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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Vera Nevill
+ Poor Wisdom's Chance
+
+Author: Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2006 [EBook #18385]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VERA NEVILL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mary Meehan and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ VERA NEVILL;
+
+ OR, POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
+
+ _A NOVEL_.
+
+ BY MRS. H. LOVETT CAMERON
+
+ Author of "Pure Gold," "In a Grass Country," etc., etc.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1893.
+
+
+
+
+ "No. Vain, alas! th' endeavour
+ From bonds so sweet to sever.
+ Poor Wisdom's Chance
+ Against a glance
+ Is now as weak as ever."
+
+ _Moore's Melodies_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. The Vicar's Family
+
+ CHAPTER II. Kynaston Hall
+
+ CHAPTER III. Fanning Dead Ashes
+
+ CHAPTER IV. The Lay Rector
+
+ CHAPTER V. "Little Pitchers"
+
+ CHAPTER VI. A Soirée at Walpole Lodge
+
+ CHAPTER VII. Evening Reveries
+
+ CHAPTER VIII. The Member for Meadowshire
+
+ CHAPTER IX. Engaged
+
+ CHAPTER X. A Meeting on the Stairs
+
+ CHAPTER XI. An Idle Morning
+
+ CHAPTER XII. The Meet at Shadonake
+
+ CHAPTER XIII. Peacock's Feathers
+
+ CHAPTER XIV. Her Wedding Dress
+
+ CHAPTER XV. Vera's Message
+
+ CHAPTER XVI. "Poor Wisdom"
+
+ CHAPTER XVII. An Unlucky Love-Letter
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Lady Kynaston's Plans
+
+ CHAPTER XIX. What She Waited For
+
+ CHAPTER XX. A Morning Walk
+
+ CHAPTER XXI. Maurice's Intercession
+
+ CHAPTER XXII. Mr. Pryme's Visitors
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII. A White Sunshade
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV. Her Son's Secret
+
+ CHAPTER XXV. St. Paul's, Knightsbridge
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI. The Russia-Leather Case
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII. Dinner at Ranelagh
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. Mrs. Hazeldine's "Long Eliza"
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX. A Wedding Tour
+
+ CHAPTER XXX. "If I could Die!"
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI. An Eventful Drive
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII. By the Vicarage Gate
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. Denis Wilde's Love
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. A Garden Party
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV. Shadonake Bath
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI. At Peace
+
+
+
+
+VERA NEVILL
+
+OR
+
+POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE VICAR'S FAMILY.
+
+ With that regal indolent air she had
+ So confident of her charm.
+
+ Owen Meredith.
+
+ Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.
+
+ Shakespeare.
+
+
+Amongst the divers domestic complications into which short-sighted man is
+prone to fall there is none which has been more conclusively proved to be
+an utter and egregious failure than that family arrangement which, for
+lack of a better name, I will call a "composite household."
+
+No one could have spoken upon this subject with greater warmth of
+feeling, nor out of the depths of a more painful experience, than
+could the Rev. Eustace Daintree, sometime vicar of the parish of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold.
+
+Mr. Daintree's family circle consisted of himself, his mother, his wife,
+and his wife's sister, and I should like to know how a man could expect
+to lead a life of peace and tranquillity with such a combination of
+inharmonious feminine elements!
+
+There were two children also, who were a fruitful source of discord and
+disunion. It is certain that, had he chosen to do so, the Rev. Eustace
+might have made many heart-rending and harrowing revelations concerning
+the private life and customs of the inhabitants of his vicarage. It is
+equally certain, however, that he would not have chosen to do so, for he
+was emphatically a man of peace and gentleness, kind hearted and given
+to good works; and was, moreover, sincerely anxious to do his duty
+impartially to those whom Providence or fate, or a combination of chances
+and changes, had somehow contrived to bring together under his roof.
+
+Things had not always been thus with him. In the early days of their
+married life Eustace Daintree and Marion his wife had had their home to
+themselves, and right well had they enjoyed it. A fairly good living
+backed up by independent means, a small rural parish, a pleasant
+neighbourhood, a pretty and comfortable vicarage-house--what more can the
+hearts of a clergyman of the Church of England and his wife desire? Mr.
+and Mrs. Daintree, at all events, had wished for nothing better. But this
+blissful state of things was not destined to last; it was, perhaps,
+hardly to be expected that it should, seeing that man is born to trouble,
+and that happiness is known to be as fleeting as time or beauty or any
+other good thing.
+
+When Eustace Daintree had been married five years, his father died,
+and his mother, accepting his warmly tendered invitation to come to
+Sutton-in-the-Wold upon a long visit, took up her abode in the pleasant
+vicarage-house.
+
+Her visit was long indeed. In a weak moment her son consented to her
+urgent request to be allowed to subscribe her quota to the household
+expenses--this was as good as giving her a ninety-nine years' lease of
+her quarters. The thin end of the wedge thus inserted, Mrs. Daintree
+_mère_ became immovable as the church tower or the kitchen chimney, and
+the doomed members of the family began to understand that nothing short
+of death itself was likely to terminate the old lady's residence amongst
+them. For the future her son's house became her home.
+
+But, even thus, things were not at their worst. Marion Daintree was a
+soft-hearted, gentle-mannered little woman. It cannot be said that she
+regarded the permanent instalment of her mother-in-law in her home with
+pleasurable feelings; she would have been more than human had she done
+so. But then she was unfeignedly fond of her husband, and desired so
+earnestly to make his home happy that, not seeing her way to oust the
+intruder without a warfare which would have distressed him, she
+determined to make the best of the situation, and to preserve the
+family peace and concord at all risks.
+
+She succeeded in her praiseworthy efforts, but at what cost no one but
+herself ever knew. Marion's whole life became one propitiatory sacrifice
+to her mother-in-law. To propitiate Mrs. Daintree was a very simple
+matter. Bearing in mind that her leading characteristics were a bad
+temper and an ungovernable desire to ride rough-shod over the feelings of
+all those who came into contact with her, in order to secure her favour
+it was only necessary to study her moods, and to allow her to tread you
+under foot as much as her soul desired. Provided that she had her own way
+in these little matters, Mrs. Daintree became an amiable old lady. Marion
+did all that was needful; figuratively speaking, she laid down in the
+dust before her, and the Juggernaut of her fate consented to be appeased
+by the lowly attitude, and crushed its way triumphantly over her fallen
+body.
+
+Thus Marion accepted her fate, and peace was preserved in her husband's
+house. But by-and-by there came somebody into the family who would by no
+manner of means consent to be so crushed and trodden under foot. This
+somebody was Vera Nevill.
+
+In order duly to set forth who and what was this young woman, who thus
+audaciously set at defiance the powers that were, it will be necessary
+that I should take a brief survey of Marion's family history.
+
+Marion, then, be it known, was the eldest of three sisters; so much the
+eldest, that when Mr. Daintree had met her and married her in Rome during
+one of his brief holidays, the two remaining sisters had been at the time
+hardly more than children. Colonel Nevill, their father, had married an
+Italian lady, long since dead, and had lived a nomad life ever since he
+had become a widower; moving about chiefly between Nice, Rome, and Malta.
+Wherever pleasant society was to be found, there would Colonel Nevill and
+his daughters instinctively drift, and year after year they became more
+and more enamoured of their foreign life, and less and less disposed to
+venture back to the chill fogs and cloudy skies of their native land.
+
+Three years after Marion had left them, and gone away with her husband to
+his English vicarage; Theodora, the second daughter, had at eighteen
+married an Italian prince, whose lineage was ancient, but whose acres
+were few; and Colonel Nevill, dying rather suddenly almost immediately
+after, Vera, the youngest daughter, as was most natural, instantly found
+a home with Princess Marinari.
+
+All this time Marion lived at Sutton-in-the-Wold, and saw none of them.
+She wept copiously at the news of her father's death, regretting bitterly
+her inability to receive his parting blessing; but, her little Minnie
+being born shortly after, her thoughts were fortunately diverted into a
+happier channel, and she suffered from her loss less keenly and recovered
+from it more quickly than had she had no separate life and no separate
+interests of her own to engross her. Still, being essentially
+affectionate and faithful, she clung to the memory of the two sisters now
+separated so entirely from her. For some years she and Theodora kept up a
+brisk correspondence. Marion's letters were full of the sayings and
+doings of Tommy and Minnie, and Theodora's were full of nothing but Vera.
+
+What Vera had looked like at her first ball, how Prince this and Marquis
+so-and-so had admired her; how she had been smothered with bouquets and
+bonbons at Carnival time; how she had sat to some world-famed artist, who
+had entreated to be allowed to put her face into his great picture, and
+how the house was literally besieged with her lovers. By all this, and
+much more in the same strain, Marion perceived that her young sister,
+whom she had last seen in all the raw unformed awkwardness of early
+girlhood, had developed somehow into a beautiful woman.
+
+And there came photographs of Vera occasionally, fully confirming the
+glowing accounts Princess Marinari gave of her; fantastic photographs,
+portraying her in strange and different ways. There was Vera looking out
+through clouds of her own dark hair hanging loosely about her face; Vera
+as a Bacchante crowned with vine leaves, laughing saucily; Vera draped as
+a _dévote_, with drooping eyes and hands crossed meekly upon her bosom.
+Sometimes she would be in a ball-dress, with lace about her white
+shoulders; sometimes muffled up in winter sables, her head covered with
+a fur cap. But always she was beautiful, always a young queen, even in
+these poor, fading photographs, that could give but a faint idea of her
+loveliness to those who knew her not.
+
+"She must be very handsome," Eustace Daintree would say heartily, as his
+wife, with a little natural flush of pride, handed some picture of her
+young sister across the breakfast-table to him. "How I wish we could see
+her, she must be worth looking at, indeed. Mother, have you seen this
+last one of Vera?"
+
+"Beauty is a snare," the old lady would answer viciously, hardly deigning
+to glance at the lovely face; "and your sister seems to me, Marion, to be
+dressed up like an actress, most unlike my idea of a modest English
+girl."
+
+Then Marion would take her treasure away with her up into her own room,
+out of the way of her mother-in-law's stern and repelling remarks.
+
+But one day there came sad news to the vicarage at Sutton. Theodora,
+Princess Marinari, caught the Roman fever in its worst form, and after
+a few agonizing letters and telegrams, that came so rapidly one upon the
+other that she had hardly time to realize the dreadful truth, Marion
+learnt that her sister was dead.
+
+After that, the elder sister's English home became naturally the right
+and fitting place for Vera to come to. So she left her gay life and her
+lovers, her bright dresses and all that had hitherto seemed to her worth
+living for, and came back to her father's country and took up her abode
+in Eustace Daintree's quiet vicarage, where she became shortly her
+sister's idol and her sister's mother-in-law's mortal foe.
+
+And then it was that the worthy clergyman came to discover that to put
+three grown-up women into the same house, and to expect them to live
+together in peace and amity, is about as foolhardy an experiment as to
+shut up a bulldog, a parrot, and a tom-cat in a cupboard, and expect
+them to behave like so many lambs.
+
+It is now rather more than a year since Vera Nevill came to live in her
+brother-in-law's house. Let me waste no further time, but introduce her
+to you at once.
+
+The time of the year is October--the time of day is five o'clock. In the
+vicarage drawing-room the afternoon tea-table has just been set out, and
+the fire just lit, for it is chilly; but one of the long French windows
+leading into the garden is still open, and through it Vera steps into
+the room.
+
+There is a background of brown and yellow foliage behind her, across the
+garden, all aglow with the crimson light of the western sky, against
+which the outlines of her figure, in its close-fitting dark dress, stand
+out clearly and distinctly. Vera has the figure, not of a sylph, but of
+a goddess; it is the absolute perfection of the female form. She is
+tall--very tall, and she carries her head a little proudly, like a young
+queen conscious of her own power.
+
+She comes in with a certain slow and languid grace in her movements, and
+pauses for an instant by the hearth, holding out her hand, that is white
+and well-shaped, though perhaps a trifle too long-fingered, to the
+warmth.
+
+The glow of the newly-lit fire flickers up over her face--her face, with
+its pure oval outlines, its delicate, regular features, and its dreamy
+eyes, that are neither blue nor gray nor hazel, but something vague and
+indistinctly beautiful, entirely peculiar to themselves. Her hair, a soft
+dusky cloud, comes down low over her broad forehead, and is gathered up
+at the back in some strange and thoroughly un-English fashion that would
+not suit every one, yet that somehow makes a fitting crown to the stately
+young head it adorns.
+
+"Tea, Vera?" says Marion, from behind the cups and saucers.
+
+Old Mrs. Daintree sits darning socks, severely, by the fading light.
+There is a sound of distant whimpering from the shadowy corner behind the
+piano; it is Tommy in disgrace. Vera turns round; Marion's kind face
+looks troubled and distressed; the old lady compresses her lips firmly
+and savagely.
+
+Vera takes the cup from her sister's hands, and putting it down again on
+the table, proceeds to cut a slice of bread from the loaf, and to spread
+it thickly with strawberry jam.
+
+"Come here, Tommy, and have some of Auntie's bread and jam."
+
+Out comes a small person, with a very swollen face and a very dirty
+pinafore, from the distant seclusion of the corner, and flies swiftly
+to Vera's sheltering arm.
+
+Mrs. Daintree drops her work angrily into her lap.
+
+"Vera, I must beg of you not to interfere with Tom; are you aware that he
+is in the corner by my orders?"
+
+"Perfectly, Mrs. Daintree; and also that he was there before I went out,
+exactly three-quarters of an hour ago; there are limits to all human
+endurance."
+
+"I consider it extremely impertinent," begins the old lady, nodding her
+head violently.
+
+"Darling Vera," pleads Marion, almost in tears; "perhaps you had better
+let him go back."
+
+"Tommy is quite good now," says Vera, calmly passing her hand over the
+rough blonde head. Master Tommy's mouth is full of bread and jam, and he
+looks supremely indifferent to the warfare that is being carried on on
+his account over his head.
+
+His crime having been the surreptitious purloining of his grandmamma's
+darning cotton, and the subsequent immersion of the same in the inkstand,
+Vera feels quite a warm glow of approval towards the little culprit and
+his judiciously-planned piece of mischief.
+
+"Vera, I _insist_ upon that child being sent back into the corner!"
+exclaims Mrs. Daintree, angrily, bringing her large fist heavily down
+upon her knee.
+
+"The child has been over-punished already," she answers, calmly, still
+administering the soothing solace of strawberry jam.
+
+"Oh, Vera, _pray_ keep the peace!" cries Marion, with clasped hands.
+
+"Here, I am thankful to say, comes my son;" as a shadow passes the
+window, and Eustace's tall figure with the meekly stooping head comes
+in at the door. "Eustace, I beg that you will decide who is to be in
+authority in this house--your mother or this young lady. It is
+insufferable that every time I send the children into the corner Vera
+should call them out and give them cakes and jam."
+
+Eustace Daintree looks helplessly from one to the other.
+
+"My dear mother--my dear girls--what is it all about? I am sure Vera does
+not mean----"
+
+"No, Vera only means to be kind, grandmamma," cries Marion, nervously;
+"she is so fond of the children----"
+
+"Hold your tongue, Marion, and don't take your sister's part so
+shamelessly!"
+
+Meanwhile Vera rises silently and pushes Tommy and all his enormities
+gently by the shoulders out of the room. Then she turns round and faces
+her foe.
+
+"Judge between us, Eustace!" the old lady is crying; "am I to be defied
+and set at nought? are we all to bow down and worship Miss Vera, the most
+useless, lazy person in the house, who turns up her nose at honest men
+and prefers to live on charity, a burden to her relations?"
+
+"Vera is no burden, only a great pleasure to me, my dear mother," said
+the clergyman, holding out his hand to the girl.
+
+"Oh, grandmamma, how unkind you are," says Marion, bursting into tears.
+But Vera only laughs lazily and amusedly, she is so used to it all! It
+does not disturb her.
+
+"Is she to be mistress here, I ask, or am I?" continues Mrs. Daintree,
+furiously.
+
+"Marion is the mistress here," says Vera, boldly; "neither you nor I have
+any authority in her house or over her children." And then the old lady
+gathers up her work and sails majestically from the room, followed by her
+weak, trembling daughter-in-law, bent on reconciliation, on cajolement,
+on laying herself down for her own sins, and her sister's as well, before
+the avenging genius of her life.
+
+The clergyman stands by the hearth with his head bent and his hands
+behind him. He sighs wearily.
+
+Vera creeps up to him and lays her hand softly upon his coat sleeve.
+
+"I am a firebrand, am I not, Eustace?"
+
+"My dear, no, not that; but if you could try a little to keep the peace!"
+He stayed the caressing hand within his own and looked at her tenderly.
+His face is a good one, but not a handsome one; and, as he looks at his
+wife's young sister, it is softened into its best and kindest. Who can
+resist Vera, when she looks gentle and humble, with that rare light in
+her dark eyes?
+
+"Vera, why don't you look like that at Mr. Gisburne?" he says, smiling.
+
+"Oh, Eustace! am I indeed a burden to you, as your mother says?" she
+exclaims, evasively.
+
+"No, no, my dear, but it seems hard for you here; a home of your own
+might be happier for you; and Gisburne is a good man."
+
+"I don't like good men who are poor!" says Vera, with a little grimace.
+
+Her brother-in-law looks shocked. "Why do you say such hard worldly
+things, Vera? You do not really mean them."
+
+"Don't I? Eustace, look at me: do I look like a poor clergyman's wife? Do
+survey me dispassionately." She holds herself at arm's length from him,
+and looks comically up and down the length of her gray skirts. "Think of
+the yards and yards of stuff it takes to clothe me; and should not a
+woman as tall as I am be always in velvet and point lace, Eustace? What
+is the good of condemning myself to workhouse sheeting for the rest of my
+days?"
+
+Mr. Daintree looks at her admiringly; he has learnt to love her; this
+beautiful southern flower that has come to blossom in his home. Women
+will be hard enough on Vera through her life--men, never.
+
+"You have great gifts and great temptations, my child," he says,
+solemnly. "I pray that I may be enabled to do my duty to you. Do not say
+you do not like good men, Vera, it pains me to hear you say it."
+
+"I like _one_ good man, and his name is Eustace Daintree!" she answers,
+softly; "is not that a hopeful sign?"
+
+"You are a little flatterer, Vera," he says, kissing her; but, though he
+is a middle-aged clergyman and her brother-in-law, he is by no means
+impervious to the flattery.
+
+Meanwhile, upstairs, Marion is humbling herself into the dust, at the
+footstool of her tyrant. Mrs. Daintree is very angry with Marion's
+sister, and Mr. Gisburne is also the text whereon she hangs her sermon.
+
+"I wish her no harm, Marion; why should I? She is most impertinent to me,
+but of that I will not speak."
+
+"Indeed, grandmamma, you do not understand Vera. I am sure she----"
+
+"Oh, yes, excuse me, my dear, I understand her perfectly--the
+impertinence to myself I waive--I hope I am a Christian, but I cannot
+forgive her for turning up her nose at Mr. Gisburne--a most excellent
+young man; what can a girl want more?"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Daintree, does Vera look like a poor clergyman's wife?" said
+Marion, using unconsciously Vera's own arguments.
+
+"Now, Marion, I have no patience with such folly! Whom do you suppose she
+is to wait for? We haven't got any Princes down at Sutton to marry her;
+and I say it's a shame that she should go on living on her friends, a
+girl without a penny! when she might marry a respectable man, and have
+a home of her own."
+
+And then even Marion said that, if Vera could be brought to like Mr.
+Gisburne, it might possibly be happier for her to marry him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KYNASTON HALL.
+
+ Only the wind here hovers and revels
+ In a round where life seems barren as death.
+ Here there was laughing of old, there was weeping,
+ Haply of lovers none ever will know.
+
+ Swinburne, "A Forsaken Garden."
+
+
+It seemed to be generally acknowledged by the Daintree family that if
+Vera would only consent to yield to the solicitations of the Reverend
+Albert Gisburne, and transfer herself to Tripton Rectory for life, it
+would be the simplest and easiest solution of a good many difficult
+problems concerning her.
+
+In point of fact, Vera Nevill was an incongruous element in the Daintree
+household. In that quiet humdrum country clergyman's life she was as much
+out of her proper place as a bird of paradise in a chicken yard, or a
+Gloire de Dijon rose in a field of turnips.
+
+It was not her beauty alone, but her whole previous life which unfitted
+her for the things amongst which she found herself suddenly transplanted.
+She was no young unformed child, but a woman of the world, who had been
+courted and flattered and sought after; who had learnt to hold her own,
+and to fight her battles single-handed, and who knew far more about
+the dangers and difficulties of life than did the simple-hearted
+brother-in-law, under whose charge she now found herself, or the timid,
+gentle sister who was so many years her senior.
+
+But if she was cognizant of the world and its ways, Vera knew absolutely
+nothing about the life of an English vicarage. Sunday schools and
+mothers' meetings were enigmas to her; clothing clubs and friendly
+societies, hopeless and uninteresting mysteries which she had no desire
+to solve. She had no place in the daily routine. What was she to do
+amongst it all?
+
+Vera did what was most pleasant and also most natural to her--she did
+nothing. She was by habit and by culture essentially indolent. The
+southern blood she inherited, the life of the Italian fine lady she had
+led, made her languid and fond of inaction. To lie late in bed, to sip
+chocolate, and open her letters before she rose; to be dressed and
+re-dressed by a fashionable lady's maid; to recline in luxurious
+carriages, and to listen lazily to the flattery and adulation that had
+surrounded her--that had been Vera's life from morning till night ever
+since she grew up.
+
+How, with such antecedents, was she to enter suddenly into all the
+activity of an English clergyman's home? There were the schools, and the
+vestry meetings, and the sick and the destitute to be fretted after from
+Monday morning till Saturday night--Eustace and Marion hardly ever had a
+moment's respite or a leisure hour the whole week; whilst Sunday, of
+course, was the hardest day's work of all.
+
+But Vera could not turn her life into these things. She would not have
+known how to set about them, and assuredly she had no desire to try.
+
+So she wandered about the garden in the summer time, or sat dreamily by
+the fire in winter. She gathered flowers and decorated the rooms with
+them; she spoilt the children, she quarrelled with their grandmother, but
+she did nothing else; and the righteous soul of Eustace Daintree was
+disquieted within him on account of her. He felt that her life was
+wasted, and the responsibility of it seemed, to his over-sensitive
+conscience, to rest upon himself.
+
+"The girl ought to be married," he would say to his wife, anxiously. "A
+husband and a home of her own is what she wants. If she were happily
+settled she would find occupation enough."
+
+"I don't see whom she could marry, Eustace; men are so scarce, and there
+are so many girls in the county."
+
+"Well, she might have had Barry." Barry was a curate whom Vera had lately
+scorned, and who had, in consequence of the crushed condition of his
+affections, incontinently fled. "And then there is Gisburne. Why couldn't
+she marry Gisburne? He is quite a catch, and a good young man too."
+
+"Yes, it is a pity; perhaps she may change her mind, and he will ask her
+again after Christmas; he told me as much."
+
+"You must try and persuade her to think better of it by then, my dear.
+Now I must be off to old Abraham, and be sure you send round the port to
+Mary Williams; and you will find the list for the blanket club on my
+study table, love."
+
+Her husband started on his morning rounds, and Marion, coming down into
+the drawing-room, found old Mrs. Daintree haranguing Vera on the same
+all-important topic.
+
+"I am only speaking for your good, Vera; what other object could I have?"
+she was saying, as she dived into the huge basket of undarned socks on
+the floor before her, and extracted thereout a ragged specimen to be
+operated upon. "It is sheer obstinacy on your part that you will not
+accept such a good offer. And there was poor Mr. Barry, a most worthy
+young man, and his second cousin a bishop, too, quite sure of a living,
+I should say."
+
+"Another clergyman!" said Vera, with a soft laugh, just lifting up her
+hands and letting them fall down again upon her lap, with a little,
+half-foreign movement of impatience. "Are there, then, no other men but
+the clergy in this country?"
+
+"And a very good thing if there were no others," glared the old lady,
+defiantly, over her spectacles.
+
+"I do not like them," said Vera, simply.
+
+"Not like them! Considering that I am the daughter, the widow, and the
+mother of clergymen, I consider that remark a deliberate insult to me!"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Daintree, I am sure Vera never meant----" cried Marion,
+trembling for fear of a fresh battle.
+
+"Don't interrupt me, Marion; you ought to have more proper pride than to
+stand by and hear the Church reviled."
+
+"Vera only said she did not like them."
+
+"No more I do, Marion," said Vera, stifling a yawn--"not when they are
+young; when they are old, like Eustace, they are far better; but when
+they are young they are all exactly alike--equally harmless when out of
+the pulpit, and equally wearisome when in it!"
+
+A few moments of offended silence on the part of the elder lady,
+during which she tugs fiercely and savagely at the ragged sock in her
+hands--then she bursts forth again.
+
+"You may scorn them as much as you like, but let me tell you that the
+life of a clergyman's wife--honoured, respected, and useful--is a more
+profitable one than the idle existence which you lead, utterly
+purposeless and lazy. You never do one single thing from morning till
+night."
+
+"What shall I do? Shall I help you to darn Eustace's socks?" reaching at
+one of them out of the basket.
+
+Mrs. Daintree wrenched it angrily from her hand.
+
+"Good gracious! as if you could! What a bungle it would be. Why, I never
+saw you with a piece of work in your hand in my life. I dare say you
+could not even thread a needle."
+
+"I am quite sure I have never threaded one yet," laughed Vera, lazily. "I
+might try; but you see you won't let me be useful, so I had better resign
+myself to idleness." And then she rose and took her hat, and went out
+through the French window, out among the fallen yellow leaves, leaving
+the other women to discuss the vexed problem of her existence.
+
+She discussed it to herself as she walked dreamily along under the trees
+in the lane beyond the garden, her head bent, and her eyes fixed upon the
+ground; she swung her hat idly in her hand, for it was warm for the time
+of year, and the gold-brown leaves fluttered down about her head and
+rustled under the dark, trailing skirts behind her.
+
+About half a mile up the lane, beyond the vicarage, stood an old iron
+gateway leading into a park. It was flanked by square red-brick columns,
+upon whose summits two stone griffins, "rampant," had looked each other
+in the face for the space of some two hundred years or so, peering grimly
+over the tops of the shields against which they stood on end, upon which
+all the family arms and quarterings of the Kynastons had become softly
+coated over by an indistinct veil of gray-green moss.
+
+Vera turned in at this gate, nodding to the woman at the lodge within,
+who looked out for a minute at her as she passed. It was her daily walk,
+for Kynaston was uninhabited and empty, and any one was free to wander
+unreproved among its chestnut glades, or to stand and gossip to its
+ancient housekeeper in the great bare rooms of the deserted house.
+
+Vera did so often. The square, red-brick building, with its stone
+copings, the terrace walk before the windows, the peacocks sunning
+themselves before the front door, the fountain plashing sleepily in the
+stone basin, the statues down the square Italian garden--all had a
+certain fascination for her dreamy poetical nature. Then turning in at
+the high narrow doorway, whose threshold Mrs. Eccles, the housekeeper,
+had long ago given her free leave to cross, she would stroll through the
+deserted rooms, touching the queer spindle-legged furniture with gentle
+reverent fingers, gazing absorbedly at the dark rows of family portraits,
+and speculating always to herself what they had been like, these dead and
+gone Kynastons, who had once lived and laughed, and sorrowed and died, in
+the now empty rooms, where nothing was left of them save those dim and
+faded portraits, and where the echo of her own footsteps was the only
+sound in the wilderness of the carpetless chambers where once they had
+reigned supreme.
+
+She got to know them all at last by name--whole generations of them.
+There was Sir Ralph in armour, and Bridget, his wife, in a ruff and a
+farthingale; young Sir Maurice, who died in boyhood, and Sir Penrhyn, his
+brother, in long love-locks and lace ruffles. A whole succession of Sir
+Martins and Sir Henrys; then came the first Sir John and his wife in
+powder and patches, with their fourteen children all in a row, whose
+elaborate marriages and family histories, Vera, although assisted by Mrs.
+Eccles, who had them all at her fingers' ends, had considerable
+difficulty in clearly comprehending. It was a relief to be firmly landed
+with Sir Maurice, in a sad-coloured suit and full-bottomed wig, "the
+present baronet's grandfather," and, lastly, Sir John, "the present
+baronet's father," in a deputy-lieutenant's scarlet uniform, with a
+cocked hat under his arm--by far the worst and most inartistic painting
+in the whole collection.
+
+It was all wonderful and interesting to Vera. She elaborated whole
+romances to herself out of these portraits. She settled their loves and
+their temptations, heart-broken separations, and true lovers' meetings
+between them. Each one had his or her history woven out of the slender
+materials which Mrs. Eccles could give her of their real lives. Only one
+thing disappointed her, there was no portrait of the present Sir John.
+She would have liked to have seen what he was like, this man who was
+unmarried still, and who had never cared to live in the house of his
+fathers. She wondered what the mystery had been that kept him from it.
+She could not understand that a man should deliberately prefer dark,
+dirty, dingy London, which she had only once seen in passing from one
+station to the other on her way to Sutton, to a life in this quiet
+old-world red-brick house, with the rooks cawing among trees, and the
+long chestnut glades stretching away into the park, and all the venerable
+associations of those portraits of his ancestors. Some trouble, some
+sorrow, must have kept him away from it, she felt.
+
+But she would not question Mrs. Eccles about him; she encouraged her to
+talk of the dead and gone generations as much as she pleased, but of the
+man who was her master Vera would have thought it scarcely honourable to
+have spoken to his servant. Perhaps, too, she preferred her dreams. One
+day, idly opening the drawer of an old bureau in the little room which
+Mrs. Eccles always called religiously "My lady's morning room," Vera came
+upon a modern photograph that arrested her attention wonderfully.
