully intervened between him and the rest of the world, and his
offspring were now able to fly before him with a frankness and
success impossible in the old days.
Pamela did not answer her mother at once.
"Do you know I'm afraid Christopher isn't with her," she said,
looking both guilty and perturbed.
Lady Dysart groaned aloud.
"Why, where is he?" she demanded "I left Evelyn helping him to
paste in photographs after breakfast; I thought that would have been
nice occupation for them for at least two hours; but as for
Christopher—" she continued, her voice deepening to declamation,
"it is quite hopeless to expect anything from him. I should rather
trust Garry to entertain anyone. The day he took her out in the boat
they weren't in till six o'clock!"
"That was because Garry ran the punt on the shallow, and they had
to wade ashore and walk all the way round."
"That has nothing to say to it; at all events they had something to
talk about when they came back, which is more than Christopher has
when he has been out sailing. It is most disheartening; I ask nice
girls to the house, but I might just as well ask nice boys—Oh, of
course, yes—" in answer to a protest from her daughter; "he talks to
them; but you know quite well what I mean."
This complaint was not the first indication of Lady Dysart's
sentiments about this curious son whom she had produced. She was a
clever woman, a renowned solver of the acrostics in her society
paper, and a holder of strong opinions as to the prophetic meaning of
the Pyramids; but Christopher was an acrostic in a strange language,
an enigma beyond her sphere. She had a vague but rooted feeling that
young men were normally in love with somebody, or at least pretending
to be so; it was, of course, an excellent thing that Christopher did
not lose his heart to the wrong people, but she would probably have
preferred the agitation of watching his progress through the most
alarming flirtations to the security that deprived conversation with
other mothers of much of its legitimate charm.
"Well, there was Miss Fetherstone," began Pamela after a moment of
obvious consideration.
"Miss Fetherstone!" echoed Lady Dysart in her richest contralto,
fixing eyes of solemn reproach upon her daughter; "do you suppose that
for one instant I thought there was anything in that? No baby, no
idiot baby, could have believed in it!"
"Well, I don't know," said Pamela; "I think you and Mrs. Waller
believed in it, at least I remember your both settling what your
wedding presents were to be!"
"I never said a word about wedding presents, it was Mrs. Waller! Of
course she was anxious about her own niece, just as anybody would have
been under the circumstances." Lady Dysart here became aware of
something in Pamela's expression that made her add hurriedly, "Not
that I ever had the faintest shadow of belief in it. Too well do I
know Christopher's platonic philanderings; and you see the affair
turned out just as I said it would.
Pamela refrained from pursuing her advantage.
"If you like I'll make him come with Evelyn and me to the choir
practice this afternoon," she said after a pause. "Of course he'll
hate it, poor boy, especially as Miss Mullen wrote to me the other day
and asked us to come to tea after it was over."
"Oh, yes!" said Lady Dysart with sudden interest and forgetfulness
of her recent contention, "and you will see the new importation whom
we met with Mr. Lambert the other day. What a charming young creature
she looked! 'The fair one with the golden locks' was the only
description for her! And yet that miserable Christopher will only say
that she is 'chocolate-boxey!' Oh! I have no patience with
Christopher's affectation!" she ended, rising from her knees and
brushing the earth from her extensive lap with a gesture of annoyance.
She began to realise that the sun was hot and luncheon late, and it
was at this unpropitious moment that Pamela, having finished the
flower-bed she had been weeding, approached the scene of her mother's
labours.
"Mamma," she said faintly, "you have planted the whole bed with
chickweed!"
It had been hard work pulling the punt across from Bruff to
Lismoyle with two well-grown young women sitting in the stern; it had
been a hot walk up from the landing-place to the church, but worse
than these, transcendentally worse, in that it involved the suffering
of the mind as well as the body, was the choir practice.
Christopher's long nose drooped despondingly over his Irish church
hymnal, and his long back had a disconsolate hoop in it as he leaned
it against the wall in his place in the backmost row of the choir
benches. The chants had been long and wearisome, and the hymns were
proving themselves equally enduring. Christopher was not eminently
musical or conspicuously religious, and he regarded with a kind of
dismal respect and surprise the fervour in Pamela's pure profile as
she turned to Mrs. Gascogne and suggested that the hymn they had just
gone through twice should be sung over again. He supposed it was
because she had High Church tendencies that she was able to stand this
sort of thing, and his mind drifted into abstract speculations as to
how people could be as good as Pamela was and live.
In the interval before the last hymn he derived a temporary solace
from finding his own name inscribed in dull red characters in the leaf
of his hymn-book, with, underneath in the same colour, the fateful
inscription, "Written in blood by Garrett Dysart." The thought of his
younger brother utilising pleasantly a cut finger and the long minutes
of the archdeacon's sermon, had for the moment inspired Christopher
with a sympathetic amusement, but he had relapsed into his pristine
gloom. He knew the hymn perfectly well by this time, and his
inoffensive tenor joined mechanically with the other voices, while
his eyes roamed idly over the two rows of people in front of him.
There was nothing suggestive of ethereal devotion about Pamela's
neighbours. Miss Mullen's heaving shoulders and extended jaw spoke of
nothing but her determination to out-scream everyone else; Miss
Hope-Drummond and the curate, on the bench in front of him, were
singing primly out of the same hymn-book, the curate obviously
frightened, Miss Hope-Drummond as obviously disgusted. The Misses
Beattie were furtively eyeing Miss Hope-Drummond's costume; Miss
Kathleen Baker was openly eyeing the curate, whose hymn-book she had
been wont to share at happier choir practices, and Miss Fitzpatrick,
seated at the end of the row, was watching from the gallery window
with unaffected interest the progress of the usual weekly hostilities
between Pamela's dachshund and the sexton's cat, and was not even
pretending to occupy herself with the business in hand. Christopher's
eyes rested on her appraisingly, with the minute observation of short
sight, fortified by an eyeglass, and was aware of a small head with a
fluffy halo of conventionally golden hair, a straight and slender
neck, and an apple-blossom curve of cheek; he found himself wishing
that she would turn a little further round.
The hymn had seven verses, and Pamela and Mrs. Gascogne were going
inexorably through them all; the schoolmaster and schoolmistress, an
estimable couple, sole prop of the choir on wet Sundays, were braying
brazenly beside him, and this was only the second hymn. Christopher's
D sharp melted into a yawn, and before he could screen it with his
hymn-book, Miss Fitzpatrick looked round and caught him in the act. A
suppressed giggle and a quick lift of the eyebrows instantly conveyed
to him that his sentiments were comprehended and sympathised with,
and he as instantly was conscious that Miss Mullen was following the
direction of her niece's eye. Lady Dysart's children did not share her
taste for Miss Mullen; Christopher vaguely felt some offensive
flavour in the sharp smiling glance in which she included him and
Francie, and an unexplainable sequence of thought made him suddenly
decide that her niece was as second rate as might have been expected.
Never had the choir dragged so hopelessly; never had Mrs. Gascogne
and Pamela compelled their victims to deal with so many and difficult
tunes, and never at any previous choir practice had Christopher
registered so serious a vow that under no pretext whatever should
Pamela entice him there again. They were all sitting down now, while
the leaders consulted together about the Kyrie, and the gallery
cushions slowly turned to stone in their well-remembered manner.
Christopher's ideas of church-going were inseparably bound up with
those old gallery cushions. He had sat upon them ever since, as a
small boy, he had chirped a treble beside his governess, and he knew
every knob in their anatomy. There is something blighting to the
devotional tendencies in the atmosphere of a gallery. He had often
formulated this theory for his own exculpation, lying flat on his
back in a punt in some shady backwater, with the Oxford church bells
reminding him reproachfully of Lismoyle Sundays, and of Pamela, the
faithful, conscientious Pamela, whipping up the pony to get to church
before the bell stopped. Now, after a couple of months' renewed
acquaintance with the choir, the theory had hardened into a tedious
truism, and when at last Christopher's long legs were free to carry
him down the steep stairs, the malign influence of the gallery had
brought their owner to the verge of free thought.
He did not know how it had happened or by whose disposition of the
forces it had been brought about, but when Miss Mullen's tea-party
detached itself from the other members of the choir at the churchyard
gate, Pamela and Miss Hope-Drummond were walking on either side of
their hostess, and he was behind with Miss Fitzpatrick.
"You don't appear very fond of hymns, Mr. Dysart," began Francie at
once, in the pert Dublin accent that, rightly or wrongly, gives the
idea of familiarity.
"People aren't supposed to look about them in church," replied
Christopher with the peculiar suavity which, combined with his
disconcerting infirmity of pausing before he spoke, had often baffled
the young ladies of Barbadoes, and had acquired for him the
reputation, perhaps not wholly undeserved, of being a prig.
"Oh, I daresay!" said Francie; "I suppose that's why you sit in the
back seat, that no one'll see you doing it!"
There was a directness about this that Lismoyle would not have
ventured on, and Christopher looked down at his companion with an
increase of interest.
"No; I sit there because I can go to sleep."
"Well, and do you? and who do you get to wake you?"—her quick
voice treading sharply on the heels of his quiet one—"I used always
to have to sit beside Uncle Robert in church to pinch him at the end
of the sermon."
"I find it very hard to wake at the end of the sermon too,"
remarked Christopher, with an experimental curiosity to see what Miss
Mullen's unexpected cousin would say next.
"Do y' indeed?" said Francie, flashing a look at him of instant
comprehension and complete sang froid. "I'll lend the schoolmistress a
hat-pin if you like! What on earth makes men so sleepy in church I
don't know," she continued; "at our church in Dublin I used to be
looking at them. All the gentlemen sit in the corner seat next the
aisle, because they're the most comfortable, y' know, and from the
minute the clergyman gives out the text—" she made a little gesture
with her hand, showing thereby that half the buttons were off her
glove— "they're snoring!"
How young she was, and how pretty, and how inexpressibly vulgar.
Christopher thought all these things in turn, while he did what in him
lay to continue the conversation in the manner expected of him. The
effort was perhaps not very successful, as, after a few minutes, it
was evident that Francie was losing her first freedom of discourse,
and was casting about for topics more appropriate to what she had
heard of Mr. Dysart's mental and literary standard.
"I hear you're a great photographer, Mr. Dysart," she began. "Miss
Mullen says you promised to take a picture of her and her cats, and
she was telling me to remind you of it. Isn't it awfully clever of you
to be able to do it?"
To this form of question reply is difficult, especially when it is
put with all the good faith of complete ignorance. Christopher evaded
the imbecilities of direct response.
"I shall think myself awfully clever if I photograph the cats," he
said.
"Clever!" she caught him up with a little shriek of laughter. "I
can tell you you'll want to be clever! Are you able to photograph up
the chimney or under Norry's bed? for that's where they always run
when a man comes into the house, and if you try to stop them they'd
claw the face off you! Oh, they're terrors!"
"It's very good of you to tell me all this in time," Christopher
said, with a rather absent laugh. He was listening to Miss Mullen's
voice, and realising, for the first time, what it would be to live
under the same roof with her and her cats; and yet this girl seemed
quite light-hearted and happy. "Perhaps, on the whole, I'd better stay
away?" he said, looking at her, and feeling in the sudden causeless
way in which often the soundest conclusions are arrived at, how vast
was the chasm between her ideal of life and his own, and linking with
the feeling a pity that would have been self-sufficient if it had not
also been perfectly simple.
"Ah! don't say you won't come and take the cats!" Francie exclaimed.
They reached the Tally Ho gate as she spoke, and the others were
only a step or two in front of them. Charlotte looked over her
shoulder with a benign smile.
"What's this I hear about taking my cats?" she said jovially.
"You're welcome to everything in my house, Mr. Dysart, but I'll set
the police on you if you take my poor cats!"
"Oh, but I assure you—"
"He's only going to photo them," said Christopher and Francie
together.
"Do you hear them, Miss Dysart?" continued Charlotte, fumbling for
her latch key, "conspiring together to rob a poor lone woman of her
only live stock!"
She opened the door, and as her visitors entered the hall they
caught a glance of Susan's large, stern countenance regarding them
with concentrated suspicion through the rails of the staircase.
"My beauty-boy!" shouted his mistress, as he vanished upstairs.
"Steal him if you can, Mr. Dysart."
Miss Hope-Drummond looked rather more uninterested than is usual in
polite society. When she had left the hammock, slung in the shade
beside the tennis-ground at Bruff, it had not been to share Mr.
Corkran's hymn-book; still less had it been to walk from the church
to Tally Ho between Pamela and a woman whom, from having regarded as
merely outrée and incomprehensible, she had now come to look upon as
rather impertinent. Irish society was intolerably mixed, she decided,
as she sniffed the various odours of the Tally Ho hall, and, with some
sub-connection of ideas, made up her mind that photography was a
detestable and silly pursuit for men. While these thoughts were
passing beneath her accurately curled fringe, Miss Mullen opened the
drawing-room door, and, as they walked in, a short young man in light
grey clothes arose from the most comfortable chair to greet them.
There was surprise and disfavour in Miss Mullen's eye as she
extended her hand to him.
"This is an unexpected pleasure, Mr. Hawkins," she said.
"Yes," answered Mr. Hawkins cheerfully, taking the hand and doing
his best to shake it at the height prescribed by existing fashion, "I
thought it would be; Miss. Fitzpatrick asked me to come in this
afternoon; didn't you?" addressing himself to Francie. "I got rather
a nasty jar when I heard you were all out, but I thought I'd wait for
a bit. I knew Miss Dysart always gives 'em fits at the choir practice.
All the same, you know, I should have begun to eat the cake if you
hadn't come in."
The round table in the middle of the room was spread, in Louisa's
accustomed fashion, as if for breakfast, and in the centre was placed
a cake, coldly decked in the silver paper trappings that it had long
worn in the grocer's window.
"'Twas well for you you didn't!" said Francie, with, as it seemed
to Christopher, a most familiar and challenging laugh.
"Why?" inquired Hawkins, looking at her with a responsive eye.
"What would you have done?"
"Plenty," returned Francie unhesitatingly; "enough to make you
sorry anyway!"
Mr. Hawkins looked delighted, and was opening his mouth for a
suitable rejoinder, when Miss Mullen struck in sharply:
"Francie, go tell Louisa that I suppose she expects us to stir our
tea with our fingers, for there's not a spoon on the table."
"Oh, let me go," said Hawkins, springing to open the door; "I know
Louisa; she was very kind to me just now. She hunted all the cats out
of the room." Francie was already in the hall, and he followed her.
The search for Louisa was lengthy, involving much calling for her
by Francie, with falsetto imitations by Mr. Hawkins, and finally a
pause, during which it might be presumed that the pantry was being
explored. Pamela brought her chair nearer to Miss Mullen, who had
begun wrathfully to stir her tea with the sugar-tongs, and entered
upon a soothing line of questions as to the health and numbers of the
cats; and Christopher, having cut the grocer's cake, and found that it
was the usual conglomerate of tallow, saw-dust, bad eggs, and gravel,
devoted himself to thick bread and butter, and to conversation with
Miss Hope-Drummond. The period of second cups was approaching, when
laughter, and a jingle of falling silver in the hall told that the
search for Louisa was concluded, and Francie and Mr. Hawkins
re-entered the drawing-room, the latter endeavouring, not
unsuccessfully, to play the bones with four of Charlotte's best
electro-plated teaspoons, while his brown boots moved in the furtive
rhythm of an imaginary breakdown. Miss Mullen did not even raise her
eyes, and Christopher and Miss Hope-Drummond continued their
conversation unmoved; only Pamela acknowledged the histrionic
intention with a sympathetic but nervous smile. Pamela's finger was
always instinctively on the pulse of the person to whom she was
talking, and she knew better than either Francie or Hawkins that they
were in disgrace.
"I'd be obliged to you for those teaspoons, Mr. Hawkins, when
you've quite done with them," said Charlotte, with an ugly look at the
chief offender's self-satisfied countenance; "it's a good thing no
one except myself takes sugar in their tea."
"We couldn't help it," replied Mr. Hawkins unabashed; "Louisa was
out for a walk with her young man, and Miss Fitzpatrick and I had to
polish up the teaspoons ourselves."
Charlotte received this explanation and the teaspoons in silence as
she poured out the delinquents' tea; there were moments when she
permitted herself the satisfaction of showing disapproval if she felt
it. Francie accepted her cousin's displeasure philosophically, only
betraying her sense of the situation by the expressive eye which she
turned towards her companion in disgrace over the rim of her tea-cup.
But Mr. Hawkins rose to the occasion. He gulped his tepid and bitter
cup of tea with every appearance of enjoyment, and having arranged his
small moustache with a silk handkerchief, addressed himself
undauntedly to Miss Mullen.
"Do you know I don't believe you have ever been out in our
tea-kettle, Miss Mullen. Captain Cursiter and I are feeling very hurt
about it."
"If you mean by 'tea-kettle' that steamboat thing that I've seen
going about the lake," replied Charlotte, making an effort to resume
her first attitude of suave and unruffled hospitality, and at the
same time to administer needed correction to Mr. Hawkins, "I certainly
have not. I have always been taught that it was manners to wait till
you're asked."
"I quite agree with you, Miss Mullen," struck in Pamela; "we also
thought that for a long time, but we had to give it up in the end and
ask ourselves! You are much more honoured than we were."
"Oh, I say, Miss Dysart, you know it was only our grovelling
humility," expostulated Hawkins, "and you always said it dirtied your
frock and spoiled the poetry of the lake. You quite put us off taking
anybody out. But we've pulled ourselves together now, Miss Mullen,
and if you and Miss Fitzpatrick will fix an afternoon to go down the
lake, perhaps if Miss Dysart says she's sorry we'll let her come too,
and even, if she's very good, bring whoever she likes with her."
Mr. Hawkins' manner towards ladies had precisely that tone of
self-complacent gallantry that Lady Dysart felt to be so signally
lacking in her own son, and it was not without its effect even upon
Charlotte. It is possible had she been aware that this special
compliment to her had been arranged during the polishing of the
teaspoons, it might have lost some of its value; but the thought of
steaming forth with the Bruff party and "th' officers," under the very
noses of the Lismoyle matrons, was the only point of view that
presented itself to her.
"Well, I'll give you no answer till I get Mr. Dysart's opinion.
He's the only one of you that knows the lake," she said more
graciously. "If you say the steamboat is safe, Mr. Dysart, and you'll
come and see we're not drowned by these harum-scarum soldiers, I've no
objection to going."
Further discussion was interrupted by a rush and a scurry on the
gravel of the garden path, and a flying ball of fur dashed up the
outside of the window, the upper half of which was open, and suddenly
realising its safety, poised itself on the sash, and crooned and spat
with a collected fury at Mr. Hawkins' bull terrier, who leaped
unavailingly below.
"Oh! me poor darling Bruffy!" screamed Miss Mullen, springing up
and upsetting her cup of tea; "she'll be killed! Call off your dog,
Mr. Hawkins!"
As if in answer to her call, a tall figure darkened the window, and
Mr. Lambert pushed Mrs. Bruff into the room with the handle of his
walking-stick.
"Hullo, Charlotte! Isn't that Hawkins' dog?" he began, putting his
head in at the window, then, with a sudden change of manner as he
caught sight of Miss Mullen's guests, "oh—I had no idea you had
anyone here," he said, taking off his hat to as much of Pamela and
Miss Hope-Drummond as was not hidden by Charlotte's bulky person, "I
only thought I'd call round and see if Francie would like to come out
for a row before dinner."
Washerwomen do not, as a rule, assimilate the principles of their
trade. In Lismoyle, the row of cottages most affected by ladies of
that profession was, indeed, planted by the side of the lake, but
except in winter, when the floods sent a muddy wash in at the kitchen
doors of Ferry Row, the customers' linen alone had any experience of
its waters. The clouds of steam from the cauldrons of boiling clothes
ascended from morning till night, and hung in beads upon the sooty
cobwebs that draped the rafters; the food and wearing apparel of the
laundresses and their vast families mingled horribly with their
professional apparatus, and, outside in the road, the filthy children
played among puddles that stagnated under an iridescent scum of
soap-suds. A narrow strip of goose-nibbled grass divided the road
from the lake shore, and at almost any hour of the day there might be
seen a slatternly woman or two kneeling by the water's edge, pounding
the wet linen on a rock with a flat wooden weapon, according to the
immemorial custom of their savage class.
The Row ended at the ferry pier, and perhaps one reason for the
absence of self-respect in the appearance of its inhabitants lay in
the fact that the only passers-by were the country people on their
way to the ferry, which here, where the lake narrowed to something
less than a mile, was the route to the Lismoyle market generally used
by the dwellers on the opposite side. The coming of a donkey-cart
down the Row was an event to be celebrated with hooting and
stone-throwing by the children, and, therefore, it can be understood
that when, on a certain still, sleepy afternoon Miss Mullen drove
slowly in her phaeton along the line of houses, she created nearly as
great a sensation as she would have made in Piccadilly.
Miss Mullen had one or two sources of income which few people knew
of, and about which, with all her loud candour, she did not enlighten
even her most intimate friends. Even Mr. Lambert might have been
surprised to know that two or three householders in Ferry Row paid
rent to her, and that others of them had money dealings with her of a
complicated kind, not easy to describe, but simple enough to the
strong financial intellect of his predecessor's daughter. No account
books were taken with her on these occasions. She and her clients
were equally equipped with the absolutely accurate business memory of
the Irish peasant, a memory that in few cases survives education, but,
where it exists, may be relied upon more than all the generations of
ledgers and account books.
Charlotte's visits to Ferry Row were usually made on foot, and were
of long duration, but her business on this afternoon was of a trivial
character, consisting merely in leaving a parcel at the house of Dinny
Crimeen, the tailor, and of convincing her washerwoman of iniquity in
a manner that brought every other washerwoman to her door, and made
each offer up thanks to her most favoured saint that she was not
employed by Miss Mullen.
The long phaeton was at last turned, with draggings at the horse's
mouth and grindings of the fore-carriage; the children took their last
stare, and one or two ladies whose payments were in arrear emerged
from their back gardens and returned to their washing-tubs. If they
flattered themselves that they had been forgotten, they were mistaken;
Charlotte had given a glance of grim amusement at the deserted
washing-tubs, and as her old phaeton rumbled slowly out of Ferry Row,
she was computing the number of customers, and the consequent
approximate income of each defaulter.
To the deep and plainly expressed chagrin of the black horse, he
was not allowed to turn in at the gate of Tally Ho, but was urged
along the road which led to Rosemount. There again he made a protest,
but, yielding to the weighty arguments of Charlotte's whip, he fell
into his usual melancholy jog, and took the turn to Gurthnamuckla with
dull resignation. Once steered into that lonely road, Charlotte let
him go at his own pace, and sat passive, her mouth tightly closed,
and her eyes blinking quickly as she looked straight ahead of her with
a slight furrow of concentration on her low forehead. She had the
unusual gift of thinking out in advance her line of conversation in
an interview, and, which is even less usual, she had the power of
keeping to it. By sheer strength of will she could force her plan of
action upon other people, as a conjuror forces a card, till they came
to believe it was of their own choosing; she had done it so often that
she was now confident of her skill, and she quite understood the
inevitable advantage that a fixed scheme of any sort has over
indefinite opposition. When the clump of trees round Gurthnamuckla
rose into view, Charlotte had determined her order of battle, and was
free to give her attention to outward circumstances. It was a long
time since she had been out to Miss Duffy's farm, and as the stony
country began to open its arms to the rich, sweet pastures, an often
repressed desire asserted itself, and Charlotte heaved a sigh that
was as romantic in its way as if she had been sweet and twenty,
instead of tough and forty.
Julia Duffy did not come out to meet her visitor, and when
Charlotte walked into the kitchen, she found that the mistress of the
house was absent, and that three old women were squatted on the floor
in front of the fire, smoking short clay pipes, and holding converse
in Irish that was punctuated with loud sniffs and coughs. At sight of
the visitor the pipes vanished in the twinkling of an eye, and one of
the women scrambled to her feet.
"Why, Mary Holloran, what brings you here?" said Charlotte,
recognising the woman who lived in the Rosemount gate lodge.
"It was a sore leg I have, yer honour, miss," whined Mary Holloran;
"it's running with me now these three weeks, and I come to thry would
Miss Duffy give me a bit o' a plashther."
"Take care it wouldn't run away with you altogether," replied
Charlotte facetiously; "and where's Miss Duffy herself?"
"She's sick, the craythure," said one of the other women, who,
having found and dusted a chair, now offered it to Miss Mullen; "she
have a wakeness like in her head, and an impression on her heart, and
Billy Grainy came afther Peggy Roche here, the way she'd mind her."
Peggy Roche groaned slightly, and stirred a pot of smutty gruel
with an air of authority.
"Could I see her d'ye think?" asked Charlotte, sitting down and
looking about her with sharp appreciation of the substantial
excellence of the smoke-blackened walls and grimy woodwork. "There
wouldn't be a better kitchen in the country," she thought, "if it was
properly done up."
"Ye can, asthore, ye can go up," replied Peggy Roche, "but wait a
while till I have the sup o' grool hated, and maybe yerself 'll take
it up to herself."
"Is she eating nothing but that?" asked Charlotte, viewing the
pasty compound with disgust.
"Faith, 'tis hardly she'll ate that itself." Peggy Roche rose as
she spoke, and, going to the dresser, returned with a black bottle.
"As for a bit o' bread, or a pratie, or the like o' that, she couldn't
use it, nor let it past her shest; with respects to ye, as soon as
she'd have it shwallied it'd come up as simple and pleashant as it
wint down." She lifted the little three-legged pot off its heap of hot
embers, and then took the cork out of the black bottle with nimble,
dirty fingers.
"What in the name of goodness is that ye have there?" demanded
Charlotte hastily.
Mrs. Roche looked somewhat confused and murmured something about "a
weeshy suppeen o' shperits to wet the grool."
Charlotte snatched the bottle from her, and smelled it.
"Faugh!" she said, with a guttural at the end of the word that no
Saxon gullet could hope to produce; "it's potheen! that's what it is,
and mighty bad potheen too. D'ye want to poison the woman?"
A loud chorus of repudiation arose from the sick-nurse and her
friends.
"As for you, Peggy Roche, you're not fit to tend a pig, let alone a
Christian. You'd murder this poor woman with your filthy fresh
potheen, and when your own son was dying, you begrudged him the drop
of spirits that'd have kept the life in him."
Peggy flung up her hands with a protesting howl.
"May God forgive ye that word, Miss Charlotte! If 'twas the blood
of me arrm, I didn't begridge it to him; the Lord have mercy on him—"
"Amen! amen! You would not, asthore," groaned the other women.
"—but does'nt the world know it's mortial sin for a poor
craythure to go into th' other world with the smell of dhrink on his
breath!"
"It's mortal sin to be a fool," replied Miss Mullen whose medical
skill had often been baffled by such winds of doctrine; "here, give me
the gruel. I'll go give it to the woman before you have her murdered."
She deftly emptied the pot of gruel into a bowl, and, taking the
spoon out of the old woman's hand, she started on her errand of mercy.
The stairs were just outside the door, and making their dark and
perilous ascent in safety, she stood still in a low passage into which
two or three other doors opened. She knocked at the first of these,
and, receiving no answer, turned the handle quietly and looked in.
There was no furniture in it except a broken wooden bedstead;
innumerable flies buzzed on the closed window, and in the slant of
sunlight that fell through the dim panes was a box from which a
turkey reared its red throat, and regarded her with a suspicion born,
like her chickens, of long hatching. Charlotte closed the door and
noiselessly opened the next. There was nothing in the room, which was
of the ordinary low-ceiled cottage type, and after a calculating look
at the broken flooring and the tattered wall-paper, she went quietly
out into the passage again. "Good servants' room," she said to
herself, "but if she's here much longer it'll be past praying for."
If she had been in any doubt as to Miss Duffy's whereabouts, a
voice from the room at the end of the little passage now settled the
matter. "Is that Peggy?" it called.
Charlotte pushed boldly into the room with the bowl of gruel.
"No, Miss Duffy, me poor old friend, it's me, Charlotte Mullen,"
she said in her most cordial voice; "they told me below you were ill,
but I thought you'd see me, and I brought your gruel up in my hand. I
hope you'll like it none the less for that!"
The invalid turned her night-capped head round from the wall and
looked at her visitor with astonished, bloodshot eyes. Her hatchety
face was very yellow, her long nose was rather red, and her black hair
thrust itself out round the soiled frill of her night-cap in dingy
wisps.
"You're welcome, Miss Mullen," she said with a pitiable attempt at
dignity; "won't you take a cheer?"
"Not till I've seen you take this," replied Charlotte, handing her
the bowl of gruel with even broader bonhommie than before.
Julia Duffy reluctantly sat up among her blankets, conscious almost
to agony of the squalor of all her surroundings, conscious even that
the blankets were of the homespun, madder-dyed flannel such as the
poor people use, and taking the gruel, she began to eat it in
silence. She tried to prop herself in this emergency with the
recollection that Charlotte Mullen's grandfather drank her
grandfather's port wine under this very roof, and that it was by no
fault of hers that she had sunk while Charlotte had risen, but the
worn-out boots that lay on the floor where she had thrown them off,
and the rags stuffed into the broken panes in the window, were facts
that crowded out all consolation from bygone glories.
"Well, Miss Duffy," said Charlotte, drawing up a chair to the
bedside, and looking at her hostess with a critical eye, "I'm sorry to
see you so sick; when Billy Grainey left the milk last night he told
Norry you were laid up in bed, and I thought I'd come over and see if
there was anything I could do for you."
"Thank ye, Miss Mullen," replied Julia stiffly, sipping the
nauseous gruel with ladylike decorum, "I have all I require here."
"Well, ye know, Miss Duffy, I wanted to see how you are," said
Charlotte, slightly varying her attack; "I'm a bit of a doctor, like
yourself. Peggy Roche below told me you had what she called 'an
impression on the heart,' but it looks to me more like a touch of
liver."
The invalid does not exist who can resist a discussion of symptoms,
and Miss Duffy's hauteur slowly thawed before Charlotte's intelligent
and intimate questions. In a very short time Miss Mullen had felt her
pulse, inspected her tongue, promised to send her a bottle of
unfailing efficacy, and delivered an exordium on the nature and
treatment of her complaint.
"But in deed and in truth," she wound up, "if you want my opinion,
I'll tell you frankly that what ails you is you're just rotting away
with the damp and loneliness of this place. I declare that sometimes
when I'm lying awake in my bed at nights, I've thought of you out here
by yourself, without an earthly creature near you if you got sick,
and wondered at you. Why, my heavenly powers! ye might die a hundred
deaths before anyone would know it!"
Miss Duffy picked up a corner of the sheet and wiped the gruel from
her thin lips.
"If it comes to that, Miss Mullen," she said with some resumption
of her earlier manner, "if I'm for dying I'd as soon die by myself as
in company; and as for damp, I thank God this house was built by them
that didn't spare money on it, and it's as dry this minyute as what it
was forty years ago."
"What! Do you tell me the roof's sound?" exclaimed Charlotte with
genuine interest.
"I have never examined it, Miss Mullen," replied Julia coldly, "but
it keeps the rain out, and I consider that suffeecient."
"Oh, I'm sure there's not a word to be said against the house,"
Charlotte made hasty reparation; "but, indeed, Miss Duffy, I say—and
I've heard more than myself say the same thing—that a delicate
woman like you has no business to live alone so far from help. The
poor Archdeacon frets about it, I can tell ye. I believe he thinks
Father Heffernan'll be raking ye into his fold! And I can tell ye,"
concluded Charlotte, with what she felt to be a certain rough pathos,
"there's plenty in Lismoyle would be sorry to see your father's
daughter die with the wafer in her mouth!"
"I had no idea the people in Lismoyle were so anxious about me and
my affairs," said Miss Duffy. "They're very kind, but I'm able to look
afther my soul without their help."
"Well, of course, everyone's soul is their own affair; but, ye
know, when no one ever sees ye in your own parish church—well, right
or wrong, there are plenty of fools to gab about it."
The dark bags of skin under Julia Duffy's eyes became slowly red, a
signal that this thrust had home. She did not answer, and her visitor
rose, and moving towards the hermetically sealed window, looked out
across the lawn over Julia's domain. Her roundest and weightiest stone
was still in her sling, while her eye ran over the grazing cattle in
the fields.
"Is it true what I hear, that Peter Joyce has your grazing this
year?" she said casually.
"It is quite true," answered Miss Duffy, a little defiantly. A
liver attack does not pre-dispose its victims to answer in a Christian
spirit questions that are felt to be impertinent.
"Well," returned Charlotte, still looking out of the window, with
her hands deep in the pockets of her black alpaca coat, "I'm sorry for
it."
"Why so?"
Julia's voice had a sharpness that was pleasant to Miss Mullen's
car.
"I can't well explain the matter to ye now," Charlotte said,
turning round and looking portentously upon the sick woman, "but I
have it from a sure hand that Peter Joyce is bankrupt, and will be in
the courts before the year is out."
When, a short time afterwards, Julia Duffy lay back among her
madder blankets and heard the last sound of Miss Mullen's phaeton
wheels die away along the lake road, she felt that the visit had at
least provided her with subject for meditation.
Mr. Roderick Lambert's study window gave upon the flower garden,
and consequently the high road also came within the sphere of his
observations. He had been sitting at his writing-table, since
luncheon-time, dealing with a variety of business, and seldom lifting
his glossy black head except when some sound in the road attracted his
attention. It was not his custom to work after a solid luncheon on a
close afternoon, nor was it by any means becoming to his complexion
when he did so; but the second post had brought letters of an
unpleasant character that required immediate attention, and the flush
on his face was not wholly due to hot beef-steak pie and sherry. It
was not only that several of Sir Benjamin's tenants had attended a
Land League meeting the Sunday before, and that their religious
director had written to inform him that they had there pledged
themselves to the Plan of Campaign. That was annoying, but as the May
rents were in he had no objection to their amusing themselves as they
pleased during the summer; in fact, from a point of view on which Mr.
Lambert dwelt as little as possible even in his own mind, a certain
amount of nominal disturbance among the tenants might not come amiss.
The thing that was really vexing was the crass obstinacy of his
wife's trustees, who had acquainted him with the fact that they were
unable to comply with her wish that some of her capital should be
sold out.
It is probably hardly necessary to say that the worthy turkey hen
had expressed no such desire. A feeble, "to be sure, Roderick dear; I
daresay it'd be the best thing to do; but you know I don't understand
such things," had been her share of the transaction, and Mr. Lambert
knew that the refusal of her trustees to make the desired concession
would not ruffle so much as a feather, but he wished he could be as
sure of the equanimity of his coachbuilder, one of whose numerous
demands for payment was lying upon the table in front of him; while
others, dating back five years to the period of his marriage, lurked
in the pigeon-holes of his writing-table.
Mr. Lambert, like other young gentlemen of fashion, but not of
fortune, had thought that when he married a well-to-do widow, he ought
to prove his power of adjusting himself to circumstances by expending
her ready money in as distinguished a manner as possible. The end of
the ready money had come in an absurdly short time, and, paradoxical
as it may seem, it had during its brief life raised a flourishing
following of bills which had in the past spring given Mr. Lambert far
more trouble than he felt them to be worth, and though he had stopped
the mouths of some of the more rapacious of his creditors, he had done
so with extreme difficulty and at a cost that made him tremble. It
was especially provoking that the coachbuilder should have threatened
legal proceedings about that bill just now, when, in addition to
other complications, he happened to have lost more money at the
Galway races than he cared to think about, certainly more than he
wished his wife and her relations to know of.
Early in the afternoon he had, with an unregarding eye, seen
Charlotte drive by on her way to Gurthnamuckla; but after a couple of
hours of gloomy calculation and letter-writing, the realisation that
Miss Mullen was not at her house awoke in him, coupled with the idea
that a little fresh air would do him good. He went out of the house,
some unconfessed purpose quickening his step. He hesitated at the gate
while it expanded into determination, and then he hailed his wife,
whose poppy-decked garden-hat was painfully visible above the magenta
blossoms of a rhododendron bush.
"Lucy! I wouldn't be surprised if I fetched Francie Fitzpatrick
over for tea. She's by herself at Tally Ho! I saw Charlotte drive by
without her a little while ago."
When he reached Tally Ho he found the gate open, an offence always
visited with extremest penalties by Miss Mullen, and as he walked up
the drive he noticed that, besides the broad wheel-tracks of the
phaeton there were several thin and devious ones, at some places
interrupted by footmarks and a general appearance of a scuffle; at
another heading into a lilac bush with apparent precipitancy, and at
the hall-door circling endlessly and crookedly with several excursions
on to the newly-mown plot of grass.
"I wonder what perambulator has been running amuck in here.
Charlotte will make it hot for them, whoever they were," thought
Lambert, as he stood waiting for the door to be opened, and watched
through the glass of the porch-door two sleek tortoise-shell cats
lapping a saucer of yellow cream in a corner of the hall. "By Jove!
how snug she is in this little place. She must have a pot of money
put by; more than she'd ever own up to, I'll engage!"
At this juncture the door opened, and he was confronted by Norry
the Boat, with sleeves rolled above her brown elbows and stockinged
feet untrammelled by boots.
"There's noan of them within," she announced before he had time to
speak. "Miss Charlotte's gone dhriving to Gurthnamuckla, and Miss
Francie went out a while ago."
"Which way did she go, d'ye know?"
"Musha, faith! I do not know what way did she go," replied Norry,
her usual asperity heightened by a recent chase of Susan, who had fled
to the roof of the turf-house with a mackerel snatched from the
kitchen-table. "I have plinty to do besides running afther her. I
heard her spakin' to one outside in the avenue, and with that she
clapped the hall-doore afther her and she didn't come in since.