+
+It represented, however, nothing very remarkable; only a
+broad-shouldered, good-looking young man, with an aquiline noise and a
+close-cropped head. On the reverse side of the card was written in
+pencil, "My son--for Mrs. Eccles." Lady Kynaston, she supposed, must
+therefore have sent it to the old housekeeper, and of course it was Sir
+John. Vera pushed it back again into the drawer with a little flush, as
+though she had been guilty of an indiscretion in looking at it, and she
+said no word of her discovery to the housekeeper. A day or two later she
+sought for it again in the same place, but it had been taken away.
+
+But the face thus seen made an impression upon her. She did not forget
+it; and when Sir John Kynaston's name was mentioned, she invested him
+with the living likeness of the photograph she had seen.
+
+On this particular October morning that Vera strolled up idly to the old
+house she did not feel inclined to wander among the deserted rooms; the
+sunshine came down too pleasantly through the autumn leaves; the air was
+too full of the lingering breath of the dying summer for her to care to
+go indoors. She paused a minute by the open window of the housekeeper's
+room, and called the old lady by name.
+
+The room, however, was empty and she received no answer, so she wandered
+on to the terrace and leant over the stone parapet that looked over the
+gardens and the fountains, and the distant park beyond, and she thought
+of the photograph in the drawer.
+
+And then and there there came into Vera Neville's mind a thought that,
+beginning with nothing more than an indistinct and idle fancy, ended in
+a set and determined purpose.
+
+The thought was this:--
+
+"If Sir John Kynaston ever comes down here, I will marry him."
+
+She said it to herself, deliberately and calmly, without the slightest
+particle of hesitation or bashfulness. She told herself that what her
+relations were perpetually impressing upon her concerning the
+desirableness of her marrying and making a home of her own, was perfectly
+just and true. It would undoubtedly be a good thing for her to marry; her
+life was neither very pleasant nor very satisfactory to herself or to any
+one else. She had never intended to end her days at Sutton Vicarage; it
+had only been an intermediate condition of things. She had no vocation
+for visiting the poor, or for filling that useful but unexciting family
+office of maiden aunt; and, moreover, she felt that, with all their
+kindness to her, her brother-in-law and his wife ought not to be burdened
+with her support for longer than was necessary. As to turning governess,
+or companion, or lady-help, there was an incongruity in the idea that
+made it too ludicrous to contemplate even for an instant. There is no
+other way that a handsome and penniless woman can deliver her friends
+of the burden of her existence than by marriage.
+
+Marriage decidedly was what Vera had to look to. She was in no way averse
+to the idea, only she intended to look at the subject from the most
+practical and matter-of-fact point of view.
+
+She was not going to render herself wretched for life by rashly
+consenting to marry Mr. Gisburne, or any other equally unsuitable husband
+that her friends might choose to press upon her. Vera differed in one
+important respect from the vast majority of young ladies of the present
+day--she had no vague and indistinct dreams as to what marriage might
+bring her. She knew exactly what she wanted from it. She wanted wealth
+and position, because she knew what they were and what life became
+without them; and because she knew that she was utterly unfitted to be
+the wife of any one but a rich man.
+
+And therefore it was that Vera looked from the square red house behind
+her over the wide gardens and broad lawns, and down the noble avenues
+that spread away into the distance, and said to herself, "This is what
+will suit me, to be mistress of a place like this; I should love it
+dearly; I should find real happiness and pleasure in the duties that such
+a position would bring me. If Sir John Kynaston comes here, it is he whom
+I will marry, and none other."
+
+As to what her feelings might be towards the man whom she thus proposed
+to marry it cannot be said that Vera took them into consideration at all.
+She was not, indeed, aware whether or no she possessed any feelings; they
+had never incommoded her hitherto. Probably they had no existence. Such
+vague fancy as had been ever roused within her had been connected with a
+photograph seen once in a writing-table drawer. The photograph of Sir
+John Kynaston! The reflection did not influence her in the least, only
+she said to herself also, "If he is like his photograph, I should be sure
+to get on with him."
+
+She was an odd mixture, this Vera. Ambitious, worldly-wise, mercenary
+even, if you will; conscious of her own beauty, and determined to exact
+its full value; and yet she was tender and affectionate, full of poetry
+and refinement, honest and true as her own fanciful name.
+
+The secret of these strange contradictions is simply this. Vera has never
+loved. No one spark of divine fire has ever touched her soul or warmed
+the latent energies of her being. She has lived in the thick of the
+world, but love has passed her scatheless. Her mind, her intellect, her
+brain, are all alive, and sharpened acutely; her heart slumbers still.
+Happier for her, perhaps, had it never awakened.
+
+She leant upon the stone parapet, supporting her chin upon her hand,
+dreaming her dreams. Her hat lay by her side, her long dark dress fell in
+straight heavy folds to her feet. The yellow leaves fluttered about her,
+the peacocks strutted up and down, the gardeners in the distance were
+sweeping up the dead leaves on the lawns, but Vera stirred not; one
+motionless, beautiful figure giving grace, and life, and harmony to the
+deserted scene.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some one was passing along among the upper rooms of the house, followed
+by Mrs. Eccles, panting and exhausted.
+
+"I am sure, Sir John, I am quite ashamed that you should see the place so
+choked up with dust and lumber. If you had only let me have a day's
+notice, instead of being took all of a sudden like, I'd have had the
+house tidied up a bit; but what with not expecting to see any of the
+family, and my being old, and not so quick at the cleaning as I used to
+be----"
+
+"Never mind, Mrs. Eccles; I had just as soon see it as it is. I only
+wanted to see if you could make three or four rooms tolerably habitable
+in case I thought of bringing my horses down for a month or so. The
+stables, I find, are in good repair."
+
+"Yes, Sir John, and so is the house; though the furniture is that
+old-fashioned, that it is hardly fit for you to use."
+
+"Oh! it will do well enough; besides, I have not made up my mind at all.
+It is quite uncertain whether I shall come----Who is that?" stopping
+suddenly short before the window.
+
+"That! Oh, bless me, Sir John, it's Miss Vera, from the vicarage. I hope
+you won't object to her being here; of course, she could not know you was
+back. I had given her leave to walk in the grounds."
+
+"The vicarage! Has Mr. Daintree a daughter so old as that?"
+
+"Oh, law! no, Sir John. It is Mrs. Daintree's sister. She came from
+abroad to live with them last year. A very nice young lady, Sir John, is
+Miss Nevill, and seems lonely like, and it kind of cheers her up to come
+and see me and walk in the garden. I am sure I hope you won't take it
+amiss that I should have allowed her to come."
+
+"Take it amiss--good gracious, no! Pray, let Miss--Miss Nevill, did you
+say?--come as often as she likes. What about the cellars, Mrs. Eccles?"
+
+"I will get the key, Sir John." The housekeeper precedes him out of the
+room, but Sir John stands still by the window.
+
+"What a picture," he says to himself below his breath; "how well she
+looks there. She gives to the old place just the one thing it lacks--has
+always lacked ever since I have known it--the presence of a beautiful
+woman. Yes, Mrs. Eccles, I am coming." This last aloud, and he hastens
+downstairs.
+
+Five minutes later, Sir John Kynaston says to his housekeeper,
+
+"You need not scare that young lady away from the place by telling her
+I was here to-day and saw her. And you may get the rooms ready, Mrs.
+Eccles, and order anything that is wanted, and get in a couple of maids,
+for I have made up my mind to bring my horses down next month."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FANNING DEAD ASHES.
+
+ Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan,
+ Sorrow calls no time that's gone,
+ Violets plucked, the sweetest rain
+ Makes not fresh, nor grow again.
+
+ Fletcher.
+
+
+"Have you heard of Sir John's latest vagary, grandpapa? He is gone down
+to Kynaston to hunt--so there's an end of _him_."
+
+"Humph! Where did you hear that?"
+
+"I've been lunching at Lady Kynaston's."
+
+The speaker stood by the window of one of the large houses at Prince's
+Gate overlooking the Horticultural Gardens. She was a small, slight
+woman, with fair pale features and a mass of soft yellow hair. She had a
+delicate complexion and very clear blue eyes. Altogether she was a pretty
+little woman. A stranger would have guessed her to be a girl barely out
+of her teens. Helen Romer was in reality five-and-twenty, and she had
+been a widow four years.
+
+Of her brief married life few people could speak with any certainty,
+although there were plenty of surmises and conjectures concerning it. All
+that was known was that Helen had lived with her grandfather till she was
+nineteen; that one fine morning she had walked out of the house and had
+been married to a man whom her grandfather disapproved of, and to whom
+she had always professed perfect indifference. It was also known that
+eighteen months later her husband, having rapidly wasted his existence by
+drink and other irregular courses, had died in miserable poverty; and
+that Helen, not being able to set up a home of her own, upon her slender
+fortune of some five or six thousand pounds, had returned to her
+grandfather's house in Prince's Gate, where she had lived ever since.
+
+Why she had married William Romer no one ever exactly knew--perhaps Helen
+herself least of any one. It certainly was not for love; it could hardly
+have been from any worldly motive. Some people averred, and possibly they
+were not far wrong, that she had done so out of pique because the man she
+loved did not want her.
+
+However that might be, Mrs. Romer returned a widow, and not a very
+disconsolate one, to her grandfather's house.
+
+It is certain that she would not have lived there could she have helped
+it. She did not love old Mr. Harlowe, neither did Mr. Harlowe love her. A
+sense of absolute duty to his dead daughter's child on the one side, a
+sense of absolute necessity on the other, kept the two together. Their
+natures were inharmonious. They kept up a form of affection and intimacy
+openly; in reality, they had not one single thought in common.
+
+It is not too much to say that Mr. Harlowe positively disliked his
+grand-daughter. He had, perhaps, good reason for it. Helen had been
+nothing but a trouble to him. He had not desired to bring up a young
+lady in his house; he had not wished for the society which her presence
+entailed, nor for the dissipations of London life into which he was
+dragged more or less against his will. Added to which, Helen had not
+striven to please him in essential matters. She had married a gambling,
+drinking blackguard, whom he had forbidden to enter his doors; and now,
+when she might retrieve her position, and marry well and creditably, she
+refused to make the slightest effort to meet his views.
+
+Helen's life was a mystery to all but herself. To the world she was a
+pretty, lively little widow, with a good house to live in, and sufficient
+money of her own to spend to very good effect upon her back, with not a
+single duty or responsibility in her existence, and with no other
+occupation in life than to amuse herself. At her heart Helen knew herself
+to be a soured and disappointed woman, who had desired one thing all her
+life, and who, having attained with great pains and toil that forbidden
+fruit which she had coveted, had found it turn, as such fruits too often
+do, to dust and ashes between her teeth. It was to have been sweet as
+honeydew--and behold, it was nothing but bitterness!
+
+She stood at the window looking out at the waning light of the November
+afternoon. She was handsomely dressed in dark-green velvet, with a heavy
+old-fashioned gold chain round her neck; every now and then she looked at
+her watch, and a frown passed over her brow. The old man was bending over
+the fire behind her.
+
+"Gone to Kynaston, is he? Humph! that is your fault, you frightened him
+off."
+
+"Did I set my cap at him so palpably then?" said Helen, with a short,
+hard laugh.
+
+"You know very well what I mean," answered her grandfather, sulkily. "Set
+your cap! No, you only do that to the men you know I don't approve of,
+and who don't want you."
+
+Helen winced a little. "You put things very coarsely, grandpapa," she
+said, and laughed again. "I am sorry I have been unable to make love to
+Sir John Kynaston to please you. Is that what you wanted me to do?"
+
+"I want you to look after a respectable husband, who can afford to keep
+you. What is the meaning of that perpetual going to Lady Kynaston's then?
+And why have you dragged me up to town at this confounded time of the
+year if it wasn't for that? You have played your cards badly as usual.
+You might have had him if you had chosen."
+
+"I have never had the least intention of casting myself at Sir John's
+head," said Helen, scornfully.
+
+"You can cast yourself, as you call it, at that good-for-nothing young
+spendthrift's head fast enough if you choose it."
+
+"I don't in the least know whom you mean," she said, shortly.
+
+The old man chuckled. "Oh, yes, you know well enough--the brother who
+spends his time racing and betting. You are a fool, Helen; he doesn't
+want you; and if he did, he couldn't afford to keep you."
+
+"Suppose we leave Captain Kynaston's name out of the discussion,
+grandpapa," she said, quietly, but her face flushed suddenly and her
+hands twisted themselves nervously in and out of her heavy chain. "Are
+you not going to your study this evening?"
+
+"Oh yes, I'm going, fast enough. You want me out of the way, I suppose.
+Somebody coming to tea, eh? Oh yes, I'll clear out. I don't want to
+listen to your rubbish."
+
+The old man gathered up his books and papers and shuffled out of the
+room, muttering to himself as he went.
+
+The servant came in, bringing the lamp, replenished the fire and drew the
+curtains, shutting out the light of day.
+
+"Any one to tea, ma'am?" he inquired, respectfully.
+
+"One gentleman--no one else. Bring up tea when he comes."
+
+"Very well, ma'am;" and the servant withdrew. Mrs. Romer paced
+impatiently up and down the room, stopping again and again before the
+clock.
+
+"Late again! A whole half-hour behind his time! It is insufferable that
+he should treat me like this. He would go quickly enough to see some new
+face--some fresh fancy that had attracted him."
+
+She took out her watch and laid it on the table. "Let me see if he will
+come before the minute-hand touches the quarter; he _must_ be here by
+then!"
+
+She continued to pace steadily up and down the room. The clock ticked on,
+the minute-hand of the watch crept ever stealthily forward over the
+golden dial; now and then a passing vehicle without made her heart beat
+with sudden hope, and then sink down again with disappointment, as the
+sound of the wheels went by and died away in the distance.
+
+Suddenly she sank into an arm-chair, covering her face with her hands.
+
+"Oh, what a fool--what a fool I am!" she exclaimed aloud. "Why have I not
+strength of mind to go out before he comes, to show him that I don't
+care? Why, at least, can I not call up grandpapa, and pretend I had
+forgotten he was coming? That would be the best way to treat him; the way
+to show him that I am not the miserable slave he thinks me. Why can I,
+who know so well how to manage all other men, never manage the one man
+whose love I want? That horrid old man was right--he does not want me--he
+never did. Oh, if I only could be proud, and pretend I do not care! But I
+can't, I can't--there is always this miserable sickening pain at my heart
+for him, and he knows it. I have let him know it!"
+
+A ring at the bell made her spring to her feet, whilst a glad flush
+suddenly covered her face.
+
+In another minute the man she loved was in the room.
+
+"Nearly three-quarters of an hour late!" she cried, angrily, as he
+entered. "How shamefully you treat me!"
+
+He stood in front of the fire, pulling off his dogskin gloves:
+a broad-shouldered, handsome fellow, with an aquiline nose and a
+close-cropped head.
+
+"Am I late?" he said, indifferently. "I really did not know it. I have
+had fifty places to go to in as many minutes."
+
+"Of course I shall forgive you if you have been so busy," she said,
+softening at once. "Maurice, darling, are you not going to kiss me?" She
+stood up by his side upon the hearthrug, looking at him with all her
+heart in her eyes, whilst his were on the fire. She wound her arms round
+his neck, and drew his head down. He leant his cheek carelessly towards
+her lips, and she kissed him passionately; and he--he was thinking of
+something else.
+
+"Poor little woman," he said, almost with an effort recalling himself
+to the present; he patted her cheek lightly and turned round to toss
+his gloves into his hat on the table behind him. "How cold it has
+turned--aren't you going to give me some tea?" And then he sat down on
+the further side of the fire and stretched himself back in his arm-chair,
+throwing his arms up behind his head.
+
+Helen rang the bell for the tea.
+
+"Is that all you have to say to me?" she said, poutingly.
+
+Maurice Kynaston looked distressed.
+
+"Upon my word, Helen, I am sure I don't know what you expect. I haven't
+heard any particular news. I saw you only yesterday, you know. I don't
+know what you want me to say."
+
+Helen was silent. She knew very well what she wanted, she wanted him to
+say and do things that were impossible to him--to play the lover to her,
+to respond to her caresses, to look glad to see her.
+
+Maurice was so tired of it all! tired alike of her reproaches and her
+caresses. The first irritated him, the second gave him no pleasure. There
+was no longer any attraction to him about her, her love was oppressive to
+him. He did not want it, he had never wanted it; only somehow she had
+laid it so openly and freely at his feet, that it had seemed almost
+unmanly to him not to put forth his hand and take it. And now he was
+tired of his thraldom, sick of her endearments, satiated with her kisses.
+And what was it all to end in? He could not marry her, he would not have
+desired to do so had he been able; but as things were, there was no money
+to marry on either side. At his heart Maurice Kynaston was glad of it,
+for he did not want her for a wife, and yet he feared that he was bound
+to her.
+
+Man-like, he had no courage to break the chains that bound him, and yet
+to-night he had said to himself that he would make the effort--the state
+of his affairs furnished him with a sufficiently good pretext for
+broaching the subject.
+
+"There is something I wanted to say to you," he said, after the tea had
+been brought in and they were alone again. He sat forward in his chair
+and stroked his moustache nervously, not looking at her as he spoke.
+
+Helen came and sat on the hearthrug at his feet, resting her cheek
+caressingly against his knee.
+
+"What is it, Maurice?"
+
+"Well, it's about myself. I have been awfully hard hit this last week at
+Newmarket, you know."
+
+"Yes, so you told me. I am so sorry, darling." But she did not care much
+as long as he was with her and was kind to her--nothing else signified
+much to her.
+
+"Yes, but I am pretty well broke this time--I had to go to John again. He
+is an awfully good fellow, is old John; he has paid everything up for me.
+But I've had to promise to give up racing, and now I've got to live on
+my pay."
+
+"I could lend you fifty pounds."
+
+"Fifty pounds! pooh! what nonsense! What would be the good of fifty
+pounds to me?"
+
+He said it rather ungraciously, perhaps, and her eyes filled with tears.
+When a man does not love a woman, her little childish offers of help do
+not touch him as they would if he loved her. He would not have taken five
+thousand from her, yet he was angry with her for talking of fifty pounds.
+
+"What I wanted to say to you, Helen, was that, of course, now I am so
+hard up it's no good thinking of--of marrying--or anything of that kind;
+and don't you think it would be happiest if you and I--I mean, wisest for
+us both--for you, of course, principally----"
+
+"_What!_" She lifted her head sharply. She saw what he meant at once. A
+wild terror filled her heart. "You mean that you want to throw me over!"
+she said, breathlessly.
+
+"My dear child, do be reasonable. Throw you over! of course not--but what
+is it all to lead to? How can we possibly marry? It was bad enough
+before, when I had my few hundreds a year. But now even that is gone.
+A captain in a line regiment is not exactly in a position to marry. Why,
+I shall hardly be able to keep myself, far less a wife too. I cannot drag
+you down to starvation, Helen; it would not be right or honourable to
+continue to bind you to my broken fortunes."
+
+She was standing up now before him very white and very resolute.
+
+"Why do you make so many excuses? You want to be rid of me."
+
+"My dear child, how unjust you are."
+
+"Am I unjust? Wait! let me speak. How have we altered things? Could you
+marry me any more before you lost this money? You know you could not.
+Have we not always agreed to wait till better times? Why cannot we go on
+waiting?"
+
+"It would not be fair to tie you."
+
+He had not the courage to say, "I do not love you--money or no money, I
+do not wish to marry you." How indeed is a man who is a gentleman to say
+such a discourteous thing to a lady for whom he has once professed
+affection? Maurice Kynaston, at all events, could not say so.
+
+"It would not be fair to tie you; it would be better to let you be free:"
+that was all he could find to say. And then Helen burst forth
+impetuously,
+
+"I wish to be tied--I do not want to be free--I will not marry any other
+man on earth but you. Oh! Maurice, my love, my darling!" casting herself
+down again at his feet and clasping her arms wildly round him. "Whom else
+do I want but you--whom else have I ever loved? You know I have always
+been yours--always--long ago, in the old days when you never even gave me
+a look, and I was so maddened with misery and despair that I did not care
+what became of me when I married poor Willie, hardly knowing what I was
+doing, only because my life was so unbearable at home. And now that I
+have got you, do you think I will give you up? And you love me--surely,
+surely, you _must_ love me. You said so once, Maurice--tell me so again.
+You do love me, don't you?"
+
+What was a man to do? Maurice moved uneasily under her embrace as though
+he would withdraw her arms from about his neck.
+
+"Of course," he said, nervously; "of course, I am fond of you, and all
+that, but we can't marry upon less than nothing. You must know that as
+well as I do."
+
+"No; but we can wait."
+
+"What are we to wait for?" he said, irritably.
+
+"Oh, a hundred things might happen--your brother might die."
+
+"God forbid!" he said, pushing her from him, in earnest this time.
+
+"Well, we will hope not that, perhaps; but grandpapa can't live for ever,
+and he ought to leave me all his money, and then we should be rich."
+
+"It is horrible waiting for dead people's shoes," said Maurice, with a
+little shudder; "besides, Mr. Harlowe is just as likely as not to leave
+his money to a hospital, or to the British Museum, or the National
+Gallery--you could not count upon anything."
+
+"We could at all events wait and see."
+
+"And be engaged all that time on the off-chance?" he said, drearily;
+"that is a miserable prospect."
+
+"Then you do wish to get rid of me!" she said, looking at him
+suspiciously; "you have seen some other woman."
+
+"Pooh! what a little fool you are!" He jumped up angrily from his chair,
+leaving her there upon the hearthrug. A woman makes a false move when she
+speaks of "another woman" to the man whose affection for her is on the
+wane. In the present instance the accusation was utterly without
+foundation. Many as were his self-reproaches on her account, that one had
+never been amongst them. If he did not love her, neither had he the
+slightest fancy for any other woman. Her remark irritated him beyond
+measure; it seemed to annul and wipe out the score of his own
+shortcomings towards her, and to make himself, not her, the injured one.
+
+"Women are the most irrational, the most unjust, the most thoroughly
+pig-headed set of creatures on the face of the earth!" he burst forth,
+angrily.
+
+She saw her mistake by this time. She was no fool; she was quick
+enough--sharp as a needle--where her love did not, as love invariably
+does, warp and blind her judgment.
+
+"I am sorry, Maurice," she said, humbly. "I did not mean to doubt you, of
+course. Have you not said you love me? Sit down again, please."
+
+He sat down only half appeased, looking glum and sulky. She felt that
+some concession on her part was necessary. She took his hand and stroked
+it softly. She knew so well that he did not love her, and yet she clung
+so desperately to the hope that she could win him back; she would not own
+to herself even in the furthermost recesses of her own heart that his
+love was dead. She would not believe it; to put it in words to herself
+even would have half killed her; but still she was forced to acknowledge
+that unless she met him half-way she might lose him altogether.
+
+"I will tell you what I will do, Maurice," she said thoughtfully. "I will
+consent to let our engagement be in abeyance for the present; I will
+cease to write to you unless I have anything particular to say, and I
+will not expect you to write to me. If people question us, we will deny
+any engagement between us--we will say that we are each of us free--but
+on one condition only, that you will promise me most solemnly, on your
+honour as a gentleman, that should either of us be left any money--should
+there be, say, a clear thousand a year between us, within the next five
+years----"
+
+"My dear Helen, I am as likely to have a thousand a year as to be
+presented with the regalia."
+
+"Never mind. If it is unlikely, so much the worse--or the better,
+whichever you may like to call it. But if such a thing does happen, give
+me your word of honour that you will come to me at once--that, in fact,
+our engagement shall be renewed. If things are no better, our prospects
+no brighter, in five years from now--well, then, let us each be free to
+marry elsewhere."
+
+There was a moment or two of silence between them. Maurice bent forward
+in his chair, leaning his arms upon his knees, and staring moodily into
+the fire. He was weighing her proposition. It was something; but it was
+not enough. It virtually bound him to her for five years, for, of course,
+an engagement that is to be tacitly consented to between the principal
+contractors is an engagement still, though the whole world be in
+ignorance of it. But then it gave him a chance, and a very good chance
+too, of perfect liberty in five years' time. It was something, certainly;
+though, as he had wanted his freedom at once, it could hardly be said to
+be altogether satisfactory.
+
+Helen knelt bolt upright in front of him, watching his face. How
+passionately she desired to hear him indignantly repudiate the
+half-liberty she offered him! How ardently she desired that he should
+take her in his arms, and swear to her that he would never consent to her
+terms, no one but herself could know. It had been her last expedient to
+revive the old love, to rekindle the dead ashes of the smouldering fire.
+Surely, if there was but a spark of it left, it must leap up into life
+and vitality again at her words. But, as she watched him, her heart, that
+had beat so wildly, sank cold and colder within her. She felt that his
+heart was gone from her; she had cast her last die and lost. But, for all
+that, she was not minded to let him go free--her wild, ungoverned passion
+for him was too deeply rooted within her; since he would not be hers
+willingly, he should be hers by force.
+
+"Surely," she said, wistfully, "you cannot find my terms too hard to
+consent to--you who--who love me?"
+
+He turned to her quickly and took her hands, every feeling of
+gentleman-like honour, every spark of manly courtesy towards her, aroused
+by her gentle words.
+
+"Say no more, Helen--you are too good--too generous to me. It shall be as
+you say."
+
+And then he left, thankful to escape from her presence and to be alone
+again with his thoughts in the raw darkness of the November evening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE LAY RECTOR.
+
+ Or art thou complaining
+ Of thy lowly lot,
+ And, thine own disdaining,
+ Dost ask what thou hast not?
+ Of the future dreaming,
+ Weary of the past,
+ For the present scheming
+ All but what thou hast.
+
+ L. E. Landon.
+
+
+In the churchyard at Sutton-in-the-Wold was a monument which, for
+downright ugliness and bad taste, could hardly find its fellow in the
+whole county. It was a wonderful and marvellous structure of gray
+granite, raised upon a flight of steps, and consisted of an object like
+unto Cleopatra's Needle surmounting a family tea-urn. It had been erected
+by one Nathaniel Crupps, a well-to-do farmer in the parish, upon the
+death of his second wife. The first partner of his affections had been
+previously interred also in the same spot, but it was not until the death
+of the second Mrs. Crupps, who was undoubtedly his favourite, that
+Nathaniel bethought him of immortalizing the memory of both ladies by one
+bold stroke of fancy, as exemplified by this portentous granite
+monstrosity. On it the virtues of both wives were recorded, as it was
+touchingly and naïvely stated, by their "sorrowing husband with strict
+impartiality."
+
+It was upon this graceful structure that Vera Nevill leant one foggy
+morning in the first week of November, and surveyed the church in front
+of her. She was not engaged in any sentimental musings appropriate to the
+situation. She was neither meditating upon the briefness of life in
+general, nor upon the many virtues of the ladies of the Crupps family,
+over whose remains she was standing. She was simply waiting for Jimmy
+Griffiths, and looking at the church because she had nothing else to look
+at. The church, indeed, afforded her some food for reflection, purely, I
+regret to state, of a practical and mundane character. It was a large and
+handsome building, with a particularly fine old tower, that was sadly out
+of repair; but the chancel was a modern and barn-like structure of brick
+and plaster, which ought, of course, to be entirely swept away, and a new
+and more appropriate one built in its stead. The chancel belonged, as
+most chancels do, to the lay rector, and the lay rector was Sir John
+Kynaston.
+
+As soon as it became bruited abroad that Sir John was coming down to the
+old house for the winter, there was a general excitement throughout the
+parish, but no one partook of the excitement to a greater degree than did
+its worthy vicar.
+
+It was the dream of Eustace Daintree's life to get his church restored,
+and more especially to get the chancel rebuilt. There had been a
+restoration fund accumulating for some years, and could he have had the
+slightest assistance from the lay rector concerning the chancel, Mr.
+Daintree would assuredly have sent for the architect, and the builders,
+and the stone-cutters, and have begun his church at once with that
+beautiful disregard of the future chances of being able to get the money
+to pay for it, and with that sparrow-like trust in Providence, which is
+usually displayed by those clerical gentlemen who, in the face of an
+estimate which tells them that eight thousand pounds will be the sum
+total required, are ready to dash into bricks and mortar upon the actual
+possession of eight hundred. But there was the chancel! To leave it as it
+was whilst restoring the nave would have been too heart-rending; to touch
+it without Sir John Kynaston's assistance, impossible and illegal.
+Several times Eustace Daintree had applied to Sir John in writing upon
+the subject. The answers had been vague and unsatisfactory. He would
+promise nothing at all; he would come down and see it some day possibly,
+and then he would be able to say more about it; meanwhile, for the
+present, things must remain as they were.
+
+When, therefore, the news was known that Sir John was actually coming
+down, Mr. Daintree's thoughts flew at once to his beloved church.
+
+"Now we shall get the chancel done at last," he said to his wife
+gleefully, rubbing his hands. And the very day after Sir John's arrival
+Eustace went up to the Hall after dinner to see him upon the subject.
+
+"Had you not better wait a day or two?" counselled his more prudent wife.
+"Wait till you meet him, naturally. You don't very well know what kind of
+man he is, nor how he will take it."
+
+"What is the use of waiting? I knew him well enough eight years ago; he
+was a pleasant fellow enough then. He won't kill me, I suppose, and the
+chancel is a disgrace--a positive disgrace to him. It is my duty to point
+it out to him; the thing can't afford to wait, it ought to be done at
+once."