Lambert thought it wiser not to venture on the suggestion that
Louisa might be better informed, and walked away down the avenue
trying hard not to admit to himself his disappointment.
He turned towards home again in an objectless way, thoroughly
thwarted, and dismally conscious that the afternoon contained for him
only the prospect of having tea with his wife and finishing his
letters afterwards. His step became slower and slower as he approached
his own entrance gates, and he looked at his watch.
"Confound it! it's only half-past four. I can't go in yet;" then, a
new idea striking him, "perhaps she went out to meet Charlotte. I
declare I might as well go a bit down the road and see if they're
coming back yet."
He walked for at least half a mile under the trees, whose young
June leaves had already a dissipated powdering of white limestone
dust, without meeting anything except a donkey with a pair of
creaking paniers on its back, walking alone and discreetly at its own
side of the road, as well aware as Mr. Lambert that its owner was
dallying with a quart of porter at a roadside public house a mile
away. The turn to Gurthnamuckla was not far off when the distant
rumble of wheels became at last audible; Lambert had only time to
remember angrily that, as the Tally Ho phaeton had but two seats, he
had had his walk for nothing, when the bowed head and long melancholy
face of the black horse came in sight, and he became aware that
Charlotte was without a companion.
Her face had more colour in it than usual as she pulled up beside
him, perhaps from the heat of the afternoon and the no small exertion
of flogging her steed, and her manner when she spoke was neither
bluff nor hearty, but approximated more nearly to that of ordinary
womankind than was its wont. Mr. Lambert noticed none of these
things; and, being a person whose breeding was not always equal to
annoying emergencies, he did not trouble himself to take off his hat
or smile appropriately as Charlotte said—
"Well, Roddy, I'd as soon expect to see your two horses sitting in
the dog-cart driving you as to see you as far from home as this on
your own legs. Where are you off to?"
"I was taking a stroll out to meet you, and ask you to come back
and have tea with Lucy," replied Mr. Lambert, recognising the decree
of fate with a singularly bad grace. "I went down to Tally Ho to ask
you, and Norry told me you had gone to Gurthnamuckla."
"Did you see Francie there?" said Charlotte quickly.
"No; I believe she was out somewhere."
"Well, you were a very good man to take so much trouble about us,"
she replied, looking at him with an expression that softened the lines
of her face in a surprising way. "Are you too proud to have a lift
home now?"
"Thank you, I'd sooner walk—and—" casting about for an
excuse—"you mightn't like the smell of my cigar under your nose."
"Come, now, Roddy," exclaimed Charlotte, "you ought to know me
better than that! Don't you remember how you used to sit smoking
beside me in the office when I was helping you to do your work? In
fact, I wouldn't say that there hadn't been an occasion when I was
guilty of a cigarette in your company myself!"
She turned her eyes towards him, and the provocative look in them
came as instinctively and as straight as ever it did from Francie's,
or as ever it has been projected from the curbed heart of woman. But,
unfair as it may be, it is certain that if Lambert had seen it, he
would not have been attracted by it. He, however, did not look up.
"Well, if you don't mind going slow, I'll walk beside you," he said,
ignoring the reminiscence. "I want to know whether you did better
business with Julia Duffy than I did last week."
The soft look was gone in a moment from Charlotte's face.
"I couldn't get much satisfaction out of her," she replied; "but I
think I left a thorn in her pillow when I told her Peter Joyce was
bankrupt."
"I'll take my oath you did," said Lambert, with a short laugh. "I
declare I'd be sorry for the poor old devil if she wasn't such a bad
tenant, letting the whole place go to the mischief, house and all."
"I tell you the house isn't in such a bad way as you think; it's
dirt ails it more than anything else." Charlotte had recovered her
wonted energy of utterance. "Believe me, if I had a few workmen in
that house for a month you wouldn't know it."
"Well, I believe you will, sooner or later. All the same, I can't
see what the deuce you want with it. Now, if I had the place, I'd make
a pot of money out of it, keeping young horses there, as I've often
told you. I'd do a bit of coping, and making hunters to sell. There's
no work on earth I'd like as well."
He took a long pull at his cigar, and expelled a sigh and a puff of
smoke.
"Well, Roddy," said Charlotte, after a moment's pause, speaking
with an unusual slowness and almost hesitancy, "you know I wouldn't
like to come between you and your fancy. If you want the farm, in
God's name take it yourself!"
"Take it myself! I haven't the money to pay the fine, much less to
stock it. I tell you what, Charlotte," he went on, turning round and
putting his hand on the splash-board of the phaeton as he walked,
"you and I are old pals, and I don't mind telling you it's the most I
can do to keep going the way I am now. I never was so driven for
money in my life," he ended, some vague purpose, added to the habit
of an earlier part of his life, pushing him on to be confidential.
"Who's driving you, Roddy?" said Charlotte, in a voice in which a
less preoccupied person than her companion might have noticed a
curiously gentle inflection.
It is perhaps noteworthy that while Mr. Lambert's lips replied with
heartfelt irritation, "Oh, they're all at me, Langford the
coachbuilder, and everyone of them," one section of his brain was
asking the other how much ready money old Mrs. Mullen had had to
leave, and was receiving a satisfactory answer.
There was a pause in the conversation. It was so long now since the
black horse had felt the whip, that, acting on the presumption that
his mistress had fallen asleep, he fell into an even more slumbrous
crawl without any notice being taken.
"Roddy," said Charlotte at last, and Lambert now observed how low
and rough her voice was, "do you remember in old times once or twice,
when you were put to it for a five-pound note, you made no bones
about asking a friend to help you? Well, you know I'm a poor
woman"—even at this moment Charlotte's caution asserted
itself—"but I daresay I could put my hand on a couple of hundred,
and if they'd be any use to you—"
Lambert became very red. The possibility of some such climax as
this had floated in a sub-current of thought just below the level of
formed ideas, but now that it had come, it startled him. It was an
unheard-of thing that Charlotte should make such an offer as this. It
gave him suddenly a tingling sense of power, and at the same time a
strange instinct of disgust and shame.
"Oh, my dear Charlotte," he began awkwardly, "upon my soul you're a
great deal too good. I never thought of such a thing—I—I—" he
stammered, wishing he could refuse, but casting about for words in
which to accept.
"Ah, nonsense. Now, Roddy, me dear boy," interrupted Charlotte,
regaining her usual manner as she saw his embarrassment, "say no more
about it. We'll consider it a settled thing, and we'll go through the
base business details after tea."
Lambert said to himself that there was really no way out of it. If
she was so determined the only thing was to let her do as she liked;
no one could say that the affair was of his seeking.
"And, you know," continued Charlotte in her most jocular voice,
before he could frame a sentence of the right sort, "who knows, if I
get the farm, that we mightn't make a joint-stock business out of it,
and have young horses there, and all the rest of it!"
"You're awfully good, Charlotte," said Lambert, with an emotion in
his voice that she did not guess to be purely the result of inward
relief and exultation; "I'm awfully obliged to you—you always were
a—a true friend—some day, perhaps, I'll be able to show you what I
think about it," he stammered, unable to think of anything else to
say, and, lifting his hand from the splash-board, he put it on hers,
that lay in her lap with the reins in it, and pressed it for a moment.
Into both their minds shot simultaneously the remembrance of a
somewhat similar scene, when, long ago, Charlotte had come to the
help of her father's pupil, and he had expressed his gratitude in a
more ardent manner —a manner that had seemed cheap enough to him at
the time, but that had been more costly to Charlotte than any other
thing that had ever befallen her.
"You haven't forgotten old times any more than I have," he went on,
knowing very well that he was taking now much the same simple and
tempting method of getting rid of his obligation that he had once
found so efficacious, and to a certain extent enjoying the thought
that he could still make a fool of her. "Ah, well!" he sighed,
"there's no use trying to get those times back, any more than there is
in trying to forget them." He hesitated. "But, after all, there's
many a new tune played on an old fiddle! Isn't that so?" He was
almost frightened at his own daring as he saw Charlotte's cheek burn
with a furious red, and her lips quiver in the attempt to answer.
Upon their silence there broke from the distance a loud scream,
then another, and then a burst of laughter in a duet of soprano and
bass, coming apparently from a lane that led into the road a little
further on— a smooth and secluded little lane, bordered thickly
with hazel bushes—a private road, in fact, to a model farm that Mr.
Lambert had established on his employer's property. From the mouth of
this there broke suddenly a whirling vision of whiteness and wheels,
and Miss Fitzpatrick, mounted on a tricycle and shrieking loudly,
dashed across the high road and collapsed in a heap in the ditch.
Lambert started forward, but long before he could reach her the Rev.
Joseph Corkran emerged at full speed from the lane, hatless, with long
flying coat-tails, and, with a skill born of experience, extricated
Francie from her difficulties.
"Oh, I'm dead!" she panted. "Oh, the horrible thing! What good were
you that you let it go?" unworthily attacking the equally exhausted
Corkran. Then, in tones of consternation, "Goodness! Look at Mr.
Lambert and Charlotte! Oh, Mr. Lambert," as Lambert came up to her,
"did you see the toss I got? The dirty thing ran away with me down the
hill, and Mr. Corkran was so tired running he had to let go, and I
declare I thought I was killed—and you don't look a bit sorry for
me!"
"Well, what business had you to get up on a thing like that?"
answered Lambert, looking angrily at the curate. "I wonder, Corkran,
you hadn't more sense than to let a lady ride that machine."
"Well, indeed, Mr. Lambert, I told Miss Fitzpatrick it wasn't as
easy as she thought," replied the guilty Corkran, a callow youth from
Trinity College, Dublin, who had been as wax in Francie's hands, and
who now saw, with unfeigned terror, the approach of Charlotte. "I
begged of her not to go outside Tally Ho, but—but—I think I'd
better go back and look for my hat—" he ended abruptly, retreating
into the lane just as Charlotte drew up the black horse and opened her
mouth to deliver herself of her indignation.
The broad limestone steps at Bruff looked across the lawn to the
lake, and to the south. They were flanked on either hand by stone
balustrades which began and ended in a pot of blazing scarlet
geraniums, and on their topmost plateau on this brilliant Ist of
July, the four Bruff dogs sat on their haunches and gazed with anxious
despondency in at the open hall-door. For the last half-hour Max and
Dinah, the indoor dogs, had known that an expedition was toward. They
had seen Pamela put on a hat that certainly was not her garden one,
and as certainly lacked the veil that betokened the abhorred ceremony
of church-going. They knew this hat well, and at the worst it usually
meant a choir practice; but taken in connection with a blue serge
skirt and the packing of a luncheon basket, they almost ventured to
hope it portended a picnic on the lake. They adored picnics. In the
first place, the outdoor dogs were always left at home, which alone
would have imparted a delicious flavour to any entertainment, and in
the second, all dietary rules were remitted for the occasion, and they
were permitted to raven unchecked upon chicken bones, fat slices of
ham, and luscious leavings of cream when the packing-up time came.
There was, however, mingled with this enchanting prospect, the fear
that they might be left behind, and from the sounding of the first
note of preparation they had never let Pamela out of their sight.
Whenever her step was heard through the long passages there had gone
with it the scurrying gallop of the two little waiters on providence,
and when her arrangements had culminated in the luncheon basket their
agitation had become so poignant that a growling game of play under
the table, got up merely to pass the time, turned into an acrimonious
squabble, and caused their ejection to the hall-door steps by Lady
Dysart. Now, sitting outside the door, they listened with trembling to
the discussion that was going on in the hall, and with the
self-consciousness of dogs were convinced that it was all about
themselves.
"No, I cannot allow Garry to go," declaimed Lady Dysart, her eyes
raised to the ceiling as if to show her remoteness from all human
entreaty; "he is not over the whooping-cough; I heard him whooping
this morning in his bedroom."
The person mentioned ceased from a game of fives with a tennis-ball
that threatened momentarily to break the windows, and said
indignantly, "Oh, I say, mother, that was only the men in the yard
pumping. That old pump makes a row just like whooping-cough."
Lady Dysart faltered for a moment before this ingenious falsehood,
but soon recovered herself.
"I don't care whether it was you or the pump that whooped, it does
not alter the fact of your superfluity at a picnic."
"I think Captain Cursiter and Mr. Hawkins wanted him to stoke,"
said Pamela from the luncheon basket.
"I have no doubt they do, but they shall not have him," said Lady
Dysart with the blandness of entire decision, though her eyes wavered
from her daughter's face to her son's; "they're very glad indeed to
save their own clothes and spoil his."
"Well, then, I'll go with Lambert," said Garry rebelliously.
"You will do nothing of the sort!" exclaimed Lady Dysart, "Whatever
I may do about allowing you to go with Captain Cursiter, nothing shall
induce me to sanction any plan that involves your going in that most
dangerous yacht. Christopher himself says she is over-sparred." Lady
Dysart had no idea of the meaning of the accusation, but she felt the
term to be good and telling. "Now, Pamela, will you promise me to stay
with Captain Cursiter all the time?"
"Oh, yes, I will," said Pamela laughing; "but you know in your
heart that he would much rather have Garry."
"I don't care what my heart knows," replied Lady Dysart
magnificently, "I know what my mouth says, and that is that you must
neither of you stir out of the steam-launch."
At this descent of his mother into the pit so artfully digged for
her, Garry withdrew to attire himself for the position of stoker, and
Pamela discreetly changed the conversation.
It seemed a long time to Max and Dinah before their fate was
decided, but after some last moments of anguish on the pier they found
themselves, the one coiled determinedly on Pamela's lap, and the
other smirking in the bow in Garry's arms, as Mr. Hawkins sculled the
second relay of the Bruff party out to the launch. The first relay,
consisting of Christopher and Miss Hope-Drummond, was already on its
way down the lake in Mr. Lambert's 5-ton boat, with every inch of
canvas set to catch the light and shifty breeze that blew petulantly
down from the mountains, and ruffled the glitter of the lake with
dark blue smears. The air quivered hotly over the great stones on the
shore, drawing out the strong aromatic smell of the damp weeds and
the bog-myrtle, and Lady Dysart stood on the end of the pier, and
wrung her hands as she thought of Pamela's complexion.
Captain Cursiter was one of the anomalous soldiers whose happiness
it is to spend as much time as possible in a boat, dressed in
disreputable clothes, with hands begrimed and blistered with oil or
ropes as the case may be, and steaming or sailing to nowhere and back
again with undying enthusiasm. He was a thin, brown man, with a
moustache rather lighter in colour than the tan of his face, and his
beaky nose, combined with his disposition to flee from the haunts of
men, had inspired his friends to bestow on him the pet name of
"Snipey." The festivity on which he was at present embarked was none
of his seeking, and it had been only by strenuous argument, fortified
by the artful suggestion that no one else was really competent to
work the boat, that Mr. Hawkins had got him into clean flannels and
the conduct of the expedition. He knew neither Miss Mullen nor
Francie, and his acquaintance with the Dysarts, as with other dwellers
in the neighbourhood, was of a slight and unprogressive character, and
in strong contrast to the manner in which Mr. Hawkins had become at
Bruff and elsewhere what that young gentleman was pleased to term "the
gated infant." During the run from Lismoyle to Bruff he had been able
to occupy himself with the affairs of the steam-launch; but when
Hawkins, his prop and stay, had rowed ashore for the Dysart party,
the iron had entered into his soul.
As the punt neared the launch, Mr. Hawkins looked round to take his
distance in bringing her alongside, and recognised with one delighted
glance the set smile of suffering politeness that denoted that
Captain Cursiter was making himself agreeable to the ladies. Charlotte
was sitting in the stern with a depressing air of Sunday-outness
about her, and a stout umbrella over her head. It was not in her
nature to feel shy; the grain of it was too coarse and strong to
harbour such a thing as diffidence, but she knew well enough when she
was socially unsuccessful, and she was already aware that she was
going to be out of her element on this expedition. Lambert, who would
have been a kind of connecting link, was already far in the offing.
Captain Cursiter she mentally characterised as a poor stick. Hawkins,
whom she had begun by liking, was daily—almost hourly—gaining in
her disfavour, and from neither Pamela, Francie, or Garry did she
expect much entertainment. Charlotte had a vigorous taste in
conversation, and her idea of a pleasure party was not to talk to
Pamela Dysart about the choir and the machinery of a school feast for
an hour and a half, and from time to time to repulse with ill-assumed
politeness the bird-like flights of Dinah on to her lap. Francie and
Mr. Hawkins sat forward on the roof of the little cabin, and
apparently entertained one another vastly, judging by their appearance
and the fragments of conversation that from time to time made their
way aft in the environment of a cloud of smuts. Captain Cursiter,
revelling in the well-known restrictions that encompass the man at the
wheel, stood serenely aloof, steering among the hump-backed green
islands and treacherous shallows, and thinking to himself that Hawkins
was going ahead pretty fast with that Dublin girl.
Mr. Hawkins had been for some time a source of anxiety to his
brother officers, who disapproved of matrimony for the young of their
regiment. Things had looked so serious when he was quartered at
Limerick that he had been hurriedly sent on detachment to Lismoyle
before he had time to "make an example of himself," as one of the most
unmarried of the majors observed, and into Captain Cursiter's trusted
hands he had been committed, with urgent instructions to keep an eye
on him. Cursiter's eye was renowned for its blighting qualities on
occasions such as these, and his jibes at matrimony were looked on by
his brother officers as the most finished and scathing expressions of
proper feeling on the subject that could be desired; but it was agreed
that he would have his hands full.
The launch slid smoothly along with a low clicking of the
machinery, cutting her way across the reflections of the mountains in
pursuit of the tall, white sail of the Daphne, that seemed each
moment to grow taller, as the yacht was steadily overhauled by her
more practical comrade. The lake was narrower here, where it neared
the end of its twenty-mile span, and so calm that the sheep and
cattle grazing on the brown mountains were reflected in its depths,
and the yacht seemed as incongruous in the midst of them as the ark on
Mount Ararat. The last bend of the lake was before them; the Daphne
crept round it, moved mysteriously by a wind that was imperceptible to
the baking company on the steam-launch, and by the time the latter
had churned her way round the fir-clad point, the yacht was letting go
her anchor near the landing-place of a large wooded island.
At a picnic nothing is of much account before luncheon, and the
gloom of hunger hung like a pall over the party that took ashore
luncheon baskets, unpacked knives and forks, and gathered stones to
put on the corners of the table-cloth. But such a hunger is Nature's
salve for the inadequacy of human beings to amuse themselves; the
body comes to the relief of the mind with the compassionate
superiority of a good servant, and confers inward festivity upon many
a dull dinner party. Max and Dinah were quite of this opinion. They
had behaved with commendable fortitude during the voyage, though in
the earlier part of it a shuddering dejection on Max's part had seemed
to Pamela's trained eye to forbode sea-sickness, but at the lifting
of the luncheon basket into the punt their self-control deserted them.
The succulent trail left upon the air, palpable to the dognose as the
smoke of the steam-launch to the human eye, beguiled them into efforts
to follow, which were only suppressed by their being secretly immured
in the cabin by Garry. No one but he saw the two wan faces that
yearned at the tiny cabin windows, as the last punt load left for the
land, and when at last the wails of the captives streamed across the
water, anyone but Garry would have repented of the cruelty. The dogs
will never forget it to Captain Cursiter that it was he who rowed out
to the launch and brought them ashore to enjoy their fair share of the
picnic, and their gratitude will never be tempered by the knowledge
that he had caught at the excuse to escape from the conversation
which Miss Hope-Drummond, notwithstanding even the pangs of hunger,
was proffering to him.
There is something unavoidably vulgar in the aspect of a picnic
party when engaged in the culminating rite of eating on the grass.
They may feel themselves to be picturesque, gipsy-like, even
romantic, but to the unparticipating looker-on, not even the gilded
dignity of champagne can redeem them from being a mere group of
greedy, huddled backs, with ugly trimmings of paper, dirty plates,
and empty bottles. But at Innishochery the only passers-by were
straight-flying wild-duck or wood-pigeons, or an occasional sea-gull
lounging up from the distant Atlantic, all observant enough in their
way, but not critical. It is probable they did not notice even the
singular ungracefulness of Miss Mullen's attitude, as she sat with her
short legs uncomfortably tucked away, and her large jaws moving
steadily as she indemnified herself for the stupidity of the recent
trip. The champagne at length had its usual beneficent effect upon
the conversation. Charlotte began to tell stories about her cats and
her servants to Christopher and Pamela, with admirable dramatic effect
and a sense of humour that made her almost attractive. Miss
Hope-Drummond had discovered that Cursiter was one of the Lincolnshire
Cursiters, and, with mutual friends as stepping-stones, was working
her way on with much ability; and Francie was sitting on a mossy
rock, a little away from the table-cloth, with a plate of cherry-pie
on her lap, Mr. Hawkins at her feet, and unlimited opportunities for
practical jestings with the cherry-stones. Garry and the dogs were
engaged in scraping out dishes and polishing plates in a silence more
eloquent than words; Lambert alone, of all the party, remained
impervious to the influences of luncheon, and lay on his side with his
eyes moodily fixed upon his plate, only responding to Miss Mullen's
frequent references to him by a sarcastic grunt.
"Now I assure you, Miss Dysart, it's perfectly true," said
Charlotte, after one of these polite rejoinders. "He's too lazy to say
so, but he knows right well that when I complained of my kitchen-maid
to her mother, all the good I got from her was that she said, 'Would
ye be agin havin' a switch and to be switchin' her!' That was a
pretty way for me to spend my valuable time." Her audience laughed;
and inspired by another half glass of champagne, Miss Mullen
continued, "But big a fool as Bid Sal is, she's a Solon beside
Donovan. He came to me th' other day and said he wanted 'little
Johanna for the garden.' 'Little who?' says I; 'Little Johanna,' says
he. 'Ye great, lazy fool,' says I, 'aren't ye big enough and ugly
enough to do that little pick of work by yerself without wanting a
girl to help ye?' And after all," said Charlotte, dropping from the
tones of fury in which she had rendered her own part in the interview,
"all he wanted was some guano for my early potatoes!"
Lambert got up without a smile, and sauntering down to the lake,
sat down on a rock and began to smoke a cigar. He could not laugh as
Christopher and even Captain Cursiter did, at Charlotte's
dramatisation of her scene with her gardener. At an earlier period of
his career he had found her conversation amusing, and he had not
thought her vulgar. Since then he had raised himself just high enough
from the sloughs of Irish middle-class society to see its vulgarity,
but he did not stand sufficiently apart from it to be able to
appreciate its humorous side, and in any case he was at present little
disposed to laugh at anything. He sat and smoked morosely for some
time, feeling that he was making his dissatisfaction with the
entertainment imposingly conspicuous; but his cigar was a failure, the
rock was far from comfortable, and his bereaved friends seemed to be
enjoying themselves rather more than when he left them. He threw the
cigar into the water in front of him, to the consternation of a
number of minnows, who had hung in the warm shallow as if listening,
and now vanished in a twinkling to spread among the dark resorts of
the elder fishes the tale of the thunderbolt that fell in their
midst, while Lambert stalked back to the party under the trees.
Its component parts were little altered, saving that Miss
Hope-Drummond had, by the ingenious erection of a parasol, isolated
herself and Christopher from the others, and that Garry had joined
himself to Francie and Hawkins, and was, in company with the latter,
engaged in weaving stalks of grass across the insteps of Miss
Fitzpatrick's open-worked stockings.
"Just look at them, Mr. Lambert," Francie called out in cheerful
complaint. "They're having a race to see which of them will finish
their bit of grass first, and they won't let me stir, though I'm
nearly mad with the flies!"
She had a waving branch of mountain-ash in her hand; the big straw
hat that she had trimmed for herself with dog-roses the night before
was on the back of her head; her hair clustered about her white
temples, and the colour that fighting the flies had brought to her
face lent a lovely depth to eyes that had the gaiety and the
soullessness of a child. Lambert had forgotten most of his classics
since he had left school, and it is probable that even had he
remembered them it would not have occurred to him to regard anything
in them as applicable to modern times. At all events Francie's
Dryad-like fitness to her surroundings did not strike him, as it
struck another more dispassionate onlooker, when an occasional lift of
the Hope-Drummond parasol revealed the white-clad finger with its
woody background to Christopher.
"It seems to me you're very well able to take care of yourself,"
was Lambert's reply to Miss Fitzpatrick's appeal. He turned his back
upon her, and interrupted Charlotte in the middle of a story by
asking her if she would walk with him across the island and have a
look at the ruins of Ochery Chapel.
One habit at least of Mr. Lambert's school life remained with him.
He was still a proficient at telling tales.
Innishochery Island lay on the water like a great green bouquet,
with a narrow grey lace edging of stony beach. From the lake it seemed
that the foliage stood in a solid impenetrable mass, and that nothing
but the innumerable wood-pigeons could hope to gain its inner
recesses; even the space of grass which, at the side of the
landing-place, drove a slender wedge up among the trees, had still
the moss-grown stumps upon it that told it had been recovered by force
from the possession of the tall pines and thick hazel and birch
scrub. The end of the wedge narrowed into a thread of a path which
wound its briary way among the trees with such sinuous vagueness, and
such indifference to branches overhead and rocks underfoot, that to
follow it was both an act of faith and a penance. Near the middle of
the island it was interrupted by a brook that slipped along
whispering to itself through the silence of the wood, and though the
path made a poor shift to maintain its continuity with
stepping-stones, it expired a few paces farther on in the bracken of
a little glade.
It was a glade that had in some elfish way acquired an expression
of extremest old age. The moss grew deep in the grass, lay deep on the
rocks; stunted birch-trees encircled it with pale twisted arms hoary
with lichen, and, at the farther end of it, a grey ruined chapel,
standing over the pool that was the birthplace of the stream,
fulfilled the last requirement of romance. On this hot summer
afternoon the glade had more than ever its air of tranced meditation
upon other days and superiority to the outer world, lulled in its
sovereignty of the island by the monotone of humming insects, while on
the topmost stone of the chapel a magpie gabbled and cackled like a
court jester. Christopher thought, as he sat by the pool smoking a
cigarette, that he had done well in staying behind under the pretence
of photographing the yacht from the landing-place, and thus eluding
the rest of the party. He was only intermittently unsociable, but he
had always had a taste for his own society, and, as he said to
himself, he had been going strong all the morning, and the time had
come for solitude and tobacco.
He was a young man of a reflective turn, and had artistic
aspirations which, had he been of a hardier nature, would probably
have taken him further than photography. But Christopher's
temperament held one or two things unusual in the amateur. He had the
saving, or perhaps fatal power of seeing his own handiwork with as
unflattering an eye as he saw other people's. He had no confidence in
anything about himself except his critical ability, and as he did not
satisfy that, his tentative essays in painting died an early death.
It was the same with everything else. His fastidious dislike of doing
a thing indifferently was probably a form of conceit, and though it
was a higher form than the common vanity whose geese are all swans,
it brought about in him a kind of deadlock. His relations thought him
extremely clever, on the strength of his university career and his
intellectual fastidiousness, and he himself was aware that he was
clever, and cared very little for the knowledge. Half the people in
the world were clever nowadays, he said to himself with indolent
irritability, but genius was another affair; and, having torn up his
latest efforts in water-colour and verse, he bought a camera, and
betook himself to the more attainable perfection of photography.
It was delightful to lie here with the delicate cigarette smoke
keeping the flies at bay, and the grasshoppers whirring away in the
grass, like fairy sewing-machines, and with the soothing knowledge
that the others had been through the glade, had presumably done the
ruin thoroughly, and were now cutting their boots to pieces on the
water-fretted limestone rocks as they scrambled round from the shore
to the landing-place. This small venerable wood, and the boulders that
had lain about the glade through sleepy centuries till the moss had
smothered their outlines, brought to Christopher's mind the enchanted
country through which King Arthur's knights rode; and he lay there
mouthing to himself fragments of half-remembered verse, and wondering
at the chance that had reserved for him this backwater in a day of
otherwise dubious enjoyment. He even found himself piecing together a
rhyme or two on his own account; but, as is often the case,
inspiration was paralysed by the overwhelming fulness of the reality;
the fifth line refused to express his idea, and the interruption of
lyric emotion caused by the making and lighting of a fresh cigarette
proved fatal to the prospects of the sonnet. He felt disgusted with
himself and his own futility. When he had been at Oxford not thus had
the springs of inspiration ceased to flow. He had begun to pass the
period of water-colours then, but not the period when ideas are as
plenty and as full of novelty as leaves in spring, and the knowledge
has not yet come that they, like the leaves, are old as the world
itself.
For the past three or four years the social exigencies of
Government House life had not proved conducive to fervour of any kind,
and now, while he was dawdling away his time at Bruff, in the
uninterested expectation of another appointment, he found that he not
only could not write, but that he seemed to have lost the wish to try.
"I suppose I am sinking into the usual bucolic stupor," he said to
himself, as he abandoned the search for the vagrant rhyme. "If I only
could read the Field, and had a more spontaneous habit of cursing, I
should be an ideal country gentleman."
He crumpled into his pocket again the envelope on the back of which
he had been scribbling, and told himself that it was more philosophic
and more simple to enjoy things in the homely, pre-historic manner,
without trying to express them elaborately for the benefit of others.
He was intellectually effete, and what made his effeteness more
hopeless was that he recognised it himself. "I am perfectly happy if
I let myself alone," was the sum of his reflections. "They gave me a
little more culture than I could hold, and it ran over the edge at
first. Now I think I'm just about sufficiently up in the bottle for
Lismoyle form." He tilted his straw hat over his nose, shut his eyes,
and, leaning back, soon felt the delicious fusion into his brain of
the surrounding hum and soft movement that tells of the coming of
out-of-door summer sleep.
It is deplorable to think of what figure Christopher must cut in
the eyes of those whose robuster taste demands in a young man some
more potent and heroic qualities, a gentlemanly hardihood in language
and liquor, an interesting suggestion of moral obliquity, or, at
least, some hereditary vice on which the character may make shipwreck
with magnificent helplessness. Christopher, with his preference for
his sister's society, and his lack of interest in the majority of
manly occupations, from hunting to music halls, has small claim to
respect or admiration. The invertebrateness of his character seemed to
be expressed in his attitude, as he lay, supine, under the birch
trees, with the grass making a luxurious couch for his lazy limbs, and
the faint breeze just stirring about him. His sleep was not deep
enough to still the breath of summer in his ears, but it had quieted
the jabber of the magpie to a distant purring, and he was fast falling
into the abyss of unconsciousness, when a gentle, regular sound made
itself felt, the fall of a footstep and the brushing of a skirt
through the grass. He lay very still, and cherished an ungenial hope
that the white-stemmed birches might mercifully screen him from the
invader. The step came nearer, and something in its solidity and
determination gave Christopher a guess as to whose it was, that was
speedily made certainty by a call that jarred all the sleepy
enchantment of the glade.
"Fran-cie!"
Christopher shrank lower behind a mossy stone, and wildly hoped
that his unconcealable white flannels might be mistaken for the stem
of a fallen birch.
"Fran-cie!"
It had come nearer, and Christopher anticipated the inevitable
discovery by getting up and speaking.
"I'm afraid she's not here, Miss Mullen. She has not been here for
half an hour at least." He did not feel bound to add that when he
first sat down by the pool, he had heard Miss Fitzpatrick's and Mr.
Hawkins' voices in high and agreeable altercation on the opposite side
of the island to that taken by the rest of the party.
The asperity that had been discernible in Miss Mullen's summons to
her cousin vanished at once.
"My goodness me! Mr. Dysart! To think of your being here all the
time, 'Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife!' Here I am hunting
for that naughty girl to tell her to come and help to make tea,
instead of letting your poor sister have all the trouble by herself."
Charlotte was rather out of breath, and looked hot and annoyed, in
spite of the smile with which she lubricated her remark.
"Oh, my sister is used to that sort of thing," said Christopher,
"and Miss Hope-Drummond is there to help, isn't she?"
Charlotte had seated herself on a rock, and was fanning herself
with her pocket-handkerchief; evidently going to make herself
agreeable, Christopher thought, with an irritability that lost no
detail of her hand's ungainly action.
"I don't think Miss Hope-Drummond is much in the utilitarian line,"
she said, with a laugh that was as slighting as she dared to make it.
"Hers is the purely ornamental, I should imagine. Now, I will say for
poor Francie, if she was there, no one would work harder than she
would, and, though I say it that shouldn't, I think she's ornamental
too."
"Oh, highly ornamental," said Christopher politely. "I don't think
there can be any doubt about that."
"You're very good to say so," replied Charlotte effusively; "but I
can tell you, Mr. Dysart, that poor child has had to make herself
useful as well as ornamental before now. From what she tells me I
suspect there were few things she didn't have to put her hand to
before she came down to me here."
"Really!" said Christopher, as politely as before, "that was very
hard luck."
"You may say that it was!" returned Charlotte, planting a hand on
each knee with elbows squared outwards, as was her wont in moments of
excitement, and taking up her parable against the Fitzpatricks with
all the enthusiasm of a near relation. "Her uncle and aunt are very
good people in their way, I suppose, but beyond feeding her and
putting clothes on her back, I don't know what they did for her."
Charlotte had begun her sentence with comparative calm, but she had
gathered heat and velocity as she proceeded. She paused with a snort,
and Christopher, who had never before been privileged to behold her
in her intenser moments, said, without a very distinct idea of what
was expected of him:
"Oh, really, and who are these amiable people?"
"Fitzpatricks!" spluttered Miss Mullen, "and no better than the
dirt under my poor cousin Isabella Mullen's feet. It's through her
Francie's related to me, and not through the Fitzpatricks at all. I'm
no relation of the Fitzpatricks, thank God! My father's brother
married a Butler, and Francie's grandmother was a Butler too—"
"It's very intricate," murmured Christopher; "it sounds as if she
ought to have been a parlour-maid."
"And that's the only connection I am of the Fitzpatricks,"
continued Miss Mullen at lightning speed, oblivious of interruption;
"but Francie takes after her mother's family and her grandmother's
family, and your poor father would tell you if he was able, that the
Butlers of Tally Ho were as well known in their time as the Dysarts of
Bruff!"
"I'm sure he would," said Christopher feebly, thinking as he spoke
that his conversations with his father had been wont to treat of more
stirring and personal topics than the bygone glories of the Butlers.
"Yes, indeed, as good a family as any in the county. People laugh
at me, and say I'm mad about family and pedigree; but I declare to
goodness, Mr. Dysart, I think the French are right when they say,
'bong song ne poo mongtir,' and there's nothing like good blood after
all."
Charlotte possessed the happy quality of believing in the purity of
her own French accent, and she felt a great satisfaction in rounding
her peroration with a quotation in that tongue. She had, moreover,
worked off some of the irritation which had, from various causes, been
seething within her when she met Christopher; and when she resumed
her discourse it was in the voice of the orator, who, having ranted
out one branch of his subject, enters upon the next with almost awful
quietness.
"I don't know why I should bore you about a purely family matter,
Mr. Dysart, but the truth is, it cuts me to the heart when I see your
sister—your charming sister—yes, and Miss Hope-Drummond too—not
that I'd mention her in the same breath with Miss Dysart—with every
advantage that education can give them, and then to think of that
poor girl, brought up from hand to mouth, and her little fortune that
should have been spent on herself going, as I may say, to fill the
stomachs of the Fitzpatricks' brood!"
Christopher raised himself from the position of leaning against a
tree, in which he had listened, not without interest, to the recital
of Francie's wrongs.
"I don't think you need apologise for Miss Fitzpatrick," he said,
rather more coldly than he had yet spoken. He had ceased to be amused
by Miss Mullen; eccentricity was one thing, but vulgar want of
reserve was another; he wondered if she discussed her cousin's affairs
thus openly with all his friends.
"It's very kind of you to say so," rejoined Miss Mullen eagerly,"
but I know very well you're not blind, any more than I am, and all my
affection for the girl can't make me shut my eyes to what's
unlady-like or bad style, though I know it's not her fault."
Christopher looked at his watch surreptitiously.
"Now I'm delaying you in a most unwarrantable way," said Charlotte,
noting and interpreting the action at once, "but I got so hot and
tired running about the woods that I had to take a rest. I was trying
to get a chance to say a word to your sister about Francie to ask her
to be kind to her, but I daresay it'll come to the same thing now
that I've had a chat with you," she concluded, rising from her seat
and smiling with luscious affability.
A little below the pond two great rocks leaned towards each other,
and between them a hawthorn bush had pressed itself up to the light.
Something like a path was trodden round the rocks, and a few rags
impaled on the spikes of the thorn bush denoted that it marked the
place of a holy well. Conspicuous among these votive offerings were
two white rags, new and spotless, and altogether out of keeping with
the scraps of red flannel and dirty frieze that had been left by the
faithful in lieu of visiting cards for the patron saint of the
shrine. Christopher and Charlotte's way led them within a few yards of
the spot; the latter's curiosity induced her, as she passed, to
examine the last contributions to the thorn bush.
"I wonder who has been tearing up their best pocket-handkerchiefs
for a wish?" said Christopher, putting up his eye-glass and peering at
the rags.
"Two bigger fools than the rest of them, I suppose," said Miss
Mullen shortly; "we'd better hurry on now, Mr. Dysart, or we'll get no
tea."
She swept Christopher in front of her along the narrow path before
he had time to see that the last two pilgrims had determined that the
saint should make no mistake about their identity, and had struck
upon the thorn bush the corners of their handkerchiefs, one of them, a
silken triangle, having on it the initials G. H., while on the other
was a large and evidently home-embroidered F.
Late that afternoon, when the sun was beginning to stoop to the
west, a wind came creeping down from somewhere back of the mountains,
and began to stretch tentative cats' paws over the lake. It had
pushed before it across the Atlantic a soft mass of orange-coloured
cloud, that caught the sun's lowered rays, and spread them in a mellow
glare over everything. The lake turned to a coarse and furious blue;
all the rocks and tree stems became like red gold, and the polished
brass top of the funnel of the steam-launch looked as if it were on
fire as Captain Cursiter turned the Serpolette's sharp snout to the
wind, and steamed at full speed round Ochery Point. The yacht had
started half an hour before on her tedious zig-zag journey home, and
was already far down to the right, her sails all aglow as she leaned
aslant like a skater, swooping and bending under the freshening
breeze.
It was evident that Lambert wished to make the most of his time,
for almost immediately after the Daphne had gone about with smooth
precision, and had sprung away on the other tack, the party on the
launch saw a flutter of white, and a top-sail was run up.
"By Jove! Lambert didn't make much on that tack," remarked Captain
Cursiter to his brother-in-arms, as with an imperceptible pressure of
the wheel he serenely headed the launch straight for her destination,
"I don't believe he's done himself much good with that top-sail
either."
Mr. Hawkins turned a sour eye upon the Daphne and said laconically,
"Silly ass; he'll smother her."
"Upon my word, I don't think he'll get in much before nine o'clock
to-night," continued Cursiter; "it's pretty nearly dead in his teeth,
and he doesn't make a hundred yards on each tack."
Mr. Hawkins slammed the lid of the coal-bunker, and stepped past
his chief into the after-part of the launch.
"I say, Miss Mullen," he began with scarcely suppressed malignity,
"Captain Cursiter says you won't see your niece before to-morrow
morning. You'll be sorry you wouldn't let her come home in the launch
after all."
"If she hadn't been so late for her tea," retorted Miss Mullen,
"Mr. Lambert could have started half an hour before he did."
"Half an hour will be neither here nor there in this game. What
Lambert ought to have done was to have started after luncheon, but I
think I may remind you, Miss Mullen, that you took him off to the
holy well then."
"Well, and if I did, I didn't leave my best pocket handkerchief
hanging in rags on the thorn-bush, like some other people I know of!"
Miss Mullen felt that she had scored, and looked for sympathy to
Pamela, who, having as was usual with her, borne the heat and burden
of the day in the matter of packings and washings-up, was now
sitting, pale and tired, in the stern, with Dinah solidly implanted in
her lap, and Max huddled miserably on the seat beside her. Miss
Hope-Drummond, shrouded in silence and a long plaid cloak, paid no
attention to anyone or anything. There are few who can drink the dregs
of the cup of pleasuring with any appearance of enjoyment, and Miss
Hope-Drummond was not one of them. The alteration in the respective
crews of the yacht and the steam-launch had been made by no wish of
hers, and it is probable that but for the unexpected support that
Cursiter had received from Miss Mullen, his schemes for Mr. Hawkins'
welfare would not have prospered. The idea had indeed occurred to
Miss Hope-Drummond that the proprietor of the launch had perhaps a
personal motive in suggesting the exchange, but when she found that
Captain Cursiter was going to stand with his back to her, and steer,
she wished that she had not yielded her place in the Daphne to a
young person whom she already thought of as "that Miss Fitzpatrick,"
applying in its full force the demonstrative pronoun that denotes
feminine animosity more subtly and expressively than is in the power
of any adjective. Hawkins she felt was out of her jurisdiction and
unworthy of attention, and she politely ignored Pamela's attempts to
involve her in conversation with him. Her neat brown fringe was out
of curl; long strands of hair blew unbecomingly over her ears; her
feet were very cold, and she finally buried herself to the nose in a
fur boa that gave her the effect of a moustached and bearded Russian
noble, and began, as was her custom during sermons and other periods
of tedium, to elaborate the construction of a new tea-gown.
To do Mr. Hawkins justice, he, though equally ill-treated by fate,
rose superior to his disappointment. After his encounter with Miss
Mullen he settled confidentially down in the corner beside Pamela,
and amused himself by pulling Dinah's short, fat tail, and puffing
cigarette smoke in her face, while he regaled her mistress with an
assortment of the innermost gossip of Lismoyle.
On board the Daphne, the aspect of things was less comfortable.
Although the wind was too much in her teeth for her to make much
advance for home, there was enough to drive her through the water at a
pace that made the long tacks from side to side of the lake seem as
nothing, and to give Francie as much as she could do to keep her big
hat on her head. She was sitting up on the weather side with Lambert,
who was steering; and Christopher, in the bows, was working the head
sails, and acting as movable ballast when they went about. At first,
while they were beating out of the narrow channel of Ochery, Francie
had found it advisable to lie in a heap beneath a tarpaulin, to avoid
the onslaught of the boom at each frequent tack, but now that they
were out on the open lake, with the top-sail hoisted, she had risen to
her present position, and, in spite of her screams as the sharp
squalls came down from the mountains and lifted her hat till it stood
on end like a rearing horse, was enjoying herself amazingly. Unlike
Miss Hope-Drummond, she was pre-eminently one of those who come home
unflagging from the most prolonged outing, and to-day's entertainment,
so far from being exhausting, had verified to the utmost her belief in
the charms of the British officer, as well as Miss Fanny Hemphill's
prophecies of her success in such quarters. Nevertheless she was quite
content to return in the yacht; it was salutary for Mr. Hawkins to
see that she could do without him very well, it took her from
Charlotte's dangerous proximity, and it also gave her an opportunity
of appeasing Mr. Lambert, who, as she was quite aware, was not in the
best of tempers. So far her nimble tongue had of necessity been idle.
Christopher's position in the bows isolated him from all conversation
of the ordinary pitch, and Lambert had been at first too much occupied
with the affairs of his boat to speak to her, but now, as a sharper
gust nearly snatched her hat from her restraining hand, he turned to
her.
"If it wasn't that you seem to enjoy having that hat blown inside
out every second minute," he said chillingly, "I'd offer to lend you a
cap."
"What sort is it?" demanded Francie. "If it's anything like that
old deerstalker thing you have on your head now, I wouldn't touch it
with the tongs!"
Lambert's only reply was to grope under the seat with one hand, and
to bring out a red knitted cap of the conventional sailoring type,
which he handed to Francie without so much as looking at her. Miss
Fitzpatrick recognised its merits with half a glance, and, promptly
putting it on her head, stuffed the chef d'æuvre of the night before
under the seat among the deck-swabs and ends of rope that lurked
there. Christopher, looking aft at the moment, saw the change of
head-gear, and it was, perhaps, characteristic of him that even while
he acknowledged the appropriateness of the red cap of liberty to the
impertinence of the brilliant face beneath it, he found himself
reminded of the extra supplement, in colours, of any Christmas
number— indubitably pretty but a trifle vulgar.
In the meantime the object of this patronising criticism, feeling
herself now able to give her undivided attention to conversation,
regarded Mr. Lambert's sulky face with open amusement, and said:
"Well, now, tell me what made you so cross all day. Was it because
Mrs. Lambert wasn't out?"
Lambert looked at her for an instant without speaking. "Ready
about," he called out. "Mind your head! Lee helm!"
The little yacht hung and staggered for a moment, and then, with a
diving plunge, started forward, with every sail full and straining.
Francie scrambled with some difficulty to the other side of the tiny
cockpit, and climbed up on to the seat by Mr. Lambert, just in time to
see a very fair imitation of a wave break on the weather bow and
splash a sparkling shower into Christopher's face.
"Oh, Mr. Dysart! are you drowned?" she screamed ecstatically.
"Not quite," he called back, his hair hanging in dripping points on
his forehead as he took off his cap and shook the water out of it. "I
say, Lambert, it's beginning to blow pretty stiff; I'd take that
top-sail off her, if I were you."
"She's often carried it in worse weather than this," returned
Lambert; "a drop of water will do no one any harm."
Mr. Lambert in private, and as much as possible in public, affected
to treat his employer's son as a milksop, and few things annoyed him
more than the accepted opinion on the lake that there was no better
man in a boat than Christopher Dysart. His secret fear that it was
true made it now all the more intolerable that Christopher should lay
down the law to him on a point of seamanship, especially with Francie
by, ready in that exasperating way of hers to laugh at him on the
smallest provocation.
"It'll do him no harm if he does get a drop of water over him," he
said to her in a low voice, forgetting for the moment his attitude of
disapproval. "Take some of the starch out of him for once!" He took a
pull on the main sheet, and, with a satisfied upward look at the
top-sail in question, applied himself to conversation. The episode
had done him good, and it was with almost fatherly seriousness that
he began:
"Now, Francie, you were telling me a while ago that I was cross all
day. I'm a very old friend of yours, and I don't mind saying that I
was greatly put out by the way"—he lowered his voice—"by the way
you were going on with that fellow Hawkins."
"I don't know what you mean by 'going on,'" interrupted Francie,
with a slight blush. "What's the harm in talking to him if he likes to
talk to me?"
"Plenty of harm," returned Lambert quickly, "when he makes a fool
of you the way he did to-day. If you don't care that Miss Dysart and
the rest of them think you know no better than to behave like that, I
do!"
"Behave like what?"
"Well, for one thing, to let him and Garry Dysart go sticking grass
in your stockings that way after luncheon; and for another to keep
Miss Dysart waiting tea for you for half an hour, and your only
excuse to be to tell her that he was 'teaching you to make ducks and
drakes' the other side of the island." The fatherly quality had died
out of his voice, and the knuckles of the hand that held the tiller
grew white from a harder grip.
Francie instinctively tucked away her feet under her petticoats.
She was conscious that the green pattern still adorned her insteps,
and that tell-tale spikes of grass still projected on either side of
her shoes.
"How could I help it? It was just a silly game that he and Garry
Dysart made up between them; and as for Miss Dysart being angry with
me, she never said a word to me; she was awfully good; and she and her
brother had kept the teapot hot for me, and everything." She looked
furtively at Christopher, who was looking out at the launch, now
crossing their path some distance ahead. It was more than you'd have
done for me!"
"Yes, very likely it was; but I wouldn't have been laughing at you
in my sleeve all the time as they were, or at least as he was, anyhow!"
"I believe that's a great lie," said Francie unhesitatingly; "and I
don't care a jack-rat what he thought, or what you think either. Mr.
Hawkins is a very nice young man, and I'll talk to him just as much
as I like! And he's coming to tea at Tally Ho to-morrow; and what's
more, I asked him! So now!"
"Oh, all right!" said Lambert, in such a constrained voice of
anger, that even Francie felt a little afraid of him. "Have him to tea
by all means; and if I were you I should send down to Limerick and
have Miss M'Carthy up to meet him!"
"What are you saying? Who's Miss M'Carthy?" asked Francie, with a
disappointing sparkle of enjoyment in her eyes.
"She's the daughter of a George's Street tobacconist that your
friend Mr. Hawkins was so sweet about a couple of months ago that they
packed him off here to be out of harm's way. Look out, Dysart, I'm
going about now," he continued without giving Francie time to reply.
"Leehelm!"
"Oh, I'm sick of you and your old 'leehelm'!" cried Francie, as she
grovelled again in the cockpit to avoid the swing of the boom. "Why
can't you go straight like Captain Cursiter's steamer, instead of
bothering backwards and forwards, side-ways, like this? And you always
do it just when I want to ask you something."
This complaint, which was mainly addressed to Mr. Lambert's canvas
yachting shoes, received no attention. When Francie came to the
surface she found that the yacht was at a more uncomfortable angle
than ever, and with some difficulty she established herself on the
narrow strip of deck, outside the coaming, with her feet hanging into
the cockpit.
"Now, Mr. Lambert," she began at once, "you'd better tell me Miss
M'Carthy's address, and all about her, and perhaps if you're good I'll
ask you to meet her too."
As she spoke, a smart squall struck the yacht, and Lambert luffed
her hard up to meet it. A wave with a ragged white edge flopped over
her bows, wetting Christopher again, and came washing aft along the
deck behind the coaming.
"Look out aft there!" he shouted, "She's putting her nose into it!
I tell you that top-sail's burying her, Lambert."
Lambert made no answer to either Francie or Christopher. He had as
much as he could do to hold the yacht, which was snatching at the
tiller like a horse at its bit, and ripping her way deep through the
waves in a manner too vigorous to be pleasant, It was about seven
o'clock, and though the sun was still some height above the dark
jagged wall of the mountains, the clouds had risen in a tawny fleece
across his path, and it was evident that he would be seen no more
that day. The lake had turned to indigo. The beds of reeds near the
shore were pallid by contrast as they stooped under the wind; the
waves that raced towards the yacht had each an angry foam-crest,
having, after the manner of lake waves, lashed themselves into a high
state of indignation on very short notice, and hissed and effervesced
like soda-water all along the lee gunwale of the flying yacht. A few
seagulls that were trying to fight their way back down to the sea,
looked like fluttering scraps of torn white paper against the angry
bronze of the clouds, and the pine trees on the point, under the lee
of which they were scudding, were tossing like the black plumes of a
hearse.
Lambert put the yacht about, and headed back across the lake.
"We did pretty well on that tack, Dysart," he shouted. "We ought to
get outside Screeb Point with the next one, and then we'll get the
wind a point fairer, and make better weather of it the rest of the
way home."
He could see the launch, half a mile or so beyond the point,
ploughing steadily along on her way to Lismoyle, and in his heart he
wished that Francie was on board of her. He also wished that
Christopher had held his confounded tongue about the top-sail. If he
hadn't shoved in his oar where he wasn't wanted, he'd have had that
top-sail off her twenty minutes ago; but he wasn't going to stand
another man ordering him about in his own boat.
"Look here, Francie," he said, "you must look out for yourself when
I'm going about next time. It's always a bit squally round this point,
so you'd better keep down in the cockpit till we're well on the next
tack."
"But I'll get all wet down there," objected Francie, "and I'd much
rather stay up here and see the fun."
"You talk as if it was the top of a tram in Sackville Street," said
Lambert, snatching a glance of provoked amusement at her unconcerned
face. "I can tell you it will take a good deal more holding on to
than that does. Promise me now, like a good child," he went on, with a
sudden thrill of anxiety at her helplessness and ignorance, "that
you'll do as I tell you. You used to mind what I said to you."
He leaned towards her as he spoke, and Francie raised her eyes to
his with a laugh in them that made him for the moment forgetful of
everything else. They were in the open water in the centre of the
lake by this time, and in that second a squall came roaring down upon
them.
"Luff!" shouted Christopher, letting go the head sheets. "Luff, or
we're over!"
Lambert let go the main sheet and put the tiller hard down with all
the strength he was master of, but he was just too late. In that
moment, when he had allowed his thoughts to leave his steering, the
yacht had dragged herself a thought beyond his control. The rough hand
of the wind struck her, and, as she quivered and reeled under the
blow, another and fiercer gust caught hold of her, and flung her flat
on her side on the water.
Before Christopher had well realised what had happened, he had gone
deep under water, come to the surface again, and was swimming, with a
vision before him of a white figure with a red cap falling headlong
from its perch. He raised himself and shook the water out of his eyes,
and swimming a stroke or two to get clear of the mast, with its sails
heaving prone on the water like the pinions of a great wounded bird,
he saw over the shoulders of the hurrying waves the red cap and the
white dress drifting away to leeward. Through the noise of the water
in his ears, and the confusion of his startled brain, he heard
Lambert's voice shouting frantically he did not know what; the whole
force of his nature was set and centred on overtaking the red cap to
which each stroke was bringing him nearer and nearer as it appeared
and reappeared ahead of him between the steely backs of the waves.
She lay horribly still, with the water washing over her face; and as
Christopher caught her dress, and turned, breathless, to try to fight
his way back with her to the wrecked yacht, he seemed to hear a
hundred voices ringing in his ears and telling him that she was dead.
He was a good and practised swimmer, but not a powerful one. His
clothes hung heavily about him, and with one arm necessarily given to
his burden, and the waves and wind beating him back, he began to
think that his task was more than he would be able to accomplish. He
had up to this, in the intensity of the shock and struggle, forgotten
Lambert's existence, but now the agonised shouts that he had heard
came back to him, and he raised himself high in the water and stared
about with a new anxiety. To his intense relief he saw that the yacht
was still afloat, was, in fact, drifting slowly down towards him, and
in the water not ten yards from him was her owner, labouring towards
him with quick splashing strokes, and evidently in a very exhausted
state. His face was purple-red, his eyes half starting out of his
head, and Christopher could hear his hard breathing as he slowly bore
down upon him.
"She's all right, Lambert!" Christopher cried out, though his heart
belied the words. "I've got her! Hold hard; the yacht will be down on
us in a minute."
Whether Lambert heard the words or no was not apparent. He came
struggling on, and as soon as he got within reach, made a snatch at
Francie's dress. Christopher had contrived to get his left arm round
her waist, and to prop her chin on his shoulder, so that her face
should be above the water, and, as Lambert's weight swung on him, it
was all he could do to keep her in this position.
"You'll drown us all if you don't let go!" Uttermost exertion and
want of breath made Christopher's voice wild and spasmodic. "Can't you
tread water till the boat gets to us?"
Lambert still speechlessly and convulsively dragged at her, his
breath breaking from him in loud gasps, and his face working.
"Good God, he's gone mad!" thought Christopher; "we're all done for
if he won't let go." In desperation he clenched his fist, with the
intention of hitting Lambert on the head, but just as he gathered his
forces for this extreme measure something struck him softly in the
back. Lambert's weight had twisted him round so that he was no longer
facing the yacht, and he did not know how near help was. It was the
boom of the Daphne that had touched him like a friendly hand, and he
turned and caught at it with a feeling of more intense thankfulness
than he had known in all his life.
The yacht was lying over on her side, half full of water, but kept
afloat by the air-tight compartments that Mrs. Lambert's terrors had
insisted on, and that her money had paid for, when her husband had
first taken to sailing on the lake. Christopher was able with a
desperate effort to get one knee on to the submerged coaming of the
cockpit, and catching at its upper side with his right hand, he
recovered himself and prepared to draw Francie up after him.
"Come, Lambert, let go!" he said threateningly, "and help me to get
her out of the water. You need not be afraid, you can hold on to the
boat."
Lambert had not hitherto tried to speak, but now with the support
that the yacht gave him, his breath came back to him a little.
"Damn you!" he spluttered, the loud sobbing breaths almost choking
him, "I'm not afraid! Let her go! Take your arm from round her, I can
hold her better than you can. Ah!" he shrieked, suddenly seeing
Francie's face, as Christopher, without regarding what he said, drew
her steadily up from his exhausted grasp, "she's dead! you've let her
drown!" His head fell forward, and Christopher thought with the calm
of despair, "He's going under, and I can't help him if he does. Here
Lambert! man alive, don't let go! There! do you hear the launch
whistling? They're coming to us!"
Lambert's hand, with its shining gold signetring, was gripping the
coaming under water with a grasp that was already mechanical. It
seemed to Christopher that it had a yellow, drowned look about it. He
put out his foot, and, getting it under Lambert's chin, lifted his
mouth out of the water. The steam-launch was whistling incessantly, in
long notes, in short ones, in jerks, and he lifted up his voice
against the forces of the wind and the hissing and dashing of the
water to answer her. Perhaps it was the dull weight on his arm and
the stricken stillness of the face that lay in utter unconsciousness
on his shoulder, but he scarcely recognised his own voice, it was
broken with such a tone of stress and horror. He had never before
heard such music as Hawkins' shout hailing him in answer, nor seen a
sight so heavenly fair as the bow of the Serpolette cutting its way
through the thronging waves to their rescue. White faces staring over
her gunwale broke into a loud cry when they saw him hanging,
half-spent, against the tilted deck of the Daphne. It was well, he
thought, that they had not waited any longer. The only question was
whether they were not even now too late. His head swam from
excitement and fatigue, his arms and knees trembled, and when at last
Francie, Lambert, and finally he himself, were lifted on board the
launch, it seemed the culminating point of a long and awful nightmare
that Charlotte Mullen should fling herself on her knees beside the
bodies of her cousin and her friend, and utter yell after yell of
hysterical lamentation.
"Sausages and bacon, Lady Dysart! Yes, indeed, that was his
breakfast, and that for a man who—if you'll excuse the expression,
Lady Dysart, but, indeed, I know you're such a good doctor that I'd
like you to tell me if it was quite safe— who was vomiting lake
water for half an hour after he was brought into the house the night
before."
"Do you really mean that he came down to breakfast?" asked Lady
Dysart, with the flattering sincerity of interest that she bestowed on
all topics of conversation, but specially on those that related to
the art and practice of medicine. "He ought to have stayed in bed all
day to let the system recover from the shock."
"Those were the very words I used to him, Lady Dysart," returned
Mrs. Lambert dismally; "but indeed all the answer he made was,
'Fiddle-de-dee!' He wouldn't have so much as a cup of tea in his bed,
and you may think what I suffered, Lady Dysart, when I was down in the
parlour making the breakfast and getting his tray ready, when I heard
him in his bath overhead— just as if he hadn't been half-drowned the
night before. I didn't tell you that, Mrs. Gascogne," she went on,
turning her watery gaze upon the thin refined face of her spiritual
directress. "Now if it was me such a thing happened to, I'd have that
nervous dread of water that I couldn't look at it for a week."
"No, I am sure you would not," answered Mrs. Gascogne with the
over-earnestness which so often shipwrecks the absent-minded; "of
course you couldn't expect him to take it if it wasn't made with
really boiling water."
Mrs. Lambert stared in stupefaction, and Lady Dysart, far from
trying to cloak her cousin's confusion, burst into a delighted laugh.
"Kate! I don't believe you heard a single word that Mrs. Lambert
said! You were calculating how many gallons of tea will be wanted for
your school feast."
"Nonsense, Isabel!" said Mrs. Gascogne hotly, with an indignant and
repressive glance at Lady Dysart, "and how was it—" turning to Mrs.
Lambert, "that he—a—swallowed so much lake water?"
"He was cot under the sail, Mrs. Gascogne. He made a sort of a dash
at Miss Fitzpatrick to save her when she was falling, and he slipped
someway, and got in under the sail and he was half-choked before he
could get out!" A tear of sensibility trickled down the good turkey
hen's red beak, "Indeed, I don't know when I've been so upset, Lady
Dysart," she quavered.
"Upset!" echoed Lady Dysart, raising her large eyes dramatically to
the cut glass chandelier, "I can well believe it! When it came to ten
o'clock and there was no sign of them, I was simply raging up and
down between the house and the pier like a mad bull robbed of its
whelps!" She turned to Mrs. Gascogne, feeling that there was a
biblical ring in the peroration that demanded a higher appreciation
than Mrs. Lambert could give, and was much chagrined to see that lady
concealing her laughter behind a handkerchief.
Mrs. Lambert looked bewilderedly from one to the other, and,
feeling that the ways of the aristocracy were beyond her
comprehension, went on with the recital of her own woes.
"He actually went down to Limerick by train in the afternoon—he
that was half-drowned the day before, and a paragraph in the paper
about his narrow escape. I haven't had a wink of sleep those two
nights, what with palpitations and bad dreams. I don't believe, Lady
Dysart, I'll ever be the better of it."
"Oh, you'll get over it soon, Mrs. Lambert," said Lady Dysart
cheerfully; "why, I had no less than three children—"
"Calves," murmured Mrs. Gascogne, with still streaming eyes.
"Children," repeated Lady Dysart emphatically, "and I thought they
were every one of them drowned!"
"Oh, but a husband, Lady Dysart," cried Mrs. Lambert with orthodox
unction, "what are children compared to the husband?"
"Oh—er—of course not," said Lady Dysart, with something less
than her usual conviction of utterance, her thoughts flying to Sir
Benjamin and his bath chair.
"By the way," struck in Mrs. Gascogne, "my husband desired me to
say that he hopes to come over to-morrow afternoon to see Mr. Lambert,
and to hear all about the accident."
Mrs. Lambert looked more perturbed than gratified. "It's very kind
of the Archdeacon I'm sure," she said nervously; "but Mr. Lambert—"
(Mrs. Lambert belonged to the large class of women who are always
particular to speak of their husbands by their full style and title)
"Mr. Lambert is most averse to talking about it, and perhaps—if the
Archdeacon didn't mind—"
"That's just what I complain of in Christopher," exclaimed Lady
Dysart, breaking with renewed vigour into the conversation. "He was
most unsatisfactory about it all. Of course, when he came home that
night, he was so exhausted that I spared him. I said, 'Not one word
will I allow you to say to night, and I command you to stay in bed for
breakfast to-morrow morning!' I even went down at one o'clock, and
pinned a paper on William's door, so that he shouldn't call him.
Well—" Lady Dysart, at this turning-point of her story, found
herself betrayed into saying "My dear," but had presence of mind
enough to direct the expression at Mrs. Gascogne. "Well, my dear, when
I went up in the morning craving for news, he was most confused and
unsatisfactory. He pretended he knew nothing of how it had happened,
and that after the upset they all went drifting about in a sort of a
knot till the yacht came down on top of them. But, of course,
something more must have happened to them than that! It really was the
greatest pity that Miss Fitzpatrick got stunned by that blow on the
head just at the beginning of the whole business. She would have told
us all about it. But men never can describe anything."
"Oh, well, I assure you, Lady Dysart," piped the turkey hen, "Mr.
Lambert described to me all that he possibly could, and he said Mr.
Dysart gave every assistance in his power, and was the greatest help
to him in supporting that poor girl in the water; but the townspeople
were so very inquisitive, and really annoyed him so much with their
questions, that he said to me this morning he hoped he'd hear no more
about it, which is why I took the liberty of asking Mrs. Gascogne,
that the Archdeacon wouldn't mention it to him."
"Oh, yes, yes," said Mrs. Gascogne very politely, recalling herself
with difficulty from the mental excursion on which she had started
when Lady Dysart's unrelenting eye had been removed. "I am sure he
will—a—be delighted. I think, you know, Isabel, we ought—"
Lady Dysart was on her feet in a moment. "Yes, indeed, we ought!"
she responded briskly. "I have to pick up Pamela. Good-bye, Mrs.
Lambert; I hope I shall find you looking better the next time I see
you, and remember, if you cannot sleep, that there is no opiate like
an open window!" Mrs. Lambert's exclamation of horror followed
her visitors out of the room. Open windows were regarded by her as
a necessary housekeeping evil, akin to twigging carpets and
whitewashing the kitchen, something to be got over before anyone came
downstairs. Not even her reverence for Lady Dysart would induce her to
tolerate such a thing in any room in which she was, and she returned
to her woolwork, well satisfied to let the July sunshine come to her
through the well-fitting plate-glass windows of her hideous
drawing-room.
"The person I do pity in the whole matter," remarked Lady Dysart,
as the landau rolled out of the Rosemount gates and towards Lismoyle,
"is Charlotte Mullen. Of course, that poor excellent little Mrs.
Lambert got a great shock, but that was nothing compared with seeing
the sail go flat down on the water, as the people in the launch did.
In the middle of all poor Pamela's own fright, when she was tearing
open one of the luncheon baskets to get some whisky out, Charlotte
went into raging hysterics, and roared, my dear! And then she all but
fainted on to the top of Mr. Hawkins. Who would ever have thought of
her breaking down in that kind of way?"
"Faugh!" said Mrs. Gascogne, "disgusting creature!"
"Now, Kate, you are always saying censorious things about that poor
woman. People can't help showing their feelings sometimes, no matter
how ugly they are! All that I can tell you is," said Lady Dysart,
warming to fervour as was her wont, "if you had seen her this
afternoon as I did, with the tears in her eyes as she described the
whole thing to me, and the agonies she was in about that girl, you
would have felt sorry for her."
Mrs. Gascogne shot a glance, bright with intelligence and
amusement, at her cousin's flushed handsome face, and held her peace.
With Mrs. Gascogne, to hold her peace was to glide into the sanctuary
of her own thoughts, and remain there oblivious of all besides; but
the retribution that would surely have overtaken her at the next pause
in Lady Dysart's harangue was averted by the stopping of the carriage
at Miss Mullen's gate.
Francie lay back on her sofa after Pamela Dysart had left her. She
saw the landau drive away towards Bruff, with the sun twinkling on the
silver of the harness, and thought with an ungrudging envy how
awfully nice Miss Dysart was, and how lovely it would be to have a
carriage like that to drive about in. People in Dublin, who were not
half as grand as the Dysarts, would have been a great deal too grand
to come and see her up in her room like this, but here everyone was as
friendly as they could be, and not a bit stuck-up. It was certainly a
good day for her when she came down to Lismoyle, and in spite of all
that Uncle Robert had said about old Aunt Mullen's money, and how
Charlotte had feathered her own nest, there was no denying that
Charlotte was not a bad old thing after all. Her only regret was that
she had not seen the dress that Miss Dysart had on this after-noon
before she had got herself that horrid ready-made pink thing, and the
shirt with the big pink horse-shoes on it. Fanny Hemphill's hitherto
unquestioned opinion in the matter of costume suddenly tottered in
her estimation, and, with the loosening of that buttress of her former
life, all her primitive convictions were shaken.
The latch of the gate clicked again, and she leaned forward to see
who was coming. "What nonsense it is keeping me up here this way!" she
said to herself; "there's Roddy ambert coming in, and won't he be
cross when he finds that there's only Charlotte for him to talk to! I
will come down to-morrow, no matter what they say, but I suppose it
will be ages before the officers call again now." Miss Fitzpatrick
became somewhat moody at this reflection, and tried to remember what
it was that Mr. Hawkins had said about "taking shooting leave for the
12th;" she wished she hadn't been such a fool as not to ask him what
he had meant by the 12th. If it meant the 12th of July, she mightn't
see him again till he came back, and goodness knows when that would
be. Roddy Lambert was all very well, but what was he but an old
married man. "Gracious!" she interrupted herself aloud with a little
giggle, "how mad he'd be if he thought I called him that!" and Hawkins
was really a very jolly fellow. The hall-door opened again; she heard
Charlotte's voice raised in leave-taking, and then Mr. Lambert walked
slowly down the drive and the hall-door slammed. "He didn't stay
long," thought Francie; "I wonder if he's cross because I wasn't
downstairs? He's a very cross man. Oh, look at him kicking Mrs. Bruff
into the bushes! It's well for him Charlotte's coming ups-tairs and
can't see him!"
Charlotte was not looking any the worse for what she had gone
through on the day of the accident; in fact, as she came into the
room, there was an air of youthfulness and good spirits about her
that altered her surprisingly, and her manner towards her cousin was
geniality itself.
"Well, me child!" she began, "I hadn't a minute since dinner to
come and see you. The doorstep's worn out with the world and his wife
coming to ask how you are; and Louisa doesn't know whether she's on
her head or her heels with all the clean cups she's had to bring in!"
"Well, I wish to goodness I'd been downstairs to help her," said
Francie, whirling her feet off the sofa and sitting upright; "there's
nothing ails me to keep me stuck up here."
"Well, you shall come down to-morrow," replied Charlotte
soothingly; "I'm going to lunch with the Bakers, so you'll have to
come down to do your manners to Christopher Dysart. His mother said
he was coming to inquire for you to-morrow. And remember that only
for him the pike would be eating you at the bottom of the lake this
minute! Mind that! You'll have to thank him for saving your life!"
"Mercy on us," cried Francie; "what on earth will I say to him?"
"Oh, you'll find plenty to say to him! They're as easy as me old
shoe, all those Dysarts; I'd pity no one that had one of them to talk
to, from the mother down. Did you notice at the picnic how Pamela and
her brother took all the trouble on themselves? That's what I call
breeding, and not sitting about to be waited on like that great lazy
hunks, Miss Hope-Drummond! I declare I loathe the sight of these
English fine ladies, and my private belief is that Christopher Dysart
thinks the same of her, though he's too well-bred to show it. Yes, my
poor Susan," fondling with a large and motherly hand the cat that was
sprawling on her shoulder; "he's a real gentleman, like yourself, and
not a drop of dirty Saxon blood in him. He doesn't bring his great
vulgar bull-dog here to worry my poor son—"
"What did Mr. Lambert say, Charlotte?" asked Francie, who began to
be a little bored by this rhapsody. "Was he talking about the
accident?"
"Very little," said Charlotte, with a change of manner; "he only
said that poor Lucy, who wasn't there at all, was far worse than any
of us. As I told him, you, that we thought was dead, would be down
to-morrow, and not worth asking after. Indeed we were talking about
business most of the time—" She pressed her face down on the cat's
grey back to hide an irrepressible smile of recollection. "But that's
only interesting to the parties concerned."
Francie felt an unsuspected weakness in her knees when she walked
downstairs next day. She found herself clutching the stair-rail with
an absurdly tight grasp, and putting her feet down with trembling
caution on the oil-cloth stair covering, and when she reached the
drawing-room she was thankful to subside into Charlotte's armchair,
and allow her dizzy head to recover its equilibrium. She thought very
little about her nerves; in fact, was too ignorant to know whether
she possessed such things, and she gave a feeble laugh of surprise at
the way her heart jumped and fluttered when the door slammed
unexpectedly behind her. The old green sofa had been pulled out from
the wall and placed near the open window, with the Dublin Express laid
upon it; Francie noticed and appreciated the attention, and noted
too, that an arm-chair, sacred to the use of visitors, had been
planted in convenient relation to the sofa. "For Mr. Dysart, I
suppose," she thought, with a curl of her pretty lip, "he'll be as
much obliged to her as I am." She pushed the chair away, and debated
with herself as to whether she should dislodge the two cats who, with
faces of frowning withdrawal from all things earthly, were heaped in
simulated slumber in the corner of the sofa. She chose the arm-chair,
and, taking up the paper, languidly read the list of places where
bands would play in the coming week, and the advertisement of the
anthem at St. Patrick's for the next day.
How remote she felt from it all! How stale appeared these cherished
amusements! Most people would think the Lismoyle choir a poor
substitute for the ranks of white surplices in the chancel of St.
Patrick's, with the banners of the knights hanging above them, but
Francie thought it much better fun to look down over the edge of the
Lismoyle gallery at the red coats of Captain Cursiter's detachment,
than to stand crushed in the nave of the cathedral, even though the
most popular treble was to sing a solo, and though Mr. Thomas Whitty
might be waiting on the steps to disentangle her from the crowd that
would slowly surge up them into the street. A heavy-booted foot came
along the passage, and the door was opened by Norry, holding in her
grimy hand a tumbler containing a nauseous-looking yellow mixture.
"Miss Charlotte bid me give ye a bate egg with a half glass of
whisky in it whenever ye'd come downstairs." She stirred it with a
black kitchen fork, and proffered the sticky tumbler to Francie, who
took it, and swallowed the thin, flat liquid which it contained with a
shudder of loathing. "How bad y'are! Dhrink every dhrop of it now! An
empty sack won't stand, and ye're as white as a masheroon this minute.
God knows it's in yer bed ye should be, and not shtuck out in a chair
in the middle of the flure readin' the paper!" Her eye fell on the
apparently unconscious Mrs. and Miss Bruff. "Ha, ha! thin! how cozy
the two of yez is on yer sofa! Walk out, me Lady Ann!"
This courtesy-title, the expression of Norry's supremest contempt
and triumph, was accompanied by a sudden onslaught with the
hearth-brush, but long before it could reach them, the ladies referred
to had left the room by the open window.
The room was very quiet after Norry had gone away. Francie took the
evicted holding of the cats, and fell speedily into a doze induced by
the unwonted half glass of whisky. Her early dinner, an unappetising
meal of boiled mutton and rice pudding, was but a short interlude in
the dullness of the morning; and after it was eaten, a burning tract
of afternoon extended itself between her and Mr. Dysart's promised
visit. She looked out of the window at the sailing shreds of white
cloud high up in the deep blue of the sky, at the fat bees swinging
and droning in the purple blossoms of the columbine border, at two
kittens playing furiously in the depths of the mignonette bed; and
regardless of Charlotte's injunctions about the heat of the sun, she
said to herself that she would go out into the garden for a little. It
was three o'clock, and her room was as hot as an oven when she went up
to get her hat; her head ached as she stood before the glass and
arranged the wide brim to her satisfaction, and stuck her best paste
pin into the sailor's knot of her tie. Suddenly the door burst
unceremoniously open, and Norry's grey head and filthy face were
thrust round the edge of it.
"Come down, Miss Francie!" she said in a fierce whisper; "give over
making shnouts at yerself in the glass and hurry on down! Louisa isn't
in, and sure I can't open the doore the figure I am."
"Who's there?" asked Francie, with flushing cheeks.
"How would I know? I'd say 'twas Misther Lambert's knock whatever.
Sich galloppin' in and out of the house as there is these two days! Ye
may let in this one yerself!"
When Francie opened the hall-door she was both relieved and
disappointed to find that Norry had been right in the matter of the
knock. Mr. Lambert was apparently more taken by surprise than she
was. He did not speak at once, but, taking her hand, pressed it very
hard, and when Francie, finding the silence slightly embarrassing,
looked up at him with a laugh that was intended to simplify the
situation, she was both amazed and frightened to see a moisture
suspiciously like tears in his eyes.
"You—you look rather washed out," he stammered.
"You're very polite! Is that all you have to say to me?" she said,
slipping her hand out of his, and gaily ignoring his tragic tone. "You
and your old yacht nearly washed me out altogether! At all events,
you washed the colour out of me pretty well." She put up her hands and
rubbed her cheeks. "Are you coming in or going out? Charlotte's
lunching at the Bakers', and I'm going into the garden till tea-time,
so now you can do as you like."