+
+So he disregarded Marion's advice, and Vera helped him on with his
+great-coat in the hall, and wound his woollen comforter round his neck,
+and bade him good luck on his expedition to Kynaston.
+
+He came back sorrowful and abashed. Sir John had been civil, very civil;
+he had insisted on his sitting down at his table--for he had apparently
+not finished his dinner--and had opened a bottle of fine old port in his
+honour. He had inquired about many of the old people, and had expressed
+a friendly interest in the parish generally; but with regard to the
+chancel, he had been as adamant.
+
+He did not see, he had said, why it could not go on well enough as it
+was. If it was in bad repair, Davis should see to it; a man with a
+barrowful of bricks and a shovelful of mortar should be sent down. That,
+of course, it was his duty to do. Sir John did not understand that more
+could possibly be expected of him. The chancel had been good enough for
+his father, it would probably be good enough for him; it would last his
+time, he supposed, in any case.
+
+But the soul of the Rev. Eustace became as water within him. It was
+not of a barrowful of bricks and shovelful of mortar that he had been
+dreaming, but of lancet windows and stone mouldings; of polished oak
+rafters within, and of high gables and red tiles without.
+
+He came down from the Hall disheartened and discomfited, with all the
+spirit crushed out of him; and the ladies of his family, for once,
+were of one mind about the matter. There arose about him a storm of
+indignation and a gush of sympathy, which could not fail to soothe him
+somewhat. Eustace went to rest that night sore and heavy-hearted, it is
+true, but with all the damnatory verses in the Scriptures concerning the
+latter end of the "rich man" ringing in his head; a course of meditation
+which, upon the whole, afforded him a distinct sensation of consolation
+and comfort.
+
+And the next morning in the churchyard Vera leant against the Cruppsian
+sarcophagus, and thought about it.
+
+"Poor old Eustace," she said to herself; "how I wish I were very rich,
+and could do his chancel for him! How pleased he would be; and what a
+good fellow he is! How odd it is to think what different aims there are
+in people's lives! There are Eustace and Marion simply miserable this
+morning because of that hideous barn they can't get rid of. Well, it _is_
+hideous certainly; but it doesn't disturb my peace of mind in the least.
+What a mean curmudgeon Sir John must be, by the way! I should not have
+thought it from his photograph; such a frank, open, generous face he
+seemed to have. However, we all know how photographs can mislead one.
+I wonder where that wretched boy can be!"
+
+The "wretched boy" was Jimmy Griffiths afore-mentioned; he was the youth
+who was in the habit of blowing the organ. The schoolmaster, who was also
+the organist, was ill, and had sent word to Mr. Daintree that he would be
+unable to be at the church on the morrow. Eustace had asked Vera to take
+his place. Now Vera was not accomplished; she neither sang, nor played,
+nor painted in water-colours; but she had once learnt to play the organ
+a little--a very little. So she professed herself willing to undertake
+the office of organ-player for once, that is to say, if she found she
+could do it pretty well, only she must go into church and try all the
+chants over. So Jimmy Griffiths was sent for from the village, and Vera,
+with the church key in her pocket, strolled idly into the churchyard,
+and, whilst awaiting him, meditated upon the tomb of the two Mrs. Crupps.
+
+She had come in from the private gate of the vicarage, and the vicarage
+garden--very bleak and very desolate by this time--lay behind her. To the
+right, the public pathway led down through the lych-gate into the
+village. Anybody coming up from the village could have seen her as she
+stood against the granite monument. She wore a long fur cloak down almost
+to her feet, and a round fur cap upon her head; they were her sister
+Theodora's sables, which she had left to her. Old Mrs. Daintree always
+told her she ought to sell them, a remark which made Vera very angry. Her
+back was turned to the village and to the lych-gate, and she was looking
+up at poor Eustace's bug-bear--the barn-like chancel.
+
+Suddenly somebody came up close behind her and spoke to her.
+
+"Can you tell me, please, where the keys of the church are kept?"
+
+A gentleman stood beside her, lifting his hat as he spoke. Vera started
+a little at being so suddenly spoken to, but answered quite quietly and
+unconfusedly,
+
+"They are generally kept at the vicarage, or else in the clerk's
+cottage."
+
+"Thank you; then I will go and fetch them."
+
+"But they are not there now," said Vera, as though finishing her former
+remark.
+
+"If you will kindly tell me where I can find them," continued the
+stranger, very politely, "I will go and get them."
+
+"I am afraid you can't do that," said Vera, with just the vestige of a
+smile playing upon her face, "because they are at present in my pocket."
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon;" and the stranger smiled outright.
+
+"But I will let you into the church, if you like; if that is what you
+wish?" she said, quite simply.
+
+"Yes, if you please." Vera moved up the path to the porch, the gentleman
+following her. She turned the key in the heavy door and held it open. "If
+you will go in, please, I will take the keys; I must not leave them in
+the door." The gentleman went in, and Vera looked at him as he passed by.
+
+Most uninteresting! was her verdict as he passed her; forty at the very
+least! What a beautiful situation for an adventure! What a romantic
+incident! And how excessively tame is the _dénouement_! A middle-aged
+gentleman, tall and slightly bald, with close-cropped whiskers and grave,
+set features; who on earth could he be? A stranger, evidently; perhaps he
+was staying at some neighbouring country house, and had walked over to
+Sutton for the sake of exercise; but what on earth could he want to see
+the church for!
+
+The stranger stood just inside the door with his hat off, looking at her.
+
+"Won't you come in and show it to me?" he asked, rather hesitatingly.
+
+"The church? oh, certainly, if you like, but there is nothing to see in
+it." She came in, closing the door behind her, and stood beside him. It
+did not strike her as unusual or interesting, or as anything, in fact,
+but the most common-place and unexciting proceeding, that she should do
+the honours of the church to this middle-aged stranger.
+
+They stood side by side in the centre of the small nave with all the
+ugly, high, red-cushioned pews around them. Vera looked up and down the
+familiar place as though she and not he were seeing it for the first
+time; from the row of whitewashed pillars to the staring white windows;
+from the hatchment on the plastered walls to the disfiguring gallery
+along the west end.
+
+"It is very hideous," she said, almost apologetically, "especially the
+chancel; Mr. Daintree wants to have it restored, but I suppose that can't
+be done at all now."
+
+"Why can't it be done?"
+
+"Oh, because nothing can be done unless the chancel is pulled down; that
+belongs to the lay rector, and he has refused to restore it."
+
+"Sir John Kynaston is the lay rector."
+
+"Yes!" Vera looked a little startled; "do you know him?"
+
+The gentleman passed his hand over his chin.
+
+"Slightly," he answered, not looking at her.
+
+"It is a pity he cannot be brought to see how necessary it is, for he
+certainly ought to do it," continued Vera. "You see I cannot help being
+interested in it because Mr. Daintree is such a good man, and has worked
+so hard to get up money to begin the rest of the church. He had quite
+counted upon the chancel being done, and now he is so much disappointed;
+but, I beg your pardon, this cannot interest you."
+
+"But it interests me very much. Why does not somebody put it in this
+light to Sir John; he would not surely refuse?"
+
+"My brother-in-law, Mr. Daintree, I mean, did ask him last night, and he
+would not promise to do anything."
+
+The stranger suddenly left her side and walked up the church by himself
+into the chancel. He went straight up to the east end and made a minute
+examination apparently of the wall; after that, he came slowly down
+again, looking carefully into every corner and cranny from the
+whitewashed ceiling down to the damp and uneven stone paving at his feet;
+Vera thought him a very odd person, and wondered what he was thinking
+about.
+
+He came back to her and stood before her looking at her for a minute. And
+then he made this most remarkable speech:
+
+"If _you_ were to ask Sir John Kynaston this he would restore the
+chancel!" he said.
+
+For half-a-second Vera stared at him in blank amazement. Then she turned
+haughtily round, and flushed hotly with angry indignation.
+
+"There is nothing more to see in the church," she said, shortly, and
+walked straight out of it.
+
+The stranger had followed her; when they reached the churchyard he said
+to her, quite humbly,
+
+"I beg your pardon; Miss Nevill; how unlucky I am to have made you angry,
+to begin with."
+
+Vera looked at him in astonishment. How did he know her name; who was he?
+He was looking at her with such a penitent and distressed expression,
+that for the first time she noticed what a kind face it was. Then, before
+she could answer him, she saw her brother-in-law over the paling of the
+vicarage garden, coming towards them.
+
+The stranger saw him, too, and lifted his hat to her.
+
+"Good-bye," he said, rather hastily; "I did not mean to offend you; don't
+be angry about it;" and, before she could say a word, he turned quickly
+down the churchyard through the lych-gate into the road, and was gone.
+
+"Vera," said Eustace Daintree, coming leisurely up to her through the
+garden gate, "how on earth do you come to be talking to Sir John; has he
+been saying anything to you about the chancel?"
+
+"_Who_ was it? _who_ did you say?" cried Vera, aghast.
+
+"Why, Sir John Kynaston, to be sure. Did you not know it was he?"
+
+She was thunderstruck. "Are you quite sure?" she faltered.
+
+"Why, of course! I saw him only last night, you know. I wonder why he
+went off in such a hurry when he saw me?"
+
+Vera was walking silently down the garden towards the house by his side.
+The thought in her mind was, "If that was Sir John Kynaston, who then is
+the photograph I found in the writing-table drawer?"
+
+"What did he say to you, Vera? How came you to be talking to him?"
+pursued her brother-in-law.
+
+"I only let him into the church. I did not know who he was. I told him
+the chancel ought to be restored--by himself."
+
+Eustace Daintree looked dismayed.
+
+"How very unfortunate. It will, perhaps, make him still more decided to
+do nothing."
+
+Vera smiled a little to herself. "I hope not, Eustace," was all she said.
+But although she said no word of it to him, she knew at her heart that
+his chancel would be restored for him.
+
+Late that night Vera sat alone by her fireside, and thought over her
+morning's adventure; and once again she said to herself, with a little
+regretful sigh, "Whose, then, was the photograph?" But she put the
+thought away from her.
+
+After all, she said to herself, it made no difference. He was still Sir
+John Kynaston of Kynaston Hall, and just as well worth a woman's while to
+marry. She had made some mistake, that was all; and the real Sir John was
+not the least romantic or interesting to look at, but Kynaston Hall
+belonged to him all the same.
+
+They were not very exalted or very much to be admired, these dreams of
+Vera's girlhood. But neither were they quite so coarse and unlovely as
+would have been those of a purely mercenary woman. She was free from the
+vulgarity of desiring the man's money and his name from any desire to
+raise herself above her relations, or to feed her own vanity and ambition
+at their expense. It was only that, marriage being a necessity for her,
+to marry anything but a rich man would have been, with her tastes and the
+habits to which she had been brought up, the sheerest and rankest folly.
+She thought she could make a good wife to any man whose life she would
+like to share--that is to say, a life of ease and affluence. She knew she
+would make a very bad wife to a poor man. Therefore she determined upon
+so carving out her own fortunes that she should not make a failure of
+herself. It was worldly wisdom of the purest and simplest character.
+
+She was as much determined as ever upon winning Kynaston's owner if he
+was to be won. Only she wished, with a little sigh, that he had happened
+to be the man in the photograph. She hardly knew why she wished it--but
+the wish was there.
+
+She sat bending over her fire, with all her soft, dark hair loose about
+her face and flowing down her back, and her eyes fixed dreamily upon the
+flames. Her past life came back to her, her old life in the whirl and
+turmoil of pleasure which had suited her so well. She compared it, a
+little drearily, with the present; with the humdrum routine of the
+vicarage; with the parish talk about the old women and the schools; and
+the small tittle-tattle about the schoolmaster and the choir, going on
+around her all day; with old Mrs. Daintree's sharp tongue and her
+sister's meek rejoinders. She was very tired of it. It did not amuse her.
+She was not exactly discontented with her lot. Eustace and her sister
+were very kind to her, and she loved them dearly; but she did not live
+their life--she was with them, but not of them. As for herself, for her
+interests and her delights, they stagnated amongst them all. How long was
+it to last?
+
+And Kynaston, by contrast, appeared very fair, with its smooth lawns and
+its terrace walks, and its great desolate rooms, that she would so well
+understand how to fill with life and brightness; but Kynaston's master
+counted for very little to her. She knew the power of her own beauty so
+well. Experience had taught her that Vera Nevill had but to smile and to
+win; it had been so easy to her to be loved and wooed.
+
+"Only," she said to herself, as she stood up before her fire, and
+stretched up her arms so that her long hair fell back like a cloud around
+her, "only he is a different sort of man to what I had pictured him. It
+will, perhaps, not be such an easy matter to win a man like that."
+
+She went to bed and dreamt--not of Sir John Kynaston--but of the man
+whose pictured face once seen had haunted her ever since.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+"LITTLE PITCHERS."
+
+ Once at least in a man's life, if only for a brief space, he reverences
+ the saint in the woman he desires. He may love and pursue again and
+ again, but she who has power to hold him back, who can make him tremble
+ instead of woo, who can make him silent when he feels eloquent, and
+ restrained when most impassioned, has won from him what never again can
+ be given.
+
+
+It was an easier matter to win him than Vera thought.
+
+A week later Sir John Kynaston sat alone by his library fire, after
+breakfast, and owned to himself that he had fallen hopelessly and
+helplessly in love with Vera Nevill.
+
+This was all the more remarkable because Sir John was not a very young
+man, and that he was, moreover, not of a nature to do things rashly or
+impulsively.
+
+He was, on the contrary, of a slow and hesitating disposition. He was in
+the habit of weighing his words and his actions before he spoke or acted,
+his mind was tardy to take in new thoughts and new ideas, and he was
+cautious and almost sluggish in taking any steps in a strange and
+unaccustomed direction.
+
+Nevertheless, in this matter of Vera, he had succumbed to his fate with
+all the uncalculating blindness of a boy in his teens.
+
+Vera was like no other woman he had ever seen; she was as far removed
+above common young-ladyhood as Raphael's Madonnas are beyond and above
+Greuze's simpering maidens; there could be no other like her--she was
+a queen, a goddess among women.
+
+From the very first moment that he had caught sight of her on the terrace
+outside his house her absolute mastery over him had begun. Her rare
+beauty, her quiet smile, her slow, indolent movements, the very tones of
+her rich, low voice, all impressed him in a strange and wonderful manner.
+She seemed to him to be the incarnation of everything that was pure and
+elevated in womanhood. To have imagined that such a one as she could have
+thought of his wealth or his position would have been the rankest
+blasphemy in his eyes.
+
+He raised her up on a pedestal of his own creating, and then he fell down
+before her and adored her.
+
+John Kynaston had but little knowledge of women. Shy and retiring in
+manner--somewhat suspicious and distrustful also--he had kept out of
+their way through life. Once, in very early manhood, he had been
+deceived; he had become engaged to a girl whom he afterwards discovered
+to have accepted him only for his money and his name, whilst her heart
+really belonged to another and a poorer man. He had shaken himself free
+of her, with horror and disgust, and had sworn to himself that he would
+never be so betrayed again. Since then he had been suspicious--and not
+without just cause--of the young ladies who had smiled upon him, and of
+their mothers, who had pressed him with gracious invitations to their
+houses. He was a rich man, but he did not mean to be loved for his
+wealth; he said to himself that, sooner than be so, he would die
+unmarried and leave to Maurice the task of keeping up the old name and
+the old family.
+
+But he had seen Vera; and all at once all the old barriers of pride and
+reserve were broken down! Here was the one woman on earth who realized
+his dreams, the one woman whom he would wait and toil for, even as Jacob
+waited and toiled for Rachel!
+
+He had come down to Kynaston to hunt; but hitherto hunting had been very
+little in his thoughts. He had been down to the vicarage once or twice,
+he had met her once in the lanes, and he had longed for a glimpse of her
+daily; as yet he had done nothing else. He opened his letters on this
+particular morning slowly and abstractedly, tossing them into the fire,
+one after the other, as he read them, and not paying very much attention
+to their contents.
+
+There was one, however, from his brother, "I wish you would ask me down
+to Kynaston for a week or two, old fellow," wrote Maurice. "I know you
+would mount me--now I have got rid of all my horses to please you--and
+I should like a glimpse of the old country. Write and tell me if I shall
+come down on Monday."
+
+This letter Sir John did pay attention to. He rose hastily, as though not
+a moment was to be lost, and answered it:--
+
+"Dear Maurice,--I can't possibly have you down here yet. My own plans are
+very uncertain, and if you are going to take your leave after Christmas,
+you had far better not go away from your work now. If I am still here in
+January, I shall be delighted if you will come down, and will mount you
+as much as you like."
+
+He was happier when he had written and directed this letter.
+
+"I must be alone just now," he murmured. "I could not bear Maurice's
+chatter--it would jar upon me."
+
+Then he put on his hat and strolled out. He looked in at the stables one
+minute, and called the head groom to him.
+
+"Wright, did not Mr. Beavan say, when I bought that new bay mare of him,
+that she had carried a lady to hounds?"
+
+"Yes, Sir John; Miss Beavan rode her last season."
+
+"Ah, she is a good rider. Well, I wish you would put a side-saddle and a
+skirt on her, and exercise her this morning. I might want to--to lend her
+to a lady; but she must be perfectly quiet. You can take her out every
+day this week."
+
+Sir John went on his way, leaving the worthy Wright a prey to speculation
+as to who the mysterious lady might be for whom the bay mare was to be
+exercised.
+
+His master, meanwhile, bent his steps almost instinctively to the
+vicarage.
+
+Vera was undergoing a periodical persecution concerning Mr. Gisburne
+at the hands of old Mrs. Daintree. She was standing up by the table
+arranging some scarlet berries and some long trails of ivy which the
+children had brought to her in a vase. Tommy and Minnie stood by watching
+her intently; Mrs. Daintree sat at a little distance, her lap full of
+undarned socks, and rated her.
+
+"It is not as if you were a girl who could earn her living in case of
+need. There is not one single thing you can do."
+
+"Aunt Vera can make nosegays of berries boofully, grandma," interpolates
+Tommy, earnestly; "can't she, Minnie?"
+
+"Yes, she do," assented the smaller child, with emphasis.
+
+"I wasn't speaking to you, Tom; little boys should be--"
+
+"Heard and not seen," puts in Tommy, rapidly; "you always say that,
+grandma."
+
+Vera laughs softly. Mrs. Daintree goes on with her lecture.
+
+"Many girls in your position are very accomplished; can teach the piano,
+and history, and the elements of Latin; but it seems to me you have been
+brought up in idleness."
+
+"Idleness is not to be despised in its way," answers Vera, composedly.
+"Another bit of ivy, Tommy. What shall I do, Mrs. Daintree?" she
+continues, whilst her deft fingers wind the trailing greenery round and
+round the glass stem of the vase. "Shall I go down to the village school
+and sit at the feet of Mr. Dee? I have no doubt he could teach me a great
+many things I know nothing about."
+
+"That is nonsense; of course I don't mean that you can educate yourself
+to any purpose now; it is too late for that; but you need not, at all
+events, turn up your nose at the blessings that Providence sets before
+you; and I must say, that for a young woman deliberately to choose to
+remain a burden upon her friends, betokens an amount of servility and
+a lack of the spirit of independence which I should not have supposed
+possible even in you!"
+
+"What do you want me to do?" said Vera, without a sign of impatience.
+"Shall I walk over to Tripton this afternoon, and make a low curtsey to
+Mr. Gisburne, and say to him very politely, 'Here is an idle and
+penniless young woman who would be very pleased to stop here and marry
+you!' Would that be the way to do it, Mrs. Daintree?"
+
+"No, no, _no_!" imperatively from Tommy, who was listening with rapidly
+crimsoning cheeks; "you shall _not_ go and stop at Tripton, and tell Mr.
+Gisburne you will marry him!"
+
+Vera laughed. "No, Tommy, I don't think I will; not, that is to say, if
+you are a good boy. I think I can do something better than that with
+myself!" she added, softly, as if to herself. Mrs. Daintree caught the
+words.
+
+"And _what_ better, pray? What better chance are you ever likely to have?
+Let me tell you, bachelors who want penniless wives don't grow on the
+blackberry bushes down here! If you were not so selfish and so conceited,
+you would see where your duty to my son, who is supporting you, lay. You
+would see that to be married to an honest, upright man like Albert
+Gisburne is a chance that most girls would catch at only too thankfully."
+
+The old lady had raised her voice; she spoke loud and angrily; she was
+rapidly working herself into a passion. Tommy, accustomed to family rows,
+stood on the hearthrug, looking excitedly from his grandmother to his
+aunt. He was a precocious child; he did not quite understand, and yet he
+understood partly. He knew that his grandmother was scolding Vera, and
+telling her she was to go away and marry Mr. Gisburne. That Vera should
+go away! That, in itself, was sufficiently awful. Tommy adored Vera with
+all the intensity of his childish soul; that she should go away from him
+to Mr. Gisburne seemed to him the most terrible visitation that could
+possibly happen. His little heart swelled within him; the tears were very
+near his eyes.
+
+At this very minute the door softly opened, and Sir John Kynaston, whose
+ring had been unheard in the commotion, was ushered in.
+
+Tommy thought he saw a deliverer, specially sent in by Providence for the
+occasion. He made one spring at him and caught him round the legs, after
+the manner of enthusiastic small boys.
+
+"Please--please--don't let grandmamma send aunt Vera away to Tripton
+to marry Mr. Gisburne! He has red hair, and I hate him; and aunt Vera
+doesn't want to go, she wants to stop at home and do something better!"
+
+A moment of utter confusion on all sides; then Vera, crimson to the roots
+of her hair, stepped forward and held out her hand.
+
+"Little pitchers have long ears!" she said, laughing: "and Tommy is a
+very silly little boy."
+
+"No, but, aunt Vera, you said--you said," cried the child. What further
+revelations he might have made were fortunately not destined to be known.
+His aunt placed her hand unceremoniously over his small, eager mouth, and
+hustled both children in some haste out of the room.
+
+Meanwhile, Sir John, looking the picture of distress and embarrassment,
+had shaken hands with the old lady, and inquired if he could speak with
+her son.
+
+"Mr. Daintree is in his study; I will take you to him," she said, rising,
+and led him away out of the room. She looked at him sharply as she showed
+him into the study; and it did come across her mind, "I wonder what you
+come so often for." Still, no thought of Vera entered into her head. Sir
+John was the great man of the place, the squire, the potentate in the
+hollow of whose hand lay Sutton-in-the-Wold and all its inhabitants, and
+Vera was a nobody in the old lady's eyes,--a waif, whose presence was of
+no account at all. Sir John was no more likely to notice her than any of
+the village girls; except, indeed, that he would speak politely to her
+because she was Eustace's sister-in-law. Still, it did come across her
+mind to wonder what he came so often for.
+
+Five minutes later the two gentlemen were seen going across the vicarage
+garden towards the church.
+
+They remained there a very long time, more than half an hour. When they
+came back Marion had finished her housekeeping and was in the room busy
+cutting out unbleached calico into poor men's shirts, on the grand piano,
+an instrument which she maintained had been specially and originally
+called into existence for no other purpose. Mrs. Daintree still sat in
+her chimney corner. Vera was at the writing-table with her back to the
+room, writing a letter.
+
+The vicar came in with his face all aglow with excitement and delight;
+his wife looked up at him quickly, she saw that something unusual and of
+a pleasant character had happened.
+
+"My dear Marion, we must both thank our good friend, Sir John. I am happy
+to tell you that he has consented to restore the chancel."
+
+"Oh, Sir John, how can we ever thank you enough!" cried Marion, coming
+forward breathlessly and pressing his hands in eager gratitude. Sir John
+looked as if he didn't want to be thanked, but he glanced towards the
+writing-table. Vera's back was turned; she made no sign of having heard.
+
+"I am sure I had given up all hopes of it altogether," continued the
+vicar. "You gave such an unqualified refusal when I spoke to you about
+it before, I never dreamt that you would be induced to change your mind."
+
+"Some one--I mean--I thought it over--and--and it was presented to my
+notice--in another light," stammered Sir John, somewhat confusedly.
+
+"And it is most kind, most generous of you to allow it to be done in my
+own way, according to the plans I had wished to follow."
+
+"Oh, I am quite sure you will understand it much better than I am likely
+to do. Besides, I have no time to attend to it; it will suit me better to
+leave it entirely in your hands."
+
+"Would you not like to see the plans Mr. Woodley drew for us last year?"
+
+"Not now, I think, thank you; I must be going; another time, Mr.
+Daintree; I can't wait just now."
+
+He was standing irresolute in the middle of the room. He looked again
+wistfully at Vera's back. Was it possible that she was not going to give
+him one word, one look, when surely she must know by whose influence he
+had been induced to consent to rebuild the chancel!
+
+Almost in despair he moved to the door, and just as he reached it, when
+his hand was already on the handle, she looked up. Her eyes, all softened
+with pleasure and gratitude, nay, almost with tenderness, met his. He
+stopped suddenly short.
+
+"Miss Nevill, might I ask you to walk with me as far as the clerk's
+cottage? I--I forget which it is!"
+
+It was the lamest and most blundering excuse. Any six-year-old child in
+the village could have pointed out the cottage to him. Mrs. Daintree
+looked up in astonishment. Vera blushed rosy red; Eustace, man-like, saw
+nothing, and began eagerly,
+
+"I am walking that way myself; we can go together----" Suddenly his coat
+tails were violently pulled from behind. "Quite impossible, Eustace; I
+want you at home for the next hour," says Marion, quietly standing by his
+side, with a look of utter innocence upon her face. The vicar, almost
+throttled by the violence of the assault upon his garments, perceived
+that, in some mysterious manner, he had said something he ought not to
+have said. He deemed it wisest to subside into silence.
+
+Vera rose from the writing-table. "I will go and put my hat on," she
+said, quietly, and left the room.
+
+Three minutes later she and Sir John went out of the front door together.
+
+"Well, that is the oddest fellow I ever came across in my life," said
+Eustace, fairly puzzled as soon as he was gone. "It is my belief,"
+tapping his forehead significantly, "that he is a little touched _here_.
+I don't believe he quite knows what he is talking about. Why, the other
+night he would have nothing to say to the chancel, wouldn't even listen
+to me, cut me so short about it I really couldn't venture to pursue the
+subject; and here he comes, ten days later, all of his own accord, and
+proposes to do it exactly as it ought to be done, in the best and most
+expensive way--purbeck columns round the lancet windows, and all, Marion,
+just what I wanted; gives me absolute _carte blanche_ about it. I only
+hope he won't take a fresh fancy into his head and change his mind
+again."
+
+"Perhaps he found he would make himself unpopular if he did not do it,"
+suggested his mother.
+
+Marion held her tongue, and snipped away at her unbleached calico.
+
+"And then, again, about old Hoggs' cottage," pursued Mr. Daintree. "What
+on earth could make him forget where it was? He might as well forget the
+way to his own house. I really do think he must be a little gone in the
+upper storey, poor fellow! Marion, what have you to say about it?"
+
+"I have to say that if you stand chattering here all the morning, we
+shall never get anything done. I want to speak to you immediately,
+Eustace, in the other room."
+
+She hurried her husband out into the study, and carefully closed the door
+upon them.
+
+What then was the Rev. Eustace's amazement to behold his wife suddenly
+execute a series of capers round the room, which would not have disgraced
+a _coryphée_ at a Christmas pantomime, but were hardly in keeping with
+the demure and highly respectable bearing of the wife of the vicar of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold!
+
+Mr. Daintree began to think that everybody was going mad this morning.
+
+"My dear Marion, what on earth is the matter?"
+
+"Oh, you dear, stupid, blunder-headed old donkey!" exclaimed his wife,
+finishing her _pas seul_ in front of him, and hugging him vehemently as a
+finale to the entertainment. "Do you mean to say that you don't see it?"
+
+"See it? See what?" repeated the unfortunate clergyman, in mortal
+bewilderment, staring at her hard.
+
+"Oh, you dear, stupid old goose! why, it's as plain as daylight. Can't
+you guess?"
+
+Eustace shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Why, Sir John Kynaston has fallen in love with Vera!"
+
+"_Marion!_ impossible!" in an awe-struck whisper. "What can make you
+imagine such a thing?"
+
+"Why, everything--the chancel, of course. She must have spoken to him
+about it; it is to be done for her; did you not see him look at her? And
+then, asking her to go down the village with him; he knows where Hoggs'
+cottage is as well as you do, only he couldn't think of anything better."
+
+Eustace literally gasped with the magnitude of the revelation.
+
+"Great Heavens! and I offered to go with him instead of her."
+
+"Yes, you great blundering baby!"
+
+"Oh, my dear, are you sure--are you quite sure? Remember his position and
+Vera's."
+
+"Well, and isn't Vera good enough, and beautiful enough, for any
+position?" answered her sister, proudly.
+
+"Yes, yes; that is true; God bless her!" he said, fervently. "Marion,
+what a clever woman you are to find it out."
+
+"Of course I am clever, sir. But, Eustace, it is only beginning, you
+know; so we must just let things take their course, and not seem to
+notice anything. And, mind, not a word to your mother."
+
+Meanwhile Vera and Sir John Kynaston were walking down the village street
+together. The man awkward and ill at ease, the woman calm and composed,
+and thoroughly mistress of the occasion.
+
+"It is very good of you about the chancel," said Vera, softly, breaking
+the embarrassment of the silence between them.
+
+"You _knew_ I should do it," he said, looking at her.
+
+She smiled. "I thought perhaps you would."
+
+"You know _why_ I am going to do it--for whose sake, do you not?" he
+pursued, still keeping his eyes upon her downcast face.