"I'll come into the garden with you," he said stepping aside to let
her pass out. "But are you sure your head is well enough for you to go
out in this sun?"
"Sun your granny!" responded Francie, walking gingerly across the
gravel in her high-heeled house shoes, "I'm as well as ever I was."
"Well, you don't look it," he said with a concerned glance at the
faint colour in her cheeks and the violet shadows under her eyes.
"Come and sit down in the shade; it's about all you're good for."
A path skirted the flower-beds and bent round the evergreen-covered
slope that rose between the house and the road, and at the bend a
lime-tree spread its flat, green boughs lavishly over the path,
shading a seat made of half-rotten larch poles that extended its
dilapidated arms to the passer-by.
"Well now tell me all about it," began Lambert as soon as they had
sat down. "What did you feel like when you began to remember it all?
Were you very angry with me?"
"Yes, of course, I was angry with you, and I am now this minute,
and haven't I a good right, with my new hat at the bottom of the lake?"
"I can tell you we were both pretty nearly at the bottom of the
lake along with it," said Lambert, who disapproved of this frivolous
way of treating the affair. "I don't suppose I ever was nearer death
than I was when the sail was on top of me."
Francie looked at him for one instant with awestruck eyes, and
Lambert was congratulating himself on having made her realise the
seriousness of the situation, when she suddenly burst out laughing.
"Oh!" she apologised, "the thought just came into my head of the
look of Mrs. Lambert in a widow's cap, and how she'd adore to wear
one! You know she would, now don't you?"
"And I suppose you'd adore to see her in one?"
"Of course I would!" She gave him a look that was equivalent to the
wag of the tail with which a dog assures the obtuse human being that
its worrying and growling are only play. "You might know that without
being told. And now perhaps you'll tell me how poor Mrs. Lambert is?
I hear she was greatly upset by the fright she got about you, and
indeed you're not worthy of it."
"She's much better, thank you."
He looked at Francie under his lowered lids, and tried to find it
in his heart to wish that she could sometimes be a little more grown
up and serious. She was leaning back with her hat crushed against a
trunk of the tree, so that its brim made a halo round her face, and
the golden green light that filtered through the leaves of the lime
moved like water over her white dress. If he had ever heard the story
of "Undine" it might have afforded him the comforting hypothesis that
this delicate, cool, youthful creature, with her provoking charm,
could not possibly be weighted with the responsibility of a soul; but
an unfortunate lack of early culture denied to Mr. Lambert this
excuse for the levity with which she always treated him—a man
sixteen years older than she was, her oldest friend, as he might say,
who had always been kind to her ever since she was a scut of a child.
Her eyes were closed; but an occasional quiver of the long lashes told
him that she had no intention of sleeping; she was only pretending to
be tired, "out of tricks," he thought angrily. He waited for a moment
or two, and then he spoke her name. The corners of her mouth curved a
little, but the eyelashes were not raised.
"Are you tired, or are you shamming?"
"Shamming," was the answer, still with closed eyes.
"Don't you think you could open your eyes?"
"No."
Another short period of silence ensued, and the sound of summer in
the air round them strengthened and deepened, as the colour
strengthens and deepens in a blush. A wasp strayed in under the canopy
of the lime and idled inquisitively about Francie's hat and the bunch
of mignonette in her belt, but she lay so still under this supreme
test that Lambert thought she must be really asleep, and taking out
his handkerchief prepared to rout the invader. At the same moment
there came a sound of wheels and a fast-trotting horse on the road;
it neared them rapidly, and Miss Fitzpatrick leaped to her feet and
put aside the leaves of the lime just in time to see the back of Mr.
Hawkins' head as his polo-cart spun past the Tally Ho gate.
"I declare I thought it was Mr. Dysart," she said, looking a little
ashamed of herself; "I wonder where in the name of fortune is Mr.
Hawkins going!"
"I thought you were so dead asleep you couldn't hear anything,"
said Lambert, with a black look; "he's not coming here, anyhow."
She dropped back into the corner of the seat again as if the start
forward had tired her.
"Oh! I was so frightened at the wasp, and I wouldn't let on!"
"I wonder why you're always so unfriendly with me now," began
Lambert suddenly, fixing his eyes upon her; "there was once on a time
when we were great friends, and you used to write to me, and you'd
say you were glad to see me when I went up to town, but now you're so
set up with your Dysarts and your officers that you don't think your
old friends worth talking to."
"Oh!" Francie sat up and faced her accuser valiantly, but with an
inwardly-stricken conscience. "You know that's a dirty, black lie!"
"I came over here this afternoon," pursued Lambert, "very anxious
about you, and wanting to tell you how sorry I was, and how I accused
myself for what had happened—and how am I treated? You won't so
much as take the trouble to speak to me. I suppose if I was one of
your swell new friends—Christopher Dysart, for instance, who you
are looking out for so hard—it would be a very different story."
By the time this indictment was delivered, Francie's face had more
colour in it than it had known for some days; she kept her eyes on
the ground and said nothing.
"I knew it was the way of the world to kick a fellow out of the way
when you had got as much as you wanted out of him, and I suppose as I
am an old married man I have no right to expect anything better, but I
did think you'd have treated me better than this!"
"Don't," she said brokenly, looking up at him with her eyes full of
tears; "I'm too tired to fight you."
Lambert took her hand quickly. "My child," he said, in a voice
rough with contrition and pity, "I didn't mean to hurt you; I didn't
know what I was saying." He tenderly stroked the hand that lay limply
in his. "Tell me you're not vexed with me."
"No," said Francie, with a childish sob; "but you said horrid
things to me—"
"Well, I never will again," he said soothingly. "We'll always be
friends, won't we?" with an interrogatory pressure of the hand. He had
never seen her in such a mood as this; he forgot the inevitable
effect on her nerves of what she had gone through, and his egotism
made him believe that this collapse of her usual supple hardihood was
due to the power of his reproaches.
"Yes," she answered, with the dawn of a smile.
"Till the next time, anyhow," continued Lambert, still holding her
hand in one of his, and fumbling in his breast pocket with the other.
"And, now, look here what I brought you to try and make up to you for
nearly drowning you." He gently pulled her hand down from her eyes,
and held up a small gold bangle, with a horse-shoe in pearls on it.
"Isn't that a pretty thing?"
Francie looked at it incredulously, with the tears still shining on
her eyelashes.
"Oh, Mr. Lambert, you don't mean you got that for me? I couldn't
take it. Why, it's real gold!"
"Well, you've got to take it. Look what's written on it."
She took it from him, and saw engraved inside the narrow band of
gold, her own name and the date of the accident.
"Now, you see it's yours already," he said. "No, you mustn't refuse
it," as she tried to put it back into his hand again. "There,"
snapping it quickly on to her wrist, "you must keep it as a sign
you're not angry with me."
"It's like a policeman putting on a handcuff," said Francie, with a
quivering laugh. "I've often seen them putting them on the drunken men
in Dublin."
"And you'll promise not to chuck over your old friends?" said
Lambert urgently.
"No, I won't chuck them over," she replied, looking confidingly at
him.
"Not for anybody?" He weighted the question with all the expression
he was capable of.
"No, not for anybody," she repeated, rather more readily than he
could have wished.
"And you're sure you're not angry with me?" he persisted, "and you
like the bangle?"
She had taken it off to re-examine it, and she held it up to him.
"Here, put it on me again, and don't be silly," she said, the old
spirit beginning to wake in her eyes.
"Do you remember when you were a child the way you used to thank me
when I gave you anything?" he asked, pressing her hand hard.
"But I'm not a child now!"
Lambert, looking in her face, saw the provoking smile spread like
sunshine from her eyes to her lips, and, intoxicated by it, he stooped
his head and kissed her.
Steps came running along the walk towards them, and the fat face
and red head of the Protestant orphan appeared under the boughs of the
lime-tree.
"A messenger from Bruff's afther bringing this here, Miss Francie,"
she panted, tendering a letter in her fingers, "an' Miss Charlotte
lef' me word I should get tea when ye'd want it, an' will I wet it
now?"
Christopher had shirked the expression of Miss Fitzpatrick's
gratitude.
"Although I'm nearly dead after the bazaar I must write you a line
or two to tell you what it was like. It was scrumshous. I wore my
white dress with the embroidery the first day and the pink dress that
you and I bought together the second day and everybody liked me best
in the white one. It was fearful hot and it was great luck it was at
the flower stall Mrs. Gascogne asked me to sell. Kathleen Baker and
the Beatties had the refreshments and if you saw the colour of their
faces with the heat at tea-time I declare you'd have to laugh. The
Dysarts brought in a lovely lot of flowers and Mr. Dysart was very
nice helping me to tie them up. You needn't get on with any of your
nonsence about him, he'd never think of flirting with me or anyone
though he's fearfully polite and you'd be in fits if you saw the way
Miss Hopedrummond the girl I told you about was running after him and
anyone could see he'd sooner talk to his sister or his mother and I
don't wonder for their both very nice which is more than she is. Roddy
Lambert was there of course and poor Mrs. L. in a puce dress and
everybody from the whole country round. Mr. Hawkins was grand fun.
Nothing would do him but to come behind the counter with me and Mrs.
Gascogne and go on with the greatest nonsence selling buttonholes to
the old ladies and making them buy a lot of old rotten jeranium
cuttings that was all Charlotte would give to the stall. The second
day it was only just the townspeople that were there and I couldn't
be bothered selling to them all day and little thanks you get from
them. The half of them came thinking they'd get everything for
nothing because it was the last day and you'd hear them fighting Mrs.
Gascogne as if she was a shopwoman. I sat up in the gallery with
Hawkins most of the evening and he brought up tea there and
strawberries and Charlotte was shouting and roaring round the place
looking for me and nobody knew where we were. 'Twas lovely—"
At this point Miss Fitzpatrick became absorbed in meditation, and
the portrayal on the blotting-paper of a profile of a conventionally
classic type, which, by virtue of a moustache and a cigarette, might
be supposed to represent Mr. Hawkins. She did not feel inclined to
give further details of her evening, even to Fanny Hemphill. As a
matter of fact she had in her own mind pressed the possibilities of
her acquaintance with Mr. Hawkins to their utmost limit, and it seemed
to her not impossible that soon she might have a good deal more to
say on the subject; but, nevertheless, she could not stifle a certain
anxiety as to whether, after all, there would ever be anything
definite to tell. Hawkins was more or less an unknown quantity; his
mere idioms and slang were the language of another world. It was easy
to diagnose Tommy Whitty or Jimmy Jemmison and their fellows, but
this was a totally new experience, and the light of previous
flirtations had no illuminating power. She had, at all events, the
satisfaction of being sure that on Fanny Hemphill not even the
remotest shadow of an allusion would be lost, and that, whatever the
future might bring forth, she would be eternally credited with the
subjugation of an English officer.
The profile with the moustache and the cigarette was repeated
several times on the blotting-paper during this interval, but not to
her satisfaction; her new bangle pressed its pearly horse-shoes into
the whiteness of her wrist and hurt her, and she took it off and laid
it on the table. It also, and the circumstances of its bestowal, were
among the things that she had not seen fit to mention to the friend
of her bosom. It was nothing of course; of no more significance than
the kiss that had accompanied it, except that she had been glad to
have the bangle, and had cared nothing for the kiss; but that was just
what she would never be able to get Fanny Hemphill to believe.
The soft, clinging tread of bare feet became audible in the hall,
and a crack of the dining-room door was opened.
"Miss Francie," said a voice through the crack, "th' oven's hot."
"Have you the eggs and everything ready, Bid?" asked Francie, who
was adding a blotted smoke-wreath to the cigarette of the twentieth
profile.
"I have, miss," replied the invisible Bid Sal, "an' Norry says to
be hurrying for 'tis short till Miss Charlotte 'll be comin' in."
Francie closed the blotter on her half-finished letter, and pursued
the vanishing figure to the kitchen. Norry was not to be seen, but on
the table were bowls with eggs, sugar, and butter, and beside them
was laid a bunch of twigs, tied together like a miniature birch-rod.
The making of a sponge-cake was one of Francie's few accomplishments,
and putting on an apron of dubious cleanliness, lent by Louisa, she
began operations by breaking the eggs, separating the yolks from the
whites, and throwing the shells into the fire with professional
accuracy of aim.
"Where's the egg-whisk, Bid?" she demanded.
"'Tis thim that she bates the eggs with, miss," answered Bid Sal in
the small, bashful voice by which she indicated her extreme humility
towards those in authority over her, handing the birch-rod to Francie
as she spoke.
"Mercy on us! What a thing! I'd be all night beating them with
that!"
"Musha, how grand ye are!" broke in Norry's voice from the
scullery, in tones of high disdain; "if ye can't bate eggs with that
ye'd betther lave it to thim that can!" Following her words came
Norry herself, bearing an immense saucepanful of potatoes, and having
hoisted it on to the fire, she addressed herself to Bid Sal. "Get out
from undher me feet out o' this! I suppose it's to make cakes ye'd
go, in place of feedin' the pigs! God knows I have as much talked
since breakfast as'd sicken an ass, but, indeed, I might as well be
playin' the pianna as tellin' yer business to the likes o' ye."
A harsh yell at this point announced that a cat's tail had been
trodden on, but, far from expressing compunction, Norry turned with
fury upon the latest offender, and seizing from a corner beside the
dresser an ancient carriage whip, evidently secreted for the purpose,
she flogged the whole assemblage of cats out of the kitchen. Bid Sal
melted away like snow in a thaw, and Norry, snatching the bowl of eggs
from Francie, began to thrash them with the birch rod, scolding and
grumbling all the time.
"That ye may be happy!" (This pious wish was with Norry always
ironical.) "God knows ye should be ashamed, filling yer shtummicks
with what'll sicken thim, and dhraggin' the people from their work to
be runnin' afther ye!"
"I don't want you to be running after me," began Francie humbly.
"Faith thin that's the thruth!" returned the inexorable Norry; "if
ye have thim ofcers running afther ye ye're satisfied. Here, give me
the bowl till I butther it. I'd sooner butther it meself than to be
lookin' at ye doin' it!"
A loud cough, coming from the scullery, of the peculiarly doleful
type affected by beggars, momentarily interrupted this tirade.
"Sha'se mick, Nance! Look at that, now, how ye have poor Nance the
Fool waitin' on me till I give her the empty bottle for Julia Duffy."
Francie moved towards the scullery door, urged by a natural
curiosity to see what manner of person Nance the Fool might be, and
saw, squatted on the damp flags, an object which could only be
described as a bundle of rags with a cough in it. The last
characteristic was exhibited in such detail at the sight of Francie
that she retired into the kitchen again, and ventured to suggest to
Norry that the bottle should be given as soon as possible, and the
scullery relieved of Nance the Fool's dreadful presence.
"There it is for her on the dhresser," replied Norry, still
furiously whipping the eggs; "ye can give it yerself."
From the bundle of rags, as Francie approached it, there issued a
claw, which snatched the bottle and secreted it, and Francie just
caught a glimpse, under the swathing of rags, of eyes so inflamed
with crimson that they seemed to her like pools of blood, and heard
mouthings and mumblings of Irish which might have been benedictions,
but, if so, were certainly blessings in disguise.
"That poor craythur walked three miles to bring me the bottle I
have there on the dhresser. It's yerr'b tay that Julia Duffy makes for
thim that has the colic." Norry was softening a little as the whites
of the eggs rose in stiff and silvery froth. "Julia's a cousin of me
own, through the mother's family, and she's able to docthor as good
as e'er a docthor there's in it."
"I don't think I'd care to have her doctoring me," said Francie,
mindful of the touzled head and dirty face that had looked down upon
her from the window at Gurthnamuckla.
"And little shance ye'd have to get her!" retorted Norry; "'tis
little she regards the likes o' you towards thim that hasn't a
Christhian to look to but herself." Norry defiantly shook the foam
from the birch rod, and proceeded with her eulogy of Julia Duffy.
"She's as wise a woman and as good a scholar as what's in the country,
and many's the poor craythure that's prayin' hard for her night and
morning for all she done for thim. B'leeve you me, there's plinty
would come to her funeral that'd be follyin' their own only for her
and her doctherin'."
"She has a very pretty place," remarked Francie who wished to be
agreeable, but could not conscientiously extol Miss Duffy; "it's a
pity she isn't able to keep the house nicer."
"Nice! What way have she to keep it nice that hasn't one but
herself to look to! And if it was clane itself, it's all the good it'd
do her that they'd throw her out of it quicker."
"Who'd throw her out?"
"I know that meself." Norry turned away and banged open the door of
the oven. "There's plinty that's ready to pull the bed from undher a
lone woman if they're lookin' for it for theirselves."
The mixture had by this time been poured into its tin shape, and,
having placed it in the oven, Francie seated herself on the kitchen
table to superintend its baking. The voice of conscience told her to
go back to the dining-room and finish her letter, but she repressed
it, and, picking up a kitten that had lurked, unsuspected, between a
frying-pan and the wall during the rout of its relatives, she
proceeded to while away the time by tormenting it, and insulting the
cockatoo with frivolous questions.
Miss Mullen's weekly haggle with the butcher did not last quite as
long as usual this Friday morning. She had, in fact, concluded it by
herself taking the butcher's knife, and with jocose determination, had
proceeded to cut off the special portion of the "rack" which she
wished for, in spite of Mr. Driscoll's protestations that it had been
bespoke by Mrs. Gascogne. Exhilarated by this success, she walked
home at a brisk pace, regardless of the heat, and of the weight of
the rusty black tourists, bag which she always wore, slung across her
shoulders by a strap, on her expeditions into the town. There was no
one to be seen in the house when she came into it, except the exiled
cats, who were sleeping moodily in a patch of sunshine on the
hall-mat, and after some passing endearments, their mistress went on
into the dining-room, in which, by preference, as well as for
economy, she sat in the mornings. It had, at all events, one advantage
over the drawing-room, in possessing a sunny French window, opening
on to the little grass-garden—a few untidy flower-beds, with a
high, unclipped hedge surrounding them, the resort of cats and their
breakfast dishes, but for all that a pleasant outlook on a hot day.
Francie had been writing at the dinner-table, and Charlotte sat down
in the chair that her cousin had vacated, and began to add up the
expenses of the morning. When she had finished, she opened the
blotter to dry her figures, and saw, lying in it, the letter that
Francie had begun.
In the matter of reading a letter not intended for her eye, Miss
Mullen recognised only her own inclinations, and the facilities
afforded to her by fate, and in this instance one played into the
hands of the other. She read the letter through quickly, her mouth
set at its grimmest expression of attention, and replaced it carefully
in the blotting-case where she found it. She sat still, her two fists
clenched on the table before her, and her face rather redder than
even the hot walk from Lismoyle had made it.
There had been a good deal of information in the letter that was
new to her, and it seemed important enough to demand much
consideration. The reflection on her own contribution to the bazaar
did not hurt her in the least, in fact, it slightly raised her opinion
of Francie that she should have noticed it; but that ingenuous
confidence about the evening spent in the gallery was another affair.
At this point in her reflections, she became aware that her eye was
attracted by something glittering on the green baize of the
dinnertable, half-hidden under two or three loose sheets of paper. It
was the bangle that she remembered having seen on Francie's wrist, and
she took it up and looked curiously at the double horse-shoes as she
appraised its value. She never thought of it as being real—Francie
was not at all above an effective imitation—and she glanced inside
to see what the mark might be. There was the eighteen-carat mark sure
enough, and there also was Francie's name and the date, July 1st,
189—. A moment's reflection enabled Charlotte to identify this as
the day of the yacht accident, and another moment sufficed for her to
determine that the giver of the bangle had been Mr. Hawkins. She was
only too sure that it had not been Christopher, and certainly no
glimmer of suspicion crossed her mind that the first spendings from
her loan to Mr. Lambert were represented by the bangle.
She opened the blotter, and read again that part of the letter that
treated of Christopher Dysart. "P'yah!" she said to herself, "the
little fool! what does she know about him?" At this juncture, the
wheezing of the spring of the passage-door gave kindly signal of
danger, and Charlotte deftly slipped the letter back into the blotter,
replaced the bangle under the sheets of paper, and was standing
outside the French window when Francie came into the room, with
flushed cheeks, a dirty white apron, and in her hands a plate bearing
a sponge-cake of the most approved shade of golden-brown. At sight of
Charlotte she stopped guiltily, and, as the latter stepped in at the
window, she became even redder than the fire had made her.
"Oh—I've just made this, Charlotte—" she faltered; "I bought
the eggs and the butter myself; I sent Bid for them, and Norry
said—she thought you wouldn't mind—"
On an ordinary occasion Charlotte might have minded considerably
even so small a thing as the heating of the oven and the amount of
flour and sugar needed for the construction of the cake; but a
slight, a very slight sense of wrong-doing, conspired, with a little
confusion, consequent on the narrowness of her escape, to dispose her
to compliance.
"Why, me dear child, why would I mind anything so agreeable to me
and all concerned as that splendour of a cake that I see there? I
declare I never gave you credit for being able to do anything half as
useful! 'Pon me honour, I'll give a tea-party on the strength of it."
Even as she spoke she had elaborated the details of a scheme of which
the motor should be the cake that Francie's own hand had constructed.
The choir practice was poorly attended that afternoon. A long and
heavy shower, coming at the critical moment, had combined with a still
longer and heavier luncheon-party given by Mrs. Lynch, the
solicitor's wife, to keep away several members. Francie had evaded her
duties by announcing that her only pair of thick boots had gone to be
soled, and only the most ardent mustered round Mrs. Gascogne's organ
bench. Of these was Pamela Dysart, faithful, as was her wont, in the
doing of what she had undertaken; and as Charlotte kicked off her
goloshes at the gallery door, and saw Pamela's figure in its
accustomed place, she said to herself that consistency was an
admirable quality. Her approbation was still warm when she joined
Pamela at the church door after the practice was over, and she
permitted herself the expression of it.
"Miss Dysart, you're the only young woman of the rising generation
in whom I place one ha'porth of reliance; I can tell you, not one step
would I have stirred out on the chance of meeting any other member of
the choir on a day of this kind, but I knew I might reckon on meeting
you here."
"Oh, I like coming to the practices," said Pamela, wondering why
Miss Mullen should specially want to see her. They were standing in
the church porch, waiting for Pamela's pony-cart, while the rain
streamed off the roof in a white veil in front of them. "You must let
me drive you home," she went on; "but I don't think the trap will come
till this downpour is over."
Under the gallery stairs stood a bench, usually appropriated to the
umbrellas and cloaks of the congregation; and after the rest of the
choir had launched themselves forth upon the yellow torrent that took
the place of the path through the churchyard, Pamela and Miss Mullen
sat themselves down upon it to wait. Mrs. Gascogne was practising her
Sunday voluntary, and the stairs were trembling with the vibrations
of the organ; it was a Largo of Bach's, and Pamela would infinitely
have preferred to listen to it than to lend a polite ear to
Charlotte's less tuneful but equally reverberating voice.
"I think I mentioned to you, Miss Dysart, that I have to go to
Dublin next week for three or four days; teeth, you know, teeth—not
that I suppose you have any experience of such miseries yet!"
Pamela did not remember, nor, beyond a sympathetic smile, did she
at first respond. Her attention had been attracted by the dripping,
deplorable countenance of Max, which was pleading to her round the
corner of the church door for that sanctuary which he well knew to be
eternally denied to him. There had been a time in Max's youth when he
had gone regularly with Pamela to afternoon service, lying in a corner
of the gallery in discreet slumber. But as he emerged from puppydom
he had developed habits of snoring and scratching which had betrayed
his presence to Mrs. Gascogne, and the climax had come one Sunday
morning when, in defiance of every regulation, he had flung himself
from the drawing-room window at Bruff, and followed the carriage to
the church at such speed as his crooked legs could compass. Finding
the gallery door shut, he had made his way nervously up the aisle
until, when nearing the chancel steps, he was so overcome with terror
at the sight of the surpliced figure of the Archdeacon sternly
fulminating the Commandments, that he had burst out into a loud fit of
hysterical barking. Pamela and the culprit had made an abject visit
to the Rectory next day, but the sentence of ex-communication went
forth, and Max's religious exercises were thenceforth limited to the
churchyard. But on this unfriendly afternoon the sight of his long
melancholy nose, and ears dripping with rain, was too much for even
Pamela's rectitude.
"Oh, yes, teeth are horrible things," she murmured, stealthily
patting her waterproof in the manner known to all dogs as a signal of
encouragement.
"Horrible things! Upon my word they are! Beaks, that's what we
ought to have instead of them! I declare I don't know which is the
worst, cutting your first set of teeth, or your last! But that's not
what's distressing me most about going to Dublin."
"Really," said Pamela, who, conscious that Max was now securely
hidden behind her petticoats, was able to give her whole attention to
Miss Mullen; "I hope it's nothing serious."
"Well, Miss Dysart," said Charlotte, with a sudden burst of
candour, "I'll tell you frankly what it is. I'm not easy in my mind
about leaving that girl by herself—Francie y' know—she's very
young, and I suppose I may as well tell the truth, and say she's very
pretty." She paused for the confirmation that Pamela readily gave. "So
you'll understand now, Miss Dysart, that I feel anxious about leaving
her in a house by herself, and the reason I wanted to see you so
specially to-day was to ask if you'd do me a small favour, which,
being your mother's daughter, I'm sure you'll not refuse." She looked
up at Pamela, showing all her teeth. "I want you to be the good angel
that you always are, and come in and look her up sometimes if you
happen to be in town."
The lengthened prelude to this modest request might have indicated
to a more subtle soul than Pamela's that something weightier lay
behind it; but her grey eyes met Miss Mullen's restless brown ones
with nothing in them except kindly surprise that it was such a little
thing that she had been asked to do.
"Of course I will," she answered; "mamma and I will have to come in
about clearing away the rest of that awful bazaar rubbish, and I shall
be only too glad to come and see her, and I hope she will come and
lunch at Bruff some day while you are away."
This was not quite what Charlotte was aiming at, but still it was
something.
"You're a true friend, Miss Dysart," she said gushingly, "I knew
you would be; it'll only be for a few days, at all events, that I'll
bother you with me poor relation! I'm sure she'll be able to amuse
herself in the evenings and mornings quite well, though indeed, poor
child, I'm afraid she'll be lonely enough!"
Mrs. Gascogne, putting on her gloves at the top of the stairs,
thought to herself that Charlotte Mullen might be able to impose upon
Pamela, but other people were not so easily imposed on. She leaned
over the staircase railing, and said, "Are you aware, Pamela, that
your trap is waiting at the gate?" Pamela got up, and Max, deprived
of the comfortable shelter of her skirts, crawled forth from under
the bench and sneaked out of the church door. "I wouldn't have that
dog's conscience for a good deal," went on Mrs. Gascogne as she came
downstairs. "In fact, I am beginning to think that the only people who
get everything they want are the people who have no consciences at
all."
"There's a pretty sentiment for a clergyman's wife!" exclaimed
Charlotte. "Wait till I see the Archdeacon and ask him what sort of
theology that is! Now wasn't that the very image of Mrs. Gascogne?"
she continued as Pamela and she drove away; "the best and the most
religious woman in the parish, but no one's able to say a sharper
thing when she likes, and you never know what heterodoxy she'll let
fly at you next!"
The rain was over, and the birds were singing loudly in the thick
shrubs at Tally Ho as Pamela turned the roan pony in at the gate; the
sun was already drawing a steamy warmth from the bepuddled road, and
the blue of the afternoon sky was glowing freshly and purely behind a
widening proscenium of clouds.
"Now you might just as well come in and have a cup of tea; it's
going to be a lovely evening after all, and I happen to know there's a
grand sponge-cake in the house." Thus spoke Charlotte, with
hospitable warmth, and Pamela permitted herself to be persuaded. "It
was Francie made it herself; she'll be as proud as Punch at having you
to—" Charlotte stopped short with her hand on the drawing-room
door, and then opened it abruptly.
There was no one to be seen but on the table were two half-empty
cups of tea, and the new sponge-cake, reduced by one-third, graced the
centre of the board. Miss Mullen glared round the room. A stifled
giggle broke from the corner behind the piano, and Francie's head
appeared over the top, instantly followed by that of Mr. Hawkins.
"We thought 'twas visitors when we heard the wheels," said Miss
Fitzpatrick, still laughing, but looking very much ashamed of herself,
"and we went to hide when they passed the window for fear we'd be
seen." She paused, not knowing what to say, and looked entreatingly at
Pamela. "I never thought it'd be you—"
It was borne in on her suddenly that this was not the manner in
which Miss Dysart would have acted under similar circumstances, and
for the first time a doubt as to the fitness of her social methods
crossed her mind.
Pamela, as she drove home after tea, thought she understood why it
was that Miss Mullen did not wish her cousin to be left to her own
devices in Lismoyle.
There was no sound in the red gloom, except the steady trickle of
running water, and the anxious breathing of the photographer.
Christopher's long hands moved mysteriously in the crimson light,
among phials, baths, and cases of negatives, while uncanny smells of
various acids and compounds thickened the atmosphere. Piles of old
trunks towered dimly in the corners, a superannuated sofa stood on
its head by the wall, with its broken hindlegs in the air, three old
ball skirts hung like ghosts of Bluebeard's wives upon the door, from
which, to Christopher's developing tap, a narrow passage forced its
angular way.
There was presently a step on the uncarpeted flight of attic
stairs, accompanied by a pattering of broad paws, and Pamela, closely
attended by the inevitable Max, slid with due caution into the room.
"Well, Christopher," she began, sitting gingerly down in the
darkness on an old imperial, a relic of the period when Sir Benjamin
posted to Dublin in his own carriage, "mamma says she is to come!"
"Lawks!" said Christopher succinctly, after a pause occupied by the
emptying of one photographic bath into another.
"Mamma said she 'felt Charlotte Mullen's position so keenly in
having to leave that girl by herself,'" pursued Pamela, "'that it was
only common charity to take her in here while she was away.'"
"Well, my dear, and what are you going to do with her?" said
Christopher cheerfully.
"Oh, I can't think," replied Pamela despairingly; "and I know that
Evelyn does not care about her; only last night she said she dressed
like a doll at a bazaar."
Christopher busied himself with his chemicals, and said nothing.
"The fact is, Christopher," went on his sister decisively, "you
will have to undertake her. Of course, I'll help you, but I really
cannot face the idea of entertaining both her and Evelyn at the same
time. Just imagine how they would hate it."
"Let them hate it," said Christopher, with the crossness of a
good-natured person who feels that his good nature is going to make
him do a disagreeable thing.
"Ah, Christopher, be good; it will only be for three days, and
she's very easy to talk to; in fact," ended Pamela apologetically, "I
think I rather like her!"
"Well, do you know," said Christopher, "the curious thing is, that
though I can't talk to her and she can't talk to me, I rather like
her, too— when I'm at the other end of the room."
"That's all very fine," returned Pamela dejectedly; "it may amuse
you to study her through a telescope, but it won't do anyone else much
good; after all, you are the person who is really responsible for her
being here. You saved her life."
"I know I did," replied her brother irritably, staring at the
stumpy candle behind the red glass of the lantern, unaware of the
portentous effect of its light upon his eye-glass, which shone like a
ball of fire; "that's much the worst feature of the case. It creates
a dreadful bond of union. At that infernal bazaar, whenever I happened
to come within hail of her, Miss Mullen collected a crowd and made a
speech at us. I will say for her that she hid with Hawkins as much as
she could, and did her best to keep out of my way. As I said before, I
have no personal objection to her, but I have no gift for competing
with young women. Why not have Hawkins to dinner every night and to
luncheon every day? It's much the simplest way of amusing her, and it
will save me a great deal of wear and tear that I don't feel equal to."
Pamela got up from the imperial.
"I hate you when you begin your nonsense of theorising about
yourself as if you were a mixture of Methuselah and Diogenes; I have
seen you making yourself just as agreeable to young women as Mr.
Hawkins or anyone;" she paused at the door. "She'll be here the day
after to-morrow," with a sudden collapse into pathos. "Oh,
Christopher, you must help me to amuse her!"
Two days afterwards Miss Mullen left for Dublin by the early train,
and in the course of the morning her cousin got upon an outside car in
company with her trunk, and embarked upon the preliminary stage of
her visit to Bruff. She was dressed in the attire which in her own
mind she specified as her "Sunday clothes," and as the car rattled
through Lismoyle, she put on a pair of new yellow silk gloves with a
confidence in their adequacy to the situation that was almost
touching. She felt a great need of their support. Never since she was
grown up had she gone on a visit, except for a night or two to the
Hemphill's summer lodgings at Kingstown, when such "things" as she
required were conveyed under her arm in a brown paper parcel, and she
and the three Miss Hemphills had sociably slept in the back
drawing-room. She had been once at Bruff, a visit of ceremony, when
Lady Dysart only had been at home, and she had sat and drunk her tea
in unwonted silence, wishing that there were sugar in it, but afraid
to ask for it, and respecting Charlotte for the ease with which she
accepted her surroundings, and discoursed of high and difficult
matters with her hostess. It was only the thought of writing to her
Dublin friends to tell them of how she had stayed at Sir Benjamin
Dysart's place that really upheld her during the drive; no matter how
terrible her experiences might be, the fact would remain to her,
sacred and unalterable.
Nevertheless, its consolations seemed very remote at the moment
when the car pulled up at the broad steps of Bruff, and Gorman the
butler came down them, and solemnly assisted her to alight, while the
setter and spaniel, who had greeted her arrival with the usual
official chorus of barking, smelt round her politely but with extreme
firmness. She stood forlornly in the big cool hall, waiting till
Gorman should be pleased to conduct her to the drawing-room,
uncertain as to whether she ought to take off her coat, uncertain
what to do with her umbrella, uncertain of all things except of her
own ignorance. A white stone double staircase rose overawingly at the
end of the hall; the floor under her feet was dark and slippery, and
when she did at length prepare to follow the butler, she felt that
visiting at grand houses was not as pleasant as it sounded.
A door into the hall suddenly opened, and there issued from it the
hobbling figure of an old man wearing a rusty tall hat down over his
ears, and followed by a cadaverous attendant, who was holding an
umbrella over the head of his master, like a Siamese courtier.
"D—n your eyes, James Canavan!" said Sir Benjamin Dysart, "can't
you keep the rain off my new hat, you blackguard!" Then spying
Francie, who was crossing the hall, "Ho-ho! That's a fine girl,
begad! What's she doing in my hall?"
"Oh, hush, hush, Sir Benjamin!" said James Canavan, in tones of
shocked propriety. "That is a young lady visitor."
"Then she's my visitor," retorted Sir Benjamin, striking his
ponderous stick on the ground, "and a devilish pretty visitor, too!
I'll drive her out in my carriage to-morrow."
"You will, Sir Benjamin, you will," answered his henchman, hurrying
the master of the house along towards the hall door; while Francie,
with a new and wholly unexpected terror added to those she had
brought with her, followed the butler to the drawing-room.
It was a large room. Francie felt it to be the largest she had ever
been in, as she advanced round a screen, and saw Lady Dysart at an
immeasurable distance working at a heap of dingy serge, and behind
her, still further off, the well-curled head of Miss Hope-Drummond
just topping the cushion of a low arm-chair.
"Oh, how do you do!" said Lady Dysart, getting up briskly, and
dropping as she did so a large pair of scissors and the child's frock
at which she had been working. "You are very good to have come over
so early."
The geniality of Lady Dysart's manner might have assured anyone
less alarmed than her visitor that there was no ill intention in this
remark; but such discernment was beyond Francie.
"Miss Mullen told me to be over here by twelve, Lady Dysart," she
said abjectly, "and as she had the car ordered for me I didn't
like—"
Lady Dysart began to laugh, with the large and yet refined
bonhommie that was with her the substitute for tact.
"Why shouldn't you come early, my dear child?" she said, looking
approvingly at Francie's embarrassed countenance. "I'll tell Pamela
you are here. Evelyn, don't you know Miss Fitzpatrick?"
Miss Hope-Drummond, thus adjured, raised herself languidly from her
chair, and shook hands with the newcomer, as Lady Dysart strode from
the room with her customary business-like rapidity. Silence reigned
for nearly a minute after the door closed; but at length Miss
Hope-Drummond braced herself to the exertion of being agreeable.
"Very hot day, isn't it?" looking at Francie's flushed cheeks.
"It is indeed, roasting! I was nearly melting with the heat on the
jaunting-car coming over," replied Francie, with a desire to be as
responsive as possible, "but it's lovely and cool in here."
She looked at Miss Hope-Drummond's spotless white gown, and wished
she had not put on her Sunday terra-cotta.
"Oh, is it?"
Silence; during which Francie heard the wheels of her car grinding
away down the avenue, and wished that she were on it.
"Have you been out on the lake much lately, Miss Hope-Drummond?"
Francie's wish was merely the laudable one of trying to keep the
heavy ball of conversation rolling, but the question awoke a
slumbering worm of discontent in her companion's well-ordered breast.
Christopher was even now loosing from his moorings at the end of the
park, without having so much as mentioned that he was going out; and
Captain Cursiter, her own compatriot, attached—almost linked— to
her by the bonds of mutual acquaintances, and her thorough knowledge
of the Lincolnshire Cursiters, had not risen to the fly that she had
only yesterday thrown over him on the subject of the steam-launch.
"No; I had rather more than I cared for the last time we were out,
the day of the picnic. I've had neuralgia in my face ever since that
evening, we were all kept out so late."
"Oh, my! That neuralgia's a horrid thing," said Francie
sympathetically. "I didn't get any harm out of it with all the wetting
and the knock on my head and everything. I thought it was lovely fun!