+
+"Because it is the right thing to do, I hope; and for the sake of doing
+good," she answered, sedately; and Sir John felt immediately reproved and
+rebuked, as though by the voice of an angelic being.
+
+"Tell me," he said, presently, "is it true that they want you to
+marry--that parson--Gisburne, of Tripton? Forgive me for asking."
+
+Vera coloured a little and laughed.
+
+"What dreadful things little boys are!" was all she said.
+
+"Nay, but I want to know. Are you--are you _engaged_ to him?" with a
+sudden painful eagerness of manner.
+
+"Most decidedly I am not," she answered, earnestly.
+
+Sir John breathed again.
+
+"I don't know what you will think of me; you will, perhaps, say I am very
+impertinent. I know I have no right to question you."
+
+"I only think you are very kind to take an interest in me," she answered,
+gently, looking at him with that wonderful look in her shadowy eyes that
+came into them unconsciously when she felt her softest and her best.
+
+They had passed through the village by this time into the quiet lane
+beyond; needless to say that no thought of Hoggs, the clerk, or his
+cottage, had come into either of their heads by the way.
+
+Sir John stopped short, and Vera of necessity stopped too.
+
+"I thought--it seemed to me by what I overheard," he said, hesitatingly,
+"that they were tormenting you--persecuting you, perhaps--into a marriage
+you do not wish for."
+
+"They have wished me to marry Mr. Gisburne," Vera admitted, in a low
+voice, rustling the fallen brown leaves with her foot, her eyes fixed on
+the ground.
+
+"But you won't let them over-persuade you; you won't be induced to listen
+to them, will you? Promise me you won't?" he asked, anxiously.
+
+Vera looked up frankly into his face and smiled.
+
+"I give you my word of honour I will not marry Mr. Gisburne," she
+answered; and then she added, laughingly, "You had no business to make me
+betray that poor man's secrets."
+
+And then Sir John laughed too, and, changing the subject, asked her if
+she would like to ride a little bay mare he had that he thought would
+carry her. Vera said she would think of it, with the air of a young queen
+accepting a favour from a humble subject; and Sir John thanked her as
+heartily as though she had promised him some great thing.
+
+"Now, suppose we go and find Hoggs' cottage," she said, smiling. And they
+turned back towards the village.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+A SOIRÉE AT WALPOLE LODGE.
+
+ When the lute is broken,
+ Sweet notes are remembered not;
+ When the lips have spoken,
+ Loved accents are soon forgot.
+ As music and splendour
+ Survive not the lamp and the lute,
+ The heart's echoes render
+ No song when the spirit is mute.
+
+ Shelley.
+
+
+About three miles from Hyde Park Corner, somewhere among the cross-roads
+between Mortlake and Kew, there stands a rambling, old-fashioned house,
+within about four acres of garden, surrounded by a very high, red-brick
+wall. It is one of those houses of which there used to be scores within
+the immediate neighbourhood of London--of which there still are dozens,
+although, alas! they are yearly disappearing to make room for gay rows of
+pert, upstart villas, whose tawdry flashiness ill replaces the sedate
+respectability of their last-century predecessors. But, uncoveted by the
+contractor's lawless eye, untouched by the builder's desecrating hand,
+Walpole Lodge stands on, as it did a hundred years ago, hidden behind
+the shelter of its venerable walls, and half smothered under masses of
+wisteria and Virginia creeper. On the wall, in summer time, grow
+countless soft green mosses, and brown, waving grasses. Thick masses of
+yellow stonecrop and tufts of snapdragon crown its summit, whilst the
+topmost branches of the long row of lime-trees within come nodding
+sweet-scented greetings to the passers-by along the dusty high road
+below.
+
+But in the winter the wall is flowerless and the branches of the
+lime-trees are bare, and within, in the garden, there are only the
+holly-trees and the yew-hedge of the shrubbery walks, and the empty brown
+flower-beds set in the faded grass. But winter and summer alike, old Lady
+Kynaston holds her weekly receptions, and thither flock all the wit, and
+the talent, and the fashion of London. In the summer they are garden
+parties, in the winter they become evening receptions. How she manages it
+no one can quite tell; but so it is, that her rooms are always crowded,
+that no one is ever bored at her house, that people are always keen to
+come to her, and that there are hundreds who would think it an effort to
+go to other people's parties across the street who think it no trouble at
+all to drive nearly to Richmond, to hers. She has the rare talent of
+making society a charm in itself. No one who is not clever, or beautiful,
+or distinguished in some way above his or her fellows ever gains a
+footing in her drawing-rooms. Every one of any note whatever is sure to
+be found there. There are savants and diplomatists, poets and painters,
+foreign ambassadors, and men of science. The fashionable beauty is sure
+to be met there side by side with the latest type of strong-minded woman;
+the German composer, with the wild hair, whose music is to regenerate
+the future, may be seen chatting to a cabinet minister; the most rising
+barrister of the day is lingering by the side of a prima-donna, or
+discoursing to an Eastern traveller. Old Lady Kynaston herself has
+charming manners, and possesses the rare tact of making every one feel
+at home and happy in her house.
+
+It was not done in a day--this gathering about her of so brilliant and
+delightful a society. She had lived many years at Walpole Lodge, ever
+since her widowhood, and was now quite an old lady. In her early life she
+had written several charming books--chiefly biographies of distinguished
+men whom she had known, and even now she occasionally put pen again to
+paper, and sent some delightful social essay or some pleasantly written
+critique to one or other of the Reviews of the day.
+
+Her married life had been neither very long nor very happy. She had never
+learnt to love her husband's country home. At his death she had turned
+her back thankfully upon Kynaston, and had never seen it again. Of her
+two sons, she stood in some awe of the elder, whose cold and unresponsive
+character resembled her dead husband's, whilst she adored Maurice, who
+was warm-hearted and affectionate in manner, like herself. There were ten
+years between them, for she had been married twelve years; and at her
+secret heart Lady Kynaston hoped and believed that John would remain
+unmarried, so that the estates and the money might in time become
+Maurice's.
+
+It is the second Thursday in December, and Lady Kynaston is "at home" to
+the world. Her drawing-rooms--there are three of them, not large, but
+low, comfortable rooms, opening one out of the other--are filled, as
+usual, with a mixed and brilliant crowd.
+
+Across the square hall is the dining-room, where a cold supper, not very
+sumptuous or very _recherché_, but still sufficient of its kind for the
+occasion, is laid out; and beyond that is Lady Kynaston's boudoir, where
+there is a piano, and which is used on these occasions as a music-room,
+so that those who are musical may retire there, and neither interfere,
+nor be interfered with, by the rest of the company. Some one is singing
+in the music-room now--singing well, you may be sure, or he would not be
+at Walpole Lodge--but the strains of the song can hardly be heard at all
+across dining-room and hall, in the larger of the three rooms, where most
+of the guests are congregated.
+
+Lady Kynaston, a small, slight woman in soft gray satin and old lace,
+moves about graciously and gracefully still, despite her seventy years,
+among her guests--stopping now at one group, now at another, talking
+politics to one, science to a second, whispering a few discreet words
+about the latest scandal to this great lady, murmuring words of approval
+upon her clever book or her charming poem to another. Her smiles are
+equally dispensed, no one is passed over, and she has the rare talent of
+making every single individual in the crowded room feel himself to be the
+one particular person whom Lady Kynaston is especially rejoiced to see.
+She has tact, and she has sympathy--two invaluable gifts in a woman.
+
+Conspicuous among the crowd of well-dressed and handsome women is Helen
+Romer. She sits on an ottoman at the further end of the room, where she
+holds a little court of her own, dispensing her smiles and pleasant words
+among the little knot of men who linger admiringly by her side.
+
+She is in black, with masses of gold embroidery about her, and she
+carries a large black and gold feather fan in her hands, which she
+moves rapidly, almost restlessly, up and down; her eyes wander often
+to the doorway, and every now and then she raises her hand with a short,
+impatient action to her blonde head, as though she were half weary of
+the talk about her.
+
+Presently, Lady Kynaston, moving slowly among her guests, comes near her,
+and, leaning for a moment on the back of the ottoman, presses her hand as
+she passes.
+
+Mrs. Romer is a favourite of hers; she is pretty, and she is piquant in
+manner and conversation; two very good things, which she thinks highly of
+in any young woman. Besides that, she knows that Helen loves her younger
+son; and, although she hardly understands how things are between them,
+nor how far Maurice himself is implicated, she believes that Helen will
+eventually inherit her grandfather's money, and, liking her personally,
+she has seen no harm in encouraging her too plainly displayed affection.
+Moreover, the love they both bear to him has been a link between them.
+They talk of him together almost as a mother and a daughter might do;
+they have the same anxieties over his health, the same vexations over
+his debts, the same rejoicings when his brother comes forward with his
+much-needed help. Lady Kynaston does not want her darling to marry yet,
+but when the time shall come for him to take unto himself a wife, she
+will raise no objection to pretty Helen Romer, should he bring her to
+her, as a daughter-in-law.
+
+As the old lady stoops over her, Helen's upturned wistful eyes say as
+plainly as words can say it--
+
+"Is he coming to-night?"
+
+"Maurice will be here presently, I hope," says his mother, answering the
+look in her eyes; "he was to come up by the six o'clock train; he will
+dine at his club and come on here later." Helen's face became radiant,
+and Lady Kynaston passed on.
+
+Maurice Kynaston's regiment was quartered at Northampton; he came up to
+town often for the day or for the night, as he could get leave; but his
+movements were never quite to be depended upon.
+
+Half-an-hour or so more of feverish impatience. Helen watches the gay
+crowd about her with a feeling of sick weariness. Two members of
+Parliament are talking of Russian aggression and Turkish misrule close to
+her; they turn to her presently and include her in the conversation; Mrs.
+Romer gives her opinion shrewdly and sensibly. An elderly duchess is
+describing some episode of Royalty's last ball; there is a general laugh,
+in which Helen joins heartily; a young attaché bends over her and
+whispers some admiring little speech in her ear, and she blushes and
+smiles just as if she liked it above all things; while all the time her
+eyes hardly stray for one second from the open doorway through which
+Maurice will come, and her heart is saying to itself, over and over
+again,
+
+"Will he come, will he come?"
+
+He comes at last. Long before the servant, who opens the door to him, has
+taken his coat and hat from him, Helen catches sight of his handsome head
+and his broad shoulders through an opening in the crowd. In another
+minute he is in the room standing irresolute in the doorway, looking
+round as if to see who is and who is not there to-night.
+
+He is, after all, only a very ordinary type of a good-looking soldierly
+young Englishman, just such a one as may be seen any day in our parks or
+our drawing-rooms. He has clearly-cut and rather _prononcé_ features, a
+strong-built, well made figure, a long moustache, close-shaven cheeks,
+and eyes that are rather deep-set, and are, when you are near enough to
+see them well, of a deep blue-gray. In all that Maurice Kynaston is in no
+way different from scores of other good-looking young men whom we may
+have met. But there is just something that makes his face a remarkable
+one: it is a strong-looking face--a face that looks as if he had a will
+of his own and knew how to stick to it; a face that looks, too, as if he
+could do and dare much for truth and honour's sake. It is almost stern
+when he is silent; it can soften into the tenderness of a woman when he
+speaks.
+
+Look at him now as he catches sight of his mother, and steps forward for
+a minute to press her loving hands. All the hardness and all the strength
+are gone out of his face now; he only looks down at her with eyes full of
+love and gentleness--for life as yet holds nothing dearer or better for
+him than that little white-haired old woman. Only for a minute, and then
+he leaves go of her hands, and passes on down the room, speaking to the
+guests whom he knows.
+
+"He does not see me," says Helen, bitterly, to herself; "he will go on
+into the next room, and never know that I am here."
+
+But he had seen her perfectly. Next to the woman he most wishes to see in
+a room, the one whom a man first catches sight of is the woman he would
+sooner were not there. He had seen Helen the very instant he came in, but
+he had noticed thankfully that some one was talking to her, and he said
+to himself that there was no occasion for him to hurry to her side; it
+was not as if they were openly engaged; there could be no necessity for
+him to rush into slavery at once; he would speak to her, of course,
+by-and-by; and whenever he came to her he well knew that he would be
+equally welcomed: he was so sure of her. Nothing on earth or under Heaven
+is so fatal to a man's love as that. There was no longer any uncertainty;
+there was none of the keenness of pursuit dear to the old hunting
+instinct inherent in man; there was not even the charm of variety in her
+moods. She was always the same to him; always she pouted a little at
+first, and looked ill-tempered, and reproached him; and always she came
+round again at his very first kind word, and poured out her heart in a
+torrent of worship at his feet. Maurice knew it all by heart, the sulks
+and the cross words, and then the passionate denials, and the wild
+protestations of her undying love. He was sorry for her, too, in his way;
+he was too tender-hearted, too chivalrous, to be anything but kind to
+her; but though he was sorry, he could not love her; and, oh! how
+insufferably weary of her he was!
+
+Presently he did come up to her, and took the seat by her side just
+vacated by the attaché. The little serio-comedy instantly repeated
+itself.
+
+A little pout and a little toss of the head.
+
+"You have been as long coming to speak to me as you possibly could be."
+
+"Do you think it would look well if I had come rushing up to you the
+instant I came in?"
+
+"You need not, at all events, have stood talking for ten minutes to that
+great black-eyed Lady Anderleigh. Of course, if you like her better than
+me, you can go back to her."
+
+"Of course I can, if I choose, you silly little woman; but seeing that
+I am by you, and not by her, I suppose it is a proof that I prefer your
+society, is it not?"
+
+Very polite, but not strictly true, Captain Maurice! At his heart he
+preferred talking to Lady Anderleigh, or to any other woman in the room.
+The admission, however, was quite enough for Helen.
+
+"Dear Maurice," she whispered, "forgive me; I am a jealous, bad-tempered
+wretch, but," lower still, "it is only because I love you so much."
+
+And had there been no one in the room, Maurice knew perfectly that at
+this juncture Mrs. Romer would have cast her arms around his neck--as
+usual.
+
+To his unspeakable relief, a man--a clever lawyer, whose attention was a
+flattering thing to any woman--came up to Helen at this moment, and took
+a vacant chair beside her. Maurice thankfully slipped away, leaving his
+inamorata in a state of rage and disgust with that talented and elderly
+lawyer, such as no words can describe.
+
+Captain Kynaston took the favourable opportunity of escaping across the
+hall, where he spent the remainder of the evening, dividing his attention
+between the music and supper rooms, and Helen saw him no more that night.
+
+She saw, however, some one she had not reckoned upon seeing. Glancing
+carelessly across to the end of the room, she perceived, talking to Lady
+Kynaston, a little French gentleman, with a smooth black head, a neat,
+pointed, little black beard, and the red ribbon of the Légion d'Honneur
+in his button-hole.
+
+What there was in the sight of so harmless and inoffensive a personage to
+upset her it may be difficult to say; but the fact is that, when Mrs.
+Romer perceived this polite little Frenchman talking to her hostess, she
+turned suddenly so sick and white, that a lady sitting near her asked her
+if she was going to faint.
+
+"I feel it a little hot," she murmured; "I think I will go into the next
+room." She rose and attempted to escape--whether from the heat or the
+observation of the little Frenchman was best known to herself.
+
+Her maneuver, however, was not destined to succeed. Before she could
+work her way half-way through the crush to the door, the man whom she was
+bent upon avoiding turned round and saw her. A look of glad recognition
+flashed into his face, and he instantly left Lady Kynaston's side, and
+came across the room to speak to her.
+
+"This is an unlooked-for pleasure, madame."
+
+"I certainly never expected to meet you here, Monsieur D'Arblet,"
+faltered Helen, turning red and white alternately.
+
+"Will you not come and have a little conversation with me?"
+
+"I was just going away."
+
+"So soon! Oh, bien! then I will take you to your carriage." He held out
+his arm, and Helen was perforce obliged to take it.
+
+There was a little delay in the hall, whilst Helen waited for her, or
+rather for her grandfather's carriage, during which she stood with her
+hand upon her unwelcome friend's arm. Whilst they were waiting he
+whispered something eagerly in her ear.
+
+"No, no; it is impossible!" reiterated Helen, with much apparent
+distress.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet whispered something more.
+
+"Very well, if you insist upon it!" she said, faintly, and then got into
+her carriage and was driven away.
+
+Before, however, she had left Walpole Lodge five minutes, she called out
+to the servants to stop the carriage. The footman descended from the box
+and came round to the window.
+
+They had drawn up by the side of a long wall quite beyond the crowd of
+carriages that was waiting at Lady Kynaston's house.
+
+"I want to wait here a few minutes, for--for a gentleman I am going to
+drive back to town," she said to the servant, confusedly. She was ashamed
+to give such an order to him.
+
+She was frightened too, and trembled with nervousness lest any one should
+see her waiting here.
+
+It was a cold, damp night, and Helen shivered, and drew her fur cloak
+closer about her in the darkness. Presently there came footsteps along
+the pathway, and a man came through the fog up to the door. It was opened
+for him in silence, and he got in, and the carriage drove off again.
+
+Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet had a mean, cunning-looking countenance;
+strictly speaking, indeed, he was rather handsome, his features being
+decidedly well-shaped, but the evil and vindictive expression of his
+face made it an unpleasant one to look upon. As he took his seat in the
+brougham by Helen's side she shrank instinctively away from him.
+
+"So, ma mie!" he said, peering down into her face with odious
+familiarity, "here I find you again after all this time, beautiful as
+ever! It is charming to be with you again, once more."
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, pray understand that nothing but absolute necessity
+would have induced me to drive you home to-night," said Helen, who was
+trembling violently.
+
+"You are not polite, ma belle--there is a charming _franchise_ about you
+Englishwomen, however, which gives a piquancy to your conversation."
+
+"You know very well why it is that I am obliged to speak to you alone,"
+she interrupted, colouring hotly under his bold looks of admiration.
+
+"_Le souvenir du beau passé!_" murmured the Frenchman, laughing softly.
+"Is that it, ma belle Hélène?"
+
+"Monsieur," she cried, almost in tears, "pray listen to me; for pity's
+sake tell me what you have done with my letters--have you destroyed
+them?"
+
+"Destroyed them! What, those dear letters that are so precious to my
+heart? Ah, madame, could you believe it of me?"
+
+"You have kept them?" she murmured, faintly.
+
+"Mais si, certainement, that I have kept them, every one--every single
+one of them," he repeated, looking at her meaningly, with a cold glitter
+in his black eyes.
+
+"Not that--_that_ one?" pleaded Helen, piteously.
+
+"Yes--that one too--that charming and delightful letter in which you so
+generously offered to throw yourself upon my protection--do you remember
+it?"
+
+"Alas, only too well!" she murmured, hiding her face in her hands.
+
+"Ah!" he continued, with a sort of relish in torturing her, which
+resembled the feline cruelty of a wild beast playing with its prey. "Ah!
+it was a delightful letter, that; what a pity it was that I was out of
+Paris that night, and never received it till, alas! it was too late to
+rush to your side. You remember how it was, do you not? Your husband was
+lying ill at your hotel; you were very tired of him--ce pauvre mari!
+Well, you had been tired of him for some time, had you not? And he was
+not what you ladies call 'nice;' he did drink, and he did swear, and I
+had been often to see you when he was out, and had taken you to the
+theatre and the bal d'Opéra--do you remember?"
+
+"Ah, for Heaven's sake spare me these horrible reminiscences!" cried
+Helen, despairingly.
+
+He went on pitilessly, as though he had not heard her, "And you were good
+enough to write me several letters--there were one, two, three, four of
+them," counting them off upon his fingers; "and then came the fifth--that
+one you wrote when he was ill. Was it not a sad pity that I had gone out
+of Paris for the day, and never received it till you and your husband had
+left for England? But think you that I will part with it ever? It is my
+consolation, my trésor!"
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, if you have one spark of honour or of gentleman-like
+feeling, you will give me those mad, foolish letters again. I entreat you
+to do so. You know that I was beside myself when I wrote them, I was so
+unhappy--do you not see that they compromise me fatally; that it is my
+good name, my reputation, which are at stake?" In her agony she had half
+sunk at his feet on the floor of the carriage, clasping her hands
+entreatingly together.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet raised her with _empressement_.
+
+"Ah, madame, do not thus humiliate yourself at my feet. Why should you be
+afraid? Are not your good name and your reputation safe in my hands?"
+
+Helen burst into bitter tears.
+
+"How cruel, how wicked you are!" she cried; "no Englishman would treat a
+lady in this way."
+
+"Your Englishmen are fools, ma chère--and I--I am French!" he replied,
+shrugging his shoulders expressively.
+
+"But what object, what possible cause can you have for keeping those
+wretched letters?"
+
+He bent his face down close to hers.
+
+"Shall I tell you, belle Hélène? It is this: You are beautiful and you
+have talent; I like you. Some day, perhaps, when the grandpapa dies, you
+will have money--then Lucien D'Arblet will come to you, madame, with
+that precious little packet in his hands, and he will say, 'You will
+marry me, ma chère, or I will make public these letters.' Do you see?
+Till then, amusez vous, ma belle; enjoy your life and your liberty as
+much as you desire; I will not object to anything you do. Only you will
+not venture to marry--because I have these letters?"
+
+"You would prevent my marrying?" said Helen, faintly.
+
+"Mais, certainement that I should. Do you suppose any man would care to
+be your husband after he had read that last letter--the fifth, you know?"
+
+No answer, save the choking sobs of his companion.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet waited a few minutes, watching her; then, as she did
+not raise her head from the cushions of the carriage, where she had
+buried it, the Frenchman pulled the check-string of the carriage.
+
+"Now," he said, "I will wish you good-night, for we are close to your
+house. We have had our little talk, have we not?"
+
+The brougham, stopped, and the footman opened the door.
+
+"Good-night, madame, and many thanks for your kindness," said D'Arblet,
+raising his hat politely.
+
+In another minute he was gone, and Helen, hoping that the darkness had
+concealed the traces of her agitation from the servant's prying eyes, was
+driven on, more dead than alive, to her grandfather's house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+EVENING REVERIES.
+
+ For nothing on earth is sadder
+ Than the dream that cheated the grasp,
+ The flower that turned to the adder,
+ The fruit that changed to the asp,
+ When the dayspring in darkness closes,
+ As the sunset fades from the hills,
+ With the fragrance of perished roses,
+ And the music of parched-up rills.
+
+ A. L. Gordon.
+
+
+It had been the darkest chapter of her life, that fatal month in Paris,
+when she had foolishly and recklessly placed herself in the power of a
+man so unscrupulous and so devoid of principle as Lucien D'Arblet.
+
+It had begun in all innocence--on her part, at least. She had been very
+miserable; she had discovered to the full how wild a mistake her marriage
+had been. She had felt herself to be fatally separated from Maurice, the
+man she loved, for ever; and Monsieur D'Arblet had been kind to her; he
+had pitied her for being tied to a husband who drank and who gambled, and
+Helen had allowed herself to be pitied. D'Arblet had charming manners,
+and an accurate knowledge of the weakness of the fair sex; he knew when
+to flatter and when to cajole her, when to be tenderly sympathetic to her
+sorrows, and when to divert her thoughts to brighter and pleasanter
+topics than her own miseries. He succeeded in fascinating her completely.
+Whilst her husband was occupied with his own disreputable friends, Helen,
+sooner than remain alone in their hotel night after night, was persuaded
+to accept Monsieur D'Arblet's escort to theatres and operas, and other
+public places, where her constant presence with him very soon compromised
+her amongst the few friends who knew her in Paris.
+
+Then came scenes with her husband; frantic letters of misery to this
+French vicomte, whom she imagined to be so devotedly attached to her,
+and, finally, one ever-to-be-repented letter, in which she offered to
+leave her husband for ever and to come to him.
+
+True, this letter did not reach its destination till too late, and Helen
+was mercifully saved from the fate which, in her wicked despair, she was
+ready to rush upon. Twenty-four hours after her return to England she saw
+the horrible abyss upon which she had stood, and thanked God from the
+bottom of her heart that she had been rescued, in spite of herself, from
+so dreadful a deed. But the letter had been written, and was in Lucien
+D'Arblet's possession. Later on she learnt, by a chance conversation, the
+true character of the man, and shuddered when she remembered how nearly
+she had wrecked her whole life for him. And when her husband's death had
+placed her once more in the security and affluence of her grandfather's
+house, with fresh hopes and fresh chances before her, she had but one
+wish with regard to that Parisian episode of her life,--to forget it as
+though it had never been.
+
+She hoped, and, as time went on, she felt sure, that she would never see
+Monsieur D'Arblet again. New hopes and new excitements occupied her
+thoughts. The man to whom in her youth she had given her heart once more
+came across her life; she was thrown very much into his society; she
+learnt to love him more devotedly than ever, and when at last she had
+succeeded in establishing the sort of engagement which existed between
+them, she had assured him, and also assured herself, that no other man
+had ever, for one instant, filled her fancy. That stormy chapter of her
+married life was forgotten; she resolutely wiped it out of her memory, as
+if it had never existed.
+
+And now, after all this time--it was five years ago--she had met him
+again--this Frenchman, who had once compromised her name, and who now had
+possession of her letters.
+
+There was a cruel irony of fate in the fact that she should be destined
+to meet him again at Lady Kynaston's, the very house of all others where
+she would least have wished to see him.
+
+There was, however, had she thought of it, nothing at all extraordinary
+in her having done so. No house in all London society was so open to
+foreigners as Walpole Lodge, and Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet was no
+unknown upstart; he bore a good old name; he was clever, had taken an
+active part in diplomatic life, and was a very well-known individual in
+Parisian society. He had been brought to Lady Kynaston's by a member of
+the French Embassy, who was a frequenter of her soirées.
+
+Neither, however, was meeting with Mrs. Romer entirely accidental on
+Monsieur D'Arblet's part. He had never forgotten the pretty Englishwoman
+who had so foolishly and recklessly placed herself in his power.
+
+It is true he had lost sight of her, and other intrigues and other
+pursuits had filled his leisure hours; but when he came to England he had
+thought of her again, and had made a few careless inquiries after her. It
+was not difficult to identify her; the Mrs. Romer who was now a widow,
+who lived with her rich grandfather, who was very old, who would probably
+soon die and leave her all his wealth, was evidently the same Mrs. Romer
+whom he had known. The friend who gave him the information spoke of her
+as lovely and _spirituelle_, and as a woman who would be worth marrying
+some day. "She is often at Lady Kynaston's receptions," he had added.
+
+"Mon cher, take me to your Lady Kynaston's soirées," had been Lucien
+D'Arblet's lazy rejoinder as they finished their evening smoke together.
+"I would like to meet my friend, la belle veuve, again, and I will see if
+she has forgotten me."
+
+Bitter, very bitter, were Mrs. Romer's remorseful meditations that night
+when she reached her grandfather's house at Prince's Gate. Every detail
+of her acquaintance with Lucien D'Arblet came back to her with a horrible
+and painful distinctness. Over and over again she cursed her own folly,
+and bewailed the hardness of the fate which placed her once more in the
+hands of this man.
+
+Would he indeed keep his cruel threats to her? Would he bring forward
+those letters to spoil her life once more--to prevent her from marrying
+Maurice should she ever have the chance of doing so?
+
+Stooping alone over her fire, with all the brightness, and all the
+freshness gone out of her, with an old and almost haggard look in the
+face that was so lately beaming with smiles and dimples, Helen Romer
+asked herself shudderingly these bitter questions over and over again.
+
+Had she been sure of Maurice's love, she would have been almost tempted
+to have confessed her fault, and to have thrown herself upon his mercy;
+but she knew that he did not love her well enough to forgive her. Too
+well she knew with what disgust and contempt Maurice would be likely to
+regard her past conduct; such a confession would, she knew, only induce
+him to shake himself clear of her for ever. Indeed, had he loved her, it
+is doubtful whether Maurice would have been able to condone so grave a
+fault in the past history of a woman; his own standard of honour stood
+too high to allow him to pass over lightly any disgraceful or
+dishonourable conduct in those with whom he had to do. But, loving her
+not, she would have been utterly without excuse in his eyes.
+
+She knew it well enough. No, her only chance was in silence, and in vague
+hopes that time might rescue her out of her difficulties.
+
+Meanwhile, whilst Helen Romer sat up late into the early morning,
+thinking bitterly over her past sins and her future dangers, Maurice
+Kynaston and his mother also kept watch together at Walpole Lodge after
+all the guests had gone away, and the old house was left alone again to
+the mother and son.
+
+"Something troubles you, little mother," said Maurice, as he stretched
+himself upon the rug by her bedroom fire, and laid his head down
+caressingly upon her knees.
+
+Lady Kynaston passed her hand fondly over the short dark hair. "How well
+you know my face, Maurice! Yes, something has worried me all day--it is a
+letter from your brother."
+
+Maurice looked up laughingly. "What, is old John in trouble? That would
+be something new. Has he taken a leaf out of my book, mother, and dropped
+his money at Newmarket, too?"
+
+"No, you naughty boy? John has got more sense. No!" with a sigh--"I wish
+it were only money; I fear it is a worse trouble than that."
+
+"My dear mother, you alarm me," cried Maurice, looking up in mock dismay;
+"why, whatever has he been and gone and done?"
+
+"Oh, Maurice, it is nothing to laugh at--it is some woman--a girl he has
+met down at Kynaston; some nobody--a clergyman's daughter, or sister, or
+something--whom he says he is going to marry!" Lady Kynaston looked the
+picture of distress and dismay.
+
+Maurice laughed softly. "Well, well, mother; there is nothing very
+dreadful after all--I am sure I wish him joy."