But"—forgetting her shyness in the interest of the moment—"Mr.
Hawkins told me that Cursiter said to him the world wouldn't get him
to take out ladies in his boat again!"
Miss Hope-Drummond raised her dark eyebrows.
"Really? That is very crushing of Captain Cursiter."
Francie felt in a moment an emphasis on the word Captain; but tried
to ignore her own confusion.
"It doesn't crush me, I can tell you! I wouldn't give a pin to go
in his old boat. I'd twice sooner go in a yacht, upsets and all!"
"Oh!"
Miss Hope-Drummond said no more than this, but her tone was
sufficient. Her eyes strayed towards the book that lay in her lap, and
the finger inserted in its pages showed, as if unconsciously, a
tendency to open it again.
There was another silence, during which Francie studied the dark
and unintelligible oil-paintings on the expanses of wall, the flowers,
arranged with such easy and careless lavishness in strange and
innumerable jars and vases; and lastly, Dinah, in a distant window,
catching and eating flies with disgusting avidity. She felt as if her
petticoats showed her boots more than was desirable, that her gloves
were of too brilliant a tint, and that she ought to have left her
umbrella in the hall. At this painful stage of her reflections she
heard Lady Dysart's incautious voice outside.
"It's always the way with Christopher; he digs a hole and buries
himself in it whenever he's wanted. Take her out and let her eat
strawberries now; and then in the afternoon—" the voice suddenly
sank as if in response to an admonition, and Francie's already faint
heart sank along with it. Oh, to be at the Hemphills, making toffee
on the parlour fire, remote from the glories and sufferings of
aristocratic houses! The next moment she was shaking hands with
Pamela, and becoming gradually aware that she was in an atmosphere of
ease and friendliness, much as the slow pleasure of a perfume makes
itself slowly felt. The fact that Pamela had on a grass hat of
sunburnt maturity, and a skirt which bore the imprint of dogs' paws
was in itself reassuring, and as they went together down a shrubbery
walk, and finally settled upon the strawberry beds in the wide,
fragrant kitchen-garden, the first terrors began to subside in
Francie's trembling soul, and she found herself breathing more
naturally in this strange, rarefied condition of things. Even luncheon
was less formidable than she had expected. Christopher was not there,
the dreaded Sir Benjamin was not there, and Lady Dysart consulted her
about the cutting-out of poor clothes, and accepted with an almost
alarming enthusiasm the suggestions that Francie diffidently brought
up from the depths of past experience of the Fitzpatrick wardrobe.
The long, unusual leisure of the afternoon passed by her like a
pleasant dream, in which, as she sat in a basket-chair under the
verandah outside the drawing-room windows, illustrated papers,
American magazines, the snoring lethargy of the dogs, and the warm
life and stillness of the air were about equally blended. Miss
Hope-Drummond lay aloof in a hammock under a horse-chestnut tree at
the end of the flower-garden, working at the strip of Russian
embroidery that some day was to languish neglected on the stall of an
English bazaar; Francie had seen her trail forth with her arms full of
cushions, and dimly divined that her fellow-guest was hardly
tolerating the hours that were to her like fragments collected from
all the holidays she had ever known. No wonder, she thought, that
Pamela wore a brow of such serenity, when days like this were her
ordinary portion. Five o'clock came, and with it, with the majestic
punctuality of a heavenly body, came Gorman and the tea equipage,
attended by his satellite, William, bearing the tea-table. Francie
had never heard the word idyllic, but the feeling that it generally
conveys came to her as she lay back in her chair, and saw the roses
swaying about the pillars of the verandah, and watched the clots of
cream sliding into her cup over the broad lip of the cream jug, and
thought how incredibly brilliant the silver was, and that Miss
Dysart's hands looked awfully pretty while she was pouring out tea,
and weren't a bit spoiled by being rather brown. It was consolatory
that Miss Hope-Drummond had elected to have her tea conveyed to her in
the hammock; it was too much trouble to get out of it, she called, in
her shrill, languid voice, and no one had argued the matter with her.
Lady Dysart, who had occupied herself during the afternoon in visiting
the garden-beds and giving a species of clinical lecture on each to
the wholly unimpressed gardener, had subsided into a chair beside
Francie, and began to discuss with her the evangelical preachers of
Dublin, a mark of confidence and esteem which Pamela noticed with
astonishment. Francie had got to her second cup of tea, and had
evinced an edifying familiarity with Lady Dysart's most chosen
divines, when the dogs, who had been seated opposite Pamela, following
with lambent eyes the passage of each morsel to her lips, rushed from
the verandah, and charged with furious barkings across the garden and
down the lawn towards two figures, whom in their hearts they knew to
be the sons of the house, but whom, for histrionic purposes, they
affected to regard as dangerous strangers.
Miss Hope-Drummond sat up in her hammock and pinned her hat on
straight.
"Mr. Dysart," she called, as Christopher and Garry neared her
chestnut tree, "you've just come in time to get me another cup of tea."
Christopher dived under the chestnut branches, and presently, with
what Miss Hope-Drummond felt to be unexampled stupidity, returned with
it, but without his own. He had even the gaucherie to commend her
choice of the hammock, and having done so, to turn and walk back to
the verandah, and Miss Hope-Drummond asked herself for the hundredth
time how the Castlemores could have put up with him.
"I met the soldiers out on the lake to-day," Christopher remarked
as he sat down; "I told them to come and dine to-morrow." He looked at
Pamela with an eye that challenged her gratitude, but before she
could reply, Garry interposed in tones muffled by cake.
"He did, the beast; and he might have remembered it was my
birthday, and the charades and everything."
"Oh, Garry, must we have charades?" said Pamela lamentably.
"Well, of course we must, you fool," returned Garry with scriptural
directness; "I've told all the men about the place, and Kitty
Gascogne's coming to act, and James Canavan's going to put papa to
bed early and help us—" Garry's voice sank to the fluent
complaining undertone that distinguishes a small boy with a grievance,
and Christopher turned to his mother's guest.
"I suppose you've acted in charades, Miss Fitzpatrick?"
"Is it me act? Oh goodness, no, Mr. Dysart! I never did such a
thing but once, when I had to read Lady Macbeth's part at school, and
I thought I'd die laughing the whole time."
Pamela and Lady Dysart exchanged glances as they laughed at this
reminiscence. Would Christopher ever talk to a girl with a voice like
this? was the interpretation of Pamela's glance, while Lady Dysart's
was a mere note of admiration for the way that the sunlight caught the
curls on Francie's forehead as she sat up to speak to Christopher, and
for the colour that had risen in her cheeks since his arrival, more
especially since his announcement that Captain Cursiter and Mr.
Hawkins were coming to dinner. There are few women who can avoid some
slight change of manner and even of appearance, when a man is added
to the company, and it may at once be said that Francie was far from
trying to repress her increased interest on such an occasion.
"What made you think I could act, Mr. Dysart?" she said, looking at
him a little self-consciously; "do you think I look like an actress?"
The question was interrupted by a cry from the chestnut tree, and
Miss Hope-Drummond's voice was heard appealing to someone to come and
help her out of the hammock.
"She can get out jolly well by herself," remarked Garry, but
Christopher got up and lounged across the grass in response to the
summons, and Francie's question remained unanswered. Lady Dysart rose
too, and watched her son helping Miss Hope-Drummond on to her feet,
and strolling away with her in the direction of the shrubbery. Then
she turned to Francie.
"Now, Miss Fitzpatrick, you shall come and explain that Dorcas
Society sleeve to me, and I should not be surprised if you could help
me with the acrostic."
Lady Dysart considered herself to be, before all things, a
diplomatist.
Dinner was over. Gorman was regaling his fellows in the servants'
hall with an account of how Miss Fitzpatrick had eaten her curry with
a knife and fork, and her Scotch woodcock with a spoon, and how she
had accepted every variety of wine that he had offered her, and taken
only a mouthful of each, an eccentricity of which William was even now
reaping the benefit in the pantry. Mrs. Brady, the cook, dared say
that by all accounts it was the first time the poor child had seen a
bit served the way it would be fit to put into a Christian's mouth,
and, indeed, it was little she'd learn of behaviour or dinners from
Miss Mullen, except to make up messes for them dirty cats—a remark
which obtained great acceptance from her audience. Mr. Gorman then
gave it as his opinion that Miss Fitzpatrick was as fine a girl as
you'd meet between this and Dublin, and if he was Mr. Christopher,
he'd prefer her to Miss Hope-Drummond, even though the latter might be
hung down with diamonds.
The object of this criticism was meantime congratulating herself
that she had accomplished the last and most dreaded of the day's
ceremonies, and, so far as she knew, had won through it without
disaster. She certainly felt as if she never had eaten so much in her
life, and she thought to herself that, taking into consideration the
mental anxiety and the loss of time involved in the consumption of
one of these grand dinners, she infinitely preferred the tea and
poached eggs which formed her ordinary repast. Pamela was at the
piano, looking a long way off in the dim pink light of the shaded
room, and was playing such strange music as Francie had never heard
before, and secretly hoped never to hear again. She had always
believed herself to be extremely fond of music, and was wont to feel
very sentimental when she and one of that tribe, whom it is to be
feared she spoke of as her "fellows," sat on the rocks at the back of
Kingstown pier and listened to the band playing "Dorothy," or "The
Lost Chord," in the dark of the summer evening; but these minor
murmurings, that seemed to pass by steep and painful chromatic paths
from one woe to another, were to her merely exercises of varying
difficulty and ugliness, in which Miss Dysart never seemed to get the
chords quite right. She was too shy to get up and search for
amusement among the books and papers upon a remote table, and
accordingly she lay back in her chair and regarded Lady Dysart and
Miss Hope-Drummond, both comfortably absorbed in conversation, and
wondered whether she should ever have money enough to buy herself a
tea-gown.
The door opened, and Christopher sauntered in; he looked round the
room through his eye-glass, and then wandered towards the piano, where
he sat down beside Pamela. Francie viewed this proceeding with less
resentment than if he had been any other man in the world; she did not
so much mind a neglect in which Miss Hope-Drummond was equally
involved, and she was rather frightened than otherwise, when soon
afterwards she saw him, in evident obedience to a hint from his
sister, get up and come towards her with a large photograph-book under
his arm. He sat down beside her, and, with what Pamela, watching from
the distant piano, felt to be touching docility, began to expound its
contents to her. He had done this thing so often before, and he knew,
or thought he knew so well what people were going to say, that
nothing but the unfailing proprietary interest in his own handiwork
supported him on these occasions. He had not, however, turned many
pages before he found that Francie's comments were by no means of the
ordinary tepid and perfunctory sort. The Oxford chapels were, it is
true, surveyed by her in anxious silence; but a crowd of
undergraduates leaning over a bridge to look at an eight—an
instantaneous photograph of a bump-race, with its running
accompaniment of maniacs on the bank—Christopher's room, with Dinah
sitting in his armchair with a pipe in her mouth—were all examined
and discussed with fervid interest, and a cry of unfeigned excitement
greeted the page on which his own photography made its début with a
deep-brown portrait of Pamela.
"Mercy on us! That's not Miss Dysart! What has she her face
blackened for?"
"Oh, I did that when I did'nt know much about it last winter, and
it's rather over-exposed," answered Christopher, regarding his work of
art with a lenient parental eye.
"The poor thing! And was it the cold turned her black that way?"
Christopher glanced at his companion's face to see whether this
ignorance was genuine, but before he had time to offer the scientific
explanation, she had pounced on a group below.
"Why, isn't that the butler? Goodness! he's the dead image of the
Roman Emperors in Mangnall's questions! And who are all the other
people? I declare, one of them's that queer man I saw in the hall
with the old gentleman—" she stopped and stammered as she realised
that she had touched on what must necessarily be a difficult subject.
"Yes, this is a photograph of the servants," said Christopher,
filling the pause with compassionate speed, "and that's James Canavan.
You'll see him to-morrow night taking a leading part in Garry's
theatricals."
"Why, d'ye tell me that man can act?"
"Act? I should think so!" he laughed as if at some recollection or
other. "He can do anything he tries, or thinks he can. He began by
being a sort of hedge-schoolmaster, but he was too mad to stick to
it. Anyhow, my father took him up, and put him into the agency
office, and now he's his valet, and teaches Garry arithmetic when he's
at home, and writes poems and plays. I envy you your first sight of
James Canavan on the boards," he ended, laughing again.
"The boards!" Francie thought to herself; "I wonder is it like a
circus?"
The photographs progressed serenely after this. Francie began to
learn something of the discreetness that must be observed in
inspecting amateur portrait photography, and Christopher, on his side,
found he was being better entertained by Miss Mullen's cousin than he
could have believed possible. They turned page after page steadily and
conversationally, until Christopher made a pause of unconscious pride
and affection at a group of photographs of yachts in different
positions.
"These are some of the best I have," he said; "that's my boat, and
that is Mr. Lambert's."
"Oh, the nasty thing! I'm sure I don't want to see her again! and I
shouldn't think you did either!" with an uncertain glance at him. It
had seemed to her when, once or twice before, she had spoken of the
accident to him, that it was a subject he did not care about. "Mr.
Lambert says that the upsetting wasn't her fault a bit, and he likes
going out in her just the same. I think he's a very brave man, don't
you?"
"Oh, very," replied Christopher perfunctorily; "but he rather
overdoes it, I think, sometimes, and you know you got the worst of
that business."
"I think you must have had the worst of it," she said timidly. "I
never was able to half thank you—" Even the equalising glow from the
pink lampshades could not conceal the deepening of the colour in her
cheeks.
"Oh, please don't try," interrupted Christopher, surprised into a
fellow-feeling of shyness, and hastily turning over the yachting page;
"it was nothing at all."
"Indeed, I wanted to say it to you before," persevered Francie,
"that time at the bazaar, but there always were people there.
Charlotte told me that only for you the pike would be eating me at the
bottom of the lake!" she ended with a nervous laugh.
"What a very unpleasant thing to say, and not strictly true," said
Christopher lightly. "Do you recognise Miss Mullen in this?" he went
on, hurrying from the subject.
"Oh, how pretty!" cried Francie, peering into a small and dark
picture; "but I don't see Charlotte. It's the waterfall in the
grounds, isn't it?"
Pamela looked over from the piano again, amazed to hear her
brother's voice raised in loud laughter. There was no denying that the
picture was like a water-fall, and Francie at first rejected with
scorn the explanation that it represented a Sunday-school feast.
"Ah, go on, Mr. Dysart Why, I see the white water, and the black
rocks, and all!"
"That's the table-cloth, and the black rocks are the children's
faces, and that's Miss Mullen."
"Well, I'm very glad you never took any Sunday-school feast ever I
was at, if that's what you make them look like."
"You don't mean to say you go to Sunday-school feasts?"
Yes, why wouldn't I? I never missed one till this year; they're the
grandest fun out!"
Christopher stared at her. He was not prepared for a religious
aspect in Miss Mullen's remarkable young cousin.
"Do you teach in Sunday-schools?" He tried to keep the incredulity
out of his voice, but Francie caught the tone.
"You're very polite! I suppose you think I know nothing at all, but
I can tell you I could say down all the judges of Israel, or the
journeyings of St. Paul this minute, and that's more than you could
do!"
"By Jove, it is!" answered Christopher, with another laugh. "And is
that what you talk about at school feasts?"
Francie laid her head back on the cushion of her chair, and looked
at him from under her lowered eyelashes. "Wouldn't you like to know?"
she said. She suddenly found that this evening she was not in the
least afraid of Mr. Dysart. There were some, notably Roddy Lambert,
who called him a prig, but she said to herself that she'd tell him as
soon as she saw him that Mr. Dysart was a very nice young man, and
not a bit stuck-up.
"Very much," Christopher replied, sticking his eye-glass into his
eye, "that was why I asked." He really felt curious to know more of
this unwonted young creature, with her ingenuous impudence and her
lovely face. If anyone else had said the things that she had said, he
would have been either bored or revolted, and it is possibly worth
noting that, concurrently with a nascent interest in Francie, he was
consciously surprised that he was neither bored nor revolted. Perhaps
it was the influence of the half-civilised northern music that Pamela
was playing, with its blood-stirring freshness, like the whistling
wind of dawn, and its strange snatches of winding sweetness, that
woke some slumbering part of him to a sense of her charm and youth.
But Pamela guessed nothing of what Grieg's "Peer Gynt" was doing for
her brother, and only thought how gallantly he was fulfilling her
behest.
Before he said good-night to Francie, Christopher had learned a
good deal that he did not know before. He had heard how she and Mr.
Whitty, paraphrased as "a friend of mine," had got left behind on Bray
Head, while the rest of the Sunday-school excursion was being bundled
into the train, and how she and the friend had missed three trains,
from causes not thoroughly explained, and how Mr. Lambert, who had
gone there with her, just for the fun of the thing, had come back to
look for them, and had found them having tea in the station
refreshment room, and had been mad. He had heard also of her stay at
Kingstown, and of how a certain Miss Carrie Jemmison—sister, as was
explained, of another "friend"—was wont to wake her up early to go
out bathing, by the simple expedient of pulling a string which hung
out of the bedroom window over the hall door, and led thence to Miss
Fitzpatrick's couch, where it was fastened to her foot; in fact, by
half-past ten o'clock, he had gathered a surprisingly accurate idea of
Miss Fitzpatrick's manner of life, and had secretly been a good deal
taken aback by it.
He said to himself, as he smoked a final cigarette, that she must
be a nice girl somehow not to have been more vulgar than she was, and
she really must have a soul to be saved. There was something about
her—some limpid quality—that kept her transparent and fresh like
a running stream, and cool, too, he thought, with a grin and with a
great deal of reflective stroking of Dinah's apathetic head, as she
lay on his uncomfortable lap trying to make the best of a bad
business. He had not failed to notice the recurrence of Mr. Lambert's
name in these recitals, and was faintly surprised that he could not
call to mind having heard Miss Fitzpatrick mentioned by that
gentleman until just before her arrival in Lismoyle. Lambert was not
usually reticent about the young ladies of his acquaintance, and from
Francie's own showing he must have known her very well indeed. He
wondered how she came to be such a friend of his; Lambert was a
first-rate man of business and all that, but there was nothing else
first-rate about him that he could see. It showed the social poverty
of the land that she should speak of him with confidence and even
admiration; it was almost pathetic that she should know no better
than to think Roddy Lambert a fine fellow. His thoughts wandered to
the upset of the Daphne; what an ass Lambert had made of himself
then. If she could know how remarkably near her friend, Mr. Lambert,
had come to drowning her on that occasion, she would not, perhaps,
have quoted him so largely as a final opinion upon all matters. No
one blamed a man for not being able to swim, but the fact that he was
a bad swimmer was no excuse for his losing his head and coming
cursing and swearing and doing his best to drown everyone else.
Christopher let Dinah slip on to the floor, and threw the end of
his cigarette out of the open window of his room. He listened to the
sleepy quacking of a wildduck, and the far-away barking of the
gate-house dog. The trees loomed darkly at the end of the garden;
between them glimmered the pale ghost of the lake, streaked here and
there with the long quivering reflections of the stars, and in and
through the warm summer night, the darting flight of the bats wove a
phantom net before his eyes. The Grieg music still throbbed an
untiring measure in his head, and the thought of Lambert gave way to
more accustomed meditations. He had leaned his elbows on the sill,
and did not move till some time afterwards, when a bat brushed his
face with her wings in an attempt to get into the lighted room. Then
he got up and yawned a rather dreary yawn.
"Well, the world's a very pretty place," he said to himself; "it's
a pity it doesn't seem to meet all the requirements of the situation."
He was still young enough to forget at times the conventionality of
cynicism.
Lieutenant Gerald Hawkins surveyed his pink and newly shaven face
above his white tie and glistening shirt-front with a smile of
commendation. His moustache was looking its best, and showing most
conspicuously. There was, at least, that advantage in a complexion
that burned red, he thought to himself, that it made a fair moustache
tell. In his button-hole was a yellow rose, given him by Mrs.
Gascogne on condition, as she said (metaphorically it is to be
presumed), that he "rubbed it well into Lady Dysart" that she had no
blossom to equal it in shape and beauty. A gorgeous red silk sachet
with his initials embroidered in gold upon it lay on the table, and
as he took a handkerchief out of it his eye fell on an open letter
that had lain partially hidden beneath one side of the sachet. His
face fell perceptibly; taking it up he looked through it quickly, a
petulant wrinkle appearing between his light eyebrows.
"Hang it! She ought to know I can't get any leave now before the
Twelfth, and then I'm booked to Glencairn. It's all rot going on like
this—" He took the letter in both hands as if to tear it up, but
changing his mind, stuffed it in among the pocket handkerchiefs, and
hurried downstairs in response to a shout from below. His polo-cart
was at the door, and in it sat Captain Cursiter, wearing an expression
of dismal patience that scarcely warranted Mr. Hawkins' first remark.
"Well, you seem to be in a good deal of a hurry, old chap. Is it
your dinner or is it Hope-Drummond?"
"When I'm asked to dinner at eight, I like to get there before
half-past," replied Cursiter sourly; "and when you're old enough to
have sense you will too."
Mr. Hawkins drove at full pace out of the barrack gates before he
replied, "It's all very fine for you to talk as if you were a
thousand, Snipey, but, by George! we're all getting on a bit." His
ingenuous brow clouded under the peak of his cap, and his thoughts
reverted to the letter that he had thrust into the sachet. "I've been
pretty young at times, I admit, but that's the sort of thing that
makes you a lot older afterwards."
"Good thing, too," put in Cursiter unsympathetically.
"Yes, by Jove!" continued Mr. Hawkins; "I've often said I'd take a
pull, and somehow it never came off, but I'm dashed if I'm not going
to do it this time."
Captain Cursiter held his peace, and waited for the confidence that
experience had told him would inevitably follow. It did not come quite
in the shape in which he had expected it.
"I suppose there isn't the remotest chance of my getting any leave
now, is there?"
"No, not the faintest; especially as you want to go away for the
Twelfth."
"Yes, I'm bound to go then," acknowledged Mr. Hawkins with a sigh
not unmixed with relief; "I suppose I've just got to stay here."
Cursiter turned round and looked up at his young friend. "What are
you up to now?"
"Don't be such an owl, Cursiter," responded Mr. Hawkins testily;
"why should there be anything up because I want all the leave I can
get? It's a very common complaint."
"Yes, it's a very common complaint," replied Cursiter, with a
certain acidity in his voice that was not lost upon Hawkins; "but what
gave it to you this time?"
"Oh, hang it all, Cursiter! I know what you're driving at well
enough; but you're wrong. You always think you're the only man in the
world who has any sense about women."
"I didn't think I had said anything about women," returned the
imperturbable Cursiter, secretly much amused at the sensitiveness of
Mr. Hawkins' conscience.
"Perhaps you didn't; but you're always thinking about them and
imagining other people are doing the same," retorted Hawkins; "and may
I ask what my wanting leave has to say to the question?"
"You're in a funk," said Cursiter; "though mind you," he added, "I
don't blame you for that."
Mr. Hawkins debated with himself for an instant, and a confession
as to the perturbed condition of that overworked organ, his heart,
trembled on his lips. He even turned round to speak, but found
something so discouraging to confidence in the spare brown face, with
its uncompromisingly bitten moustache and observant eyes, that the
impulse was checked.
"Since you seem to know so much about me and the reasons why I want
to leave and all the rest of it, I need say no more."
Captain Cursiter laughed. "Oh! don't on my account."
Hawkins subsided into a dignified silence, which Cursiter, as was
his wont, did not attempt to break. He fell into meditation on the
drift of what had been said to him, and thought that he would write
to Greer (Greer was the adjutant), and see about getting Hawkins away
from Lismoyle; and he was doing so well here, he grumbled mentally,
and getting so handy in the launch. If only this infernal Fitzpatrick
girl would have stayed with her cads in Dublin everything would have
been as right as rain. There was no other woman here that signified
except Miss Dysart, and it didn't seem likely she'd look at him,
though you never could tell what a woman would or would not do.
Captain Cursiter was "getting on," as captains go, and he was the
less disposed to regard his junior's love affairs with an indulgent
eye, in that he had himself served a long and difficult apprenticeship
in such matters, and did not feel that he had profited much by his
experiences. It had happened to him at an early age to enter
ecstatically into the house of bondage, and in it he had remained with
eyes gradually opening to its drawbacks, until, a few years before,
the death of the only apparent obstacle to his happiness had brought
him face to face with its realisation. Strange to say, when this
supreme moment arrived, Captain Cursiter was disposed for further
delay; but it shows the contrariety of human nature, that when he
found himself superseded by his own subaltern, an habitually
inebriated viscount, instead of feeling grateful to his preserver, he
committed the imbecility of horse-whipping him; and finding it
subsequently advisable to leave his regiment, he exchanged into the
infantry with a settled conviction that all women were liars.
The coach-house at Bruff, though not apparently adapted for
theatrical purposes, had been for many years compelled to that use by
Garry Dysart, and when, at half-past nine o'clock that night, Lady
Dysart and her guests proceeded thither, they found that it had been
arranged to the best possible advantage. The seats were few, and the
carriages, ranging from an ancestral yellow chariot to Pamela's
pony-trap, were drawn up for the use of the rest of the audience. A
dozen or so of the workmen and farm labourers lined the walls in
respectful silence; and the servants of the household were divided
between the outside car and the chariot. In front of a door leading
to the harness-room, two clothes-horses, draped with tablecloths, a
long ottoman, once part of the furniture of a pre-historic yacht of
Sir Benjamin's, two chairs, and a ladder indicated the stage, and
four stable-lanterns on the floor served as footlights. Lady Dysart,
the Archdeacon, and Mrs. Gascogne sat in three chairs of honour; the
landau was occupied by the rest of the party, with the exception of
Francie and Hawkins, who had followed the others from the drawing-room
at a little distance. When they appeared, the coach-box of the landau
seemed their obvious destination; but at the same instant the
wrangling voices of the actors in the harness-room ceased, the play
began, and when Pamela next looked round neither Francie nor Mr.
Hawkins was visible, and from the open window of an invalided brougham
that had been pushed into the background, came sounds of laughter
that sufficiently indicated their whereabouts.
The most able and accustomed of dramatic critics would falter in
the attempt to master the leading idea of one of Garry's
entertainments; so far as this performance made itself intelligible,
it consisted of nightmare snatches of "Kenilworth," subordinated to
the exigencies of stage properties, chiefest among these being Sir
Benjamin's deputy-lieutenant's uniform. The sword and cocked hat found
their obvious wearer in the Earl of Leicester, and the white plume had
been yielded to Kitty Gascogne, whose small crimson face grinned
consciously beneath the limp feathers. Lady Dysart's white bernouse
was felt to confer an air of simplicity appropriate to the part of Amy
Robsart, and its owner could not repress a groan as she realised that
the heroine would inevitably be consigned to the grimy depths of the
yacht ottoman, a receptacle long consecrated to the office of stage
tomb. At present, however, it was employed as a sofa, on which sat
Leicester and Amy, engaged in an exhausting conversation on State
matters, the onus of which fell entirely upon the former, his
companion's part in it consisting mainly of a sustained giggle. It
presently became evident that even Garry was flagging, and glances
towards the door of the harnessroom told that expected relief delayed
its coming.
"He's getting a bit blown," remarked Mr. Hawkins from the window of
the brougham. "Go it, Leicester!"
Garry's only reply was to rise and stalk towards the door with a
dignity somewhat impaired by the bagginess of the silver-laced
trousers. The deserted countess remained facing the audience in an
agony of embarrassment that might have softened the heart of anyone
except her lord, whose direction, "Talk about Queen Elizabeth, you
ass!" was audible to everyone in the coach-house. Fortunately for
Kitty Gascogne, her powers of solioquy were not long tested. The door
burst open, Garry hurried back to the ottoman, and had only time to
seize Amy Robsart's hand and kneel at her feet when a tall figure
took the stage with a mincing amble. James Canavan had from time
immemorial been the leading lady in Garry's theatricals, and his
appearance as Queen Elizabeth was such as to satisfy his oldest
admirers. He wore a skirt which was instantly recognised by the
household as belonging to Mrs. Brady, the cook, a crown made of gold
paper inadequately restrained his iron-grey locks, a hamfrill ruff
concealed his whiskers, and the deputy-lieutenant's red coat, with the
old-fashioned long tails and silver epaulettes, completed his
equipment.
His entrance brought down the house; even Lady Dysart forgot her
anxiety to find out where Mr. Hawkins' voice had come from, and
collapsed into a state afterwards described by the under-housemaid as
"her ladyship in splits."
"Oh fie, fie, fie!" said Queen Elizabeth in a piping falsetto,
paying no heed to the demonstrations in her favour; "Amy Robsart and
Leicester! Oh dear, dear, this will never do!"
Leicester still stooped over Amy's hand, but even the occupants of
the brougham heard the whisper in which he said, "You're not half
angry enough! Go on again!"
Thus charged, Queen Elizabeth swept to the back of the stage, and,
turning there, advanced again upon the lovers, stamping her feet and
gesticulating with clenched fists. "What! Amy Robsart and Leicester!
Shocking! disgraceful!" she vociferated; then with a final burst,
"D—n it! I can't stand this!"
A roar of delight broke from the house; the delight always provoked
in rural audiences by the expletive that age has been powerless to
wither or custom to stale. Hawkins' amusement found vent in such a
stentorian "Bravo!" that Lady Dysart turned quickly at the sound, and
saw his head and Francie's at the window of the brougham. Even in the
indifferent light of the lamps, Francie discerned disapproval in her
look. She sat back precipitately.
"Oh, Mr. Hawkins!" she exclaimed, rashly admitting that she felt
the position to be equivocal; "I think I'd better get out."
Now, if ever, was the time for Mr. Hawkins to take that pull of
which he had spoken so stoutly to Captain Cursiter, but in addition to
other extenuating circumstances, it must be admitted that Sir
Benjamin's burgundy had to some slight extent made summer in his
veins, and caused him to forget most things except the fact that the
prettiest girl he had ever seen was sitting beside him.
"No, you shan't," he replied, leaning back out of the light, and
taking her hand as if to prevent her from moving; "you won't go, will
you?"
He suddenly felt that he was very much in love, and threw such
entreaty into the foregoing unremarkable words that Francie's heart
beat foolishly, and her efforts to take away her hand were very feeble.
"You don't want to go away, do you? You like sitting here with me?"
The powers of repartee that Tommy Whitty had often found so
baffling failed Francie unaccountably on this occasion. She murmured
something that Hawkins chose to take for assent, and in a moment he
had passed his arm round her waist, and possessed himself of the other
hand.
"Now, you see, you can't get away," he whispered, taking a wary
look out of the window of the brougham. All the attention of the
audience was engrossed upon the stage, where, at this moment, Queen
Elizabeth having chased Amy and Leicester round the ottoman, was now
doing her best not to catch them as they together scaled the
clothes-horse. The brougham was behind everyone; no one was even
thinking of them, and Hawkins leaned towards Francie till his lips
almost touched her cheek. She drew back from him, but the kiss came
and went in a moment, and was followed by more that she did not try
to escape. The loud clapping of the audience on the exit of Queen
Elizabeth brought Hawkins back to his senses; he heard the quick
drawing of Francie's breath and felt her tremble as he pressed her to
him, and he realised that so far from "taking a pull," he had let
himself get out of hand without a struggle. For this rash, enchanting
evening at all events, it was too late to try to recover lost ground.
What could he do now but hold her hand more tightly than before, and
ask her unrepentingly whether she forgave him. The reply met with an
unlooked-for interruption.
The drama on the stage had proceeded to its climax. Amy Robsart was
understood to have suffered a violent death in the harness-room, and
her entombment in the ottoman had followed as a matter of course. The
process had been difficult; in fact, but for surreptitious aid from
the corpse, the burial could scarcely have been accomplished; but the
lid was at length closed, and the bereaved earl flung himself on his
knees by the grave in an abandonment of grief. Suddenly from the
harness-room came sounds of discordant triumph, and Queen Elizabeth
bounded upon the stage, singing a war-song, of which the refrain,
"With me long sword, saddle, bridle,
Whack, fol de rol!" was alone intelligible. Amy Robsart's white
plume was stuck in the queen's crown in token of victory, and its
feathers rose on end as, with a flourish of the drawing-room poker
which she carried as her sceptre, she leaped upon the grave, and
continued her dance and song there. Clouds of dust and feathers rose
from the cushions, and encouraged by the shouts of her audience, the
queen's dance waxed more furious. There was a stagger, a crash, and a
shrill scream rose from the corpse, as the lid gave way, and Queen
Elizabeth stood knee-deep in Amy Robsart's tomb. An answering scream
came from Mrs. Gascogne and Lady Dysart, both of whom rushed from
their places on to the stage, and dragged forth the unhappy Kitty,
smothered in dust, redder in the face than ever, but unhurt, and still
giggling.
Francie and Hawkins emerged from the brougham, and mingled quietly
with the crowd in the general break-up that followed. The point at
issue between them had not been settled, but arrangements had been
made for the following day that ensured a renewal of the argument.
The crash of the prayer gong was the first thing that Francie heard
next morning. She had not gone to sleep easily the night before. It
had been so much pleasanter to lie awake, that she had done so till
she had got past the stage when the process of going to sleep is
voluntary, and she had nearly exhausted the pleasant aspect of things
and got to their wrong side when the dawn stood at her window, a
pallid reminder of the day that was before her, and she dropped into
prosaic slumber. She came downstairs in a state of some anxiety as to
whether the chill that she had perceived last night in Lady Dysart's
demeanour would be still apparent. Breakfast was nearly over when she
got into the room, and when she said good morning to Lady Dysart, she
felt, though she was not eminently perceptive of the shades in a
well-bred manner, that she had not been restored to favour.
She sat down at the table, with the feeling that was very familiar
to her of being in disgrace, combatting with the excitement and hurry
of her nerves in a way that made her feel almost hysterical; and the
fear that the strong revealing light of the long windows opposite to
which she was sitting would show the dew of tears in her eyes, made
her bend her head over her plate and scarcely raise it to respond to
Pamela's good-natured efforts to put her at her ease. Miss
Hope-Drummond presently looked up from her letters and took a quiet
stare at the discomposed face opposite to her. She had no particular
dislike for Francie beyond the ordinary rooted distrust which she felt
as a matter of course for those whom she regarded as
fellow-competitors, but on general principles she was pleased that
discomfiture had come to Miss Fitzpatrick. It occurred to her that a
deepening of the discomfiture would suit well with Lady Dysart's
present mood, and might also be to her own personal advantage.
"I hope your dress did not suffer last night, Miss Fitzpatrick?
Mine was ruined, but that was because Mr. Dysart would make me climb
on to the box for the last scene."
"No, thank you, Miss Hope-Drummond—at least, it only got a little
sign of dust."
"Really? How nice! How lucky you were, weren't you?"
"She may have been lucky about her dress," interrupted Garry, "but
I'm blowed if she could have seen much of the acting! Why on earth did
you let Hawkins jam you into that old brougham, Miss Fitzpatrick?"
"Garry," said Lady Dysart with unusual asperity, "how often am I to
tell you not to speak of grown-up gentlemen as if they were little
boys like yourself? Run off to your lessons. If you have finished,
Miss Fitzpatrick," she continued, her voice chilling again, "I think
we will go into the drawing-room."
It is scarcely to be wondered at that Francie found the atmosphere
of the drawing-room rather oppressive. She was exceedingly afraid of
her hostess; her sense of her misdoings was, like a dog's, entirely
shaped upon other people's opinions, and depended in no way upon her
own conscience; and she had now awakened to a belief that she had
transgressed very badly indeed. "And if she" ("she" was Lady Dysart,
and for the moment Francie's standard of morality) "was so angry about
me sitting in the brougham with him," she thought to herself, as,
having escaped from the house, she wandered alone under the oaks of
the shady back avenue, "what would she think if she knew the whole
story?"
In Francie's society "the whole story" would have been listened to
with extreme leniency, if not admiration; in fact, some episodes of a
similar kind had before now been confided by our young lady to Miss
Fanny Hemphill, and had even given her a certain standing in the eyes
of that arbiter of manners and morals. But on this, as on a previous
occasion, she did not feel disposed to take Miss Hemphill into her
confidence. For one thing, she was less distinct in her recollection
of what had happened than was usual. It had seemed to her that she
had lost her wonted clear and mocking remembrance of events from the
moment when he had taken her hand, and what followed was blurred in
her memory as a landscape is blurred by the quiver of heat in the
air. For another, she felt it all to be so improbable, so uncertain,
that she could not quite believe in it herself. Hawkins was so
radically different from any other man she had ever known; so much
more splendid in all ways, the very texture of his clothes, the scent
on his handkerchief, breathed to her his high estate. That she should
have any part in this greatness was still a little beyond belief, and
as she walked softly in the deep grass under the trees, she kept
saying to herself that he could not really care for her, that it was
too good to be true.