+
+"My boy," she said, below her breath, "I had so hoped, so trusted he
+would never marry--it seemed so unlikely--he seemed so completely happy
+in his bachelor's life; and I had hoped that you--that you----"
+
+"Yes, yes, mother dear, I know," he said, quickly, and twisted himself
+round till he got her hand between his, kissing it as he spoke; "but I--I
+never thought of that--dear old John, he has been the best of brothers to
+me; and, mother dear, I know it is all your love to me; but you and I,
+dear, we will not grudge him his happiness, will we?"
+
+He knew so well her weakness--how that she had loved him at the expense
+of the other son, who was not so dear to her; he loved her for it, and
+yet he did not at his heart think it right.
+
+Lady Kynaston wiped a few tears away. "You are always right, my boy,
+always, and I am a foolish old woman. But oh, Maurice, that is only half
+the trouble! Who is this woman whom he has chosen? Some country girl,
+ignorant of the ways of the world, unformed and awkward--not fitted to be
+his wife!"
+
+"Does he say so?" laughed Maurice.
+
+"No, no, of course not. Stay, where is his letter? Oh, there, on the
+dressing-table; give it me, my dear. No, this is what he says: 'Miss
+Nevill seems to me in every way to fulfil my ideal of a good and perfect
+woman, and, if she will consent to marry me, I intend to make her my
+wife.'"
+
+"Well, a good and perfect woman is a _rara avis_, at all events mother."
+
+"Oh, dear! but all men say that of a girl when they are in love--it
+amounts to very little."
+
+"You see, he has evidently not proposed to her yet; perhaps she will
+refuse him."
+
+"Refuse Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall! A poor clergyman's daughter!
+My dear Maurice, I gave you credit for more knowledge of the world.
+Besides, John is a fine-looking man. Oh, no, she is not in the least
+likely to refuse him."
+
+"Then all we have got to do is to make the best of her," said Maurice,
+composedly.
+
+"That is easily said for you, who need see very little of her. But
+John's wife is a person who will be of great importance to my
+happiness. Dear me! and to think he might have had Lady Mary Hendrie
+for the asking: a charming creature, well born, highly educated and
+accomplished--everything that a man could wish for. And there were the De
+Vallery girls--either of them would have married him, and been a suitable
+wife for him; and he must needs go and throw himself away on a little
+country chit, who could have been equally happy, and much more suitably
+mated, with her father's curate. Maurice, my dear," with a sudden change
+of voice, "I wish you would go down and cut him out; if you made love to
+her ever so little you could turn her head, you know."
+
+Maurice burst out laughing. "Oh, you wicked, immoral little mother! Did I
+ever hear such an iniquitous proposition! Do you want _me_ to marry her?"
+
+"No, no!" laughed his mother; "but you might make her think you meant to,
+and then, perhaps, she would refuse John."
+
+"I have not Kynaston Hall at my back, remember, after which you have
+given her the credit of angling. Besides, mother dear, to speak plainly,
+I honestly do not think my taste in women is in the least likely to be
+the same as John's. No, I think I will keep out of the way whilst the
+love-making is going on. I will go down and have a look at the young
+woman by-and-by when it is all settled, and let you know what I think of
+her. I dare say a good, honest country lass will suit John far better
+than a beautiful woman of the world, who would be sure to be miserable
+with him. Don't fret, little mother; make the best of her if you can."
+
+He rose and stretched himself up to his full height before the fire. Lady
+Kynaston looked up at him admiringly. Oh, she thought, if the money and
+the name could only have been his! How well he would have made use of it;
+how proud she would have been of him--her handsome boy, whom all men
+liked, and all women would gladly love.
+
+"A good son makes a good husband," she said aloud, following her own
+thoughts.
+
+"And John has been a good son, mother," said Maurice, cordially.
+
+"Yes, yes, in his way, perhaps; but I was thinking of you, my boy, not
+of him, and how lucky will be the woman who is your wife, Maurice--will
+it be----"
+
+Maurice stooped quickly, and laid his hand playfully over her lips.
+
+"I don't know, mother dear--never ask me--for I don't know it myself."
+And then he kissed her, and wished her good-night, and left her.
+
+She sat long over her fire, dreaming, by herself, thinking a little,
+perhaps, of the elder son, and the bride he was going to bring her, whom
+she should have to welcome whether she liked her or no, but thinking more
+of the younger, whose inner life she had studied, and who was so entirely
+dear and precious to her. It was very little to her that he had been
+extravagant and thoughtless, that he had lost money in betting and
+racing--these were minor faults--and she and John between them had always
+managed to meet his difficulties; they had not been, in truth, very
+tremendous. But for that, he had never caused her one day's anxiety,
+never given her one instant's pain. "God grant he may get a wife who
+deserves him," was the mother's prayer that night. "I doubt if Helen
+be worthy of him; but if he loves her, as I believe he must do, no word
+of mine shall stand between him and his happiness."
+
+And then she went to bed, and dreamed, as mothers dream of the child they
+love best.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE MEMBER FOR MEADOWSHIRE.
+
+ Honour and shame from no condition rise;
+ Act well your part, there all the honour lies.
+
+ Pope, "Essay on Man."
+
+
+About five miles from Kynaston Hall, as the crow flies, across the
+fields, stood, as the house-agents would have described it, "a large
+and commodious modern mansion, standing in about eighty acres of
+well-timbered park land."
+
+I do not know that any description that could be given of Shadonake would
+so well answer to the reality as the above familiar form of words.
+
+The house was undoubtedly large, very large, and it was also modern, very
+modern. It was a handsome stone structure, with a colonnade of white
+pillars along the entrance side, and with a multiplicity of large
+plate-glass windows stretching away in interminable vistas in every
+direction. A broad gravel sweep led up to the front door; to the right
+were the stables, large and handsome too, with a clock-tower and a belfry
+over the gateway; and to the left were the gardens and the shrubberies.
+
+There had been an old house once at Shadonake, old and picturesque and
+uncomfortable; but when the property had been purchased by the present
+owner--Mr. Andrew Miller--after he had been returned as Conservative
+member for the county, the old house was swept away, and a modern
+mansion, more suited to the wants and requirements of his family, arose
+in its place.
+
+The park was flat, but well wooded. The old trees, of course, remained
+intact; but the gardens of the first house, being rambling and
+old-fashioned, had been done away with, to make room for others on a
+larger and more imposing scale; and vineries and pineries, orchid-houses,
+and hot-houses of every description arose rapidly all over the site of
+the old bowling-green and the wilderness, half kitchen garden, half
+rosary, that had served to content the former owners of Shadonake, now
+all lying dead and buried in the chancel of the village church.
+
+The only feature of the old mansion which had been left untouched was
+rather a remarkable one. It was a large lake or pond, lying south of the
+gardens, and about a quarter of a mile from the house. It lay in a sort
+of dip in the ground, and was surrounded on all four sides--for it was
+exactly square--by very steep high banks, which had been cut into by
+steep stone steps, now gray, and broken, and moss-grown, which led down
+straight into the water. This pool was called Shadonake Bath. How long
+the steps had existed no one knew; probably for several hundred years,
+for there was a ghost story connected with them. Somebody was supposed,
+before the memory of any one living, to have been drowned there, and to
+haunt the steps at certain times of the year.
+
+It is certain that but for the fact of a mania for boating, and punting,
+and skating indulged in by several of his younger sons, Mr. Miller, in
+his energy for sweeping away all things old, and setting up all things
+new, would not have spared the Bath any more than he had spared the
+bowling-green. He had gone so far, indeed, as to have a plan submitted to
+him for draining it, and turning it into a strawberry garden, and for
+doing away with the picturesque old stone steps altogether in order to
+encase the banks in red brick, suitable to the cultivation of peaches and
+nectarines; but Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys, had thought about
+their punts and their canoes, and had pleaded piteously for the Bath; so
+the Bath was allowed to remain untouched, greatly to the relief of many
+of the neighbours, who were proud of its traditions, and who, in the
+general destruction that had been going on at Shadonake, had trembled for
+its safety.
+
+Where Mr. Miller had originally come from nobody exactly knew. It was
+generally supposed that he had migrated early in life from northern and
+manufacturing districts, where his father had amassed a large fortune.
+In spite, however, of his wealth, it is doubtful whether he would ever
+have achieved the difficult task of being returned for so exclusive and
+aristocratic a county as Meadowshire had he not made a most prudent and
+politic marriage. He had married one of the Miss Esterworths, of
+Lutterton.
+
+Now, everybody who has the slightest knowledge of Meadowshire and its
+internal politics will see at once that Andrew Miller could not have done
+better for himself. The Esterworths are the very oldest and best of the
+old county families; there can be no sort of doubt whatever as to their
+position and standing. Therefore, when Andrew Miller married Caroline
+Esterworth, there was at once an end of all hesitation as to how he was
+to be treated amongst them. Meadowshire might wonder at Miss Caroline's
+taste, but it kept its wonder to itself, and held out the right hand of
+fellowship to Andrew Miller then and ever after.
+
+It is true that there were five Miss Esterworths, all grown up, and all
+unmarried, at the time when Andrew came a-wooing to Lutterton Castle;
+they were none of them remarkable for beauty, and Caroline, who was the
+eldest of the five, less so than the others. Moreover, there were many
+sons at Lutterton, and the daughters' portions were but small. Altogether
+the love-making had been easy and prosperous, for Caroline, who was a
+sensible young woman, had readily recognized the superior advantages
+of marrying an excellent man of no birth or breeding, with twenty
+thousand a year, to remaining Miss Esterworth to her dying day, in
+dignified but impecunious spinsterhood. Time had proved the wisdom of her
+choice. For some years the Millers had rented a small but pretty little
+house within two miles of Lutterton, where, of course, everybody visited
+them, and got used to Andrew's squat, burly figure, and agreed to
+overlook his many little defects of speech and manner in consideration of
+his many excellent qualities--and his wealth--and where, in course of
+time, all their children, two daughters and six sons, were born.
+
+And then, a vacancy occurring opportunely, Mrs. Miller determined that
+her husband should stand in the Conservative interest for the county. She
+would have made a Liberal of him had she thought it would answer better.
+How she toiled and how she slaved, and how she kept her Andrew, who was
+not by any means ambitious of the position, up to the mark, it boots not
+here to tell. Suffice it to say, that the deed was accomplished, and that
+Andrew Miller became M.P. for North Meadowshire.
+
+Almost at the same time Shadonake fell into the market, and Mrs. Miller
+perceived that the time had now come for her husband's wealth to be
+recognized and appreciated; or, as he himself expressed it, in vernacular
+that was strictly to the point if inelegant in diction, the time was
+come for him "to cut a splash."
+
+She had been very clever, this daughter of the Esterworths. She had kept
+a tight rein over her husband all through the early years of their
+married life. She would have no ostentation, no vulgar display of wealth,
+no parading and flaunting of that twenty thousand per annum in their
+neighbours' faces. And she had done what she had intended; she had
+established her husband's position well in the county--she had made him
+to be accepted, not only by reason of his wealth, but also because he was
+her husband; she had roused no one's envy--she had never given cause for
+spite or jealousy--she had made him popular as well as herself. They had
+lived quietly and unobtrusively; they had, of course, had everything of
+the best; their horses and carriages were irreproachable, but they had
+not had more of them than their neighbours. They had entertained freely,
+and they had given their guests well-cooked dinners and expensive wines;
+but there had been nothing lavish in their entertainments, nothing that
+could make any of them go away and say to themselves, with angry
+discontent, that "those Millers" were purse-proud and vulgar in their
+wealth. When she had gone to her neighbours' houses Mrs. Miller had been
+handsomely but never extravagantly dressed; she had praised their cooks,
+and expressed herself envious of their flowers, and had bemoaned her own
+inability to vie with their peaches and their pineapples; she had never
+talked about her own possessions, nor had she ever paraded her own eight
+thousand pounds' worth of diamonds before the envious eyes of women who
+had none.
+
+In this way she had made herself popular--and in this way she had won the
+county seat for her husband.
+
+When, however, that great end and aim of her existence was accomplished,
+Caroline Miller felt that she might now fairly launch out a little. The
+time was come when she might reap the advantage of her long years of
+repression and patient waiting. Her daughters were growing up, her sons
+were all at school. For her children's sake, it was time that she should
+take the lead in the county which their father's fortune and new position
+entitled them to, and which no one now was likely to grudge them.
+Shadonake therefore was bought, and the house straightway pulled down,
+and built up again in a style, and with a magnificence, befitting Mr.
+Miller's wealth.
+
+Bricks and mortar were Andrew Miller's delight. He was never so happy as
+during the three years that Shadonake House was being built; every stone
+that was laid was a fresh interest to him; every inch of brick wall a
+keen and special delight. He had been disappointed not to have had the
+spoliation of Shadonake Bath; it had been a distinct mortification to him
+to have to forego the four brick walls which would have replaced its
+ancient steps; but then he had made it up to himself by altering the
+position of the front door three times before it was finally settled
+to his satisfaction.
+
+But all this was over by this time, and when my story begins Shadonake
+new House, as it was sometimes called, was built, and furnished and
+inhabited in every corner of its lofty rooms, and all along the spacious
+length of its many wide corridors.
+
+One afternoon--it is about a week later than that soirée at Walpole
+Lodge, mentioned in a previous chapter--Mrs. Miller and her eldest
+daughter are sitting together in the large drawing-room at Shadonake. The
+room is furnished in that style of high artistic decoration that is now
+the fashion. There are rich Persian rugs over the polished oak floor; a
+high oak chimney-piece, with blue tiles inserted into it in every
+direction, and decorated with old Nankin china bowls and jars; a wide
+grate below, where logs of wood are blazing between brass bars;
+quantities of spindle-legged Chippendale furniture all over the room,
+and a profusion of rich gold embroidery and "textile fabrics" of all
+descriptions lighting up the carved oak "dado" and the sombre sage green
+of the walls. There are pictures, too, quite of the best, and china of
+every period and every style, upon every available bracket and shelf and
+corner where a cup or a plate can be made to stand. Four large windows on
+one side open on to the lawn; two, at right angles to them, lead into
+a large conservatory, where there is, even at this dead season of the
+year, a blaze of exotic blossoms that fill the room with their sweet rich
+odour.
+
+Mrs. Miller sits before a writing bureau of inlaid satin-wood of an
+ancient pattern. She has her pen in her hand, and is docketing her
+visiting list. Beatrice Miller sits on a low four-legged stool by her
+mother's side, with a large Japanese china bowl on her knees filled with
+cards, which she takes out one after the other, reading the names upon
+them aloud to her mother before tossing them into a basket, also of
+Japanese structure, which is on the floor in front of her.
+
+Beatrice is Mrs. Miller's eldest daughter, and she is twenty. Guy is only
+eleven months older, and Edwin is a year younger--they are both at
+Oxford; next comes Geraldine, who is still in the school-room, but who is
+hoping to come out next Easter; then Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys;
+and lastly, Teddy and Ralph, who are at a famous preparatory school,
+whence they hope, in process of time, to be drafted on to Eton, following
+in the footsteps of their elder brothers.
+
+Of all this large family it is Beatrice, the eldest daughter, who causes
+her mother the most anxiety. Beatrice is like her mother--a plain but
+clever-looking girl, with the dark swart features and colouring of the
+Esterworths, who are not a handsome race. Added to which, she inherits
+her father's short and somewhat stumpy figure. Such a personal appearance
+in itself is enough to cause uneasiness to any mother who is anxious for
+her daughter's future; but when these advantages of looks are rendered
+still more peculiar by the fact that her hair had to be shaved off some
+years ago when she had scarlet fever, and that it has never grown again
+properly, but is worn short and loose about her face like a boy's, with
+its black tresses tumbling into her eyes every time she looks down--and
+when, added to this, Mrs. Miller also discovered to her mortification
+that Beatrice possessed a will of her own, and so decided a method of
+expressing her opinions and convictions, that she was not likely to be
+easily moulded to her own views, you will, perhaps, understand the extent
+of the difficulties with which she has to deal.
+
+For, of course, so clever and so managing a woman as Mrs. Miller has not
+allowed her daughter to grow up to the age of twenty without making the
+most careful and judiciously-laid schemes for her ultimate disposal. That
+Beatrice is to marry is a matter of course, and Mrs. Miller has well
+determined that the marriage is to be a good one, and that her daughter
+is to strengthen her father's position in Meadowshire by a union with one
+or other of its leading families. Now, when Mrs. Miller came to pass the
+marriageable men of Meadowshire under review, there was no such eligible
+bachelor amongst them all as Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall.
+
+It was on him, therefore, that her hopes with regard to Beatrice were
+fixed. Fortune hitherto had seemed to smile favourably upon her. Beatrice
+had had one season in town, during which she had met Sir John frequently,
+and he had, contrary to his usual custom, asked her to dance several
+times when he had met her at balls. Mrs. Miller said to herself that Sir
+John, not being a very young man, did not set much store upon mere
+personal beauty; that he probably valued mental qualities in a woman more
+highly than the transient glitter of beauty; and that Beatrice's good
+sense and sharp, shrewd conversation had evidently made a favourable
+impression upon him.
+
+She never was more mistaken in her life. True, Sir John did like Miss
+Miller, he found her unconventional and amusing; but his only object in
+distinguishing her by his attentions had been to pay a necessary
+compliment to the new M.P.'s daughter, a duty which he would have
+fulfilled equally had she been stupid as well as plain: moreover, as we
+have seen, few men were so intensely sensitive to beauty in a woman as
+was Sir John Kynaston. Mrs. Miller, however, was full of hopes concerning
+him. To do her justice, she was not exactly vulgarly ambitious for her
+daughter; she liked Sir John personally, and had a high respect for his
+character, and she considered that Beatrice's high spirit and self-willed
+disposition would be most desirably moderated and kept in check by a
+husband so much older than herself. Lady Kynaston, moreover, was one of
+her best and dearest friends, and was her beau-idéal of all that a clever
+and refined lady should be. The match, in every respect, would have been
+a very acceptable one to her. Whether or no Miss Beatrice shared her
+mother's views on her behalf remains to be seen.
+
+The mother and daughter are settling together the preliminaries of a
+week's festivities which Mrs. Miller has decided shall be held at
+Shadonake this winter. The house is to be filled, and there are to be a
+series of dinner parties, culminating in a ball.
+
+"The Bayleys, the Westons, the Foresters, and two daughters, I suppose,"
+reads Mrs. Miller, aloud, from the list in her hand, "Any more for the
+second dinner-party, Beatrice?"
+
+"Are you not going to ask the Daintrees, of Sutton, mother?"
+
+"Oh, dear me, another parson, Beatrice! I really don't think we can; I
+have got three already. They shall have a card for the ball."
+
+"You will ask that handsome girl who lives with them, won't you?"
+
+"Not the slightest occasion for doing so," replied her mother, shortly.
+Beatrice lifted her eyebrows.
+
+"Why, she is the best-looking woman in all Meadowshire; we cannot leave
+her out."
+
+"I know nothing about her, not even her name; she is some kind of poor
+relation, I believe--acts as the children's governess. We have too many
+women as it is. No, I certainly shall not ask her. Go on to the next,
+Beatrice."
+
+"But, mother, she is so very handsome! Surely you might include her."
+
+"Dear me, Beatrice, what a stupid girl you are! What is the good of
+asking handsome girls to cut you out in your own house? I should have
+thought you would have had the sense to see that for yourself," said Mrs.
+Miller, impatiently.
+
+"I think you are horribly unjust, mamma," says Miss Beatrice,
+energetically; "and it is downright unkind to leave her out because
+she is handsome--as if I cared."
+
+"How can I ask her if I do not know her name?" said her mother,
+irritably, with just that amount of dread of her daughter's rising temper
+to make her anxious to conciliate her. "If you like to find out who she
+is and all about her----"
+
+"Yes, I will find out," said Beatrice, quietly; "give me the note, I will
+keep it back for the present."
+
+"Now, for goodness sake, go on, child, and don't waste any more time. Who
+are coming from town to stay in the house?"
+
+"Well, there will be Lady Kynaston, I suppose."
+
+"Yes. She won't come till the end of the week. I have heard from her; she
+will try and get down in time for the ball."
+
+"Then there will be the Macpherson girls and Helen Romer. And, as a
+matter of course, Captain Kynaston must be asked?"
+
+"Yes. What a fool that woman is to advertise her feelings so openly that
+one is obliged to ask her attendant swain to follow her wherever she
+goes!"
+
+"On the contrary, I think her remarkably clever; she gets what she wants,
+and the cleverest of us can do no more. It is a well-known fact to all
+Helen's acquaintances that not to ask Captain Kynaston to meet her would
+be deliberately to insult her--she expects it as her right."
+
+"All the same, it is in very bad taste and excessively underbred of her.
+However, I should ask Captain Kynaston in any case, for his mother's
+sake, and because I like him. He is a good shot, too, and the coverts
+must be shot that week. Who next?"
+
+"Mr. Herbert Pryme."
+
+"Goodness me! Beatrice, what makes you think of _him_? We don't know
+anything about him--where he comes from or who are his belongings--he is
+only a nobody!"
+
+"He is a barrister, mamma!"
+
+"Yes, of course, I know that--but, then, there are barristers of all
+sorts. I am sure I do not know what made you fix upon him; you only met
+him two or three times in town."
+
+"I liked him," said Beatrice, carelessly; "he is a gentleman, and would
+be a pleasant man to have in the house."
+
+Her mother looked at her sharply. She was playing with the gold locket
+round her neck, twisting it backwards and forwards along its chain, her
+eyes fixed upon the heap of cards on her lap. There was not the faintest
+vestige of a blush upon her face.
+
+"However," she continued, "if you don't care about having him, strike his
+name out. Only it is a pity, because Sophy Macpherson is rather fond of
+him, I fancy."
+
+This was a lie; it was Miss Beatrice herself who was fond of him, but not
+even her mother, keen and quick-scented as she was, could have guessed it
+from her impassive face. Mrs. Miller was taken in completely.
+
+"Oh," she said, "if Sophy Macpherson likes him, that alters the case. Oh,
+yes, I will ask him by all means--as you say, he is a gentleman and
+pleasant."
+
+"Look, mamma!" exclaimed Beatrice, suddenly; "there is uncle Tom riding
+up the drive."
+
+Now, Tom Esterworth was a very important personage; he was the present
+head of the Esterworth family, and, as such, the representative of its
+ancient honours and traditions. He was a bachelor, and reigned in
+solitary grandeur at Lutterton Castle, and kept the hounds as his
+fathers had done before him.
+
+Uncle Tom was thought very much of at Shadonake, and his visits always
+caused a certain amount of agitation in his sister's mind. To her dying
+day she would be conscious that in Tom's eyes she had been guilty of a
+_mésalliance_. She never could get that idea out of her head; it made her
+nervous and ill at ease in his presence. She hustled all her notes and
+cards hurriedly together into her bureau.
+
+"Uncle Tom! Dear me, what can he have come to-day for! I thought the
+hounds were out. Ring the bell, Beatrice; he will like some tea. Where
+is your father?"
+
+"Papa is out superintending the building of the new pigsties," said
+Beatrice as she rang the bell. "I think uncle Tom has been hunting; he is
+in boots and breeches I see."
+
+"Dear me, I hope your father won't come in with his muddy feet and his
+hands covered with earth," said Mrs. Miller, nervously.
+
+Uncle Tom came in, a tall, dark-faced, strong-limbed man of fifty--an
+ugly man, if you will, but a gentleman, and an Esterworth, every inch of
+him. He kissed his sister, and patted his niece on the cheek.
+
+"Why weren't you out to-day, Pussy?"
+
+"You met so far off, uncle. I had no one to ride with to the meet. The
+boys will be back next week. Have you had a good run?"
+
+"No, we've done nothing but potter about all the morning; there isn't a
+scrap of scent."
+
+"Uncle Tom, will you give us a meet here when we have our house-warming?"
+
+"Humph! you haven't got any foxes at Shadonake," answered her uncle. He
+had drawn his chair to the fire, and was warming his hands over the
+blazing logs. Beatrice was rather a favourite with him. "I will see about
+it, Pussy," he added, kindly, seeing that she looked disappointed. Mrs.
+Miller was pouring him out a cup of tea.
+
+"Well, I've got a piece of news for you women!" says Mr. Esterworth,
+stretching out his hand for his tea. "John Kynaston's going to be
+married!"
+
+Mrs. Miller never knew how it was that the old Worcester tea-cup in her
+hand did not at this juncture fall flat on the ground into a thousand
+atoms at her brother's feet. It is certain that only a very strong
+exercise of self-control and presence of mind saved it from destruction.
+
+"Engaged to be married!" she said, with a gasp.
+
+"That is news indeed," cried Beatrice, heartily, "I am delighted."
+
+"Don't be so foolish, Beatrice," said her mother, quite sharply. "How on
+earth can you be delighted when you don't even know who it is? Who is it,
+Tom?"
+
+"Ah, that is the whole pith of the matter," said Mr. Esterworth, who was
+not above the weakness of liking to be the bearer of a piece of gossip.
+"I'll give you three guesses, and I'll bet you won't hit it."
+
+"One of the Courtenay girls?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Anna Vivian?"
+
+"I know," says Beatrice, nodding her head sagely; "it is that girl who
+lives with the Daintrees."
+
+"Beatrice, how silly you are!" cries her mother.
+
+Tom Esterworth turns round in his chair, and looks at his niece.
+
+"By Jove, you've hit it!" he exclaims. "What a clever pussy you are to be
+sure."
+
+And then the soul of the member's wife became filled with consternation
+and disgust.
+
+"Well, I call it downright sly of John Kynaston!" she exclaims, angrily;
+"picking out a nobody like that behind all our backs, and keeping it so
+quiet, too; he ought to be ashamed of himself for such an unsuitable
+selection!"
+
+Beatrice laughed. "You know, uncle Tom, mamma wanted him to marry me."
+
+"Beatrice, you should not say such things," said her mother, colouring.
+
+"Whew!" whistled Mr. Esterworth. "So that was the little game, Caroline,
+was it? John Kynaston has better taste. He wouldn't have looked at an
+ugly little girl like our pussy here, would he, Puss? Miss Nevill is one
+of the finest women I ever saw in my life. She was at the meet to-day on
+one of his horses; and, by Jove! she made all the other women look plain
+by the side of her! Kynaston is a very lucky fellow."
+
+"I think, mamma, there can be no doubt about sending Miss Nevill an
+invitation to our ball now," said Beatrice, laughingly.
+
+"She will have to be asked to stay in the house," said Mrs. Miller, with
+something akin to a groan. "I cannot leave her out, as Lady Kynaston is
+coming. Oh, dear! oh, dear! what fools men are, to be sure!"
+
+But Beatrice was wicked enough to laugh again over her mother's
+discomfiture.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ENGAGED.
+
+ I wonder did you ever count
+ The value of one human fate,
+ Or sum the infinite amount
+ Of one heart's treasures, and the weight
+ Of one heart's venture.
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+It was quite true what Mr. Thomas Esterworth had said, that Vera was
+engaged to Sir John Kynaston.
+
+It had all come about so rapidly, and withal so quietly, that, when Vera
+came to think of it, it rather took her breath away. She had expected it,
+of course; indeed, she had even planned and tried for it; but, when it
+had actually come to her, she felt herself to be bewildered by the
+suddenness of it.
+
+In the end the climax of the love-making had been prosaic enough. Sir
+John had not felt himself equal to the task of a personal interview with
+the lady of his affections, with the accompanying risks of a personal
+rejection, which, in his modesty and humility with reference to her, he
+had believed to be quite on the cards. So he had written to her. The note
+had been taken up to the vicarage by the footman, and had been brought
+into the dining-room by the vicarial parlour-maid, just as the three
+ladies were finishing breakfast, and after the vicar himself had left the
+room.
+
+"A note from Kynaston, please 'm," says rosy-cheeked Hannah, holding it
+forth before her, upon a small japanned tray, as an object of general
+family interest and excitement.
+
+"For your master, Hannah?" says old Mrs. Daintree. "Are they waiting for
+an answer? You will find him in his study."
+
+"No, ma'am, it's for Miss Vera."
+
+"Dear me!" with a suspicious glance across the table; "how very odd!"
+
+Vera takes up the note and opens it.
+
+"May I have the crest, auntie?" clamours Tommy before she had read three
+words of it.
+
+"Is it about the horse he has offered you to ride?" asks his mother.
+
+But Vera answers nothing; she gets up quietly, and leaves the room
+without a word.
+
+"Extraordinary!" gasps Mrs. Daintree; "Vera's manners are certainly most
+abrupt and unlady-like at times, Marion. I think you ought to point it
+out to her."
+
+Marion murmurs some unintelligible excuse and follows her sister--leaving
+the unfortunate Tommy a prey to his grandmother's tender mercies. So
+brilliant an opportunity is not, of course, to be thrown away. Tommy's
+fingers, having incontinently strayed in the direction of the
+sugar-basin, are summarily slapped for their indiscretion, and an
+admonition is straightway delivered to him in forcible language
+concerning the pains and penalties which threaten the ulterior destiny of
+naughty little boys in general and of such of them in particular who are
+specially addicted to the abstraction of lumps of sugar from the
+breakfast-table.
+
+Meanwhile, Marion has found her sister in the adjoining room standing up
+alone upon the hearthrug with Sir John Kynaston's letter in her hands.
+She is not reading it now, she is looking steadfastly into the fire. It
+has fulfilled--nay, more than fulfilled--her wishes. The triumph of her
+success is pleasant to her, and has brought a little more than their
+usual glow into her cheeks, and yet--Heaven knows what vague and
+intangible dreams and fancies have not somehow sunk down chill and cold
+within her during the last five minutes.
+
+Gratified ambition--flattered vanity--the joy of success--all this she
+feels to the full; but nothing more! There is not one single other
+sensation within her. Her pulses have not quickened, ever so little, as
+she read her lover's letter; her heart has not throbbed, even once, with
+a sweeter, purer delight--such as she has read and heard that other women
+have felt.
+
+"I suppose I have no heart," said Vera to herself; "it must be that I am
+cold by nature. I am happy; but--but--I wonder what it feels like--this
+_love_--that there is so much talked and written about?"
+
+And then Marion came in breathlessly.
+
+"Oh, Vera, what is it?"
+
+Vera turns round to her, smiling serenely, and places the note in her
+hands.
+
+This is what Sir John Kynaston has written:--
+
+ "Dear Miss Nevill,--I do not think what I am about to say will be
+ altogether unexpected by you. You must have surely guessed how sincere
+ an affection I have learnt to feel for you. I know that I am unworthy
+ of you, and I am conscious of how vast a disparity there is between
+ my age and your own youth and beauty. But if my great love and devotion
+ can in any way bridge over the gap that lies between us, believe me,
+ that if you will consent to be my wife, my whole life shall be devoted
+ to making you happy. If you can give me an answer to-day, I shall be
+ very grateful, as suspense is hard to bear. But pray do not decide
+ against me in haste, and without giving me every chance in your power.
+
+ "Yours devotedly,
+ "John Kynaston."
+
+"Oh! Vera, my darling sister, I am so glad!" cries Marion, in tearful
+delight, throwing her arms up round the neck of the young sister, who is
+so much taller than she is; "I had guessed it, dearest; I saw he was in
+love with you; and oh, Vera, I shall have you always near me!"
+
+"Yes, that will be nice," assents Vera, quietly, and a trifle absently,
+stroking her sister's cheek, with her eyes still fixed on the fire; "and
+of course," rousing herself with an effort, "of course I am a very lucky
+woman."
+
+And then Mr. Daintree came in, and his wife rushed to him rapturously to
+impart the joyful news. There was a little pleasant confusion of broken
+words and explanations between the three, and then Marion whisked away,
+brimming over with triumphant delight to wave the flags of victory
+exultingly in her mother-in-law's face.
+
+Eustace Daintree and Vera were alone. He took her hands within his, and
+looked steadfastly in her face.
+
+"Vera, are you sure of yourself, my dear, in this matter?"
+
+Her eyes met his for a moment, and then fell before his earnest gaze. She
+coloured a little.
+
+"I am quite sure that I mean to accept Sir John's proposal," she said,
+with a little uneasy laugh.
+
+"Child, do you love him?"
+
+Her eyes met his again; there was a vague trouble in them. The man had a
+power over her, the power of sheer goodness of soul. She could never be
+untrue to herself with Eustace Daintree; she was always at her very best
+with him, humble and gentle; and she could no more have told him a lie,
+or put him off with vague conventionalities, than she could have
+committed a deadly sin.
+
+What is it about some people that, in spite of ourselves, they thus force
+out of us the best part of our nature; that base and unworthy thoughts
+cannot live in us before them,--that they melt out of our hearts as the
+snow before the rays of the sun? Even though the effect may be transient,
+such is the power of their faith, and their truth, and their goodness,
+that it must needs call forth in us something of the same spirit as their
+own.
+
+Such was Eustace Daintree's influence over Vera. It was not because of
+his office, for no one was less susceptible than Vera--a Protestant
+brought up, with but vague ideas of her own faith, in a Catholic land--to
+any of those recognized associations with which a purely English-bred
+girl might have felt the character of the clergyman of the parish where
+she lived to be invested. It was nothing of that sort that made him great
+to her; it was, simply and solely, the goodness of the man that impressed
+her. His guilelessness, his simplicity of mind, his absolute uprightness
+of character, and, with it all, the absence in him of any assumption of
+authority, or of any superiority of character over those about him. His
+very humility made her humble with him, and exalted him into something
+saintly in her eyes.
+
+When Eustace looked at her fixedly, with all his good soul in his earnest
+eyes, and said to her again, "Do you love him, Vera?" Vera could but
+answer him simply and frankly, almost against her will, as it were.
+
+"I don't think I do, Eustace; but then I do not quite know what love is.
+I do not think, however, that it can be what I feel."
+
+"My child, no union can be hallowed without love. Vera, you will not run
+into so great a danger?" he said anxiously.
+
+She looked up at him smiling.
+
+"I like him better than any one else, at all events. Better than Mr.
+Gisburne, for instance. And I think, I do really think, Eustace, it will
+be for my happiness."
+
+The vicar looked grave. "If Sir John Kynaston were a poor man, would you
+marry him?"
+
+And Vera answered bravely, though with a heightened colour--
+
+"No; but it is not only for the money, Eustace; indeed it is not.
+But--but--I should be miserable without it; and I must do something with
+my life."
+
+He drew her near to him, and kissed her forehead. He understood her. With
+that rare gift of sympathy--the highest, the most God-like of all human
+attributes--he felt at once what she meant. It was wonderful that this
+man, who was so unworldly, so unselfish, so pure of the stains of earth
+himself, should have seen at once her position from her own point of
+view; that was neither a very exalted one, nor was it very free from the
+dross of worldliness. But it was so. All at once he seemed to know by a
+subtle instinct what were the weaknesses, and the temptations, and the
+aims of this girl, who, with all her faults, was so dear to him. He
+understood her better, perhaps, than she understood herself. Her soul was
+untouched by passion; the story of her life was unwritten; there was no
+danger for her yet; and perchance it might be that the storms of life
+would pass her by unscathed, and that she might remain sheltered for ever
+in the safe haven which had opened so unexpectedly to receive her.
+
+"There is a peril in the course you have chosen," he said, gravely; "but
+your soul is pure, and you are safe. And I know, Vera, that you will
+always do your duty."
+
+And the tears were in her eyes as he left her.
+
+When he had gone she sat down to write her answer to Sir John Kynaston.
+She dipped her pen into the ink, and sat with it in her hand, thinking.
+Her brother-in-law's words had aroused a fresh train of thought within
+her. There seemed to be an amount of solemnity in what she was about to
+do that she had not considered before. It was true that she did not love
+him; but then, as she had told Eustace just now, she loved no one else;
+she did not rightly understand what love meant, indeed. And is a woman to
+wait on in patience for years until love comes to her? Would it ever
+come? Probably not, thought Vera; not to her, who thought herself to be
+cold, and not easily moved. There must be surely many women to whom this
+wonderful thing of love never comes. In all her experience of life there
+was nothing to contradict this. It was not as if she had been a girl who
+had never left her native village, never tasted of the pleasures of life,
+never known the sweet incense of flattery and devotion. Vera had known it
+all. Many men had courted her; one or two had loved her dearly, but she
+had not loved them. Amongst them all, indeed, there had been never one
+whom she had liked with such a sincere affection as she now felt for this
+man, who seemed to love her so much, and who wrote to her so diffidently,
+and yet so devotedly.
+
+"I love him as well as I am ever likely to love any one," said Vera, to
+herself. Yet still she leant her chin upon her hand and looked out of the
+window at the gray bare branches of the elm-trees across the damp green
+lawn, and still her letter was unwritten.
+
+"Vera!" cries Marion, coming in hurriedly and breaking in upon her
+reverie, "the footman from Kynaston is waiting all this time to know if
+there is any answer! Shall I send him away? Or have you made up your
+mind?"
+
+"Oh yes, I have made up my mind. My note will be ready directly; he may
+as well take it. It will save the trouble of sending up to the Hall
+later." For Vera remembers that there is not a superfluity of servants
+at the vicarage, and that they all of them have plenty to do.
+
+And thus, a mere trifle--a feather, as it were, on the river of
+life--settled her destiny for her out of hand.
+
+She dipped her pen into the ink once more, and wrote:--
+
+ "Dear Sir John,--You have done me a great honour in asking me to be
+ your wife. I am fully sensible of your affection, and am very grateful
+ for it. I fear you think too highly of me; but I will endeavour to
+ prove myself worthy of your good opinion, and to make you as good a
+ wife as you deserve.
+
+ "Yours,
+ "Vera Nevill."
+
+She was conscious herself of the excessive coldness of her note, but she
+could not help it. She could not, for the life of her, have made it
+warmer. Nothing, indeed, is so difficult as to write down feelings that
+do not exist; it is easier to simulate with our spoken words and our
+looks; but the pen that is urged beyond its natural inclination seems to
+cool into ice in our fingers. But, at all events, she had accepted him.
+
+It was a relief to her when the thing was done, and the note sent off
+beyond the possibility of recall.
+
+After that there had been no longer any leisure for her doubting
+thoughts. There was her sister's delighted excitement, Mrs. Daintree's
+oppressive astonishment, and even Eustace's calmer satisfaction in her
+bright prospects, to occupy and divert her thoughts. Then there came her
+lover himself, tender and grateful, and with so worshipful a respect in
+every word and action that the most sensitive woman could scarcely have
+been ruffled or alarmed by the prospects of so deferential a husband.
+
+In a few days Vera became reconciled to her new position, which was in
+truth a very pleasant one to her. There were the congratulations of
+friends and acquaintances to be responded to; the pleasant flutter of
+adulation that surrounded her once more; the little daily excitement
+of John Kynaston's visits--all this made her happy and perfectly
+satisfied with the wisdom of her decision.
+
+Only one thing vexed her.
+
+"What will your mother say, John?" she had asked the very first day she
+had been engaged to him.
+
+"It will not make much difference to me, dearest, whatever she may say."
+
+Nor in truth would it, for Sir John, as we have seen, had never been a
+devoted son, nor had he ever given his confidence to his mother; he had
+always gone his own way independently of her.
+
+"But it must needs make a difference to me," Vera had insisted. "You have
+written to her, of course."
+
+"Oh, yes; I wrote and told her I was engaged to you."
+
+"And she has not written?"
+
+"Yes, there was a message for you--her love or something."
+
+Sir John evidently did not consider the subject of much importance. But
+Vera was hurt that Lady Kynaston had not written to her.
+
+"I will never enter any family where I am not welcome," she had said to
+her lover, proudly.
+
+And then Sir John had taken fright, for she was so precious to him that
+the fear of losing her was becoming almost as a nightmare to him, and,
+possibly, at the bottom of his heart he knew how feeble was his hold
+over her. He had written off to his mother that day a letter that was
+almost a command, and had told her to write to Vera.
+
+This letter was not likely to prepossess Lady Kynaston, who was a
+masterful little lady herself, in her daughter-in-law's favour; it did
+more harm than good. She had obeyed her son, it is true, because he was
+the head of the family, and because she stood in awe of him; but the
+letter, thus written under compulsion, was not kind--it was not even
+just.
+
+"Horrid girl!" had said Lady Kynaston, angrily, to herself, as she had
+sat down to her writing-table to fulfil her son's mandate. "It is not
+likely that I can be very loving to her--some wretched, second-rate girl,
+evidently--for not even Caroline Miller who, goodness knows, rakes up all
+the odds and ends of society--ever heard of her before!"
+
+It is not to be supposed that a letter undertaken under such auspices
+could be in any way conciliatory or pleasant in its tone. Such as it was,
+Vera put it straight into the fire directly she had read it; no one ever
+saw it but herself.
+
+"I have heard from your mother," she said to Sir John.
+
+"Yes? I am very glad. She wrote everything that was kind, no doubt."
+
+"I dare say she meant to be kind," said Vera; which was not true, because
+she knew perfectly that there had been no kindness intended. But she
+pursued the subject no further.
+
+"I hope you will like Maurice," said Sir John, presently; "he is a
+good-hearted boy, though he has been sadly extravagant, and given me
+a good deal of trouble."
+
+"I shall be glad to know your brother," said Vera, quietly. "Is he coming
+to Kynaston?"
+
+"Yes, eventually; but you will meet him first at Shadonake when you go
+to stay there: they have asked a large party for that week, I hear, and
+Maurice will be there."
+
+Now, by this time Vera knew that the photograph she had once found in the
+old writing-table drawer at Kynaston was that of her lover's brother
+Maurice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+A MEETING ON THE STAIRS.
+
+ Since first I saw your face
+ I resolved to honour and renown you;
+ If now I be disdained,
+ I wish my heart had never known you.
+
+ The Sun whose beams most glorious are
+ Rejecteth no beholder,
+ And your sweet beauty past compare
+ Made my poor eyes the bolder.
+
+Thomas Ford.
+
+
+I have often wondered why, in the ordering of human destinies,
+some special Providence, some guardian spirit who is gifted with
+foreknowledge, is not mercifully told off to each of us so to order the
+trifles of our lives that they may combine to the working together of our
+weal, instead of conspiring, as they too often and too evidently do, for
+our woe.
+
+Look back upon your own life, and upon the lives of those whose story you
+have known the most intimately, and see what straws, what nonentities,
+what absurd trivialities have brought about the most important events of
+existence. Recollect how, and in what manner, those people whom it would
+have been well for you never to have known came across you. How those
+whose influence over you is for good were kept out of your way at the
+very crisis of your life. Think what a different life you would have led;
+I do not mean only happier, but how much better and purer, if some absurd
+trifle had not seemed to play into the hands, as it were, of your
+destiny, and to set you in a path whereof no one could at the time
+foresee the end.
+
+Some one had looked out their train in last month's Bradshaw, unwitting
+of the autumn alterations, and was kept from you till the next day. You
+took the left instead of the right side of the square on your way home,
+or you stood for a minute gossiping at your neighbour's door, and there
+came by some one who ultimately altered and embittered your whole life,
+and who, but for that accidental meeting, you would, probably, never have
+seen again; or some evil adviser was at hand, whilst one whose opinion
+you revered, and whose timely help would have saved you from taking that
+false step you ever after regretted, was kept to the house, by Heaven
+knows what ridiculous trifle--a cold in the head, or finger-ache--and
+did not see you to warn and to keep you back from your own folly until it
+was too late.
+
+People say these things are ordered for us. I do not know; it may be so,
+but sometimes it seems rather as if we were irresponsible puppets, tossed
+and buffeted about, blindly and helplessly, upon life's river, as
+fluttering dead leaves are danced wildly along the swift current of a
+Highland stream. Such a trifle might have saved us! yet there was no
+pitying hand put forth to avert that which, in our human blindness,
+appeared to us to be as unimportant as any other incident of our lives.
+
+Life is an unsolvable problem. Shall we ever, in some other world,
+I wonder, read its riddles aright?
+
+All these moral dissertations have been called forth because Vera Nevill
+went to stay for a week at Shadonake. If she had known--what we none of
+us know--the future, she doubtless would have stayed away. Fate--a
+beneficent fate, indeed--made, I am bound to confess, a valiant effort in
+her behalf. Little Minnie fell ill the day before her departure; and the
+symptoms were such that everybody in the house believed that she was
+sickening for scarlet fever. The doctor, however, having been hastily
+summoned, pronounced the disease to be an infantile complaint of a
+harmless and innocuous nature, which he dignified by the delusively
+poetical name of "Rosalia."
+
+"It is not infectious, Mr. Smee, I hope?" asked Marion, anxiously.
+"Nothing to prevent my sister going to stay at the Millers' to morrow?"
+
+"Not in the least infectious, Mrs. Daintree, and anybody in the house can
+go wherever they like, except the child herself, who must be kept in a
+warm room for two days, when she will probably be quite well again."
+
+"I am glad, dear, there is nothing to put a stop to your visit; it would
+have been such a pity," said Marion, in her blindness, to her sister
+afterwards.
+
+So the fates had a game of pitch and toss with Vera's future, and settled
+it amongst them to their own satisfaction, probably, but not, it will be
+seen, for Vera's own good or ultimate happiness.
+
+On the afternoon of the 3rd day of January, therefore, Eustace
+Daintree drove his sister-in-law over to Shadonake in the open
+basket pony-carriage, and deposited her and her box safely at the
+stone-colonnaded door of that most imposing mansion, which she entered
+exactly ten minutes before the dressing-bell rang, and was conducted
+almost immediately upstairs to her own room.
+
+Some twenty minutes later there are still two ladies sitting on in the
+small tea-room, where it is the fashion at Shadonake to linger between
+the hours of five and seven, who alone have not yet moved to obey the
+mandate of the dressing-bell.
+
+"What _is_ the good of waiting?" says Beatrice, impatiently; "the train
+is often late, and, besides, he may not come till the nine o'clock
+train."
+
+"That is just what I want to wait for," answers Helen Romer. "I want
+just to hear if the carriage has come back, and then I shall know for
+certain."
+
+"Well, you know how frightfully punctual papa is, and how angry it makes
+him if anybody is late."
+
+"Just two minutes more, Beatrice; I can dress very quickly when once
+I set to work," pleads Helen.
+
+Beatrice sits down again on the arm of the sofa, and resigns herself to
+her fate; but she looks rather annoyed and vexed about it.
+
+Mrs. Romer paces the room feverishly and impatiently.
+
+"What did you think of Miss Nevill?" asks Beatrice.
+
+"I could hardly see her in her hat and that thick veil; but she looked as
+if she were handsome."
+
+"She is _beautiful_!" says Beatrice, emphatically, "and uncle Tom
+says----"
+
+"Hush!" interrupts Helen, hurriedly. "Is not that the sound of
+wheels?--Yes, it is the carriage."
+
+She flies to the door.
+
+"Take care, Helen," says Beatrice, anxiously; "don't open the door
+wide, don't let the servants think we have been waiting, it looks so
+bad--so--so unlady-like."
+
+But Helen Romer does not even hear her; she is listening intently to the
+approaching sounds, with the half-opened door in her hand.
+
+The tea-room door opens into a large inner hall, out of which leads the
+principal staircase; the outer or entrance-hall is beyond; and presently
+the stopping of the carriage, the opening and shutting of doors from the
+servants' departments, and all the usual bustle of an arrival are heard.
+
+The two girls stand close together listening, Beatrice hidden in the
+shadow of the room.
+
+"There are _two_ voices!" cries Helen, in a disappointed tone; "he is not
+alone!"
+
+"I suppose it is Mr. Pryme--mamma said he might come by this train,"
+answers Beatrice, so quietly that no one could ever have guessed how her
+heart was beating.
+
+"Helen, _do_ let us run upstairs; I really cannot stay. Let _me_ go, at
+all events!" she adds, with a sudden agony of entreaty as the guests were
+heard advancing towards the door of the inner hall. And as Helen made not
+the slightest sign of moving, Beatrice slipped past her and ran lightly
+and swiftly across the hall upstairs, and disappeared along the landing
+above just as Captain Kynaston and Mr. Herbert Pryme appeared upon the
+scene below.
+
+No such scruples of modesty troubled Mrs. Romer. As the young men entered
+the inner hall preceded by the butler, who was taking them up to their
+rooms, and followed by two footmen who were bearing their portmanteaus,
+Helen stepped boldly forward out of the shelter of the tea-room, and held
+out her hand to Captain Kynaston.
+
+"How do you do? How late your train is."
+
+Maurice looked distinctly annoyed, but of course he shook hands with her.
+
+"How are you, Mrs. Romer? I did not expect you to be here till to-morrow.
+Yes, we are late," consulting his watch; "only twenty minutes to dress
+in--I must look sharp."
+
+Meanwhile the stranger, Mr. Pryme, was following the butler upstairs.
+
+Helen lowered her voice.
+
+"I _must_ speak to you a minute, Maurice; it is six weeks since we have
+met, and to meet in public would be too trying. Please dress as quickly
+as ever you can; I know you can dress quickly if you choose; and wait for
+me here at the bottom of the stairs--we might get just three minutes
+together before dinner."
+
+There were the footmen and the portmanteaus within six yards of them, and
+Mr. Pryme and the butler still within earshot. What was Maurice to do? He
+could not really listen to a whole succession of prayers, and entreaties,
+and piteous appeals. There was neither the time, nor was it the place,
+for either discussion or remonstrance. All he could do was to nod a hasty
+assent to her request.
+
+"Then I must make haste," he said, and ran quickly upstairs in the wake
+of the other guest.
+
+The staircase at Shadonake was very wide and very handsome, and
+thoroughly in keeping with the spacious character of the house. It
+consisted of one wide flight of shallow steps, with a richly-carved
+balustrade on either side of it, leading straight down from a large
+square landing above. Both landing and steps were carpeted with thick
+velvet-pile carpet, so that no jarring footfall was ever heard upon them.
+The hall into which the staircase led was paved in coloured mosaic tiles,
+and was half covered over with rich Persian rugs. A great many doors,
+nearly all the sitting-rooms of the house, in fact, opened into it,
+and the blank spaces of the wall were filled in with banks of large
+handsome plants, palms and giant ferns, and azaleas in full bloom, which
+were daily rearranged by the gardeners in every available corner.
+
+At the foot of the staircase, and with his back to it, leaning against
+the balustrade, stood Captain Kynaston, exactly four minutes before the
+dinner was announced.
+
+Most people were in the habit of calling Maurice a good-looking man, but
+if anybody had seen him now for the first time it is doubtful whether
+they would have endorsed that favourable opinion upon his personal
+appearance. A thoroughly ill-tempered expression of face seldom enhances
+any one's good looks, and if ever a man looked in a bad temper, Maurice
+Kynaston did so at the present moment.
+
+He stood with his hands in his trousers pockets, and his eyes fixed upon
+his own boots, and he looked as savage as it was well possible for a man
+to look.
+
+He was waiting here for Helen, because he had told her that he would do
+so, and when Captain Kynaston promised anything to a lady he always kept
+his word.
+
+But to say that he hated being there is but a mild term for the rage and
+disgust he experienced.
+
+To be waylaid and attacked thus, directly he had set foot in the house,
+with a stranger and three servants looking on so as to render him
+absolutely helpless; to be uncomfortably hurried over his toilet, and
+inveigled into a sort of rendezvous at the foot of a public staircase,
+where a number of people might at any minute enter from any one of the
+six or eight surrounding doors, was enough of itself to try his temper;
+but when he came to consider how Helen, in thus appropriating him and
+making him obey her caprices, was virtually breaking her side of the
+treaty between them; that she was exacting from him the full amount of
+servitude and devotion which an open engagement would demand, and yet she
+had agreed to deny any such engagement between them openly--it was, he
+felt, more than he could continue to bear with meekness.
+
+Meekness, indeed, was in no way Maurice Kynaston's distinguishing
+characteristic. He was masterful and imperious by nature; to be the slave
+of any woman was neither pleasant nor profitable to him. Honour, indeed,
+had bound him to Helen, and had he loved her she might have led him. Her
+position gave her a certain hold over him, and she knew how to appeal to
+his heart; but he loved her not, and to control his will and his spirit
+was beyond her power.
+
+Maurice said to himself that he would put a stop to this system of
+persecution once and for all--that this interview, which she herself had
+contrived, should be made the opportunity of a few forcible words, that
+should frighten her into submission.
+
+So he stood fretting, and fuming, and raging, waiting for her at the foot
+of the stairs.
+
+There was a soft rustle, as of a woman's dress, behind him. He turned
+sharply round.
+
+Halfway down the stairs came a woman whom he had never seen before.
+A black velvet dress, made high in the throat, with a wide collar of
+heavy lace upon her shoulders, hung clingingly about the outlines of her
+tall and perfect figure; her hands, with some lace ruffles falling about
+her wrists, were simply crossed before her. The light of a distant
+hanging-lamp shone down upon her, just catching one diamond star that
+glittered among the thick coils of her hair--she wore no other ornament.
+She came down the stairs slowly, almost lingeringly, with a certain
+grace in her movements, and without a shadow of embarrassment or
+self-consciousness.
+
+Maurice drew aside to let her pass him--looking at her--for how could he
+choose but look? But when she reached the bottom of the steps, she turned
+her face towards him.
+
+"You are Maurice--are you not?" she said, and put forth both her hands
+towards him.
+
+An utter bewilderment as to who she was made him speechless; his mind had
+been full of Helen and his own troubles; everything else had gone out of
+his head. She coloured a little, still holding out her hands to him.
+
+"I am Vera," she said, simply, and there was a little deprecating appeal
+in the words as though she would have added, "Be my friend."
+
+He took the hands--soft slender hands that trembled a very little in his
+grasp--within his own, and some nameless charm in their gentle touch
+brought a sudden flush into his face, but no appropriate words concerning
+his pleasure at meeting her, or his gratification at their future
+relations, fell from Maurice Kynaston's lips. He only held her thus by
+her hands, and looked at her--looked at her as if he could never look at
+her enough--from her head to her feet, and from her feet up again to her
+head, till a sudden wave of colour flooded her face at the earnestness
+of his scrutiny.
+
+"Vera--_Vera Nevill_!" was all he said; and then below his breath, as
+though his absolute amazement were utterly irrepressible: "_By Jove!_"
+And Vera laughed softly at the thoroughly British character of the
+exclamation.
+
+"How like an Englishman!" she said. "An Italian would have paid me fifty
+pretty compliments in half the time you have taken just to stare at me!"
+
+"What a charming _tableau vivant_!" exclaims a voice above them as Mrs.
+Romer comes down the staircase. "You really look like a scene in a play!
+Pray don't let me disturb you."
+
+"I am making friends with my sister-in-law that is to be, Mrs. Romer,"
+says Maurice, who has dropped Vera's hands with a guilty suddenness, and
+now endeavours to look completely at his ease--an effort in which he
+signally fails.
+
+"Were you? Dear me! I thought you and Miss Nevill were practising the
+pose of the 'Huguenots'!"
+
+Now the whole armoury of feminine weapons--impertinence, spite, and bad
+manners, born of jealousy--is utterly beneath the contempt of such a
+woman as Vera; but she is no untried, inexperienced country girl such as
+Mrs. Romer imagines her to be disconcerted or stricken dumb by such an
+attack. She knew instantly that she had been attacked, and in what
+manner, and she was perfectly capable of taking care of herself.
+
+"I have never seen that picture, the 'Huguenots,' Mrs. Romer," she
+said, quietly; "do you think there is a photograph or a print of it
+at Kynaston, Maurice? If so, you or John must show it to me."
+
+And how Mrs. Romer hated her then and there, from that very minute until
+her life's end, it would not be easy to set forth!
+
+The utter _insouciance_, the lady-like ignoring of Helen's impertinence,
+the quiet assumption of what she knew her own position in the Kynaston
+family to be, down to the sisterly "Maurice," whereby she addressed the
+man whom in public, at least, Mrs. Romer was forced to call by a more
+formal name--all proved to that astute little woman that Vera Nevill was
+no ordinary antagonist, no village maiden to be snubbed or patronised at
+her pleasure, but a woman of the world, who understood how to fight her
+own battles, and was likely, as she was forced to own to herself, to
+"give back as good as she got."
+
+Not another single word was spoken between them, for at that very minute
+a door was thrown open, and the whole of the party in the house came
+trooping forth in pairs from the drawing-room in a long procession on
+their way to the dining-room.
+
+First came Mr. Miller with old Mrs. Macpherson on his arm. Then Mr. Pryme
+and Miss Sophy Macpherson; her sister behind with Guy Miller; Beatrice,
+looking melancholy, with the curate in charge; and her mother last with
+Sir John, who had come over from Kynaston to dinner. Edwin Miller, the
+second son, by himself brought up the rear.
+
+There was some laughter at the expense of the three defaulters, who, of
+course, were supposed to have only just hurried downstairs.
+
+"Aha! just saved your soup, ladies!" cried Mr. Miller, laughingly. "Fall
+in, fall in, as best you can!"
+
+Mrs. Miller came to the rescue, and, by a rapid stroke of generalship,
+marshalled them into their places.
+
+Miss Nevill, of course, was a stranger; Helen had been on intimate terms
+with them all for years; Vera, besides, was standing close to Maurice.
+
+"Please take in Miss Nevill, Captain Kynaston; and Edwin, my dear, give
+your arm to Mrs. Romer."
+
+Edwin, who was a pleasant-looking boy, with plenty to say for himself,
+hurried forward with alacrity; and Helen had to accept her fate with the
+best grace she could.
+
+"Well, how did you get on with Vera, and how did you like her?" asked Sir
+John, coming round to his brother's side of the table when the ladies had
+left the room. He had noted with pleasure that Vera and Maurice had
+talked incessantly throughout the dinner.
+
+"My dear fellow!" cried Maurice, heartily, "she is the handsomest woman I
+ever met in my life! I give you my word that, when she introduced herself
+to me coming downstairs, I was so surprised, she was so utterly different
+to what I and the mother have been imagining, that upon my life I
+couldn't speak a word--I could do nothing but stare at her!"
+
+"You like her, then?" said his brother, smiling, well pleased at his
+openly expressed admiration.
+
+"I think you are a very lucky fellow, old man! Like her! of course I do;
+she's a downright good sort!"
+
+And if Sir John was slightly shocked at the irreverence of alluding to so
+perfect and pure a woman as his adored Vera by so familiar a phrase as "a
+good sort," he was, at all events, too pleased by Maurice's genuine
+approval of her to find any fault with his method of expressing it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AN IDLE MORNING.
+
+ We loved, sir; used to meet;
+ How sad, and bad, and mad it was;
+ But then, how it was sweet!
+
+ Browning.
+
+
+Leaning against a window-frame at the end of a long corridor on the
+second floor, and idly looking out over the view of the wide lawns and
+empty flower-beds which it commands, stands Mr. Herbert Pryme, on the
+second morning after his arrival at Shadonake House.
+
+It is after breakfast, and most of the gentlemen of the house have
+dispersed; that is to say, Mr. Miller has gone off to survey his new
+pigsties, and his sons and a Mr. Nethercliff, who arrived last night,
+have ridden to a meet some fifteen miles distant, which the ladies had
+voted to be too far off to attend.