It was almost pathetic that this girl, with her wildrose freshness
and vivid spring-like youth, should be humble enough to think that she
was not worthy of Mr. Hawkins, and sophisticated enough to take his
love-making as a matter of common occurrence, that in no way involved
anything more serious. Whatever he might think about it, however, she
was certain that he would come here to-day, and being wholly without
the power of self-analysis, she passed easily from such speculations
to the simpler mental exercise of counting how many hours would have
to crawl by before she could see him again. She had left the avenue,
and she strolled aimlessly across a wide marshy place between the
woods and the lake, that had once been covered by the water, but was
now so far reclaimed that sedgy grass and bog-myrtle grew all over it,
and creamy meadow-sweet and magenta loosestrife glorified the swampy
patches and the edges of the drains. The pale azure of the lake lay on
her right hand, with, in the distance, two or three white sails just
tilted enough by the breeze to make them look like acute accents,
gaily emphasising the purpose of the lake and giving it its final
expression. In front of her spread a long, low wood, temptingly cool
and green, with a gate pillared by tall fir-trees, from which, as she
lifted the latch, a bevy of wood-pigeons dashed out, startling her
with the sudden frantic clapping of their wings. It was a curious
wood—very old, judging by its scattered knots of hoary,
weather-twisted pine-trees; very young, judging by the growth of ash
saplings and slender larches that made dense every inch of space
except where rides had been cut through them for the woodcock
shooting. Francie walked along the quiet path, thinking little of the
beauty that surrounded her, but unconsciously absorbing its rich
harmonious stillness. The little grey rabbits did not hear her coming,
and hopped languidly across the path, "for all the world like toys
from Robinson's," thought Francie; the honeysuckle hung in delicious
tangle from tree to tree; the wood-pigeons crooned shrilly in the
fir-trees, and every now and then a bumble-bee started from a clover
blossom in the grass with a deep resentful note, as when one plucks
the lowest string of a violoncello. She had noticed a triple
wheel-track over the moss and primrose leaves of the path, and vaguely
wondered what had brought it there; but at a turn where the path took
a long bend to the lake she was no longer left in doubt. Drawn up
under a solemn pine-tree near the water's edge was Sir Benjamin's
bath-chair, and in it the dreaded Sir Benjamin himself, vociferating
at the top of his cracked old voice, and shaking his oaken staff at
some person or persons not apparent.
Francie's first instinct was flight, but before she had time to
turn, her host had seen her, and changing his tone of fury to one of
hideous affability, he called to her to come and speak to him. Francie
was too uncertain as to the exact extent of his intellect to risk
disobedience, and she advanced tremblingly.
"Come here, miss," said Sir Benjamin, goggling at her through his
gold spectacles. "You're the pretty little visitor, and I promised I'd
take you out driving in my carriage and pair. Come here and shake
hands with me, miss. Where's your manners?"
This invitation was emphasised by a thump of his stick on the floor
of the chair, and Francie, with an almost prayerful glance round for
James Canavan, was reluctantly preparing to comply with it, when she
heard Garry's voice calling her.
"Miss Fitzpatrick! Hi! Come here!"
Miss Fitzpatrick took one look at the tremulous, irritable old claw
outstretched for her acceptance, and plunged incontinently down a ride
in the direction of the voice. In front of her stood a sombre ring of
immense pine trees, and in their shadow stood Garry and James
Canavan, apparently in committee upon some small object that lay on
the thick mat of moss and pine-needles.
"I heard the governor talking to you," said Garry with a grin of
intelligence, "and I thought you'd sooner come and look at the rat
that's just come out of this hole. Stinking Jemima's been in there for
the last half hour after rabbits. She's my ferret, you know, a
regular ripper," he went on in excited narration, "and I expect she's
got the muzzle off and is having a high old time. She's just bolted
this brute."
The brute in question was a young rat that lay panting on its side,
unable to move, with blood streaming from its face.
"Oh! the creature!" exclaimed Francie with compassionate disgust;
"what'll you do with it?"
"I'll take it home and try and tame it," replied Garry; "it's quite
young enough. Isn't it, Canavan?"
James Canavan, funereal in his black coat and rusty tall hat, was
regarding the rat meditatively, and at the question he picked up
Garry's stick and balanced it in his hand. "Voracious animals that we
hate,
Cats, rats, and bats deserve their fate,"
he said pompously, and immediately brought the stick down on the
rat's head with a determination that effectually disposed of all plans
for its future, educational or otherwise.
Garry and Francie cried out together, but James Canavan turned his
back unregardingly upon them and his victim, and stalked back to Sir
Benjamin, whose imprecations, since Francie's escape, had been
pleasantly audible.
"The old beast!" said Garry, looking resentfully after his late
ally; "you never know what he'll do next. I believe if mother hadn't
been there last night, he'd have gone on jumping on Kitty Gascogne
till he killed her. By the bye, Miss Fitzpatrick, Hawkins passed up
the lake just now, and he shouted out to me to say that he'd be at the
turfboat pier at four o'clock, and he hoped none of you were going
out."
Then he had not forgotten her; he was going to keep his word,
thought Francie, with a leap of the heart, but further thoughts were
cut short by the sudden appearance of Pamela, Christopher, and Miss
Hope-Drummond at the end of the ride. The treacherous slaughter of
the rat was immediately recounted to Pamela at full length by Garry,
and Miss Fitzpatrick addressed herself to Christopher.
"How sweet your woods are, Mr. Dysart," she began, feeling that
some speech of the kind was suitable to the occasion. "I declare, I'd
never be tired walking in them!"
Christopher was standing a little behind the others, looking cool
and lank in his flannels, and feeling a good deal less interested in
things in general than he appeared. He had an agreeably craven habit
of simulating enjoyment in the society of whoever fate threw him in
contact with, not so much from a wish to please as from a politeness
that had in it an unworthy fear of exciting displeasure; and so ably
had he played the part expected of him that Miss Hope-Drummond had
felt, as she strolled with him and his sister through the sunshiny
wood, that he really was far more interested in her than she had
given him credit for, and that if that goose Pamela were not so
officious in always pursuing them about everywhere, they would have
got on better still. She did not trouble her brothers in this way, and
the idea that Mr. Dysart would not have come at all without his
sister did not occur to her. She was, therefore, by no means pleased
when she heard him suggest to Miss Fitzpatrick that she should come
and see the view from the point, and saw them walk away in that
direction without any reference to the rest of the party.
Christopher himself could hardly have explained why he did it. It
is possible that he felt Francie's ingenuous, unaffected vulgarity to
be refreshing after the conversation in which Miss Hope-Drummond's own
especial tastes and opinions had shed their philosophy upon a
rechauffé of the society papers, and recollections of Ascot and
Hurlingham. Perhaps also, after his discovery that Francie had a soul
to be saved, he resented the absolute possession that Hawkins had
taken of her the night before. Hawkins was a good little chap, but not
the sort of person to develop a nascent intellectuality, thought this
sage of seven-and-twenty.
"Why did you come out here by yourself?" he said to her, some
little time after they had left the others.
"And why shouldn't I?" answered Francie, with the pertness that
seldom failed her, even when, as on this morning, she felt a little
uninterested in every subject except one.
"Because it gave us the trouble of coming out to look for you."
"To see I didn't get into mischief, I suppose!"
"That hadn't occurred to me. Do you always get into mischief when
you go out by yourself?"
"I would if I thought you were coming out to stop me!"
"But why should I want to stop you?" asked Christopher, aware that
this class of conversation was of a very undeveloping character, but
feeling unable to better it.
"Oh, I don't know; I think everyone's always wanting to stop me,"
replied Francie with a cheerful laugh; "I declare I think it's
impossible for me to do anything right."
"Well, you don't seem to mind it very much," said Christopher, the
thought of how like she was to a typical "June" in a Christmas Number
striking him for the second time; "but perhaps that's because you're
used to it."
"Oh, then, I can tell you I am used to it, but, indeed, I don't
like it any better for that."
There was a pause after this. They scrambled over the sharp loose
rocks, and between the stunted fir-trees of the lake shore, until they
gained a comparatively level tongue of sandy gravel, on which the
sinuous line of dead rushes showed how high the fretful waves had
thrust themselves in winter. A glistening bay intervened between this
point and the promontory of Bruff, a bay dotted with the humped backs
of the rocks in the summer shallows, and striped with darkgreen beds
of rushes, among which the bald coots dodged in and out with shrill
metallic chirpings. Outside Bruff Point the lake spread broad and
mild, turned to a translucent lavender grey by an idly-drifting
cloud; the slow curve of the shore was followed by the woods, till
the hay fields of Lismoyle showed faintly beyond them, and, further
on, the rival towers of church and chapel gave a finish to the
landscape that not even conventionality could deprive of charm.
Christopher knew every detail of it by heart. He had often solaced
himself with it when, as now, he had led forth visitors to see the
view, and had discerned their boredom with a keenness that was the
next thing to sympathy; he had lain there on quiet Autumn evenings,
and tried to put into fitting words the rapture and the despair of the
sunset, and had gone home wondering if his emotions were not mere
self-conscious platitudes, rather more futile and contemptible than
the unambitious adjectives, or even the honest want of interest, of
the average sight-seer. He waited rather curiously to see whether Miss
Fitzpatrick's problematic soul would here utter itself. From his
position a little behind her he could observe her without seeming to
do so; she was looking down the lake with a more serious expression
than he had yet seen on her face, and when she turned suddenly towards
him, there was a wistfulness in her eyes that startled him.
"Mr. Dysart," she began, rather more shyly than usual; "d'ye know
whose is that boat with the little sail, going away down the lake now?"
Christopher's mood received an unpleasant jar.
"That's Mr. Hawkins' punt," he replied shortly.
"Yes, I thought it was," said Francie, too much preoccupied to
notice the flatness of her companion's tone.
There was another pause, and then she spoke again.
"Mr. Dysart, d'ye think—would you mind telling me, was Lady
Dysart mad with me last night?" She blushed as she looked at him, and
Christopher was much provoked to feel that he also became red.
"Last night?" he echoed in a tone of as lively perplexity as he
could manage; "what do you mean? why should my mother be angry with
you?" In his heart he knew well that Lady Dysart had been, as Francie
expressed it, "mad."
"I know she was angry," pursued Francie. "I saw the look she gave
me when I was getting out of the brougham, and then this morning she
was angry too. I didn't think it was any harm to sit in the brougham."
"No more it is. I've often seen her do it herself."
"Ah! Mr. Dysart, I didn't think you'd make fun of me," she said
with an accent on the "you" that was flattering, but did not
altogether please Christopher. "You know," she went on, "I've never
stayed in a house like this before. I mean—you're all so
different—"
"I think you must explain that remarkable statement," said
Christopher, becoming Jonsonian as was his wont when he found himself
in a difficulty. "It seems to me we're even depressingly like ordinary
human beings."
"You're different to me," said Francie in a low voice, "and you
know it well."
The tears came to her eyes, and Christopher, who could not know
that this generality covered an aching thought of Hawkins, was smitten
with horrified self-questioning as to whether anything he had said or
done could have wounded this girl, who was so much more observant and
sensitive than he could have believed.
"I can't let you say things like that," he said clumsily. "If we
are different from you it is so much the worse for us."
"You're trying to pay me a compliment now to get out of it," said
Francie, recovering herself,; "isn't that just like a man!"
She felt, however, that she had given him pain, and the knowledge
seemed to bring him more within her comprehension.
There are few things that so stimulate life, both social and
vegetable, in a country neighbourhood as the rivalry that exists,
sometimes unconfessed, sometimes bursting into an open flame, among
the garden owners of the district. The Bruff garden was a little
exalted and removed from such competition, but the superiority had its
depressing aspect for Lady Dysart in that it was counted no credit to
her to excel her neighbours, although those neighbours took to
themselves the highest credit when they succeeded in excelling her. Of
all these Mr. Lambert was the one she most feared and respected. He
knew as well, if not better than she, the joints in the harness of
Doolan the gardener, the weak battalions in his army of bedding-out
plants, the failures in the ranks of his roses. Doolan himself, the
despotic and self-confident, felt an inward qualm when he saw Mr.
Lambert strolling slowly through the garden with her ladyship, as he
was doing this very afternoon, his observant eye taking in everything
that Doolan would have preferred that it should not take in, while he
paid a fitting attention to Lady Dysart's conversation.
"I cannot understand why these Victor Verdiers have not better
hearts," she was saying, with the dejection of a clergyman
disappointed in his flock "Mrs. Waller told me they were very greedy
feeders, and so I gave them the cleanings of the scullery drain, but
they don't seem to care for it. Doolan, of course, said Mrs. Waller
was wrong, but I should like to know what you thought about it."
Mr. Lambert delivered a diplomatic opinion, which sufficiently
coincided with Lady Dysart's views, and yet kept her from feeling that
she had been entirely in the right. He prided himself as much on his
knowledge of women as of roses, and there were ultra feminine
qualities in Lady Dysart, which made her act up to his calculations on
almost every point. Pamela did not lend herself equally well to his
theories; "she hasn't half the go of her mother; she'd as soon talk
to an old woman as to the smartest chap in Ireland," was how he
expressed the fine impalpable barrier that he always felt between
himself and Miss Dysart. She was now exactly fulfilling this opinion
by devoting herself to the entertainment of his wife, while the
others were amusing themselves down at the launch; and being one of
those few who can go through unpleasant social duties with "all grace,
and not with half disdain hid under grace," not even Lambert could
guess that she desired anything more agreeable.
"Isn't it disastrous that young Hynes is determined upon going to
America?" remarked Lady Dysart presently, as they left the garden;
"just when he had learned Doolan's ways, and Doolan is so hard to
please."
"America is the curse of this country," responded Mr. Lambert
gloomily; "the people are never easy till they get there and make a
bit of money, and then they come swaggering back saying Ireland's not
fit to live in, and end by setting up a public-house and drinking
themselves to death. They're sharp enough to know the only way of
making money in Ireland is by selling drink." Lambert spoke with the
conviction of one who is sure, not only of his facts, but of his
hearer's sympathy. Then seeing his way to a discussion of the matter
that had brought him to Bruff, he went on, "I assure you, Lady Dysart,
the amount of money that's spent in drink in Lismoyle would frighten
you. It's easy to know where the rent goes, and those that aren't
drunken are thriftless, and there isn't one of them has the common
honesty to give up their land when they've ruined it and themselves.
Now, there's that nice farm, Gurthnamuckla, down by the lake-side, all
going to moss from being grazed year after year, and the house
falling to pieces for the want of looking after; and as for paying
her rent—" he broke off with a contemptuous laugh.
"Oh, but what can you expect from that wretched old Julia Duffy?"
said Lady Dysart good-naturedly; "she's too poor to keep the place in
order."
"I can expect one thing of her," said Lambert, with possibly a
little more indignation than he felt; "that she'd pay up some of her
arrears, or if she can't, that she'd go out of the farm. I could get a
tenant for it to-morrow that would give me a good fine for it and put
the house to rights into the bargain."
"Of course, that would be an excellent thing, and I can quite see
that she ought to go," replied Lady Dysart, falling away from her
first position; "but what would happen to the poor old creature if she
left Gurthnamuckla?"
"That's just what your son says," replied Lambert with an almost
irrepressible impatience; "he thinks she oughtn't to be disturbed
because of some promise that she says Sir Benjamin made her, though
there isn't a square inch of paper to prove it. But I think there can
be no doubt that she'd be better and healthier out of that house; she
keeps it like a pigstye. Of course, as you say, the trouble is to find
some place to put her."
Lady Dysart turned upon him a face shining with the light of
inspiration.
"The back-lodge!" she said, with Delphic finality. "Let her go into
the back-lodge when Hynes goes out of it!"
Mr. Lambert received this suggestion with as much admiration as if
he had not thought of it before.
"By Jove! Lady Dysart, I always say that you have a better head on
your shoulders than any one of us! That's a regular happy thought."
Any new scheme, no matter how revolutionary, was sure to be viewed
with interest, if not with favour, by Lady Dysart, and if she happened
to be its inventor, it was endowed with virtues that only flourished
more strongly in the face of opposition. In a few minutes she had
established Miss Duffy in the back-lodge, with, for occupation, the
care of the incubator recently imported to Bruff, and hitherto a
failure except as a cooking-stove; and for support, the milk of a
goat that should be chained to a laurel at the back of the lodge, and
fed by hand. While these details were still being expanded, there
broke upon the air a series of shrill, discordant whistles, coming
from the direction of the lake.
"Good heavens!" ejaculated Lady Dysart. "What can that be?
Something must be happening to the steam-launch; it sounds as if it
were in danger!"
"It's more likely to be Hawkins playing the fool," replied Lambert
ill-temperedly. "I saw him on the launch with Miss Fitzpatrick just
after we left the pier."
Lady Dysart said nothing, but her expression changed with such
dramatic swiftness from vivid alarm to disapproval, that her mental
attitude was as evident as if she had spoken.
"Hawkins is very popular in Lismoyle," observed Lambert, tepidly.
"That I can very well understand," said Lady Dysart, opening her
parasol with an abruptness that showed annoyance, "since he takes so
much trouble to make himself agreeable to the Lismoyle young ladies."
Another outburst of jerky, amateur whistles from the steam launch
gave emphasis to the remark.
"Oh, the trouble's a pleasure," said Lambert acidly. "I hope the
pleasure won't be a trouble to the young ladies one of these days."
"Why, what do you mean?" cried Lady Dysart, much interested.
"Oh, nothing," said Lambert, with a laugh, "except that's he's been
known to love and ride away before now."
He had no particular object in lowering Hawkins in Lady Dysart's
eyes, beyond the fact that it was an outlet for his indignation at
Francie's behaviour in leaving him, her oldest friend, to go and make
a common laughing-stock of herself with that young puppy, which was
the form in which the position shaped itself in his angry mind. He
almost decided to tell Lady Dysart the episode of the Limerick
tobacconist's daughter, when they saw Miss Hope-Drummond and Captain
Cursiter coming up the shrubbery path towards them, and he was obliged
to defer it to a better occasion.
"What was all that whistling about, Captain Cursiter?" asked Lady
Dysart, with a certain vicarious severity.
Captain Cursiter seemed indisposed for discussion. "Mr. Hawkins was
trying the whistle, I think," he replied with equal severity.
"Oh, yes, Lady Dysart!" broke in Miss Hope-Drummond, apparently
much amused; "Mr. Hawkins has nearly deafened us with that ridiculous
whistle; they would go off down the lake, and when we called after
them to ask where they were going, and told them they would be late
for tea, they did nothing but whistle back at us in that absurd way."
"Why? What? Who have gone? Whom do you mean by they?" Lady Dysart's
handsome eyes shone like stars as they roved in wide consternation
from one speaker to another.
"Miss Fitzpatrick and Mr. Hawkins!" responded Miss Hope-Drummond
with childlike gaiety; "we were all talking on the pier, and we
suddenly heard them calling out 'good-bye!' And Mr. Hawkins said he
couldn't stop the boat, and off they went down the lake! I don't know
when we shall see them again."
Lady Dysart's feelings found vent in a long-drawn groan. "Not able
to stop the boat! Oh, Captain Cursiter, is there any danger? Shall I
send a boat after them? Oh, how I wish this house was in the Desert
of Sahara, or that that intolerable lake was at the bottom of the sea!"
This was not the first time that Captain Cursiter had been called
upon to calm Lady Dysart's anxieties in connection with the lake, and
he now unwillingly felt himself bound to assure her that Hawkins
thoroughly understood the management of the Serpolette, that he would
certainly be back in a few minutes, and that in any case, the lake was
as calm as the conventional mill-pond. Inwardly he was cursing
himself for having yielded to Hawkins in putting into Bruff; he was
furious with Francie for the vulgar liberties taken by her with the
steam-whistle, an instrument employed by all true steam-launchers in
the most abstemious way; and lastly, he was indignant with Hawkins
for taking his boat without his permission, and leaving him here, as
isolated from all means of escape, and as unprotected, as if his
clothes had been stolen while he was bathing.
The party proceeded moodily into the house, and, as moodily,
proceeded to partake of tea. It was just about the time that Mrs.
Lambert was asking that nice, kind Miss Dysart for another cup of very
weak tea—"Hog-wash, indeed, as Mr. Lambert calls it"— that the
launch was sighted by her proprietor crossing the open space of water
beyond Bruff Point, and heading for Lismoyle. Almost immediately
afterwards Mrs. Lambert received the look from her husband which
intimated that the time had arrived for her to take her departure, and
some instinct told her that it would be advisable to relinquish the
prospect of the second cup and to go at once.
If Mr. Lambert's motive in hurrying back to Lismoyle was the hope
of finding the steam-launch there, his sending along our friend the
black mare, till her sleek sides were in a lather of foam, was
unavailing. As he drove on to the quay the Serpolette was already
steaming back to Bruff round the first of the miniature headlands
that jagged the shore, and the good turkey-hen's twitterings on the
situation received even less attention than usual, as her lord pulled
the mare's head round and drove home to Rosemount.
The afternoon dragged wearily on at Bruff; Lady Dysart's mood
alternating between anger and fright as dinner-time came nearer and
nearer and there was still no sign of the launch.
"What will Charlotte Mullen say to me?" she wailed, as she went for
the twentieth time to the window and saw no sign of the runaways upon
the lake vista that was visible from it. She found small consolation
in the other two occupants of the drawing-room. Christopher, reading
the newspaper with every appearance of absorbed interest, treated the
alternative theories of drowning or elopement with optimistic
indifference; and Miss Hope-Drummond, while disclaiming any idea of
either danger, dwelt on the social aspect of the affair so ably as
almost to reduce her hostess to despair. Cursiter was down at the
pier, seriously debating with himself as to the advisability of
rowing the long four miles back to Lismoyle, and giving his opinion to
Mr. Hawkins in language that would, he hoped, surprise even that bland
and self-satisfied young gentleman. There Pamela found him standing,
as desolate as Sir Bedivere when the Three Queens had carried away
King Arthur in their barge, and from thence she led him, acquiescing
with sombre politeness in the prospect of dining out for the second
time in one week, and wondering whether Providence would again
condemn him to sit next Miss Hope-Drummond, and prattle to her about
the Lincolnshire Cursiters. He felt as if talking to Pamela would make
the situation more endurable. She knew how to let a man alone, and
when she did talk she had something to say, and did not scream twaddle
at you, like a peacock. These unamiable reflections will serve to
show the irritation of Captain Cursiter's mind, and as he stalked
into dinner with Lady Dysart, and found that for her sake he had
better make the best of his subaltern's iniquity, he was a man much to
be pitied.
At about this very time it so happened that Mr. Hawkins was also
beginning to be sorry for himself. The run to Lismoyle had been
capital fun, and though the steering and the management of the
machinery took up more of his attention than he could have wished, he
had found Francie's society more delightful than ever. The posting of
a letter, which he had fortunately found in his pocket, had been the
pretext for the expedition, and both he and Francie confidently
believed that they would get back to Bruff at about six o'clock. It is
true that Mr. Hawkins received rather a shock when, on arriving at
Lismoyle, he found that it was already six o'clock, but he kept this
to himself, and lost no time in starting again for Bruff.
The excitement and hurry of the escapade had conspired, with the
practical business of steering and attending to the various brass
taps, to throw sentiment for a space into the background, and that
question as to whether forgiveness should or should not be extended
to him, hung enchantingly on the horizon, as delightful and as
seductive as the blue islands that floated far away in the yellow haze
of the lowered sun. There was not a breath of wind, and the launch
slit her way through tranquil, oily spaces of sky that lay reflected
deep in the water, and shaved the long rocky points so close that they
could see the stones at the bottom looking like enormous cairngorms in
the golden shallows.
"That was a near thing," remarked Mr. Hawkins complacently, as a
slight grating sound told that they had grazed one of these
smooth-backed monsters. "Good business old Snipey wasn't on board!"
"Well, I'll tell old Snipey on you the very minute I get back!"
"Oh, you little horror!" said Mr. Hawkins.
Both laughed at this brilliant retort, and Hawkins looked down at
her, where she sat near him, with an expression of fondness that he
did not take the least pains to conceal.
"Hang it! you know," he said presently, "I'm sick of holding this
blooming wheel dead amidships; I'll just make it fast, and let her rip
for a bit by herself." He suited the action to the word, and came and
sat down beside her.
"Now you're going to drown me again, I suppose, the way Mr. Lambert
did," Francie said. She felt a sudden trembling that was in no way
caused by the danger of which she had spoken; she knew quite well why
he had left the wheel, and her heart stood still with the expectation
of that explanation that she knew was to come.
"So you think I want to drown you, do you?" said Hawkins, getting
very close to her, and trying to look under the wide brim of her hat.
"Turn round and look me in the face and say you're ashamed of
yourself for thinking of such a thing."
"Go on to your steering," responded Francie, still looking down and
wondering if he saw how her hands were trembling.
"But I'm not wanted to steer, and you do want me here, don't you?"
replied Hawkins, his face flushing through the sunburn as he leaned
nearer to her, "and you know you never told me last night if you were
angry with me or not."
"Well, I was."
"Ah, not very—" A rather hot and nervous hand, burned to an
unromantic scarlet, turned her face upwards against her will. "Not
very?" he said again, looking into her eyes, in which love lay
helpless like a prisoner.
"Don't," said Francie, yielding the position, powerless, indeed, to
do otherwise.
Her delicate defeated face was drawn to his; her young soul rushed
with it, and with passionate, innocent sincerity, thought it had found
heaven itself. Hawkins could not tell how long it was before he heard
again, as if in a dream, the click-clicking of the machinery, and
wondered, in the dazed way of a person who is "coming to" after an
anæsthetic, how the boat was getting on.
"I must go back to the wheel, darling," he whispered in the small
ear that lay so close to his lips; "I'm afraid we're a little bit off
the course."
As he spoke, his conscience reminded him that he himself had got a
good deal off his course, but he put the thought aside. The launch was
duly making for the headland that separated them from Bruff, but
Hawkins had not reflected that in rounding the last point he had gone
rather nearer to it than was usual, and that he was consequently
inside the proper course. This, however, was an easy matter to
rectify, and he turned the Serpolette's head out towards the ordinary
channel. A band of rushes lay between him and it, and he steered wide
of them to avoid their parent shallow. Suddenly there was a dull
shock, a quiver ran through the launch, and Hawkins found himself
sitting abruptly on the india-rubber matting at Francie's feet. The
launch had run at full speed upon the soft, muddy shallow that
extended unconscionably far beyond the bed of rushes, and her sharp
nose was now digging itself deeper and deeper into the mud. Hawkins
lost no time in reversing the engine, but by the time they had gone
full speed astern for five minutes, and had succeeded only in lashing
the water into a thick, pea-soupy foam all round them, he began to
feel exceedingly anxious as to their prospects of getting off again.
"Well, we've been and gone and done it this time," he said, with a
laugh that had considerably more discomfiture than mirth in it; "I
expect we've got to stay here till we're taken off."
Francie looked all round the lake; not a boat was in sight, not
even a cottage on the shore from which they might hope for help. She
was standing up, pale, now that the tide of excitement had ebbed a
little, and shaken by a giddy remembrance of that moment when the
yacht heeled over and flung her into blackness.
"I told you you were going to drown me," she said, shivering and
laughing together; and "oh—! what in the name of goodness will I say
to Lady Dysart?"
"Oh, we'll tell her it was an accident, and she won't say a word,"
said Hawkins with more confidence than he felt. "If the worst comes to
the worst I'll swim ashore and get a boat."
"Oh don't, don't! you mustn't do that!" she cried, catching at his
arm as if she already saw him jumping overboard; "I'd be
frightened—I could'nt bear to see you—don't go away from me!"
Her voice failed pathetically, and, bared of all their wiles, her
eyes besought him through the tears of a woman's terror and
tenderness. Hawkins looked at her with a kind of ecstacy.
"Do you care so much as all that," he said, "you silly little
thing!"
After this there was nothing to be done except sit down again, and
with her head on his shoulder, allow that fatal anæsthetic to rob him
of all considerations beyond Francie's kisses.
Dinner at Bruff was over. It had been delayed as long as possible
in the belief that each moment would bring back the culprits, and it
had dragged painfully through its eight courses, in spite of Lady
Dysart's efforts to hasten Gorman and his satellite in their
inexorable orbit. Everyone except Garry and Miss Hope-Drummond had
been possessed by an anxiety which Lady Dysart alone had courage to
express. She indeed, being a person who habitually said what other
people were half afraid to think, had dilated on all possible
calamities till Cursiter, whose temper was momently becoming worse,
many times wished himself on the lake, rowing dinnerless and vengeful
on the track of the fugitives.
The whole party was now out of doors, and on its way down to the
landing-place, in the dark twilight; Lady Dysart coming last of all,
and driving before her the much incensed Gorman, whom she had armed
with the gong, in the idea that its warlike roar would be at once a
guide and a menace to the wanderers. So far it had only had the effect
of drawing together in horrified questioning all the cattle in the
lower part of the park, and causing them to rush, bellowing, along by
the railings that separated them from the siren who cried to them with
a voice so commanding and so mysterious. Gorman was fully alive to the
indignity of his position, and to the fact that Master Garry, his
ancient enemy, was mocking at his humiliation; but any attempt to
moderate his attack upon the gong was detected by his mistress.
"Go on, Gorman! Beat it louder! The more they bellow the better, it
will guide them into the landing-place."
Christopher's affected misapprehension of his mother's pronouns
created a diversion for some time, as it was perhaps intended to do.
He had set himself to treat the whole affair with unsympathetic
levity, but, in spite of himself, an insistent thorn of anxiety made
it difficult for him to make little of his mother's vigorous panic. It
was absurd, but her lamentations about the dangers of the lake and of
steam-launches found a hollow echo in his heart. He remembered, with
a shudder that he had not felt at the time, the white face rising and
dipping in the trough of the grey lake waves; and though his sense of
humour, and of the supreme inadequacy and staleness of swearing,
usually deprived him of that safety valve, he was conscious that in
the background of his mind the traditional adjective was monotonously
coupling itself with the name of Mr. Hawkins. He was walking behind
the others down the path to the pier. Here and there great trees that
looked tired from their weight of foliage stood patiently spreading
their arms to the dew, and in the intervals between Gorman's
fantasias on the gong, he could hear how the diffident airs from the
lake whispered confidentially to the sleeping leaves. There was no
moon; the sky was thickened with a light cloudiness, and in the
mystical twilight the pale broad blossoms of an elder-bush looked like
constellated stars in a nearer and darker firmament. Christopher
walked on, that cold memory of danger and disquiet jarring the
fragrance and peace of the rich summer night.
The searchers ranged themselves on the pier; the gong was stilled,
and except for the occasional stamping of a hoof, or low booming
complaint from the cattle, there was perfect silence. All were
listening for some sound from the lake before Christopher and
Cursiter carried out their intention of starting in a boat to look
for the launch. Suddenly in the misty darkness into which all were
staring, a vivid spark of light sprang out. It burned for a few
seconds only, a sharp distinct star, and then disappeared.
"There they are!" cried Lady Dysart. "The gong, Gorman! The gong!"
Gorman sounded with a will, and the harsh, brazen blare spread and
rolled over the lake, but there was no response.
"They must hear that," said Cursiter to Christopher; "why the devil
don't he whistle?"
"How should I know?" answered Christopher, with a crossness which
was in some irrational way the outcome of extreme relief; "I suppose
he fooled with it till it broke."
"Perhaps they are not there after all," suggested Miss
Hope-Drummond cheerfully.
"How can you say such a thing, Evelyn!" exclaimed Lady Dysart
indignantly; "I know it was they, and the light was a signal of
distress!"
"More likely to have been Hawkins lighting a cigarette," said
Christopher; "if everyone would stop talking at the same time we might
be able to hear something."
A question ran like a ripple through Pamela's mind, "What makes
Christopher cross to-night?" but the next instant she forgot it. A
distant shout, unmistakably uttered by Hawkins, came thinly to them
across the water, and in another second or two the noise of oars
could be distinctly heard. The sound advanced steadily.
"Show a light there on the pier!" called out a voice that was not
Hawkins'.
Cursiter struck a match, a feeble illuminant that made everything
around invisible except the faces of the group on the pier, and by the
time it had been tossed, like a falling star, into the tarry blackness
of the water, the boat was within conversational distance.
"Is Miss Fitzpatrick there?" demanded Lady Dysart.
"She is," said Lambert's voice.
"What have you done with the launch?" shouted Cursiter, in a tone
that made his subaltern quake.
"She's all right," he made haste to reply. "She's on that
mud-shallow off Curragh Point, and Lambert's man is on board her now.
Lambert saw us aground there from his window, and we were at her for
an hour trying to get her off, and then it got so dark, we thought
we'd better leave her and come on. She's all right, you know."
"Oh," said Captain Cursiter, in, as Hawkins thought to himself, a
deuced disagreeable voice.
The boat came up alongside of the pier, and in the hubbub of
inquiry that arose, Francie was conscious of a great sense of
protection in Lambert's presence, angry though she knew he was. As he
helped her out of the boat, she whispered tremulously:
"It was awfully good of you to come."
He did not answer, and stepped at once into the boat again. In
another minute the necessary farewells had been made, and he,
Cursiter, and Hawkins, were rowing back to the launch, leaving Francie
to face her tribunal alone.
It was noon on the following day—a soaking, windy noon. Francie
felt its fitness without being aware that she did so, as she knelt in
front of her trunk, stuffing her few fineries into it with
unscientific recklessness, and thinking with terror that it still
remained for her to fee the elderly English upper housemaid with the
half-crown that Charlotte had diplomatically given her for the purpose.
Everything had changed since yesterday, and changed for the worse.
The broad window, out of which yesterday afternoon she had leaned in
the burning sunshine to see the steam-launch puffing her way up the
lake, was now closed against the rain; the dirty flounces of her best
white frock, that had been clean yesterday, now thrust themselves out
from under the lid of her trunk in disreputable reminder of last
night's escapade; and Lady Dysart, who had been at all events
moderately friendly yesterday, now evidently considered that Francie
had transgressed beyond forgiveness, and had acquiesced so readily in
Francie's suggestion of going home for luncheon, that her guest felt
sorry that she had not said breakfast. Even the padlock of her
bonnet-box refused to lock—was "going bandy with her," as she put
it, in a phrase learnt from the Fitzpatrick cook—and she was still
battling with it when the sound of wheels on the gravel warned her
that the ordeal of farewell was at hand. The blasé calm with which
Sarah helped her through the presentation of Charlotte's half-crown
made her feel her social inferiority as keenly as the coldness of
Lady Dysart's adieux made her realise that she was going away in
disgrace, when she sought her hostess and tried to stammer out the few
words of orthodox gratitude that Charlotte had enjoined her not to
forget.
Pamela, whose sympathies were always with the sinner, was kinder
than ever, even anxiously kind, as Francie dimly perceived, and in
some unexpected way her kindness brought a lump into the throat of
the departing guest. Francie hurried mutely out on to the steps,
where, in spite of the rain, the dogs and Christopher were waiting to
bid her goodbye.
"You are very punctual," he said. "I don't know why you are in such
a hurry to go away."
"Oh, I think you've had quite enough of me," Francie replied with a
desperate attempt at gaiety. "I'm sure you're all very glad to be shut
of me."
"That isn't a kind thing to say, and I think you ought to know that
it is not true either."
"Indeed then I know it is true" answered Francie, preparing in her
agitation to plunge into the recesses of the landau without any
further ceremonies of farewell.
"Well, won't you even shake hands with me?"
She was already in the carriage; but at this reproach she thrust an
impulsive hand out of the window. "Oh, gracious—! I mean—I beg
your pardon, Mr. Dysart," she cried incoherently, "I—I'm awfully
grateful for all your kindness, and to Miss Dysart—"
She hardly noticed how tightly he held her hand in his; but, as she
was driven away, and, looking back, saw him and Pamela standing on the
steps, the latter holding Max in her arms, and waving one of his
crooked paws in token of farewell, she thought to herself that it must
be only out of good nature they were so friendly to her; but anyhow
they were fearfully nice.
"Thank goodness!" said Lady Dysart fervently, as she moved away
from the open hall-door—"thank goodness that responsibility is off
my hands. I began by liking the creature, but never, no, never, have
I seen a girl so abominably brought up."
"Not much notion of the convenances, has she?" observed Miss
Hope-Drummond, who had descended from her morning task of writing many
letters in a tall, square hand, just in time to enjoy the sight of
Francie's departure, without having the trouble of saying good-bye to
her.
"Convenances!" echoed Lady Dysart, lifting her dark eyes till
nothing but the whites were visible; "I don't suppose she could tell
you the meaning of the word. 'One master passion in the breast, like
Aaron's serpent, swallows up the rest,' and of all the man-eaters I
have ever seen, she is the most cannibalistic!"
Miss Hope-Drummond laughed in polite appreciation, and rustled
crisply away towards the drawing-room. Lady Dysart looked approvingly
after the tall, admirably neat figure, and thought, with inevitable
comparison, of Francie's untidy hair, and uncertainly draped skirts.
She turned to Christopher and Pamela, and continued, with a lowered
voice:
"Do you know, even the servants are all talking about her. Of
course, they can't help noticing what goes on."
Christopher looked at his mother with a singularly expressionless
face.
"Gorman hasn't mentioned it to me yet, or William either."
"If you had not interrupted me, Christopher," said poor Lady
Dysart, resentful of this irreproachably filial rebuke, "I would have
told you that none of the servants breathed a word on the subject to
me. Evelyn was told it by her maid."
"How Evelyn can discuss such things with her maid, I cannot
imagine," said Pamela, with unwonted heat; "and Davis is such a
particularly detestable woman."
"I do not care in the least what sort of woman she is, she does
hair beautifully, which is more than I can say for you," replied Lady
Dysart, with an Uhlanlike dash into the enemy's country.
"I suppose it was by Davis' advice that Evelyn made a point of
ignoring Miss Fitzpatrick this whole morning," continued Pamela, with
the righteous wrath of a just person.
"It was quite unnecessary for her to trouble herself," broke in
Lady Dysart witheringly; "Christopher atoned for all her
deficiencies—taking advantage of Mr. Hawkins' absence, I suppose."