+
+Mr. Pryme, however, is evidently not a keen sports-man; he has declined
+the offer of a mount which Guy Miller has hospitably pressed upon him,
+and he has also declined to avail himself of his host's offer of the
+services of the gamekeeper. Curiously enough, another guest at Shadonake,
+whose zeal for hunting has never yet been impeached, has followed his
+example.
+
+"What on earth do they meet at Fretly for!" Maurice Kynaston had
+exclaimed last night to young Guy, as the morrow's plans had been
+discussed in the smoking-room; "it's the worst country I ever was in, all
+plough and woodlands, and never a fox to be found. Your uncle ought to
+know better than to go there. I certainly shan't take the trouble to get
+up early to go to that place."
+
+"Not go?" repeated Guy, aghast; "you don't mean to say you won't go,
+Kynaston?"
+
+"That's just what I do mean, though."
+
+"What the deuce will you do with yourself all day?"
+
+"Lie in bed," answered Maurice, between the puffs of his pipe; "we've
+had a precious hard day's shooting to-day, and I mean to take it easy
+to-morrow."
+
+And Captain Kynaston was as good as his word. He did not appear in the
+breakfast-room the next morning until the men who were bound for Fretly
+had all ridden off and were well out of sight of the house. What he had
+stayed for he would have been somewhat puzzled to explain. He was not the
+kind of man who, as a rule, cared to dawdle about all day with women when
+there was any kind of sport to be had from hunting down to ratting; more
+especially was he disinclined for any such dawdling when Helen Romer was
+amongst the number of the ladies so left to be danced attendance upon.
+And yet he distinctly told himself that he meant to be devoted for this
+one day to the fair sex. All yesterday he had been crossed and put out;
+the men had been out shooting from breakfast till dinner; some of the
+ladies had joined them with the Irish-stew at lunch time; Helen had been
+amongst them, but not Miss Nevill. Maurice, in spite of the pheasants
+having been plentiful and the sport satisfactory, had been in a decidedly
+bad temper all the afternoon in consequence. In the evening the party at
+dinner had been enlarged by an influx of country neighbours; Vera had
+been hopelessly divided from him and absorbed by other people the whole
+evening; he had not exchanged a single word with her all day.
+
+Captain Kynaston was seized with an insatiable desire to improve his
+acquaintance with his sister-in-law to be. It was his duty, he told
+himself, to make friends with her; his brother would be hurt, he argued,
+and his mother would be annoyed if he neglected to pay a proper attention
+to the future Lady Kynaston. There could be no doubt that it was his
+duty; that it was also his pleasure did not strike him so forcibly as it
+should have done, considering the fact that a man is only very keen to
+create duties for himself when they are proportionately mingled with that
+which is pleasant and agreeable. The exigencies of his position, with
+regard to his elder brother's bride having been forcibly borne in upon
+him--combined possibly with the certain knowledge that the elder brother
+himself would be hunting all day--compelled him to stop at home and
+devote himself to Vera. Mr. Herbert Pryme, however, had no such excuse,
+real or imaginary, and yet he stands idly by the corridor window, idly,
+yet perfectly patiently--relieving the tedium of his position by the
+unexciting entertainment of softly whistling the popular airs from the
+"Cloches de Corneville" below his breath.
+
+Herbert Pryme is a good-looking young fellow of about six-and-twenty; he
+looks his profession all over, and is a good type of the average young
+barrister of the present day. He has fair hair, and small, close-cropped
+whiskers; his face is retrieved from boyishness by strongly-marked
+and rather heavy features; he studiously affects a solemn and imposing
+gravity of face and manner, and a severe and elderly style of dress,
+which he hopes may produce a favourable effect upon the non-legal minds
+of his somewhat imaginary clients.
+
+It is doubtful, however, whether Mr. Pryme has not found a shorter and
+pleasanter road to fortune than that slow and toilsome route along which
+the legal muse leads her patient votaries.
+
+Ten, fifteen, twenty minutes elapse, and still Mr. Pryme looks patiently
+out of the window, and still he whistles the Song of the Bells. The only
+sign of weariness he gives is to take out his watch, which, by the way,
+is suspended by a broad black ribbon, and lives, not in his waistcoat
+pocket, but in a "fob," and is further decorated by a very large and
+old-fashioned seal. Having consulted a time piece which for size and
+thickness might have belonged to his great-grandfather, he returns it to
+his fob, and resumes his whistling.
+
+Presently a door at the further end of the corridor softly opens and
+shuts, and Mr. Pryme looks up quickly.
+
+Beatrice Miller, looking about her a little guiltily, comes swiftly
+towards him along the passage.
+
+"Mamma kept me such ages!" she says, breathlessly; "I thought I should
+never get away."
+
+"Never mind, so long as you are here," he answers, holding her by
+both hands. "My darling, I must have a kiss; I hungered for one all
+yesterday."
+
+He looks into her face eagerly and lovingly. To most people Beatrice is a
+plain girl, but to this man she is beautiful; his own love for her has
+invested her with a charm and a fascination that no one else has seen in
+her.
+
+Oh! divine passion, that can thus glorify its object. It is like a dash
+of sunshine over a winter landscape, which transforms it into the
+loveliness of spring; or the magic brush of the painter, which can turn a
+ploughed field and a barren common into the golden glories of a Cuyp or a
+Turner.
+
+Thus it was with Herbert Pryme. He looked at Beatrice with the blinding
+glamour of his own love in his eyes, and she was beautiful to him. Truth
+to say, Beatrice was a woman whom to love once was to love always. There
+was so much that was charming and loveable in her character, so great a
+freshness of mind and soul about her, that, although from lack of beauty
+she had hitherto failed to attract love, having once secured it, she
+possessed that rare and valuable faculty of being able to retain it,
+which many women, even those who are the most beautiful, are incapable
+of.
+
+"It is just as I imagined about Mr. Nethercliff," says Beatrice,
+laughing; "he has been asked here for my benefit. Mamma has just been
+telling me about him; he is Lord Garford's nephew and his heir. Lord
+Garford's place, you know, is quite the other side of the county; he is
+poor, so I suppose I might do for him," with a little grimace. "At all
+events, I am to sit next to him at dinner to-night, and make myself
+civil. You see, I am to be offered to all the county magnates in
+succession."
+
+Herbert Pryme still holds her hands, and looks down with grave vexation
+into her face.
+
+"And how do you suppose I shall feel whilst Mr. Nethercliff is making
+love to you?"
+
+"You may make your mind quite easy; it is impossible that there should be
+another man foolish enough in all England to want to make love to such an
+'ugly duckling' as I am!"
+
+"Don't be silly, child, and don't fish for compliments," he answers,
+fondly, stroking her short dark hair, which he thinks so characteristic
+of herself.
+
+Beatrice looks up happily at him. A woman is always at her very best when
+she is alone with the man she loves. Unconsciously, all the charms she
+possesses are displayed in her glistening eyes, and in the colour which
+comes and goes in her contented face. There is no philtre which beauty
+can use, there is neither cosmetic nor rouge that can give that tender,
+lovely glow with which successful love transforms even a plain face into
+radiance and fascination.
+
+"I wish, Beatrice, you would let me speak to your father," continued
+Herbert; "I cannot bear to be here under false pretences. Why will you
+not let me deal fairly and openly with your parents?"
+
+"And be sent about your business by the evening train. No, thank you!
+My dear boy, speaking to papa would be as much use as speaking to the
+butler; they would both of them refer you instantly to mamma; and with
+an equally lamentable result. Please leave things to me. When mamma has
+offered me ineffectually to every marriageable man in Meadowshire, she
+will get quite sick of it, and, I dare say, I shall be allowed to do as
+I like then without any more fuss."
+
+"And how long is this process to last?"
+
+"About a year; by which time Geraldine will be nearly eighteen, and ready
+to step into my shoes. Mamma will be glad enough to be rid of me then,
+and to try her hand upon her instead. Geraldine is meek and tractable,
+and will be quite willing to do as she is told."
+
+"And, meanwhile, what am I to do?"
+
+"You! You are to make love to Sophy Macpherson. Do you not know that she
+is the excuse for your having been asked here at all?"
+
+"I don't like it, Beatrice," repeats her lover, gravely--not, however,
+alluding to the duties relating to Miss Macpherson, which she had been
+urging upon him. "Upon my life, I don't." He looks away moodily out of
+the window. "I hate doing things on the sly. And, besides, I am a poor
+man, and your parents are rich. I could not afford to support a wife at
+present on my own income."
+
+"All the more reason that we should wait," she interrupts, quickly.
+
+"Yes; but I ought not to have spoken to you; I'd no business to steal
+your heart."
+
+"You did not steal it," she says, nestling up to his side. "I presented
+it to you, free, gratis."
+
+Where is the man who could resist such an appeal! Away went duty,
+prudence, and every other laudable consideration to the winds; and
+Herbert Pryme straightway became insanely and blissfully oblivious of his
+own poverty, of Mr. Miller's wealth, and of everything else upon earth
+and under the sun that was not entirely and idiotically delightful and
+ecstatic.
+
+"You will do as I tell you?" whispers Beatrice.
+
+"Of course I will," answers her lover. And then there is a complete
+stagnation of the power of speech on both sides for the space of five
+minutes, during which the clock ticking steadily on at the far end of the
+corridor has things entirely its own way.
+
+"There is another couple who are happy," says Herbert Pryme, breaking the
+charmed silence at length, and indicating, by a sign, two people who are
+wandering slowly down the garden. Beatrice Miller, following the
+direction of his eyes, sees Maurice Kynaston and Vera.
+
+"Those two?" she exclaims. "Oh dear, no! They are not happy--not in our
+way. Miss Nevill is engaged to his brother, you know."
+
+"Umph! if I were Sir John Kynaston, I would look after my brother then."
+
+"Herbert! what _can_ you mean?" cries Beatrice, opening her eyes in
+astonishment. "Why, Captain Kynaston is supposed to be engaged to Mrs.
+Romer; at any rate, she is desperately in love with him."
+
+"Yes, everybody knows that: but is he in love with her?"
+
+"Herbert, I am sure you must be mistaken!" persists Beatrice, eagerly.
+
+"Perhaps I am. Never mind, little woman," kissing her lightly; "I only
+said they looked happy. If you will take the trouble to remark them
+through the day, you will, perhaps, be struck by the same blissful aspect
+that I have noticed. If they are happy, it won't last long. Why should
+not one be glad to see other people enjoying themselves? Let them be
+happy whilst they can."
+
+Herbert Pryme was right. Maurice and Vera wandering side by side along
+the broad gravel walks in the wintry gardens were happy--without so much
+as venturing to wonder what it was that made them so.
+
+"I did not want to hunt to-day," Maurice is saying; "I thought I would
+stop at home and talk to you."
+
+"That was kind of you," answers Vera, with a smile.
+
+If she had known him better, she would have been more sensible of the
+compliment implied. To give up a day's hunting for a woman's sake is what
+very few keen sports-men have been known to do; the attraction must be
+great indeed.
+
+"You will go out, of course, on Monday, the day the hounds meet here?
+I should like to see you on a horse."
+
+"I shall at all events put on a habit and get up on the mare John has
+given me. But I know very little of English hunting; I have only ridden
+in Italy. We used to go out in winter over the Campagna--that is very
+different to England."
+
+"You must look very well in a habit." He turned to look at her as he
+spoke. There was no reticence in his undisguised admiration of her.
+
+Vera laughed a little. "You shall look at me if you like when I have it
+on," she said, blushing faintly under his scrutiny.
+
+"I am grateful to you for the permission; but I am bound to confess that
+I should look all the same had you forbidden me to do so."
+
+Vera was pleased. She felt glad that he admired her. Was it not quite
+right and most desirable that her husband's brother should appreciate her
+beauty and ratify his good taste?
+
+"When does your mother come?" she said, changing the subject quietly, but
+without effort.
+
+"Only the very night of the ball, I am afraid. Tuesday, is it not?"
+
+"Have you written to her about me? She does not like me, I fear."
+
+"No; I will not write. She shall see you and judge for herself. I am not
+the least afraid of her not liking you when she knows you; and you will
+love her."
+
+By this time they had wandered away from the house through the belt of
+shrubbery, and had emerged beyond upon the margin of the pool of water.
+
+Vera stood still, suddenly struck with the sight.
+
+"Is this Shadonake Bath?" she asked, below her breath.
+
+"Yes; have you never seen it before?" he answered, in some surprise.
+
+"Never. I have not lived in Meadowshire long, you know, and the Millers
+were moving into the house and furnishing it all last summer. I have
+never been in the gardens till to-day. How strangely sad the place looks!
+Let us walk round it."
+
+They went round to the further side.
+
+The pool of water lay dark and silent within its stone steps; not a
+ripple disturbed its surface; not a dead leaf rested on its bosom. Only
+the motionless water looked up everlastingly at the gray winter skies
+above, and reflected them back blackly and gloomily upon its solemn face.
+
+Vera stood still and looked at it. Something in its aspect--she could not
+have told what--affected her powerfully. She went down two or three steps
+towards the water, and stooped over it intently.
+
+Maurice, watching her curiously, saw, to his surprise, that she trembled.
+She turned round to him.
+
+"Does it not look dark and deep? Is it very deep?"
+
+"I believe it is. There are all sorts of stories about it. Come up, Vera;
+why do you tremble so?"
+
+"How dreadful to be drowned here!" she said, below her breath, and she
+shuddered.
+
+He stretched out his hand to her.
+
+"Do not say such horrid things! Give me your hand--the steps are
+slippery. What has put drowning into your head? And--why, how pale you
+are; what has frightened you?"
+
+She took his hand and came back again to where he stood.
+
+"Do you believe in presentiments?" she said, slowly, with her eyes fixed
+still, as though by some fascination, upon the dark waters beneath them.
+
+"Not in the very least," he answered, cheerily; "do not think of such
+things. John would be the first to scold you--and to scold me for
+bringing you here."
+
+He stood, holding her hand, looking at her kindly and compassionately;
+suddenly she looked at him, and as their eyes met once more, she trembled
+from head to foot.
+
+"Vera, you are frightened; tell me what it is!"
+
+"I don't know! I don't know!" she cried, with a sudden wail, like a
+person in pain; "only--oh! I wish I had not seen it for the first time
+with _you_!"
+
+Before he could answer her, some one, _beckoning_ to them from the
+further side of the pool, caused them both to turn suddenly round.
+
+It was not only Herbert Pryme who had seen them wander away down the
+garden from the house. Mrs. Romer, too, had been at another window and
+had noticed them. To run lightly upstairs, put on her hat and jacket, and
+to follow them, had been the work of but a very few minutes. Helen was
+not minded to allow Maurice to wander about all the morning with Vera.
+
+"Are you going for a walk?" she called out to them across the water.
+"Wait for me; I am coming with you."
+
+Vera turned quickly to her companion.
+
+"Is it true that you are engaged to her?" she asked him rapidly, in a low
+voice.
+
+Maurice hesitated. Morally speaking, he was engaged to her; but, then, it
+had been agreed between them that he was to deny any such engagement. He
+felt singularly disinclined to let Vera know what was the truth.
+
+"People say you are," she said, once more. "Will you tell me if it is
+true?"
+
+"No; there is no engagement between us," he answered, gravely.
+
+"I am very glad," she answered, earnestly. He coloured, but he had no
+time to ask her why she was glad--for Helen came up to them.
+
+"How interested you look in each other's conversation!" she said, looking
+suspiciously at them both. "May I not hear what you have been talking
+about?"
+
+"Anybody might hear," answered Vera, carelessly, "were it worth one's
+while to take the trouble of repeating it."
+
+Maurice said nothing. He was angry with Helen for having interrupted
+them, and angry with himself for having denied his semi-engagement. He
+stood looking away from them both, prodding his stick into the gravel
+walk.
+
+For half a minute they stood silently together.
+
+"Let us go on," said Vera, and they began to walk.
+
+Once again in the days that were to come those three stood side by side
+upon the margin of Shadonake Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE MEET AT SHADONAKE.
+
+ The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow,
+ The devotion to something afar.
+
+ Shelley.
+
+
+Mrs. Macpherson had brought up her daughters with one fixed and
+predominant idea in her mind. Each of them was to excel in some one taste
+or accomplishment, by virtue of which they might be enabled to shine in
+society. They were taught to do one thing well. Thus, Sophy, the eldest,
+played the piano remarkably, whilst Jessie painted in water-colours with
+charming exactitude and neatness. They had both had first-rate masters,
+and no pains had been spared to make each of them proficient in the
+accomplishment that had been selected for her. But, as neither of these
+young ladies had any natural talent, the result was hardly so
+satisfactory as their fond mother could have desired. They did exactly
+what they had been taught to do with precision and conscientiousness; no
+less and no more; and the further result of their entire devotion to one
+kind of study was, that they could do nothing else.
+
+Mrs. Macpherson began to realize that her system of education had
+possibly left something to be desired on the Monday morning that Mr.
+Esterworth brought up his hounds to Shadonake House. It was provoking
+to see all the other ladies attired in their habits, whilst her own
+daughters had to come down to breakfast in their ordinary morning
+dresses, because they had never been taught to ride.
+
+"Are you not going to ride?" she heard Guy Miller ask of Sophy, who was
+decidedly the best looking and the pleasantest of the sisters.
+
+"No, we have never ridden at all; mamma never thought we had the time for
+it," answers Sophy.
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Macpherson, turning to her hostess, "that I shall
+pursue a different course with my younger girls. I feel sorry now that
+Sophy and Jessie do not ride. Music and painting are, of course, the most
+charming accomplishments that a woman can have; but still it is not at
+all times that they are useful."
+
+"No, you cannot be always painting and playing."
+
+"Neither can you be always riding," said Mrs. Macpherson, with some
+asperity, for there was a little natural jealousy between these ladies on
+the subject of their girls; "but still----"
+
+"But still, you will acknowledge that I have done right in letting
+Beatrice hunt. You may be quite sure that there is no accomplishment
+which brings a girl so much into notice in the country. Look at her now."
+
+Mrs. Macpherson looked and saw Beatrice in her habit at the far end of
+the dining-room surrounded by a group of men in pink, and she also saw
+her own daughters sitting neglected by themselves on the other side of
+the room. She made no observation upon the contrast, for it would hardly
+have been polite to have done so; but she made a mental note of the fact
+that Mrs. Miller was a very clever woman, and that, if you want an ugly
+daughter to marry, you had better let her learn how to ride across
+country. And she furthermore decided that her third daughter, Alice, who
+was not blessed with the gift of beauty, should forthwith abandon the
+cultivation of a very feeble and uncertain vocal organ and be sent to the
+nearest riding-school the very instant she returned to her home.
+
+Beatrice Miller rode very well indeed; it was the secret of her uncle's
+affection for her, and many a good day's sport had the two enjoyed side
+by side across the flat fields and the strong fences and wide ditches of
+their native country. Her brothers, Guy and Edwin, were fond of hunting
+too, but they rode clumsily and awkwardly, floundering across country in
+what their uncle called, contemptuously, a thoroughly "provincial style."
+But Beatrice had the true Esterworth seat and hand; she looked as if she
+were born to her saddle, and, in truth, she was never so happy as when
+she was in it. It was a proof of how great and real was her love to
+Herbert Pryme that she fully recognized that, in becoming his wife, she
+would have to live in London entirely and to give up her beloved hunting
+for his sake.
+
+A woman who rides, as did Beatrice, is sure to be popular on a hunting
+morning; and, with the consciousness of her lover's hands resting upon
+the back of her chair, with her favourite uncle by her side, and with
+several truly ardent admirers of her good riding about her, Miss Miller
+was evidently enjoying herself thoroughly.
+
+The scene, indeed, was animated to the last degree. The long dining-room
+was filled with guests, the table was covered with good things, a repast,
+half breakfast, half luncheon, being laid out upon it. Everybody helped
+themselves, with much chattering and laughter, and there was a pleasant
+sense of haste and excitement, and a charming informality about the
+proceedings, which made the Shadonake Hunt breakfast, which Tom
+Esterworth had been prevailed upon by his niece's entreaties to allow,
+a thorough and decided success.
+
+Outside there were the hounds, drawn up in patient expectation on the
+grass beyond the gravel sweep, the bright coats and velvet caps of the
+men, and the gray horses--on which it was the Meadowshire tradition that
+they should be always mounted--standing out well against the dark
+background of the leafless woods behind. Then there were a goodly company
+who had not dismounted, and to whom glasses of sherry were being handed
+by the servants, and who also were chattering to each other, or to those
+on foot, whilst before the door, an object of interest to those within as
+to those without, Sir John Kynaston was putting Miss Nevill upon her
+horse.
+
+There was not a man present who did not express his admiration for her
+beauty and her grace; hardly a woman who did not instantly make some
+depreciatory remark. The latter fact spoke perhaps more convincingly for
+the undoubted success she had created than did the former.
+
+Maurice was standing by one of the dining-room windows, Mrs. Romer, as
+usual, by his side. He alone, perhaps, of all the men who saw her vault
+lightly into her saddle, made no audible remark, but perhaps his
+admiration was all too plainly written in his eyes, for it called
+forth a contemptuous remark from his companion--
+
+"She is a great deal too tall to look well on a horse; those big women
+should never ride."
+
+"What! not with a figure so perfect as hers?"
+
+"Yes, that is the third time you have spoken about her figure to-day,"
+said Helen, irritably. "What on earth can you see in it?" for Mrs. Romer,
+who was slight almost to angularity, was, as all thin women are, openly
+indignant at the masculine foible for more flowing outlines, which was
+displayed with greater candour than discretion by her quasi-lover.
+
+"What do I see in it?" repeated Maurice, who was dimly conscious of her
+jealousy, and was injudicious enough to lose his temper slightly over its
+exhibition. "I see in it the beauty of a goddess, and the perfection of
+a woman!"
+
+"Really!" with a sarcastic laugh; "how wonderfully enthusiastic and
+poetical you become over Miss Nevill's charms; it is something quite new
+in you, Maurice. Your interest in this 'goddess-like' young lady strikes
+me as singularly warmly expressed; it is more lover-like than fraternal."
+
+"What do you mean?" he said, looking at her coldly and angrily. Helen had
+seen that look of hard contempt in his face before; she quailed a little
+before it, and was frightened at what she had said.
+
+"Of course," she said, reddening, "I know it's all right; but it does
+really sound peculiar, your admiring her so much; and--and--it is hardly
+flattering to me."
+
+"I don't see that it has anything to do with you," and he turned shortly
+away from her.
+
+She made a step or two after him. "You will ride with me, will you not,
+Maurice? You know I can't go very hard; you might give me a lead or two,
+and keep near me."
+
+"You must not ask me to make any promises," he said, politely, but
+coldly. "Guy Miller says there is a groom told off to look after you
+ladies. Of course, if I can be of any use to you, I shall be happy, but
+it is no use making rash engagements as to what one will do in a run."
+
+"Come, come, it's time we were off," cries out Tom Esterworth at the
+further end of the room, and his stalwart figure makes its way in the
+direction of the door.
+
+In a very few minutes the order "to horse" has gone forth, and the whole
+company have sallied forth and are busy mounting their horses in front of
+the house.
+
+Off goes the master, well in front, at a sharp trot, towards the woods on
+the further slope of the hill, and off go the hounds and the whips, and
+the riders, in a long and gay procession after him, down the wide avenue.
+
+"Promise me you will not stop out long, Vera," says Sir John to her as
+they go side by side down the drive. "You look white and tired as it is.
+Have you got a headache?"
+
+"Yes, a little," confesses Vera, with a blush. "I did not sleep well."
+
+"This sitting up late night after night is not good for you," says her
+lover, anxiously; "and there is the ball to-morrow night."
+
+"Yes; and I want to look my best for your mother," she said, smiling. "I
+will take care of myself, John; I will go home early in time for lunch."
+
+"You are always so ready to do what I ask you. Oh, Vera, how good you
+are! how little I deserve such a treasure!"
+
+"Don't," she answers, almost sharply, whilst an expression of pain
+contracts her brow for an instant. "Don't say such things to me, John;
+don't call me good."
+
+John Kynaston looks at her fondly. "I will not call you anything you
+don't wish," he says, gently, "but I am free to think it, Vera!"
+
+The first covert is successfully drawn without much delay. A fox is
+found, and breaks away across the open, and a short but sharp burst of
+fifteen or twenty minutes follows. The field is an unusually large one,
+and there are many out who are not in it at all. Beatrice, however, is
+well up, and so is Herbert Pryme, who is not likely to be far from her
+side. Close behind them follows Sir John Kynaston, and Mrs. Romer, who is
+well mounted upon one of Edwin Miller's horses, keeps well up with the
+rest.
+
+Vera never quite knew how it was that somehow or other she got thrown out
+of that short but exciting run. She was on the wrong side of the covert
+to begin with; several men were near her, but they were all strangers,
+and at the time "Gone away!" was shouted, there was no one to tell her
+which way to take. Two men took the left side of the copse, three others
+turned to the right. Vera followed the latter, and found that the hounds
+must have gone in the opposite direction, for when she got round the wood
+not a trace of them was to be seen.
+
+She did not know the country well, and she hardly knew which way to turn.
+It seemed to her, however, that by striking across a small field to the
+left of her she would cut off a corner, and eventually come up with the
+hounds again.
+
+She turned her mare short round, and put her at a big straggling hedge
+which she had no fears of her being unable to compass. There was,
+however, more of a drop on the further side than she had counted upon,
+and in some way, as the mare landed, floundering on the further side,
+something gave way, and she found that her stirrup-leather had broken.
+
+Vera pulled up and looked about her helplessly. She found herself in
+a small spinney of young birch-trees, filling up the extremity of a
+triangular field into which she had come. Not a sign of the hounds, or,
+indeed, of any living creature was to be seen in any direction. She did
+not feel inclined to go on--or even to go back home with her broken
+stirrup-leather. It occurred to her that she would get off and see what
+she could do towards patching it together herself.
+
+With some little difficulty, her mare being fidgety, and refusing to
+stand still, she managed to dismount; but in doing so her wrist caught
+against the pommel of her saddle, and was so severely wrenched backwards,
+as she sprang to the ground, that she turned quite sick with the pain.
+
+It seemed to her that her wrist must be sprained; at all events, her
+right hand was, for the minute, perfectly powerless. The mare, perceiving
+that nothing further was expected of her, amused herself by cropping the
+short grass at her feet, whilst Vera stood by her side in dire perplexity
+as to what she was to do next. Just then she heard the welcome sound of a
+horse's hoofs in the adjoining field, and in another minute a hat and
+black coat, followed by a horse's head and forelegs appeared on the top
+of the fence, and a man dropped over into the spinney just ten yards in
+front of her.
+
+Vera took it to be her lover, for the brothers both hunted in black, and
+there was a certain family resemblance between their broad shoulders and
+the square set of their heads. She called out eagerly,
+
+"Oh, John! how glad I am to see you! I have come to grief!"
+
+"So I see; but I am not John. I hope, however, I may do as well. What is
+the matter?"
+
+"It is you, Maurice? Oh, yes, you will do quite as well. I have broken my
+stirrup-leather, and I am afraid I have sprained my wrist."
+
+"That sounds bad--let me see."
+
+In an instant he had sprung from his horse to help her.
+
+She looked up at him as he came, pushing the tall brushwood away as
+he stepped through it. It struck her suddenly how like he was to the
+photograph she had found of him at Kynaston long ago, and what a
+well-made man he was, and how brave and handsome he looked in his
+hunting gear.
+
+"How have you managed to hurt your wrist? Let me see it."
+
+"I wrenched it somehow in jumping down; but I don't think that it can be
+sprained, for I find I can move it now a little; it is only bruised, but
+it hurts me horribly."
+
+She turned back her cuff and held out the injured hand to him. Maurice
+stooped over it. There was a moment's silence, the two horses stood
+waiting patiently by, the solitary fields lay bare and lifeless on every
+side of them, the little birch-trees rustled mysteriously overhead, the
+leaden sky, with its chill curtain of unbroken gray cloud, spread
+monotonously above them; there was no living thing in all the winter
+landscape besides to listen or to watch them.
+
+Suddenly Maurice Kynaston caught the hand that he held to his lips, and
+pressed half a dozen passionate kisses upon its outstretched palm.
+
+It was the work of half a minute, and in the next Maurice felt as if he
+should die of shame and remorse.
+
+"For God's sake, forgive me!" he cried, brokenly. "I am a brute--I forgot
+myself--I must be mad, I think; for Heaven's sake tell me that I have not
+offended you past forgiveness, Vera!"
+
+His pulses were beating wildly, his face was flushed, the hands that
+still held hers shook with a nameless emotion; he looked imploringly into
+her face, as if to read his sentence in her eyes, but what he saw there
+arrested the torrent of repentance and regret that was upon his lips.
+
+Upon Vera's face there was no flush either of shame or anger. No storm
+of indignation, no passion of insulted feeling; only eyes wide open and
+terror-stricken, that met his with the unspeakable horror that one sees
+sometimes in those of a hunted animal. She was pale as death. Then
+suddenly the colour flushed hotly back into her face; she averted her
+eyes.
+
+"Let me go home," she said, in a faint voice; "help me to get on to my
+horse, Maurice."
+
+There was neither resentment nor anger in her voice, only a great
+weariness.
+
+He obeyed her in silence. Possibly he felt that he had stood for one
+instant upon the verge of a precipice, and that miraculously her face had
+saved him, he knew not how, where words would only have dragged him down
+to unutterable ruin.
+
+What had it been that had thus saved him? What was the meaning of that
+terror that had been written in her lovely eyes? Since she was not angry,
+what had she feared?
+
+Maurice asked himself these questions vainly all the way home. Not a word
+was spoken between them; they rode in absolute silence side by side until
+they reached the house.