"If Hawkins had been there," said Christopher, with the slowness
that indicated that he was trying not to stammer, "it would have saved
me the trouble of making c-conversation for a person who did not care
about it."
"You may make your mind easy on that point, my dear!" Lady Dysart
shot this parting shaft after her son as he turned away towards the
smoking-room. "To do her justice, I don't think she is in the least
particular, so long as she has a man to talk to!"
It is not to be wondered at, that, as Francie drove through
Lismoyle, she felt that the atmosphere was laden with reprobation of
her and her conduct.
Her instinct told her that the accident to Captain Cursiter's
launch, and her connection with it, would be a luscious topic of
discourse for everyone, from Mrs. Lambert downwards; and the thought
kept her from deriving full satisfaction from the Bruff carriage and
pair. Even when she saw Annie Beattie standing at her window with a
duster in her hand, the triumph of her position was blighted by the
reflection that if Charlotte did not know everything before the
afternoon was out, full details would be supplied to her at the party
to which on this very evening they had been bidden by Mrs. Beattie.
The prospect of the cross-examination which she would have to
undergo grew in portentousness during the hour and a half of waiting
at Tally Ho for her cousin's return, while through and with her fears
the dirt and vulgarity of the house and the furniture, the sickly
familiarities of Louisa, and the all-pervading smell of cats and
cooking, impressed themselves on her mind with a new and repellent
vigour. But Charlotte, when she arrived, was evidently still in happy
ignorance of the events that would have interested her so profoundly.
Her Dublin dentist had done his spiriting gently, her friends had been
so hospitable that her lodging-house breakfasts had been her only
expense in the way of meals, and the traditional battle with the
Lismoyle car-driver and his equally inevitable defeat, had raised her
spirits so much that she accepted Francie's expurgated account of her
sojourn at Bruff with almost boisterous approval. She even extended a
jovial feeler in the direction of Christopher.
"Well, now, after all the chances you've had, Francie, I'll not
give tuppence for you if you haven't Mr. Dysart at your feet!"
It was not usually Francie's way to object to jests of this kind,
but now she shrank from Charlotte's heavy hand.
"Oh, he was awfully kind," she said hurriedly; "but I don't think
he'll ever want to marry anyone, not even Miss Hope-Drummond, for all
as hard as she's trying!"
"Paugh! Let her try! She'll not get him, not if she was to put her
eyes on sticks! But believe you me, child, there never was a man yet
that pretended he didn't want to marry that wasn't dying for a wife!"
This statement demanded no reply, and Miss Mullen departed to the
kitchen to see the new kittens and to hold high inquisition into the
doings of the servants during her absence.
Mrs. Beattie gave but two parties in the year—one at Christmas,
on account of the mistletoe; and one in July, on account of the
raspberries, for which her garden was justly famous. This, it need
scarcely be said, was the raspberry party, and accordingly when the
afternoon had brought a cessation of the drizzling rain, Miss Ada and
Miss Flossie Beattie might have been seen standing among the wet
over-arching raspberry canes, devoured by midges, scarlet from the
steamy heat, and pestered by that most maddening of all created
things, the common fly, but, nevertheless, filling basket after basket
with fruit. Miss May and Miss Carrie spent a long and arduous day in
the kitchen making tartlets, brewing syrupy lemonade, and decorating
cakes with pink and white sugar devices and mottoes archly stimulative
of conversation. Upon Mrs. Beattie and her two remaining daughters
devolved the task of arranging the drawing-room chairs in a Christy
minstrel circle, and borrowing extra tea-cups from their obliging
neighbour, Mrs. Lynch; while Mr. Beattie absented himself judiciously
until his normal five o'clock dinner hour, when he returned to snatch
a perfunctory meal at a side table in the hall, his womenkind, after
their wont, declining anything more substantial than nomadic cups of
tea, brewed in the kitchen tea-pot, and drunk standing, like the
Queen's health.
But by eight o'clock all preparations were completed, and the young
ladies were in the drawing-room, attired alike in white muslin and
rose-coloured sashes, with faces pink and glossy from soap and water.
In Lismoyle, punctuality was observed at all entertainments, not as a
virtue but as a pleasure, and at half-past eight the little glaring
drawing-room had rather more people in it than it could conveniently
hold. Mrs. Beattie had trawled Lismoyle and its environs with the
purest impartiality; no one was invidiously omitted, not even young
Mr. Redmond the solicitor's clerk, who came in thick boots and a suit
of dress clothes so much too big for him as to make his trousers look
like twin concertinas, and also to suggest the more massive
proportions of his employer, Mr. Lynch. In this assemblage, Mrs.
Baker, in her celebrated maroon velvet, was a star of the first
magnitude, only excelled by Miss Mullen, whose arrival with her cousin
was, in a way, the event of the evening. Everyone knew that Miss
Fitzpatrick had returned from Bruff that day, and trailing clouds of
glory followed her in the mind's eye of the party as she came into the
room. Most people, too, knew of the steam-launch adventure, so that
when, later in the proceedings, Mr. Hawkins made his appearance, poor
Mrs. Beattie was given small credit for having secured this prize.
"Are they engaged, do you think?" whispered Miss Corkran, the
curate's sister, to Miss Baker.
"Engaged indeed!" echoed Miss Baker, "no more than you are! If you
knew him as well as I do you'd know that flirting's all he cares for!"
Miss Corkran, who had not the pleasure of Mr. Hawkins'
acquaintance, regarded him coldly through her spectacles, and said
that for her own part she disapproved of flirting, but liked making
gentlemen-friends.
"Well, I suppose I might as well confess," said Miss Baker with a
frivolous laugh, "that there's nothing I care for like flirting, but
p'pa's awful particular! Wasn't he for turning Dr. M'Call out of the
house last summer because he cot me curling his moustache with my
curling-tongs! 'I don't care what you do with officers,' says p'pa,
'but I'll not have you going on with that Rathgar bounder of a
fellow!' Ah, but that was when the poor 'Foragers' were quartered
here; they were the jolliest lot we ever had!"
Miss Corkran paid scant attention to these memories, being wholly
occupied with observing the demeanour of Mr. Hawkins, who was holding
Miss Mullen in conversation. Charlotte's big, pale face had an
intellectuality and power about it that would have made her
conspicuous in a gathering more distinguished than the present, and
even Mr. Hawkins felt something like awe of her, and said to himself
that she would know how to make it hot for him if she chose to cut up
rough about the launch business.
As he reflected on that escapade he felt that he would have given a
good round sum of money that it had not taken place. He had played
the fool in his usual way, and now it didn't seem fair to back out of
it. That, at all events, was the reason he gave to himself for coming
to this blooming menagerie, as he inwardly termed Mrs. Beattie's
highest social effort; it wouldn't do to chuck the whole thing up all
of a sudden, even though, of course, the little girl knew as well as
he did that it was all nothing but a lark. This was pretty much the
substance of the excuses that he had offered to Captain Cursiter; and
they had seemed so successful at the time that he now soothed his
guilty conscience with a rechauffé of them, while he slowly and
conversationally made his way round the room towards the green rep
sofa in the corner, whereon sat Miss Fitzpatrick, looking charming
things at Mr. Corkran, judging, at least, by the smile that displayed
the reverend gentleman's prominent teeth to such advantage. Hawkins
kept on looking at her over the shoulder of the Miss Beattie to whom
he was talking, and with each glance he thought her looking more and
more lovely. Prudence melted in a feverish longing to be near her
again, and the direction of his wandering eye became at length so
apparent that Miss Carrie afterwards told her sister that "Mr. Hawkins
was fearfully gone about Francie Fitzpatrick—oh, the tender looks
he cast at her!"
Mrs. Beattie's entertainments always began with music, and the
recognised musicians of Lismoyle were now contributing his or her
share in accustomed succession. Hawkins waited until the time came
for Mr. Corkran to exhibit his wiry bass, and then definitely took up
his position on the green sofa. When he had first come into the room
their eyes had met with a thrilling sense of understanding, and since
then Francie had felt rather than seen his steady and diplomatic
advance in her direction. But somehow, now that he was beside her,
they seemed to find little to say to each other.
"I suppose they're all talking about our running aground
yesterday," he said at last in a low voice. "Does she know anything
about it yet?" indicating Miss Mullen with a scarcely perceptible turn
of his eye.
"No," replied Francie in the same lowered voice; "but she will
before the evening's out. Everyone's quizzing me about it." She looked
at him anxiously as she spoke, and his light eyebrows met in a frown.
"Confound their cheek!" he said angrily; "why don't you shut them
up?"
"I don't know what to say to them. They only roar laughing at me,
and say I'm not born to be drowned anyway."
"Look here," said Hawkins impatiently, "what do they do at these
shows? Have we got to sit here all the evening?"
"Hush! Look at Charlotte looking at you, and that's Carrie Beattie
just in front of us."
"I didn't come here to be wedged into a corner of this little
beastly hole all the evening," he answered rebelliously; "can't we get
out to the stairs or the garden or something?"
"Mercy on us!" exclaimed Francie, half-frightened and
half-delighted at his temerity. "Of course we can't! Why, they'll be
going down to tea now in a minute—after that perhaps—"
"There won't be any perhaps about it," said Hawkins, looking at her
with an expression that made her blush and tremble, "will there?"
"I don't know—not if you go away now," she murmured, "I'm so
afraid of Charlotte."
"I've nowhere to go; I only came here to see you."
Captain Cursiter, at this moment refilling his second pipe, would
not have studied the fascinating pages of the Engineer with such a
careless rapture had he at all realised how Mr. Hawkins was fulfilling
his promises of amendment.
At this juncture, however, the ringing of a bell in the hall
notified that tea was ready, and before Hawkins had time for
individual action, he found himself swept forward by his hostess, and
charged with the task of taking Mrs. Rattray, the doctor's bride, down
to the dining-room. The supply of men did little more than yield a
sufficiency for the matrons, and after these had gone forth with due
state, Francie found herself in the midst of a throng of young ladies
following in the wake of their seniors. As she came down the stairs
she was aware of a tall man taking off his coat in a corner of the
hall, and before she reached the dining-room door Mr. Lambert's hand
was laid upon her arm.
Tea at Mrs. Beattie's parties was a serious meal, and, as a
considerable time had elapsed since any of the company, except Mr.
Hawkins, had dined, they did full justice to her hospitality. That
young gentleman toyed with a plate of raspberries and cream and a cup
of coffee, and spasmodically devoted himself to Mrs. Rattray in a way
that quite repaid her for occasional lapses of attention. Francie was
sitting opposite to him, not at the table, where, indeed, there was no
room for her, but on a window-sill, where she was sharing a small
table with Mr. Lambert. They were partly screened by the window
curtains, but it seemed to Hawkins that Lambert was talking a great
deal and that she was eating nothing. Whatever was the subject of
their conversation they were looking very serious over it, and, as it
progressed, Francie seemed to get more and more behind her window
curtain. The general clamour made it impossible for him to hear what
they were talking about, and Mrs. Rattray's demands upon his attention
became more intolerable every moment, as he looked at Francie and saw
how wholly another man was monopolising her.
"And do you like being stationed here, Mr Hawkins?" said Mrs.
Rattray after a pause.
"Eh? what? Oh yes, of course I do—awfully! you're all such
delightful people y'know!"
Mrs. Rattray bridled with pleasure at this audacity.
"Oh, Mr. Hawkins, I'm afraid you're a terrible flatterer! Do you
know that one of the officers of the Foragers said he thought it was a
beastly spawt!"
"Beastly what? Oh yes, I see. I don't agree with him at all; I
think it's a capital good spot." (Why did that old ass, Mrs. Corkran
stick her great widow's cap just between him and the curtain? Francie
had leaned forward and looked at him that very second, and that
infernal white tow-row had got in his way.)
Mrs. Rattray thought it was time to play her trump card.
"I suppose you read a great deal, Mr. Hawkins? Dr. Rattray takes
the—a—the Pink One I think he calls it—I know, of course, it's
only a paper for gentlemen," she added hurriedly, "but I believe it's
very comical, and the doctor would be most happy to lend it to you."
Mr. Hawkins, whose Sunday mornings would have been a blank without
the solace of the Sporting Times, explained that the loan was
unnecessary, but Mrs. Rattray felt that she had nevertheless made her
point, and resolved that she would next Sunday study the Pink One's
inscrutable pages, so that she and Mr. Hawkins might have, at least,
one subject in common.
By this time the younger members of the company had finished their
tea, and those nearest the door began to make a move. The first to
leave the room were Francie and Lambert, and poor Hawkins, who had
hoped that his time of release had at length come, found it difficult
to behave as becomes a gentleman and a soldier, when Mrs. Rattray,
with the air of one who makes a concession, said she thought she
could try another saucer of raspberries, Before they left the table
the piano had begun again upstairs, and a muffled thumping, that shook
flakes from the ceiling down on to the tea-table, told that the
realities of the evening had begun at last.
"I knew the young people would be at that before the evening was
out," said Mrs. Beattie with an indulgent laugh, "though the girls let
on to me it was only a musical party they wanted."
"Ah well, they'll never do it younger!" said Mrs. Baker, leaning
back with her third cup of tea in her hand. "Girls will be girls, as
I've just been saying to Miss Mullen."
"Girls will be tom-fools!" said Miss Mullen with a brow of storm,
thrusting her hands into her gloves, while her eyes followed Hawkins,
who had at length detached Mrs. Rattray from the pleasures of the
table, and was hurrying her out of the room.
"Oh now, Miss Mullen, you mustn't be so cynical," said Mrs. Beattie
from behind the tea-urn; "we have six girls, and I declare now Mr.
Beattie and I wouldn't wish to have one less."
"Well, they're a great responsibility," said Mrs. Corkran with a
slow wag of her obtrusively widowed head, "and no one knows that
better than a mother. I shall never forget the anxiety I went
through—it was just before we came to this parish—when my Bessy
had an offer. Poor Mr. Corkran and I disapproved of the young man, and
we were both quite distracted about it. Indeed we had to make it a
subject of prayer, and a fortnight afterwards the young man died. Oh,
doesn't it show the wonderful force of prayer?"
"Well now I think it's a pity you didn't let it alone," said Mr.
Lynch, with something resembling a wink at Miss Mullen.
"I daresay Bessy's very much of your opinion," said Charlotte,
unable to refrain from a jibe at Miss Corkran, pre-occupied though she
was with her own wrath. She pushed her chair brusquely back from the
table. "I think, with your kind permission, Mrs. Beattie, I'll go
upstairs and see what's going on. Don't stir Mr. Lynch, I'm able to
get that far by myself."
When Miss Mullen arrived at the top of the steep flight of stairs,
she paused on the landing amongst the exiled drawing-room chairs and
tables, and looked in at seven or eight couples revolving in a space
so limited as to make movement a difficulty, if not a danger, and in
an atmosphere already thickened with dust from the carpet. She saw to
her surprise that her cousin was dancing with Lambert, and, after a
careful survey of the room, espied Mr. Hawkins standing partnerless in
one of the windows.
"I wonder what she's at now," thought Charlotte to herself; "is she
trying to play Roddy off against him? The little cat, I wouldn't put
it past her!"
As she looked at them wheeling slowly round in the cramped circle
she could see that neither he or Francie spoke to each other, and
when, the dance being over, they sat down together in the corner of
the room, they seemed scarcely more disposed to talk than they had
been when dancing.
"Aha! Roddy's a good fellow," she thought, "he's doing his best to
help me by keeping her away from that young scamp."
At this point the young scamp in question crossed the room and
asked Miss Fitzpatrick for the next dance in a manner that indicated
just displeasure. The heat of the room and the exertion of dancing on
a carpet had endued most of the dancers with the complexions of ripe
plums, but Francie seemed to have been robbed of all colour. She did
not look up at him as he proffered his request.
"I'm engaged for the next dance."
Hawkins became very red. "Well the next after that," he persisted,
trying to catch her eye.
"There isn't any next," said Francie, looking suddenly at him with
defiant eyes; "after the next we're going home."
Hawkins stared for a brief instant at her with a sparkle of anger
in his eyes. "Oh, very well," he said with exaggerated politeness of
manner, "I thought I was engaged to you for the first dance after
supper, that was all."
He turned away at once and walked out of the room, brushing past
Charlotte at the door, and elbowed his way through the uproarious
throng that crowded the staircase. Mrs. Beattie, coming up from the
tea-table with her fellow matrons, had no idea of permitting her
prize guest to escape so early. Hawkins was captured, his excuses were
disregarded, and he was driven up the stairs again.
"Very well," he said to himself, "if she chooses to throw me over,
I'll let her see that I can get on without her." It did not occur to
him that Francie was only acting in accordance with the theory of the
affair that he had himself presented to Captain Cursiter. His mind
was now wholly given to revenging the snub he had received, and,
spurred by this desire, he advanced to Miss Lynch, who was reposing
in an armchair in a corner of the landing, while her partner played
upon her heated face with the drawing-room bellows, and secured her
for the next dance.
When Mr. Hawkins gave his mind to rollicking, there were few who
could do it more thoroughly, and the ensuing polka was stamped through
by him and Miss Lynch with a vigour that scattered all opposing
couples like ninepins. Even his strapping partner appealed for mercy.
"Oh, Mr. Hawkins," she panted, "wouldn't you chassy now please? If
you twirl me any more, I think I'll die!"
But Mr. Hawkins was deaf to entreaty; far from moderating his
exertions, he even snatched the eldest Miss Beattie from her position
as on-looker, and, compelling her to avail herself of the dubious
protection of his other arm, whirled her and Miss Lynch round the
room with him in a many-elbowed triangle. The progress of the other
dancers was necessarily checked by this performance, but it was
viewed with the highest favour by all the matrons, especially those
whose daughters had been selected to take part in it. Francie looked
on from the doorway, whither she and her partner, the Reverend
Corkran, had been driven for safety, with a tearing pain at her
heart. Her lips were set in a fixed smile —a smile that barely kept
their quivering in check— and her beautiful eyes shone upon the
dazzled curate through a moisture that was the next thing to tears.
"I want to find Miss Mullen," she said at last, dragging Mr.
Corkran towards the stairs, when a fresh burst of applause from the
dancing-room made them both look back. Hawkins' two partners had, at a
critical turn, perfidiously let him go with such suddenness that he
had fallen flat on the floor, and having pursued them as they polkaed
round the room, he was now encircling both with one arm, and affecting
to box their ears with his other hand, encouraged thereto by cries
of, "Box them, Mr. Hawkins!" from Mrs. Beattie. "Box them well!"
Charlotte was in the dining-room, partaking of a gentlemanly glass
of Marsala with Mr. Beattie, and other heads of families.
"Great high jinks they're having upstairs!" she remarked, as the
windows and tea-cups rattled from the stamping overhead, and Mr.
Beattie cast many an anxious eye towards the ceiling. "I suppose my
young lady's in the thick of it, whatever it is!" She always assumed
the attitude of the benevolently resigned chaperon when she talked
about Francie, and Mr. Lynch was on the point of replying in an
appropriate tone of humorous condolence, when the young lady herself
appeared on Mr. Corkran's arm, with an expression that at once struck
Charlotte as being very unlike high jinks.
"Why, child, what do you want down here?" she said. "Are you tired
dancing?"
"I am; awfully tired; would you mind going home, Charlotte?"
"What a question to ask before our good host here! Of course I mind
going home!" eyeing Francie narrowly as she spoke; "but I'll come if
you like."
"Why, what people you all are for going home!" protested Mr.
Beattie hospitably; "there was Hawkins that we only stopped by main
strength, and Lambert slipped away ten minutes ago, saying Mrs.
Lambert wasn't well, and he had to go and look after her! What's your
reverence about letting her go away now, when they're having the fun
of Cork upstairs?"
Francie smiled a pale smile, but held to her point, and a few
minutes afterwards she and Charlotte had made their way through the
knot of loafers at the garden gate, and were walking through the
empty moon-lit streets of Lismoyle towards Tally Ho. Charlotte did not
speak till the last clanging of the Bric-à-brac polka had been left
behind, and then she turned to Francie with a manner from which the
affability had fallen like a garment.
"And now I'll thank you to tell me what's the truth of this I hear
from everyone in the town about you and that young Hawkins being out
till all hours of the night in the steam-launch by yourselves?"
"It wasn't our fault. We were in by half-past nine." Francie had
hardly spirit enough to defend herself, and the languor in her voice
infuriated Charlotte.
"Don't give me any of your fine-lady airs," she said brutally; "I
can tell ye this, that if ye can't learn how to behave yourself
decently I'll pack ye back to Dublin!"
The words passed over Francie like an angry wind, disturbing, but
without much power to injure.
"All right, I'll go away when you like."
Charlotte hardly heard her. "I'll be ashamed to look me old friend,
Lady Dysart, in the face!" She stormed on. "Disgracing her house by
such goings on with an unprincipled blackguard that has no more idea
of marrying you than I have—not that that's anything to be
regretted! An impudent little upstart without a halfpenny in his
pocket, and as for family—" her contempt stemmed her volubility for
a mouthing moment. "God only knows what gutter he sprang from; I
don't suppose he has a drop of blood in his whole body!"
"I'm not thinking of marrying him no more than he is of marrying
me," answered Francie in the same lifeless voice, but this time
faltering a little. "You needn't bother me about him, Charlotte, he's
engaged."
"Engaged!" yelled Charlotte, squaring round at her cousin, and
standing stock still in her amazement. "Why didn't you tell me so
before? When did you hear it?"
"I heard it some time ago from a person whose name I won't give
you," said Francie, walking on. "They're to be married before
Christmas." The lump rose at last in her throat, and she trod hard on
the ground as she walked, in the effort to keep the tears back.
Charlotte girded her velveteen skirt still higher, and hurried
clumsily after the light graceful figure.
"Wait, child! Can't ye wait for me? Are ye sure it's true?"
Francie nodded.
"The young reprobate! To be making you so remarkable and to have
the other one up his sleeve all the time! Didn't I say he had no
notion of marrying ye?"
Francie made no reply, and Charlotte with some difficulty
disengaged her hand from her wrappings and patted her on the back.
"Well, never mind, me child," she said with noisy cheerfulness;
"you're not trusting to the likes of that fellow! wait till ye're me
Lady Dysart of Bruff, and it's little ye'll think of him then!"
They had reached the Tally Ho gate by this time; Francie opened it,
and plunged into the pitch-dark tunnel of evergreens without a word.
The pre-eminently domestic smell of black currant jam pervaded
Tally Ho next day. The morning had been spent by Charlotte and her
retainers in stripping the straggling old bushes of the berries that
resembled nothing so much as boot-buttons in size, colour, and
general consistency; the preserving pan had been borrowed, according
to immemorial custom, from Miss Egan of the hotel, and at three
o'clock of the afternoon the first relay was sluggishly seething and
bubbling on the kitchen fire, and Charlotte, Norry, and Bid Sal were
seated at the kitchen table snipping the brown tips off the shining
fruit that still awaited its fate.
It was a bright, steamy day, when the hot sun and the wet earth
turned the atmosphere into a Turkish bath, and the cats sat out of
doors, but avoided the grass like the plague. Francie had docilely
picked currants with the others. She was accustomed to making herself
useful, and it did not occur to her to shut herself up in her room,
or go for a walk, or, in fact, isolate herself with her troubles in
any way. She had too little self-consciousness for these deliberate
methods, and she moved among the currant bushes in her blue gown, and
was merely uncomplainingly thankful that she was able to pull the
broad leaf of her hat down so as to hide the eyes that were heavy from
a sleepless night and red from the sting of tears. She went over again
what Lambert had told her, as she mechanically dropped the currants
into her tin can; the soldier-servant had read the letters, and had
told Michael, the Rosemount groom, and Michael had told Mr. Lambert.
She wouldn't have cared a pin about his being engaged if he had only
told her so at first. She had flirted with engaged men plenty of
times, and it hadn't done anybody any harm, but this was quite
different. She couldn't believe, after the way he went on, that he
cared about another girl all the time, and yet Michael had said that
the soldier had said that they were to be married at Christmas. Well,
thank goodness, she thought, with a half sob, she knew about it now;
he'd find it hard to make a fool of her again.
After the early dinner the practical part of the jam-making began,
and for an hour Francie snipped at the currant-tops as industriously
as Charlotte herself. But by the time that the first brew was ready
for the preserving pan, the heat of the kitchen, and the
wearisomeness of Charlotte's endless discussions with Norry, made
intolerable the headache that had all day hovered about her forehead,
and she fetched her hat and a book and went out into the garden to
look for coolness and distraction. She wandered up to the seat where
she had sat on the day that Lambert gave her the bangle, and, sitting
down, opened her book, a railway novel, bought by Charlotte on her
journey from Dublin. She read its stodgily sensational pages with hot
tired eyes, and tried hard to forget her own unhappiness in the
infinitely more terrific woes of its heroine; but now and then some
chance expression' or one of those terms of endearment that were
lavished throughout its pages, would leap up into borrowed life and
sincerity, and she would shut her eyes and drift back into the golden
haze on Lough Moyle, when his hand had pressed her head down on to his
shoulder, and his kisses had touched her soul. At such moments all
the heated stillness of the lake was round her, with no creature
nearer than the white cottages on the far hillsides; and when the
inevitable present swam back to her, with carts rattling past on the
road, and insects buzzing and blundering against her face, and Bid
Sal's shrill summoning of the hens to their food, she would fling
herself again into the book to hide from the pursuing pain and the
undying, insane voice of hope.
Hope mastered pain, and reality mastered both, when, with the
conventionality of situation to which life sometimes condescends,
there came steps on the gravel, and looking up she saw that Hawkins
was coming towards her. Her heart stopped and rushed on again like a
startled horse, but all the rest of her remained still and almost
impassive, and she leaned her head over her book to keep up the
affectation of not having seen him.
"I saw your dress through the trees as I was coming up the drive,"
he said after a moment of suffocating silence, "and so—" he held out
his hand, "aren't you going to shake hands with me?"
"How d'ye do, Mr. Hawkins?" she gave him a limp hand and withdrew
it instantly.
Hawkins sat down beside her, and looked hard at her half-averted
face. He had solved the problem of her treatment of him last night in
a way quite satisfactory to himself, and he thought that now that he
had been sharp enough to have found her here, away from Miss Mullen's
eye, things would be very different. He had quite forgiven her her
share in the transgression; in fact, if the truth were known, he had
enjoyed himself considerably after she had left Mrs. Beattie's party,
and had gone back to Captain Cursiter and disingenuously given him to
understand that he had hardly spoken a word to Miss Fitzpatrick the
whole evening.
"So you wouldn't dance with me last night," he said, as if he were
speaking to a child; "wasn't that very unkind of you?"
"No it was not," she replied, without looking at him.
"Well, I think it was," he said, lightly touching the hand that
held the novel.
Francie took her hand sharply away.
"I think you are being very unkind now," he continued; "aren't you
even going to look at me?"
"Oh yes, I'll look at you if you like," she said, turning upon him
in a kind of desperation; "it doesn't do me much harm, and I don't
suppose it does you much good."
The cool, indifferent manner that she had intended to assume was
already too difficult for her, and she sought a momentary refuge in
rudeness. He showed all the white teeth, that were his best point, in
a smile that was patronisingly free from resentment.
"Why, what's the matter with her?" he said caressingly. "I believe
I know what it's all about. She's been catching it about that day in
the launch! Isn't that it?"
"I don't know what you're talking about, Mr. Hawkins," said
Francie, with an indifferent attempt at hauteur; "but since you're so
clever at guessing things I suppose there's no need of me telling you."
Hawkins came closer to her, and forcibly took possession of her
hands. "What's the matter with you?" he said in a low voice; "why are
you angry with me? Don't you know I love you?" The unexpected element
of uncertainty sharpened the edge of his feelings and gave his voice
an earnestness that was foreign to it.
Francie started visibly; "No, I know you don't," she said, facing
him suddenly, like some trapped creature; "I know you're in love with
somebody else!"
His eyes flinched as though a light had been flashed in them. "What
do you mean?" he said quickly, while a rush of blood darkened his face
to the roots of his yellow hair, and made the veins stand out on his
forehead; "who told you that?"
"It doesn't matter who told me," she said, with a miserable
satisfaction that her bolt had sped home; "but I know it's true."
"I give you my honour it's not!" he said passionately; "you might
have known better than to believe it."
"Oh yes, I might," she said with all the scorn she was master of;
"but I think it 'twas as good for me I didn't." Her voice collapsed at
the end of the sentence, and the dry sob that rose in her throat
almost choked her. She stood up and turned her face away to hide the
angry tears that in spite of herself had sprung to her eyes.
Hawkins caught her hand again and held it tightly. "I know what it
is. I suppose they've been telling you of that time I was in Limerick;
and that was all rot from beginning to end; anyone could tell you
that."
"It's not that; I heard all about that—"
Hawkins jumped up. "I don't care what you heard," he said
violently. "Don't turn your head away from me like that, I won't have
it—I know that you care about me, and I know that I shouldn't care
if everyone in the world was dead, so long as you were here." His arm
was round her, but she shook herself free.
"What about Miss Coppard?" she said; "what about being married
before Christmas?"
For a moment Hawkins could find no words to say, "So you've got
hold of that, have you?" he said, after some seconds of silence that
seemed endless to Francie. "And do you think that will come between
us?"
"Of course it must come between us," she said in a stifled voice;
"and you knew that all through."
Mr. Hawkins' engagement was a painful necessity about which he
affaired himself as little as possible. He recognised it as a certain
and not disagreeable road to paying his debts, which might with good
luck be prolonged till he got his company, and, latterly, it had
fallen more than ever into the background. That it should interfere
with his amusements in any way made it an impertinence of a wholly
intolerable kind.
"It shall not come between us!" he burst out; "I don't care what
happens, I won't give you up! I give you my honour I never cared
twopence about her—I've never thought of her since I first saw
you— I've thought of no one but you."
His hot, stammering words were like music to her; but that
staunchness of soul that was her redeeming quality still urged her to
opposition.
"It's no good your going on like this. You know you're going to
marry her. Let me go."
But Mr. Hawkins was not in the habit of being baulked of anything
on which he had set his heart.
"No, I will not let you go," he said, drawing her towards him with
bullying tenderness. "In the first place, you're not able to stand,
and in the second place, I'm not going to marry anybody but you."
He spoke with a certainty that convinced himself; the certainty of
a character that does not count the cost either for itself or for
others; and, in the space of a kiss, her distrust was left far behind
her as a despicable thing.
Nearly three weeks had gone by since Mrs. Beattie's party, and as
Charlotte Mullen walked slowly along the road towards Rosemount one
afternoon, her eyes fixed on the square toes of her boots, and her
hands, as was her custom, in the pockets of her black jacket, she
meditated agreeably upon recent events. Of these perhaps the
pleasantest was Mr. Hawkins' departure to Hythe, for a musketry
course, which had taken place somewhat unexpectedly a fortnight ago.
He was a good-for-nothing young limb, and engagement or no engagement
it was a good job he was out of the place; and, after all, Francie
had not seemed to mind. Almost equally satisfactory was the
recollection of that facetious letter to Christopher Dysart, in which
she had so playfully reminded him of the ancient promise to
photograph the Tally Ho cats, and hoped that she and her cousin would
not come under that category. Its success had even been surprising,
for not only had Christopher come and spent a long afternoon in that
difficult enterprise, but had come again more than once, on pretexts
that had appeared to Charlotte satisfactorily flimsy, and had
apparently set aside what she knew to be his repugnance to herself.
That he should lend Francie "John Inglesant" and Rosetti's Poems, made
Charlotte laugh in her sleeve. She had her own very sound opinion of
her cousin's literary capacity, and had no sympathy for the scientific
interest felt by a philosopher in the evolution of a nascent soul.
Christopher's manner did not, it is true, coincide with her theory of
a lover, which was crude, and founded on taste rather than experience,
but she had imagination enough to recognise that Christopher, in
love-making, as in most other things, would pursue methods unknown to
her.
At this point in her reflections, congratulation began to wane. She
thought she knew every twist and turn in Roddy Lambert, but lately she
had not been able to explain him at all to her satisfaction. He was
always coming to Tally Ho, and he always seemed in a bad temper when
he was there; in fact she had never known him as ill-mannered as he
was last week, one day when he and Christopher were there together,
and she had tried, for various excellent reasons, to get him off into
the dining-room to talk business. She couldn't honestly say that
Francie was running after him, though of course she had that nasty
flirty way with every man, old or young, married or single; but all
the same, there was something in it she didn't like. The girl was more
trouble than she was worth; and if it wasn't for Christopher Dysart
she'd have sent her packing back to Letitia Fitzpatrick, and told her
that whether she could manage it or not she must keep her. But of
course to have Sir Christopher Dysart of Bruff—she rolled the title
on her tongue—as a cousin was worthy of patience.
As she walked up the trim Rosemount avenue she spied the owner of
the house lying in a basket-chair in the shade, with a pipe in his
mouth, and in his hand that journal politely described by Mrs. Rattray
as "the pink one."
"Hallo, Charlotte!" he said lazily, glancing up at her from under
the peak of his cap, "you look warm."
"And you look what you are, and that's cool, in manners and body,"
retorted Miss Mullen, coming and standing beside him, "and if you had
tramped on your four bones through the dust, maybe you'd be as hot as
I am."
"What do you wear that thick coat for?" he said, looking at it with
a disfavour that he took no trouble to hide.
Charlotte became rather red. She had the Irish peasant-woman's love
of heavy clothing and dislike of abating any item of it in summer.
"If you had my tendency to bronchitis, me fine fellow," she said,
seating herself on the uncomfortable garden bench beside which his
chair had been placed, "you'd think more of your health than your
appearance."
"Very likely," said Mr. Lambert, yawning and relapsing into silence.
"Well, Roddy," resumed Charlotte more amicably, "I didn't walk all
the way here to discuss the fashions with you. Have y'any more news
from the seat of war?"
"No; confound her, she won't stir, and I don't see what's going to
make her unless I evict her."
"Why don't ye writ her for the money?" said Charlotte, the spirit
of her attorney grandfather gleaming in her eyes; "that'd frighten
her!"
"I don't want to do that if I can help it. I spoke o her about the
lodge that Lady Dysart said she could have, and the old devil was fit
to be tied; but we might get her to it before we've done with her."
"If it was me I'd writ her now," repeated Charlotte venomously;
"you'll find you'll have to come to it in the end."
"It's a sin to see that lovely pasture going to waste," said
Lambert, leaning back and puffing at his pipe. "Peter Joyce hasn't six
head of cattle on it this minute."
"If you and I had it, Roddy," said Charlotte, eyeing him with a
curious, guarded tenderness, "it wouldn't be that way."
Some vibration of the strong, incongruous tremor that passed
through her as she spoke, reached Lambert's indolent perception and
startled it. It reminded him of the nebulous understanding that
taking her money seemed to have involved him in; he believed he knew
why she had given it to him, and though he knew also that he held his
advantage upon precarious terms, even his coarse-fibred nature found
something repellent in the thought of having to diplomatise with such
affections as Charlotte's.
"I was up at Murphy's yesterday," he said, as if his train of ideas
had not been interrupted. "He has a grand filly there that I'd buy
to-morrow if I had the money, or any place to put her. There's a pot
of money in her."
"Well, if you'll get me Gurthnamuckla," said Charlotte with a
laugh, in which nervousness was strangely apparent, "you may buy up
every young horse in the country and stable them in the parlour, so
long as you'll leave the attics for me and the cats."
Lambert turned his head upon its cushion, and looked at her.
"I think I'll leave you a little more space than that, Charlotte,
if ever we stable our horses together."
She glanced at him, as aware of the double entendre, and as stirred
by it as he had intended her to be. Perhaps a little more than he had
intended; at all events, he jerked himself into a sitting position,
and, getting on to his feet, stretched himself with almost
ostentatious ease.
"Where's Francie?" he asked, yawning.
"At home, dressmaking," replied Miss Mullen. She was a little paler
than usual. "I think I'll go in now and have a cup of tea with Lucy,"
she said, rising from the garden bench with something like an effort.
"Well, I daresay I'll take the mare down to Tally Ho, and make
Francie go for a ride," said Lambert; "it's a pity for anyone to be
stewing in the house on a day like this."
"I wanted her to come here with me, but she wouldn't," Charlotte
called after him as he turned towards the path that led to the
stables. "Maybe she thought there might be metal more attractive for
her at home!"
She grinned to herself as she went up the steps. "Me gentleman may
put that in his pipe and smoke it!" she thought; "that little hussy
would let him think it was for him she was sitting at home!"
Ever since Mrs. Lambert's first entrance into Lismoyle society, she
had found in Charlotte her most intimate and reliable ally. If Mr.
Lambert had been at all uneasy as to his bride's reception by Miss
Mullen, he must have been agreeably surprised to find that after a
month or so Charlotte had become as useful and pleasant to Mrs.
Lambert as in older days she had been to him. That Charlotte should
have recognised the paramount necessity of his marrying money, had
been to Lambert a proof of her eminent common sense. He had always
been careful to impress his obvious destiny upon her, and he had
always been grateful to that destiny for having harmlessly fulfilled
itself, while yet old Mrs. Mullen's money was in her own keeping, and
her niece was, beyond all question, ineligible. That was Mr.
Lambert's view of the situation; whatever Charlotte's opinion was,
she kept it to herself.
Mrs. Lambert was more than usually delighted to see her
ever-sympathising friend on this hot afternoon. One of her chiefest
merits in the turkey-hen's eyes was that she "was as good as any
doctor, and twice better than Dr. Rattray, who would never believe
the half she went through with palpitations, and buzzings in her ears
and roarings in her head," and the first half hour or so of her visit
was consumed in minute detail of her more recent symptoms. The fact
that large numbers of women entertain their visitors with biographies,
mainly abusive, of their servants, has been dwelt on to weariness by
many writers; but, nevertheless, in no history of Mrs. Lambert could
this characteristic be conscientiously omitted.
"Oh, my dear," she said, as her second cup of sweet weak tea was
entered upon, "you know that Eliza Hackett, that I got with the
highest recommendations from the Honourable Miss Carrick, and
thinking she'd be so steady, being a Protestant? Well, last Sunday
she went to mass!" She paused, and Charlotte, one of whose most
genuine feelings was a detestation of Roman Catholics, exclaimed:
"Goodness alive! what did you let her do that for?"
"How could I stop her?" answered Mrs. Lambert plaintively, "she
never told one in the house she was going, and this morning, when I
was looking at the meat with her in the larder, I took the opportunity
to speak to her about it. 'Oh,' says she, turning round as cool as
you please, 'I consider the Irish Church hasn't the Apostolic
succession!'"
"You don't tell me that fat-faced Eliza Hackett said that?"
ejaculated Charlotte.
"She did, indeed," replied Mrs. Lambert deplorably; "I was quite
upset. 'Eliza,' says I, 'I wonder you have the impudence to talk to me
like that. You that was taught better by the Honourable Miss
Carrick.' 'Ma'am,' says she, up to my face, 'Moses and Aaron was two
holy Roman Catholic priests, and that's more than you can say of the
archdeacon!' 'Indeed, no,' says I, 'thank God he's not!' but I ask
you, Charlotte, what could I say to a woman like that, that would
wrest the Scriptures to her own purposes?"
Even Charlotte's strong brain reeled in the attempt to follow the
arguments of Eliza the cook and Mrs. Lambert,
"Well, upon my word, Lucy, it's little I'd have argued with her.
I'd have just said to her, 'Out of my house you march, if you don't go
to your church!' I think that would have composed her religious
scruples."
"Oh! but, Charlotte," pleaded the turkey-hen, "I couldn't part her;
she knows just what gentlemen like, and Roderick's so particular about
savouries. When I told him about her, he said he wouldn't care if she
was a Mormon and had a dozen husbands, so long as she made good soup."
Charlotte laughed out loud. Mr. Lambert's turn of humour had a
robustness about it that always roused a sympathetic chord in her.
"Well, that's a man all over! His stomach before anyone else's
soul!"
"Oh, Charlotte, you shouldn't say such things! Indeed, Roderick
will often take only the one cut of meat at his dinner these times,
and if it isn't to his liking he'll take nothing; he's a great
epicure. I don't know what's over him those last few weeks," continued
Mrs. Lambert gloomily, "unless it's the hot weather, and all the
exercise he's taking that's making him cross."
"Well, from all I've ever seen of men," said Charlotte, with a
laugh, "the hotter they get the better pleased they are. Take my word
for it, there's no time a man's so proud of himself as when he's
'larding the lean earth!'"
Mrs. Lambert looked bewildered, but was too much affaired with her
own thoughts to ask for an explanation of what seemed to her a strange
term in cookery.
"Did he know Francie Fitzpatrick much in Dublin?" she said after a
pause, in which she had given a saucerful of cream and sopped cake to
her dog.
Charlotte looked at her hostess suddenly and searchingly as she
stooped with difficulty to take up the saucer.
"He's known her since she was a child," she replied, and waited for
further developments.
"I thought it must be that way," said Mrs. Lambert, with a
dissatisfied sound in her voice; "they're so very familiar-like
talking to each other."
Charlotte's heart paused for an instant in its strong, regular
course. Was it possible, she thought, that wisdom was being perfected
in the mouth of Lucy Lambert?
"I never noticed anything so wonderfully familiar," she said, in a
tone meant to provoke further confidence; "I never knew Roddy yet that
he wasn't civil to a pretty girl; and as for Francie, any man comes
handy to her! Upon my word, she'd dote on a tongs, as they say!"
Mrs. Lambert fidgeted nervously with her long gold watch chain.
"Well, Charlotte," she said, a little defiantly, "I've been married to
him five years now, and I've never known him particular with any girl."
"Then, my dear woman, what's this nonsense you're talking about him
and Francie?" said Charlotte, with Mephistophelian gaiety.
"Oh, Charlotte!" said Mrs. Lambert, suddenly getting very red, and
beginning to whimper, "I never thought to speak of it—" she broke
off and began to root for her handkerchief, while her respectable
middle-aged face began to wrinkle up like a child's, "and, indeed, I
don't want to say anything against the girl, for she's a nice girl,
and so I've always found her, but I can't help noticing—" she broke
off again.
"What can't ye help noticing?" demanded Charlotte roughly.
Mrs. Lambert drew a long breath that was half-suffocated by a sob.
"Oh, I don't know," she cried helplessly; "he's always going down to
Tally Ho, by the way he'll take her out riding or boating or
something, and though he doesn't say much, a little thing'll slip out
now and again, and you can't say a word to him but he'll get cross."
"Maybe he's in trouble about money unknown to you," suggested
Charlotte, who, for some reason or other, was not displaying her usual
capacity for indictment, "or maybe he finds life's not worth living
because of the liver!" she ended, with a mirthless laugh.
"Oh, no, no, Charlotte; indeed, it's no laughing joke at all—"
Mrs. Lambert hesitated, then, with a little hysterical burst of sobs,
"he talks about her in his sleep!" she quavered out, and began to cry
miserably.
Charlotte sat perfectly still, looking at Mrs. Lambert with eyes
that saw, but held no pity for, her abundant tears. How far more
serious was this thing, if true, to her, than to that contemptible
whining creature, whose snuffling gasps were exasperating her almost
beyond the bounds of endurance. She waited till there was a lull.
"What did he say about her?" she asked in a hard jeering voice.
"Oh, Charlotte, how can I tell you? all sorts of things he says,
nonsense like, and springing up and saying she'll be drowned."
"Well, if it's any comfort to you," said Charlotte, "she cares no
more for him than the man in the moon! She has other fish to fry, I
can tell you!"
"But what signifies that, Charlotte," sighed Mrs. Lambert, "so long
as he thinks about her?"
"Tell him he's a fool to waste his time over her," suggested
Charlotte scoffingly.
"Is it me tell him such a thing!" The turkey-hen lifted her wet red
eyes from her saturated pocket handkerchief and began to laugh
hysterically. "Much regard he has for what I say to him! Oh, don't
make me laugh, Charlotte—" a frightened look came over her face, as
if she had been struck, and she fell back in her chair. "It's the
palpitations," she said faintly, with her hand on her heart. "Oh, I'm
going—I'm going—"
Charlotte ran to the chimney-piece, and took from it a bottle of
smelling salts. She put it to Mrs. Lambert's nose with one hand, and
with the other unfastened the neck of her dress without any excitement
or fuss. Her eyes were keen and quiet as she bent over the pale
blotched face that lay on the antimacassar; and when Mrs. Lambert
began to realise again what was going on round her, she was conscious
of a hand chafing her own, a hand that was both gentle and skilful.
"Metal more attractive!" Lambert thought there could not be a more
offensive phrase in the English language than this, that had rung in
his ears ever since Charlotte had flung it at him when he parted from
her on his own avenue. He led the black mare straight to the
dilapidated loose-box at Tally Ho Lodge, in which she had before now
waited so often and so dismally, with nothing to do except nose about
the broken manger for a stray oat or two, or make spiteful faces
through the rails at her comrade, the chestnut, in the next stall.
Lambert swung open the stable door, and was confronted by the pricked
ears and interested countenance of a tall bay horse, whom he instantly
recognised as being one of the Bruff carriage horses, looking out of
the loose-box. Mr. Lambert's irritation culminated at this point in
appropriate profanity; he felt that all these things were against him,
and the thought that he would go straight back to Rosemount made him
stand still on the doorstep. But the next moment he had a vision of
himself and the two horses turning in at the Rosemount gate, with the
certain prospect of being laughed at by Charlotte and condoled with
by his wife, and without so much as a sight of that maddening face
that was every day thrusting itself more and more between him and his
peace. It would be a confession of defeat at the hands of Christopher
Dysart, which alone would be intolerable; besides, there wasn't a
doubt but that, if Francie were given her choice, she would rather go
out riding with him than anything.
Buoyed up by this reflection, he put the chestnut into the stable,
and the mare into the cow-shed, and betook himself to the house. The
hall door was open, he knocked lightly at the drawing-room door, and
walked in without waiting for an answer. Christopher was sitting with
his back to him, holding one end of a folded piece of pink cambric,
while Francie, standing up in front of him, was cutting along the
fold towards him, with a formidable pair of scissors.
"Must I hold on to the end?" he was saying, as the scissors
advanced in leaps towards his fingers.
"I'll kill you if you let go!" answered Francie, rather thickly, by
reason of a pin between her front teeth. "Goodness, Mr. Lambert! you
frightened the heels off me! I thought you were Louisa with the tea."
"Good evening, Francie; good evening, Dysart," said Lambert with
solemn frigidity.
Christopher reddened a little as he looked round. "I'm afraid I
can't shake hands with you, Lambert," with an unavoidably foolish
laugh, "I'm dressmaking."
"So I see," replied Mr. Lambert, with something as near a sneer as
he dared. He always felt it a special unkindness of Providence to have
placed this young man to reign over him, and the practical sentiment
that it is well not to quarrel with your bread and butter, had not
unfrequently held him back from a much-desired jibe. "I came,
Francie," he went on with the same portentous politeness, "to see if
you'd care to come for a ride with me."
"When? Now?" said Francie, without much enthusiasm.
"Oh, not unless you like," he replied, in a palpably offended tone.
"Well, how d'ye know I wouldn't like? Keep quiet now, Mr. Dysart,
I've another one for you to hold!"
"I'm afraid I must be going—" began Christopher, looking
helplessly at the billows of pink cambric which surrounded him on the
floor. Lambert's arrival had suddenly made the situation seem vulgar.
"Ah, can't you sit still now?" said Francie, thrusting another
length of material into his hand, and beginning to cut swiftly towards
him. "I declare you're very idle!"
Lambert stood silent while this went on, and then, with an angry
look at Francie, he said, "I understand then that you're not coming
out riding to-day?"
"Do you?" asked Francie, pinning the seam together with marvellous
rapidity; "take care your understanding isn't wrong! Have you the
horse down here?"
"Of course I have."
"Well, I'll tell you what we'll do; we'll have tea first, and then
we'll ride back with Mr. Dysart; will that do you?"
"I wanted to ride in the opposite direction," said Lambert, "I had
some business—"
"Oh, bother your old business!" interrupted Francie, "anyway, I
hear her bringing in the tea."
"Oh, I hope you'll ride home with me," said Christopher, "I hate
riding by myself."
"Much I pity you!" said Francie, flashing a sidelong look at him as
she went over to the tea-table; "I suppose you'd be frightened!"
"Quite so. Frightened and bored. That is what I feel like when I
ride by myself," said Christopher, trying to eliminate from his manner
the constraint that Lambert's arrival had imparted to it, "and my
horse is just as bored; I feel apologetic all the time and wishing I
could do something to amuse him that wouldn't be dangerous. Do come;
I'm sure he'd like it."
"Oh, how anxious you are about him!" said Francie cutting bread and
butter with a dexterous hand from the loaf that Louisa had placed on
the table in frank confession of incapacity, "I don't know what I'll
do till I've had my tea. Here now, here's yours poured out for both of
you; I suppose you'd like me to come and hand it to you!" with a
propitiatory look at Lambert.
Thus adjured, the two men seated themselves at the table on which
Francie had prepared their tea and bread and butter with a propriety
that reminded Christopher of his nursery days. It was a very
agreeable feeling, he thought; and as he docilely drank his tea and
laughed at Francie for the amount of sugar that she put into hers, the
idealising process to which he was unconsciously subjecting her
advanced a stage. He was beginning to lose sight of her vulgarity,
even to wonder at himself for ever having applied that crudely
inappropriate word to her. She had some reflected vulgarities of
course, thought the usually hypercritical Mr. Christopher Dysart, and
her literary progress along the lines he had laid down for her was
slow; but lately, since his missionary resolve to let the light of
culture illuminate her darkness, he had found out subtle depths of
sweetness and sympathy that were, in their responsiveness, equivalent
to intellect.
When Francie went up a few minutes later to put on her habit,
Christopher did not seem disposed to continue the small talk in which
his proficiency had been more surprising than pleasing to Mr. Lambert.
He strolled over to the window, and looked meditatively out at Mrs.
Bruff and a great-grandchild or two embowered in a tangle of
nasturtiums, and putting his hands in his pockets began to whistle
sotto voce. Lambert looked him up and down, from his long thin legs
to his small head, on which the light brown hair grew rather long,
with a wave in it that was to Lambert the height of effeminacy. He
began to drum with his fingers on the table to show that he too was
quite undisturbed and at his ease.
"By the bye, Dysart," he observed presently, "have you heard
anything of Hawkins since he left?"
Christopher turned round. "No, I don't know anything about him
except that he's gone to Hythe."
"Gone to hide, d'ye say?" Lambert laughed noisily in support of his
joke.
"No, Hythe."
"It seems to me it's more likely it's a case of hide," Lambert went
on with a wink; he paused, fiddled with his teaspoon, and smiled at
his own hand as he did so. "P'raphs he thought it was time for him to
get away out of this."
"Really?" said Christopher, with a lack of interest that was quite
genuine.
Lambert's pulse bounded with the sudden desire to wake this
supercilious young hound up for once, by telling him a few things that
would surprise him.
"Well, you see it's a pretty strong order for a fellow to carry on
as Hawkins did, when he happens to be engaged."
The fact of Mr. Hawkins' engagement had, it need scarcely be said,
made its way through every highway and by-way of Lismoyle; inscrutable
as to its starting-point, impossible of verification, but all the
more fascinating for its mystery. Lambert had no wish to claim its
authorship; he had lived among gentlemen long enough to be aware that
the second-hand confidences of a servant could not creditably be
quoted by him. What he did not know, however, was whether the story
had reached Bruff, or been believed there, and it was extremely
provoking to him now that instead of being able to observe its effect
on Christopher, whose back was to the light, his discoveries should be
limited to the fact that his own face had become very red as he spoke.
"I suppose he knows his own affairs best," said Christopher, after
a silence that might have meant anything, or nothing.
"Well," leaning back and putting his hands in his pockets, "I don't
pretend to be straight-laced, but d—n it, you know, I think Hawkins
went a bit too far."
"I don't think I have heard who it is that he is engaged to," said
Christopher, who seemed remarkably unaffected by Mr. Hawkins'
misdemeanours.
"Oh, to a Yorkshire girl, a Miss—what's this her name
is—Coppard. Pots of money, but mighty plain about the head, I
believe. He kept it pretty dark, didn't he?"
"Apparently it got out, for all that."
Lambert thought he detected a tinge of ridicule in the voice,
whether of him or of Hawkins he did not know; it gave just the
necessary spur to that desire to open Christopher's eyes for him a bit.
"Oh, yes, it got out," he said, putting his elbow on the table, and
balancing his teaspoon on his fore-finger, "but I think there are very
few that know for certain it's a fact,—fortunately for our friend."
"Why fortunately? I shouldn't think it made much difference to
anyone."
"Well, as a rule, girls don't care to flirt with an engaged man."
"No, I suppose not," said Christopher, yawning with a frankness
that was a singular episode in his demeanour towards his agent.
Lambert felt his temper rising every instant. He was a man whose
jealousy took the form of reviling the object of his affections, if,
by so doing, he could detach his rivals.
"Well, Francie Fitzpatrick knows it for one; but perhaps she's not
one of the girls who object to flirting with an engaged man."
Lambert got up and walked to the window; he felt that he could no
longer endure seeing nothing of Christopher except a lank silhouette
with an offensive repose of attitude. He propped his back against one
of the shutters, and obviously waited for a comment.
"I should think it was an inexpensive amusement," said Christopher,
in his most impersonal and academic manner, "but likely to pall."
"Pall! Deuce a bit of it!" Lambert put a toothpick in his mouth,
and began to chew it, to convey the effect of ease. "I can tell you
I've known that girl since she was the length of my stick, and I never
saw her that she wasn't up to some game or other; and she wasn't over
particular about engagements or anything else!"
Christopher slightly shifted his position, but did not speak, and
Lambert went on:
"I'm very fond of the girl, and she's a good-hearted little thing;
but, by Jove! I was sorry to see the way she went on with that fellow
Hawkins. Here he was, morning, noon, and night, walking with her, and
steam-launching, and spooning, and setting all the old women in the
place prating. I spoke to her about it, and much thanks I got, though
there was a time she was ready enough to mind what I said to her."
During this recital Mr. Lambert's voice had been deficient in the
accent of gentlemanlike self-importance that in calmer moments he was
careful to impart to it, and the raw Limerick brogue was on top as he
said, "Yes, by George! I remember the time when she wasn't above
fancying your humble servant!"
He had almost forgotten his original idea; his own position, long
brooded over, rose up out of all proportion, and confused his mental
perspective, till Christopher Dysart's opinions were lost sight of. He
was recalled to himself by a startling expression on the face of his
confidant, an expression of almost unconcealed disgust, that checked
effectively any further outpourings. Christopher did not look at him
again, but turned from the window, and, taking up Miss Mullen's
photograph-book, proceeded to a minute inspection of its contents.
Neither he nor Lambert quite knew what would happen next, each in his
own way being angry enough for any emergency, and both felt an extreme
relief when Francie's abrupt entrance closed the situation.
"Well, I wasn't long now, was I?" she said breathlessly; "but
what'll I do? I can't find my gloves!" She swept out of the corner of
the sofa a cat that had been slumbering unseen behind a cushion. "Here
they are! and full of fleas I'll be bound, after Clementina sleeping
on them! Oh, goodness! Are both of you too angry to speak to me? I
didn't think I was so long. Come on out to the yard; you can't say
I'm keeping you now."
She whirled out of the room, and by the time Lambert and
Christopher got into the yard, she had somehow dragged the black mare
out of the cowshed and was clambering on to her back with the aid of
a wheel-barrow.
Riding has many charms, but none of its eulogists have properly
dwelt on the advantages it offers to the unconversational. To ride in
silence is the least marked form of unsociability, for something of
the same reason that talking on horseback is one of the pleasantest
modes of converse. The power of silence cuts both ways, and simplifies
either confidence or its reverse amazingly. It so happened, however,
that had Lambert had the inclination to make himself agreeable to his
companions he could not have done so. Christopher's carriage-horse
trotted with the machine-like steadiness of its profession, and the
black mare, roused to emulation, flew along beside him, ignoring the
feebly expressed desire of her rider that she should moderate her
pace. Christopher, indeed, seldom knew or cared at what pace his horse
was going, and was now by no means sorry to find that the question of
riding along with Lambert had been settled for him. The rough, young
chestnut was filled with a vain-glory that scorned to trot, and after
a great deal of brilliant ramping and curveting he fell into a kind
of heraldic action, half-canter, half-walk, that left him more and
more hopelessly in the rear, and raised Lambert's temper to boiling
point.
"We're going very fast, aren't we?" panted Francie, trying to push
down her rebellious habit-skirt with her whip, as they sped along the
flat road between Lismoyle and Bruff. "I'm afraid Mr. Lambert can't
keep up. That's a dreadfully wild horse he's riding."
"Are we?" said Christopher vaguely. "Shall we pull up? Here, woa,
you brute!" He pulled the carriage-horse into a walk, and looked at
Francie with a laugh. "I'm beginning to hope you're as bad a rider as
I am," he said sympathetically. "Let me hold your reins, while you're
pinning up that plait."
"Oh, botheration take it! Is my hair down again? It always comes
down if I trot fast," bewailed Francie, putting up her hands to her
dishevelled hair, that sparkled like gold in the sun.
"Do you know, the first time I ever saw you, your hair had come
down out riding," said Christopher, looking at her as he held her
rein, and not giving a thought to the intimate appearance they
presented to the third member of the party; "if I were you I should
start with it down my back."
"Ah, nonsense, Mr. Dysart; why would you have me make a Judy of
myself that way?"
"Because it's the loveliest hair I've ever seen," answered
Christopher, the words coming to his lips almost without his volition,
and in their utterance causing his heart to give one or two unexpected
throbs.
"Oh!" There was as much astonishment as pleasure in the
exclamation, and she became as red as fire. She turned her head away,
and looked back to see where Lambert was.
She had heard from Hawkins only this morning, asking her for a
piece of the hair that Christopher had called lovely. She had cut off
a little curl from the place he had specified, near her temple, and
had posted it to him this very afternoon after Charlotte went out;
but all the things that Hawkins had said of her hair did not seem to
her so wonderful as that Mr. Dysart should pay her a compliment.
Lambert was quite silent after he joined them. In his heart he was
cursing everything and everyone, the chestnut, Christopher, Francie,
and most of all himself, for having said the things that he had said.
All the good he had done was to leave no doubt in Christopher's mind
that Hawkins was out of the running, and as for telling him that
Francie was a flirt, an ass like that didn't so much as know the
meaning of the word flirting. He knew now that he had made a fool of
himself, and the remembrance of that disgusted expression on
Christopher's face made his better judgment return as burningly as the
blood into veins numbed with cold. At the cross-roads next before
Bruff, he broke in upon the exchange of experiences of the Dublin
theatres that was going on very enjoyably beside him.
"I'm afraid we must part company here, Dysart," he said in as civil
a voice as he could muster; "I want to speak to a farmer who lives
down this way."
Christopher made his farewells, and rode slowly down the hill
towards Bruff. It was a hill that had been cut down in the Famine, so
that the fields on either side rose high above its level, and the red
poppies and yellowing corn nodded into the sky over his head. The bay
horse was collecting himself for a final trot to the avenue gates,
when he found himself stopped, and, after a moment of hesitation on
the part of his rider, was sent up the hill again a good deal faster
than he had come down. Christopher pulled up again on the top of the
hill. He was higher now than the corn, and, looking across its
multitudinous, rustling surface, he saw the figure that some errant
impulse had made him come back to see. Francie's head was turned
towards Lambert, and she was evidently talking to him. Christopher's
eyes followed the pair till they were out of sight, and then he again
turned his horse, and went home to Bruff.
One fine morning towards the end of August, Julia Duffy was sitting
on a broken chair in her kitchen, with her hands in her lap, and her
bloodshot eyes fixed on vacancy. She was so quiet that a party of
ducks, which had hung uncertainly about the open door for some time,
filed slowly in, and began to explore an empty pot or two with their
long, dirty bills. The ducks knew well that Miss Duffy, though
satisfied to accord the freedom of the kitchen to the hens and
turkeys, had drawn the line at them and their cousins the geese, and
they adventured themselves within the forbidden limits with the utmost
caution, and with many side glances from their blinking, beady eyes
at the motionless figure in the chair. They had made their way to a
plate of potato skins and greasy cabbage on the floor by the table,
and, forgetful of prudence, were clattering their bills on the delf
as they gobbled, when an arm was stretched out above their heads, and
they fled in cumbrous consternation.
The arm, however, was not stretched out in menace; Julia Duffy had
merely extended it to take a paper from the table, and having done so,
she looked at its contents in entire obliviousness of the ducks and
their maraudings. Her misfortunes were converging. It was not a week
since she had heard of the proclaimed insolvency of the man who had
taken the grazing of Gurthnamuckla, and it was not half an hour since
she had been struck by this last arrow of outrageous fortune, the
letter threatening to process her for the long arrears of rent that
she had felt lengthening hopelessly with every sunrise and sunset. She
looked round the dreary kitchen that had about it all the added
desolation of past respectability, at the rusty hooks from which she
could remember the portly hams and flitches of bacon hanging; at the
big fire-place where her grandfather's Sunday sirloin used to be
roasted. Now, cobwebs dangled from the hooks, and the old grate had
fallen to pieces, so that the few sods of turf smouldered on the
hearthstone. Everything spoke of bygone plenty and present
wretchedness.
Julia put the letter into its envelope again and groaned a long
miserable groan. She got up and stood for a minute, staring out of the
open door with her hands on her hips, and then went slowly and
heavily up the stairs, groaning again to herself from the exertion
and from the blinding headache that made her feel as though her brain
were on fire. She went into her room and changed her filthy gown for
the stained and faded black rep that hung on the door. From a
band-box of tanned antiquity she took a black bonnet that had first
seen the light at her mother's funeral, and tied its clammy satin
strings with shaking hands. Flashes of light came and went before her
eyes, and her pallid face was flushed painfully as she went downstairs
again, and finding, after long search, the remains of the bottle of
blacking, laboriously cleaned her only pair of boots. She was going
out of the house when her eye fell upon the plate from which the ducks
had been eating; she came back for it, and, taking it out with her,
scattered its contents to the turkeys, mechanically holding her dress
up out of the dirt as she did so. She left the plate on the kitchen
window-sill, and set slowly forth down the avenue.
Under the tree by the gate, Billy Grainy was sitting, engaged, as
was his custom in moments of leisure, in counting the coppers in the
bag that hung round his neck. He looked in amazement at the unexpected
appearance of his patroness, and as she approached him he pushed the
bag under his shirt.
"Where are ye goin'?" he asked.
Julia did not answer; she fumbled blindly with the bit of stick
that fastened the gate, and, having opened it, went on without
attempting to shut it.
"Where are ye goin' at all?" said Billy again, his bleared eyes
following the unfamiliar outline of bonnet and gown.
Without turning, she said, "Lismoyle," and as she walked on along
the sunny road, she put up her hand and tried to wipe away the tears
that were running down her face. Perhaps it was the excitement with
which every nerve was trembling that made the three miles to
Rosemount seem as nothing to this woman, who, for the last six months,
had been too ill to go beyond her own gate; and probably it was the
same unnatural strength that prevented her from breaking down, when,
with her mind full of ready-framed sentences that were to touch Mr.
Lambert's heart and appeal to his sense of justice, she heard from
Mary Holleran at the gate that he was away for a couple of days in
Limerick. Without replying to Mary Holleran's exclamations of pious
horror at the distance she had walked, and declining all offers of
rest or food, she turned and walked on towards Lismoyle.
She had suddenly determined to herself that she would walk to Bruff
and see her landlord, and this new idea took such possession of her
that she did not realise at first the magnitude of the attempt. But by
the time she had reached the gate of Tally Ho the physical power that
her impulse gave her began to be conscious of its own limits. The
flashes were darting like lightning before her eyes, and the nausea
that was her constant companion robbed her of her energy. After a
moment of hesitation she decided that she would go in and see her
kinswoman, Norry the Boat, and get a glass of water from her before
going further. It wounded her pride somewhat to go round to the
kitchen—she, whose grandfather had been on nearly the same social
level as Miss Mullen's; but Charlotte was the last person she wished
to meet just then. Norry opened the kitchen door, beginning, as she
did so, her usual snarling maledictions on the supposed beggar, which,
however, were lost in a loud invocation of her patron saint as she
recognised her first cousin, Miss Duffy.
"And is it to leg it in from Gurthnamuckla ye done?" said Norry,
when the first greetings had been exchanged, and Julia was seated in
the kitchen, "and you looking as white as the dhrivelling snow this
minnit."
"I did," said Julia feebly, "and I'd be thankful to you for a drink
of water. The day's very close."
"Faith ye'll get no wather in this house," returned Norry in grim
hospitality; "I'll give ye a sup of milk, or would it be too much
delay on ye to wait till I bile the kittle for a cup o' tay? Bad cess
to Bid Sal! There isn't as much hot wather in the house this minute
as'd write yer name!"
"I'm obliged to ye, Norry," said Julia stiffy, her sick pride
evolving a supposition that she could be in want of food; "but I'm
only after my breakfast myself. Indeed," she added, assuming from old
habit her usual attitude of medical adviser, "you'd be the better
yourself for taking less tea."
"Is it me?" replied Norry indignantly. "I take me cup o' tay
morning and evening, and if 'twas throwing after me I wouldn't take
more."
"Give me the cold wather, anyway," said Julia wearily; "I must go
on out of this. It's to Bruff I'm going."
"In the name o' God what's taking ye into Bruff, you that should be
in yer bed, in place of sthreelin' through the counthry this way?"
"I got a letter from Lambert to-day," said Julia, putting her hand
to her aching head, as if to collect herself, "and I want to speak to
Sir Benjamin about it."
"Ah, God help yer foolish head!" said Norry impatiently; "sure ye
might as well be talking to the bird above there," pointing to the
cockatoo, who was looking down at them with ghostly solemnity. "The
owld fellow's light in his head this long while."
"Then I'll see some of the family," said Julia; "they remember my
fawther well, and the promise I had about the farm, and they'll not
see me wronged."
"Throth, then, that's thrue," said Norry, with an unwonted burst of
admiration; "they was always and ever a fine family, and thim that
they takes in their hands has the luck o' God! But what did Lambert
say t'ye?" with a keen glance at her visitor from under her heavy
eyebrows.
Julia hesitated for a moment.
"Norry Kelly," she said, her voice shaking a little; "if it wasn't
that you're me own mother's sister's child, I would not reveal to you
the disgrace that man is trying to put upon me. I got a letter from
him this morning saying he'd process me if I didn't pay him at once
the half of what's due. And Joyce that has the grazing is bankrupt,
and owes me what I'll never get from him."
"Blast his sowl!" interjected Norry, who was peeling onions with
furious speed.
"I know there's many would be thankful to take the grazing,"
continued Julia, passing a dingy pocket handkerchief over her
forehead; "but who knows when I'd be paid for it, and Lambert will
have me out on the road before that if I don't give him the rent."
Norry looked to see whether both the kitchen doors were shut, and
then, putting both her hands on the table, leaned across towards her
cousin.
"Herself wants it," she said in a whisper.
"Wants what? What are you saying?"
"Wants the farm, I tell ye, and it's her that's driving Lambert."
"Is it Charlotte Mullen?" asked Julia, in a scarcely audible voice.
"Now ye have it," said Norry, returning to her onions, and shutting
her mouth tightly.
The cockatoo gave a sudden piercing screech, like a note of
admiration. Julia half got up, and then sank back into her chair.
"Are ye sure of that?"
"As sure as I have two feet," replied Norry, "and I'll tell ye what
she's afther it for. It's to go live in it, and to let on she's as
grand as the other ladies in the counthry."
Julia clenched the bony, discoloured hand that lay on the table.
"Before I saw her in it I'd burn it over my head!"
"Not a word out o' ye about what I tell ye," went on Norry in the
same ominous whisper. "Shure she have it all mapped this minnit, the
same as a pairson'd be makin' a watch. She's sthriving to make a match
with young Misther Dysart and Miss Francie, and b'leeve you me,
'twill be a quare thing if she'll let him go from her. Sure he's the
gentlest crayture ever came into a house, and he's that innocent he
wouldn't think how cute she was. If ye'd see her, ere yestherday,
follying him down to the gate, and she smilin' up at him as sweet as
honey! The way it'll be, she'll sell Tally Ho house for a fortune for
Miss Francie, though, indeed, it's little fortune himself'll ax!"
The words drove heavily through the pain of Julia's head, and their
meaning followed at an interval.
"Why would she give a fortune to the likes of her?" she asked;
"isn't it what the people say, it's only for a charity she has her
here?"
Norry gave her own peculiar laugh of derision, a laugh with a snort
in it.
"Sharity! It's little sharity ye'll get from that one! Didn't I
hear the old misthress tellin' her, and she sthretched for death—and
Miss Charlotte knows well I heard her say it—'Charlotte,' says she,
and her knees dhrawn up in the bed, 'Francie must have her share.'
And that was the lasht word she spoke." Norry's large wild eyes roved
skywards out of the window as the scene rose before her. "God rest her
soul, 'tis she got the death aisy!"
"That Charlotte Mullen may get it hard!" said Julia savagely. She
got up, feeling new strength in her tired limbs, though her head was
reeling strangely, and she had to grasp at the kitchen table to keep
herself steady. "I'll go on now. If I die for it I'll go to Bruff
this day."
Norry dropped the onion she was peeling, and placed herself between
Julia and the door.
"The divil a toe will ye put out of this kitchen," she said,
flourishing her knife; "is it you walk to Bruff?"
"I must go to Bruff," said Julia again, almost mechanically; "but
if you could give me a taste of sperrits, I think I'd be better able
for the road."
Norry pulled open a drawer, and took from the back of it a bottle
containing a colourless liquid.
"Drink this to your health!" she said in Irish, giving some in a
mug to Julia; "it's potheen I got from friends of me own, back in
Curraghduff." She put her hand into the drawer again, and after a
little search produced from the centre of a bundle of amorphous rags
a cardboard box covered with shells. Julia heard, without heeding it,
the clink of money, and then three shillings were slapped down on the
table beside her. "Ye'll go to Conolly's now, and get a car to dhrive
ye," said Norry defiantly; "or howld on till I send Bid Sal to get it
for ye. Not a word out o' ye now! Sure, don't I know well a pairson
wouldn't think to put his money in his pocket whin he'd be hasting
that way lavin' his house."
She did not wait for an answer, but shuffled to the scullery door,
and began to scream for Bid Sal in her usual tones of acrid
ill-temper. As she returned to the kitchen, Julia met her at the door.
Her yellow face, that Norry had likened by courtesy to the driven
snow, was now very red, and her eyes had a hot stare in them.
"I'm obliged to you, Norry Kelly," she said, "but when I'm in need
of charity I'll ask for it. Let me out, if you please."
The blast of fury with which Norry was preparing to reply was
checked by a rattle of wheels in the yard, and Bid Sal appeared with
the intelligence that Jimmy Daly was come over with the Bruff cart,
and Norry was to go out to speak to him. When she came back she had a
basket of grapes in one hand and a brace of grouse in the other, and
as she put them down on the table, she informed her cousin, with
distant politeness, that Jimmy Daly would drive her to Bruff.
The drive in the spring-cart was the first moment of comparative
ease from suffering that Julia had known that day. Her tormented brain
was cooled by the soft steady rush of air in her face, and the
mouthful of "potheen" that she had drunk had at first the effect of
dulling all her perceptions. The cart drove up the back avenue, and at
the yard gate Julia asked the man to put her down. She clambered out
of the cart with great difficulty, and going round to the hall door,
went toilfully up the steps and rang the bell. Sir Benjamin was out,
Lady Dysart was out, Mr. Dysart was out; so Gorman told her, with a
doubtful look at the black Sunday gown that seemed to him indicative
of the bearer of a begging petition, and he did not know when they
would be in. He shut the door, and Julia went slowly down the steps
again.
She had begun to walk mechanically away from the house, when she
saw Sir Benjamin in his chair coming up a side walk. His face, with
its white hair, gold spectacles, and tall hat, looked so sane and
dignified, that, in spite of what Norry had said, she determined to
carry out her first intention of speaking to him. She shivered, though
the sun blazed hotly down upon her, as she walked towards the chair,
not from nervousness, but from the creeping sense of illness, and the
ground rose up in front of her as if she were going up-hill. She made
a low bow to her landlord, and James Canavan, who knew her by sight,
stopped the onward course of the chair.
"I wish to speak to you on an important matter, Sir Benjamin,"
began Julia in her best voice; "I was unable to see your agent, so I
determined to come to yourself."
The gold spectacles were turned upon her fixedly, and the
expression of the eyes behind them was more intelligent than usual.
"Begad that's one of the tenants, James," said Sir Benjamin,
looking up at his attendant.
"Certainly, Sir Benjamin, certainly; this lady is Miss Duffy, from
Gurthnamuckla," replied the courtly James Canavan. "An old tenant, I
might almost say an old friend of your honour's."
"And what the devil brings her here?" inquired Sir Benjamin,
glowering at her under the wide brim of his hat.
"Sir Benjamin," began Julia again, "I know your memory's failing
you, but you might remember that after the death of my father, Hubert
Duffy—" Julia felt all the Protestant and aristocratic associations
of the name as she said it—"you made a promise to me in your office
that I should never be disturbed in my holding of the land."
"Devil so ugly a man as Hubert Duffy ever I saw," said Sir
Benjamin, with a startling flight of memory; "and you're his daughter,
are you? Begad, the dairymaid didn't distinguish herself!"
"Yes, I am his daughter, Sir Benjamin," replied Julia, catching at
this flattering recognition. "I and my family have always lived on
your estate, and my grandfather has often had the honour of
entertaining you and the rest of the gentry, when they came
fox-hunting through Gurthnamuckla. I am certain that it is by no wish
of yours, or of your kind and honourable son, Mr. Christopher, that
your agent is pairsecuting me to make me leave the farm—" Her voice
failed her, partly from the suffocating anger that rose in her at her
own words, and partly from a dizziness that made the bath-chair, Sir
Benjamin, and James Canavan, float up and down in the air before her.
Sir Benjamin suddenly began to brandish his stick. "What the devil
is she saying about Christopher? What has Christopher to say to my
tenants. D—n his insolence! He ought to be at school!"
The remarkable grimaces which James Canavan made at Julia from the
back of the bath-chair informed her that she had lighted upon the
worst possible method of ingratiating herself with her landlord, but
the information came too late.
"Send that woman away, James Canavan!" he screamed, making sweeps
at her with his oak stick. "She shall never put her d—d splay foot
upon my avenue again. I'll thrash her and Christopher out of the
place! Turn her out, I tell you, James Canavan!"
Julia stood motionless and aghast beyond the reach of the stick,
until James Canavan motioned to her to move aside; she staggered back
among the long arms of a lignum vitæ, and the bath-chair, with its
still cursing, gesticulating occupant, went by her at a round pace.
Then she came slowly and uncertainly out on to th