+
+Then, as he lifted her off her horse at the hall-door, he whispered,
+
+"Have you forgiven me?"
+
+"There was nothing to forgive," she answered, in a low, strained voice.
+She spoke wearily, as one who is suffering physical pain. But, as she
+spoke, the hand that he still held seemed almost, to his fancy, to linger
+for a second with a gentle fluttering pressure within his grasp.
+
+Miss Nevill went into the house, having utterly forgotten that she had
+sprained her wrist; a fact which proves indisputably, I suppose, that the
+injury could not have been of a very serious nature.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PEACOCK'S FEATHERS.
+
+ That practised falsehood under saintly show,
+ Deep malice to conceal, couched with revenge.
+
+ Milton, "Paradise Lost."
+
+
+Old Lady Kynaston arrived at Shadonake in the worst possible temper. Her
+butler and factotum, who always made every arrangement for her when she
+was about to travel, had for once been unequal to cope with Bradshaw;
+he had looked out the wrong train, and had sent off his lady and her maid
+half-an-hour too late from Walpole Lodge.
+
+The consequence was that, instead of reaching Shadonake comfortably at
+half-past six in the afternoon, Lady Kynaston had to wait for the next
+train. She ate her dinner alone, in London, at the Midland Railway Hotel,
+and never reached her destination till half-past nine on the night of the
+ball.
+
+Before she had half completed her toilette the guests were beginning to
+arrive.
+
+"I am afraid I must go down and receive these people, dear Lady
+Kynaston," said Mrs. Miller, who had remained in her guest's room full
+of regret and sympathy at the _contretemps_ of her journey.
+
+"Oh, dear me! yes, Caroline--pray go down. I shall be all the quicker for
+being left alone. Not _that_ cap, West; the one with the Spanish point,
+of course. Dear me, how I do hate all this hurry and confusion!"
+
+"I am so afraid you will be tired," murmured Mrs. Miller, soothingly.
+"Would you like me to send Miss Nevill up to your room? It might be
+pleasanter for you than to meet her downstairs."
+
+"Good gracious, no!" exclaimed the elder lady, testily. "What on earth
+should I be in such a hurry for! I shall see quite as much of her as I
+want by-and-by, I have no doubt."
+
+Mrs. Miller retired, and the old lady was left undisturbed to finish
+her toilette, during which it may fairly be assumed that that dignified
+personage, Mrs. West, had a hard time of it.
+
+When she issued forth from her room, dressed, like a little fairy
+godmother, in point lace and diamonds, the dancing downstairs was in
+full swing.
+
+Lady Kynaston paused for a minute at the top of the broad staircase to
+look down upon the bright scene below. The hall was full of people. Girls
+in many-coloured dresses passed backwards and forwards from the ball-room
+to the refreshment-room, laughing and chatting to their partners; elderly
+people were congregated about the doorways gossiping and shaking hands
+with new-comers, or watching their daughters with pleased or anxious
+faces, according to the circumstances of their lot. Everybody was talking
+at once. There came up a pleasant confusion of sound--happy voices
+mingling with the measured strains of the dance-music. In a sheltered
+corner behind the staircase, Beatrice and Herbert Pryme had settled
+themselves down comfortably for a chat. Lady Kynaston saw them.
+
+"Caroline is a fool!" she muttered to herself. "All the balls in the
+world won't get that girl married as she wishes. She has set her heart
+upon that briefless barrister. I saw it as plain as daylight last season.
+As to entertaining all this _cohue_ of aborigines, Caroline might spare
+her trouble and her money, as far as the girl is concerned."
+
+And then, coming slowly down the staircase, Lady Kynaston saw something
+which restored her to good temper at once.
+
+The something was her younger son. She had caught sight of him through an
+open doorway in the conservatory. His back was turned to her, and he was
+bending over a lady who was sitting down, and whose face was concealed
+behind him.
+
+Lady Kynaston stood still with that sudden _serrement de coeur_ which
+comes to us all when we see the creature we love best on earth. He did
+not see her, and she could not see his face, because it was turned away
+from her; but she knew, by his very attitude, the way he bent down over
+his companion, by the eager manner in which he was talking to her, and by
+the way in which he was evidently entirely engrossed and absorbed in what
+he was saying--that he was enjoying himself, and that he was happy.
+
+The mother's heart all went out towards him; the mother's eyes moistened
+as she looked.
+
+The couple in the conservatory were alone. A Chinese lantern, swung high
+up above, shed down a soft radiance upon them. Tall camellia bushes,
+covered with waxen blossoms and cool shiny leaves, were behind them;
+banks of long-fronded, feathery ferns framed them in like a picture.
+Maurice's handsome figure stood up tall and strong amongst the greenery;
+the dress of the woman he was with lay in soft diaphanous folds upon the
+ground beyond him. One white arm rested on her lap, one tiny foot peeped
+out from below the laces of her skirt. But Lady Kynaston could not see
+her face.
+
+"I wonder who she is," she said to herself. "It is not Helen. She has
+peacock's feathers on her dress--bad luck, I believe! Dear boy, he looks
+thoroughly happy. I will not disturb him now."
+
+And she passed on through the hall into the large drawing-room, where the
+dancing was going on.
+
+The first person she caught sight of there was her eldest son. He was
+dancing a quadrille, and his partner was a short young lady in a
+strawberry-coloured tulle dress, covered with trails of spinach-green
+fern leaves. This young person had a round, chubby face, with bright
+apple-hued cheeks, a dark, bullet-shaped head, and round, bead-like eyes
+that glanced about her rapidly like those of a frightened dickey-bird.
+Her dress was cut very low, and the charms she exhibited were not
+captivating. Her arms were very red, and her shoulders were mottled: the
+latter is considered to be a healthy sign in a baby, but is hardly a
+beautiful characteristic in a grown woman.
+
+"_That_ is my daughter-in-law," said Lady Kynaston to herself, and she
+almost groaned aloud. "She is _worse_ even than I thought! Countrified
+and common to the last degree; there will be no licking that face or that
+figure into shape--they are hopeless! Elise and Worth combined could do
+nothing with her! John must be mad. No wonder she is good, poor thing,"
+added the naughty little old lady, cynically. "A woman with _that_
+appearance can never be tempted to be anything else!"
+
+The quadrille came to an end, and Sir John, after depositing his partner
+at the further side of the room, came up to his mother.
+
+"My dear mother, how are you? I am so sorry about your journey; you must
+be dead beat. What a fool Bates was to make such a mistake." He was
+looking about the room as he spoke. "I must introduce you to Vera."
+
+"Yes, introduce me to her at once," said his mother, in a resigned and
+depressed tone of voice. She would like to have added, "And pray get it
+over as soon as you can." What she did say was only, "Bring her up to me
+now. The young lady you have just been dancing with, I suppose!"
+
+"What!" cried Sir John, and burst out laughing. "Good Heavens, mother!
+that was Miss Smiles, the daughter of the parson of Lutterton. You don't
+mean to say you thought a little ugly chit like _that_ was my Vera!"
+
+His mother suddenly laid her hand upon his arm.
+
+"Who is that lovely woman who has just come in with Maurice?" she
+exclaimed.
+
+Her son followed the direction of her eyes, and beheld Vera standing in
+the doorway that led from the conservatory by his brother's side.
+
+Without a word he passed his mother's hand through his arm and led her
+across the room.
+
+"Vera, this is my mother," he said. And Lady Kynaston owned afterwards
+that she never felt so taken aback and so utterly struck dumb with
+astonishment in her life.
+
+Her two sons looked at her with amusement and some triumph. The little
+surprise had been so thoroughly carried out; the contrast of the truth to
+what they knew she had expected was too good a joke not to be enjoyed.
+
+"Not much what you expected, little mother, is it?" said Maurice,
+laughingly. But to Vera, who knew nothing, it was no laughing matter.
+
+She put both her hands out tremblingly and hesitatingly--with a pretty
+pleading look of deprecating deference in her eyes--and the little old
+lady, who valued beauty and grace and talent so much that she could
+barely tolerate goodness itself without them, was melted at once.
+
+"My dear," she said, "you are beautiful, and I am going to love you; but
+these naughty boys made me think you were something like little Miss
+Smiles."
+
+"Nay, mother, it was your own diseased imagination," laughed Maurice;
+"but come, Vera, I am not going to be cheated of this waltz--if John does
+not want you to dance with him, that is to say."
+
+John nodded pleasantly to them, and the two whirled away together into
+the midst of the throng of dancers.
+
+"Well, mother?"
+
+"My dear, she is a very beautiful creature, and I have been a silly,
+prejudiced old woman."
+
+"And you forgive her for being poor, and for living in a vicarage instead
+of a castle?"
+
+"She would be a queen if she were a beggar and lived in a mud hovel!"
+answered his mother, heartily, and Sir John was satisfied.
+
+Lady Kynaston's eyes were following the couple as they danced: for all
+her admiration and her enthusiasm, there was a little anxiety in their
+gaze. She had not forgotten the little picture she had caught a glimpse
+of in the conservatory, nor had her woman's eyes failed to notice that
+Vera's dress was trimmed with peacock's feathers.
+
+Where was Helen? Lady Kynaston said to herself; and why was Maurice
+devoting himself to his future sister-in-law instead of to her?
+
+Mrs. Romer, you may be sure, had not been far off. Her sharp eyes had
+seen Vera and Maurice disappear together into the conservatory. She could
+have told to a second how long they had remained there; and again, when
+they came out, she had watched the little family scene that had taken
+place at the door. She had seen the look of delighted surprise on Lady
+Kynaston's face; she had noted how pleased and how proud of Vera the
+brothers had looked, and then how happily Maurice and Vera had gone off
+again together.
+
+"What does it mean?" Helen asked herself, bitterly. "Is Sir John a fool
+or blind that he does not see what is going on under his nose? She has
+got him, and his money, and his place; what does she want with Maurice
+too? Why can't she let him alone--she is taking him from me."
+
+She watched them eagerly and feverishly. They stood still for a moment
+near her; she could not hear what they said, but she could see the look
+in Maurice's eyes as he bent towards his partner.
+
+Can a woman who has known what love is ever be mistaken about that?
+
+Vera, all wondering and puzzled, might be but dimly conscious of the
+meaning in the eyes that met hers; her own drooped, half troubled, half
+confused, before them. But to Helen, who knew what love's signals were,
+there was no mystery whatever in the passion in his down-bent glance.
+
+"He loves her!" she said to herself, whilst a sharp pang, almost of
+physical pain, shot through her heart. "She shall never get him!--never!
+never! Not though one of us die for it! They are false, both of them. I
+swear they shall never be happy together!"
+
+"Why are you not dancing, Mrs. Romer?" said a voice at her elbow.
+
+"I will dance with you, Sir John, if you will ask me," answers Helen,
+smiling.
+
+Sir John responds, as in duty bound, by passing his arm around her waist.
+
+"When are you going to be married, Sir John?" she asks him, when the
+first pause in the dance gives her the opportunity of speech.
+
+Sir John looks rather confused. "Well, to tell you the truth, I have
+not spoken to Vera yet. I have not liked to hurry her--I thought,
+perhaps----"
+
+"Why don't you speak to her? A woman never thinks any better of a man
+for being diffident in such matters."
+
+"You think not? But you see Vera is----"
+
+"Vera is very much like all other women, I suppose; and you are not
+versed in the ways of the sex."
+
+Sir John demurred in his own mind as to the first part of her speech.
+Vera was certainly not like other women; but then he acknowledged the
+truth of Mrs. Romer's last remark thoroughly.
+
+"No, I dare say I don't know much about women's ways," he admitted; "and
+you think----"
+
+"I think that Vera would be glad enough to be married as soon as she can.
+An engagement is a trying ordeal. One is glad enough to get settled down.
+What is the use of waiting when once everything is arranged?"
+
+Sir John flushed a little. The prospect of a speedy marriage was pleasant
+to him. It was what he had been secretly longing for--only that, in his
+slow way, he had not yet been able to suggest it.
+
+"Do you really think she would like it?" he asked, earnestly.
+
+"Of course she would; any woman would."
+
+"And how long do you think the preparations would take?"
+
+"Oh, a month or three weeks is ample time to get clothes in."
+
+His pulses beat hotly at the bare possibility of such a thing. To possess
+his Vera in so short a time seemed something too great and too wonderful
+to be true.
+
+"Do not lose any more time," continued Helen, following up the impression
+she saw she had made upon him. "Speak to her this evening; get her to fix
+your wedding-day within the month; believe me, a man gets no advantage by
+putting things off too long; and there are dangers, too, in your case."
+
+"Dangers! How do you mean?" he said, quickly.
+
+"Oh, nothing particular--only she is very handsome, and she is young, and
+not accustomed, I dare say, to admiration. Other men may admire her as
+well as you."
+
+"If they did, it could do her no harm," he answered, stiffly.
+
+"Oh, no, of course not; but you can't keep other men from looking at
+her. When once she is your wife you will have her more completely to
+yourself."
+
+Sir John made no particular answer to this; but when he had done dancing
+with Mrs. Romer, he led her back to her seat and thanked her gravely and
+courteously for her suggestions.
+
+"You have done me a great service, Mrs. Romer, and I am infinitely
+obliged to you," he said, and then went his way to find Vera.
+
+He was not jealous; but there was a certain uneasiness in his mind. It
+might be, indeed, true that others would admire and love Vera; others
+more worthy of her, more equally mated with her youth and loveliness; and
+he, he said to himself in his humility with regard to her, he had so
+little to offer her--nothing but his love. He knew himself to be grave
+and quiet; there was nothing about him to enchain her to him. He lacked
+brilliancy in manner and conversation; he was dull; he was, perhaps,
+even prosy. He knew it very well himself; but suppose Vera should find it
+out, and find that she had made a mistake! The bare thought of it was
+enough to make him shudder.
+
+No; Mrs. Romer was a clever, well-intentioned little woman. She had meant
+to give him a hint in all kindness, and he would not be slow to take it.
+What she had meant to say was, "Take her yourself quickly, or some one
+else will take her from you."
+
+And Sir John said to himself that he would so take her, and that as
+quickly as possible.
+
+Standing talking to her younger son, later on that evening, Lady Kynaston
+said to him, suddenly,
+
+"Why does Vera wear peacock's feathers?"
+
+"Why should she not?"
+
+"They are bad luck."
+
+Maurice laughed. "I never knew you to be superstitious before, mother."
+
+"I am not so really; but from choice I would avoid anything that bears an
+unlucky interpretation. I saw her with you in the conservatory as I came
+downstairs."
+
+Maurice turned suddenly red. "Did you?" he asked, a little anxiously.
+
+"Yes. I did not know it was her, of course. I did not see her face, only
+her dress, and I noticed that it was trimmed with peacock's feathers;
+that was what made me recognize her afterwards."
+
+"That was bad luck, at all events," said Maurice, almost involuntarily.
+
+"Why?" asked Lady Kynaston, looking up at him sharply. But Maurice would
+not tell her why.
+
+Lady Kynaston asked no more questions; but she pondered, and she watched.
+Captain Kynaston did not dance again with Vera that night, and he did
+dance several times with Mrs. Romer; it did not escape her notice,
+however, that he seemed absent and abstracted, and that his face bore its
+hardest and sternest aspect throughout the remainder of the evening.
+
+So the ball at Shadonake came to an end, as balls do, with the first
+gleams of daylight; and nothing was left of all the gay crowd who had so
+lately filled the brilliant rooms but several sleepy people creeping up
+slowly to bed, and a great _chiffonade_ of tattered laces, and flowers,
+and coloured scraps littered all over the polished floor of the
+ball-room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HER WEDDING DRESS.
+
+ Those obstinate questionings
+ Of sense and outward things,
+ Fallings from us, vanishings,
+ Blank misgivings--
+ High instincts before which our moral nature
+ Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised.
+
+ Wordsworth.
+
+
+"Vera, are you not coming to look at it?"
+
+"Presently."
+
+"It is all laid out on your bed, and you ought to try it on; it might
+want alterations."
+
+"Oh, there is plenty of time!"
+
+"It is downright affectation!" says old Mrs. Daintree, angrily, to her
+daughter-in-law, as she and Marion leave the room together; "no girl can
+really be indifferent to a wedding dress covered with yards of lovely
+Brussels lace flounces; she ought to be ashamed of herself for her
+ingratitude to Lady Kynaston for such a present; she must really want
+to see it, only she likes playing the fine lady beforehand!"
+
+"I don't think it is that," says Marion, gently; "I don't believe Vera is
+well."
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" snorts her mother-in-law. "A woman who is going to marry
+ten thousand a year within ten days is bound to be well."
+
+Vera sits alone; she leans her head against the window, her hands lie
+idle in her lap, her eyes mechanically follow the rough, gray clouds that
+rack across the winter sky. In little more than a week she will be Vera
+Nevill no longer; she will have gained all that she desired and tried
+for--wealth, position, Kynaston--and Sir John! She should be well
+content, seeing that it has been her own doing all along. No one has
+forced or persuaded her into this engagement, no one has urged her on to
+a course contrary to her own inclination, or her own judgment. It has
+been her own act throughout. And yet, as she sits alone in the twilight,
+and counts over on her fingers the few short days that intervene between
+to-day and her bridal morning, hot miserable tears rise to her eyes,
+and fall slowly down, one by one, upon her clasped hands. She does not
+ask herself why she weeps; possibly she dares not. Only her thoughts
+somehow--by that strange connection of ideas which links something in
+our present to some other thing in our past, and which apparently is in
+no way dependent upon it--go back instinctively, as it were, to her dead
+sister, the Princess Marinari.
+
+"Oh, my poor darling Theodora!" she murmurs, half aloud; "if you had
+lived, you would have taken care of your Vera; if you had not died, I
+should never have come here, nor ever have known--any of them."
+
+And then she hears Marion's voice calling to her from the top of the
+stairs.
+
+"Vera! Vera! do come up and see it before it gets quite dark."
+
+She rises hastily and dashes away her tears.
+
+"What is the matter with me to-day!" she says to herself, impatiently.
+"Have I not everything in the world I wish for? I am happy--of course
+I am happy. I am coming, Marion, instantly."
+
+Upstairs her wedding dress, a soft cloud of rich silk and fleecy lace,
+relieved with knots of flowers, dark-leaved myrtle, and waxen orange
+blossoms, lies spread out upon her bed. Marion stands contemplating it,
+wrapt in ecstatic admiration; old Mrs. Daintree has gone away.
+
+"It is perfectly lovely! I am so glad you had silk instead of satin;
+nothing could show off Lady Kynaston's lace so well: is it not beautiful?
+you ought to try it on. Why, Vera! what is the matter? I believe you have
+been crying."
+
+"I was thinking of Theodora," she murmurs.
+
+"Ah! poor dear Theodora!" assents Marion, with a compassionate sigh; "how
+she would have liked to have known of your marriage; how pleased she
+would have been."
+
+Vera looks at her sister. "Marion," she says, in a low earnest voice;
+"if--if I should break it off, what would you say?"
+
+"Break it off!" cries her sister, horror-struck. "Good heavens, Vera!
+what can you mean? Have you gone suddenly mad? What is the matter with
+you? Break off a match like this at the last minute? You must be
+demented!"
+
+"Oh, of course," with a sudden change of manner; "of course I did not
+mean it, it only came into my head for a minute; of course, as you say,
+it is a splendid match for me. What should I want to break it off for?
+What should I gain? what, indeed?" She spoke feverishly and excitedly,
+laughing a little harshly as she spoke.
+
+Marion looked at her anxiously. "I hope to goodness you will never say
+such horrid things to anybody else; it sounds dreadful, Vera, as if
+Eustace and I were forcing you into it; as if you did not want to marry
+Sir John yourself."
+
+"Of course I want to marry him!" interrupted Vera, with unreasonable
+sharpness.
+
+"Then, pray don't make a fool of yourself, my dear, by talking about
+breaking it off."
+
+"It was only a joke. Break it off! how could I? The best match in the
+county, as you say. I am not going to make a fool of myself; don't be
+afraid, Marion. It would be so inconvenient, too; the trousseau all
+bought, the breakfast ordered, the guests invited; even the wedding dress
+here, all finished and ready to put on, and ten thousand a year waiting
+for me! Oh, no, I am not going to be such an utter fool!"
+
+She laughed; but her laughter was almost more sad than her tears, and her
+sister left her, saddened and puzzled by her manner.
+
+It was now nearly two months since the ball at Shadonake; and, soon after
+that eventful visit, Vera had begun to be employed in preparing for her
+wedding-day, which had been fixed for the 27th of February; for Sir John
+had taken Mrs. Romer's hint, and had pressed an early marriage upon her.
+Vera had made no objection; what objection, indeed, could she have found
+to make? She had acquiesced readily in her lover's suggestions, and had
+set to work to prepare herself for her marriage.
+
+All this time Captain Kynaston had not been in Meadowshire at all; he had
+declined his brother's hospitality, and had gone to spend his leave
+amongst other friends in Somersetshire, where he had started a couple of
+hunters, and wrote word to Sir John that the sport was of such a very
+superior nature that he was unable to tear himself away.
+
+Within a fortnight, however, of Sir John's wedding, Maurice did yield at
+last to his brother's pressing request, and came up from Somersetshire to
+Kynaston. Last Sunday he had suddenly appeared in the Kynaston pew in
+Sutton Church by Sir John's side, and had shaken hands with Vera and her
+relations on coming out of church, and had walked across the vicarage
+garden by the side of Mrs. Daintree, Vera having gone on in front with
+Tommy and Minnie. And it was from that moment that Vera had as suddenly
+discovered that she was utterly and thoroughly wretched, and that she
+dreaded her wedding-day with a strange and unaccountable terror.
+
+She told herself that she was out of health, that the excitement and
+bustle of the necessary preparations had over-tried her, that her nerves
+were upset, her spirits depressed by reason of the solemnity a woman
+naturally feels at the approach of so important a change in her life.
+She assured herself aloud, day after day, that she was perfectly happy
+and content, that she was the very luckiest and most fortunate of women,
+and that she would sooner be Sir John's wife than the wife of any one
+else in the world. And she told it to herself so often and so
+emphatically, that there were whole hours, and even whole days together,
+when she believed in these self-assurances implicitly and thoroughly.
+
+All this time she saw next to nothing of Maurice Kynaston; the weather
+was mild and open, and he went out hunting every day. Sir John, on the
+other hand, was much with her; a constant necessity for his presence
+seemed to possess her. She was never thoroughly content but when he was
+with her; ever restless and ill at ease in his absence.
+
+No one could be more thoroughly convinced than Vera of the entire wisdom
+of the marriage she was about to make. It was, she felt persuaded, the
+best and the happiest thing she could have done with her life. Wealth,
+position, affection, were all laid at her feet; and her husband,
+moreover, would be a man whose goodness and whose devotion to her could
+never fail to command her respect. What more could a woman who, like
+herself, was fully alive to the importance of the good things of this
+world desire? Surely nothing more. Vera, when she was left alone with
+the glories of her wedding garment, took herself to task for her foolish
+words to her sister.
+
+"I am a fool!" she said to herself, half angrily, as she bundled all the
+white silk and the rich lace unceremoniously away into an empty drawer of
+her wardrobe. "I am a fool to say such things even to Marion. It looks,
+as she says, as if I were being forced into a rich marriage by my
+friends. I am very fond of John; I shall make him a most exemplary wife,
+and I shall look remarkably well in the family diamonds, and that is all
+that can possibly be required of me."
+
+Having thus settled things comfortably in her own mind, she went
+downstairs again, and was in such good spirits, and so radiant with
+smiles for the rest of the evening, that Mr. Daintree remarked to his
+wife, when they had retired into their conjugal chamber, that he had
+never seen Vera look so well or so happy.
+
+"Dear child," he said, "it is a great comfort to me to see it, for just
+at first I feared that she had been influenced by the money and the
+position, and that her heart was not in it; but now she has evidently
+become much attached to Sir John, and is perfectly happy; and he is a
+most excellent man, and in every way worthy of her. Did I tell you,
+Marion, that he told me the chancel should be begun immediately after the
+wedding? It is a pity it could not have been done before; but we shall
+just get it finished by Easter."
+
+"I am glad of that. We must fill the church with flowers for the 27th,
+and then its appalling ugliness will not be too visible. Of course, the
+building could hardly have been begun in the middle of winter."
+
+But if Mrs. Eustace Daintree differed at all from her husband upon the
+subject of her sister's serene and perfect happiness, she, like a wise
+woman, kept her doubts to herself, and spoke no word of them to destroy
+the worthy vicar's peace of mind upon the subject.
+
+The next morning Sir John came down from the Hall to the vicarage with
+a cloud upon his brow, and requested Vera to grant him a few minutes'
+private conversation. Vera put on her sable cloak and hat, and went out
+with him into the garden.
+
+"What is the matter?"
+
+"I am exceedingly vexed with my brother," he answered.
+
+"What has Maurice done?"
+
+"He tells me this morning that he will not stop for the wedding, nor be
+my best man. He talks of going away to-morrow."
+
+Vera glanced at him. He looked excessively annoyed; his face, usually so
+kind and placid, was ruffled and angry; he flicked the grass impatiently
+with his stick.
+
+"I have been talking to him for an hour, and cannot get him to change his
+mind, or even to tell me why he will not stay; in fact, he has no good
+reason for going. He _must_ stay."
+
+"Does it matter very much?" she asked, gently.
+
+"Of course it matters. My mother is not able to be present; it would not
+be prudent after her late attack of bronchitis. My only brother surely
+might make a point of being at my wedding."
+
+"But if he has other engagements----"
+
+"He has no other engagement!" he interrupted, angrily; "He cannot find
+any but the most paltry excuses. It is behaving with great unkindness to
+myself, but that is a small matter. What I do mind and will not submit to
+is, that it is a deliberate insult to you."
+
+"An insult to me! Oh! John, how can that be?" she said, in some surprise;
+and then, suddenly, she flushed hotly. She knew what he meant. There had
+been plenty of people to say that Sir John Kynaston was marrying beneath
+himself--a nobody who was unworthy of him: these murmurs had reached
+Vera's ears, but she had not heeded them since Lady Kynaston had been on
+her side. She saw, however, that Sir John feared that the absence of his
+mother and his brother at his wedding might be misconstrued into a sign
+that they also disapproved of his bride.
+
+"I don't think Maurice would wish to slight me," she said, gently.
+
+"No; but, then, he must not behave as though he did. I assure you, Vera,
+if he perseveres in his determination, I shall be most deeply hurt. I
+have always endeavoured to be a kind brother to him, and, if he cannot do
+this small thing to please me, I shall consider him most ungrateful."
+
+"That I am sure he is not," she answered, earnestly; "little as I know
+him, I can assure you that he never loses an occasion of saying how much
+he feels your goodness and generosity to him."
+
+"Then he must prove it. Look here, Vera, will you go up to the Hall now
+and talk to him? He is not hunting to-day; you will find him in the
+library."
+
+"I?" she cried, looking half frightened; "what can I do? You had much
+better ask him yourself."
+
+"I have asked him over and over again, till I am sick of asking! If you
+were to put it as a personal request from yourself, I am sure he would
+see how important to us both it is that he should be present at our
+wedding."
+
+"Pray don't ask me to do such a thing; I really cannot," she said,
+hastily.
+
+Sir John looked at her in some surprise; there was an amount of distress
+in her face that struck him as inadequate to the small thing he had asked
+of her.
+
+"Why, Vera! have you grown shy? Surely you will not mind doing so small a
+thing to please me? You need not stay long, and you have your hat on all
+ready. I have to speak to your brother-in-law about the chancel; I have a
+letter from the architect this morning; and everything must be settled
+about it before we go. If you will go up and speak to Maurice now, I will
+join you--say in twenty minutes from now," consulting his watch, "at the
+lodge gates. You will go, won't you, dear, just to please me?"
+
+She did not know how to refuse; she had no excuse to give, no reason that
+she could put into words why she should shrink with such a dreadful
+terror from this interview with his brother which he was forcing upon
+her. She told him that she would go, and Sir John, leaving her, went into
+the house well satisfied to do his business with the vicar.
+
+And Vera went slowly up the lane alone towards the Hall. She did not know
+what she was going to say to Maurice; she hardly knew, indeed, what it
+was she had been commissioned to ask of him; nor in what words her
+request was to be made. She thought no longer of her wedding-day, nor of
+the lover who had just parted with her. Only before her eyes there came
+again the little wintry copse of birch-trees; the horses standing by, the
+bare fields stretching around, and back into her heart there flashed the
+memory of those quick, hot kisses pressed upon her outstretched hand; the
+one short--and alas! all too perilous--glimpse that had been revealed to
+her of the inner life and soul of the man whose lightest touch she had
+learnt that day to fear as she feared no other living thing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+VERA'S MESSAGE.
+
+ Alas! how easily things go wrong,
+ A word too much, or a sigh too long;
+ And there comes a mist and a driving rain,
+ And life is never the same again.
+
+
+The library at Kynaston was the room which Sir John had used as his only
+sitting-room since he had come down to stay in his own house. When his
+wedding with Miss Nevill had been definitely fixed, there had come down
+from town a whole army of decorators and painters and upholsterers, who
+had set to work to renovate and adorn the rest of the house for the
+advent of the bride, who was so soon to be brought home to it.
+
+They had altered things in various ways, they had improved a few, and
+they had spoiled a good many more; they had, at all events, introduced a
+wholesome and thorough system of cleansing and cleaning throughout the
+house, that had been very welcome to the soul of Mrs. Eccles; but into
+the library they had not penetrated. The old bookshelves remained
+untouched; the old books, in their musty brown calf bindings, were
+undesecrated by profaning hands. All sorts of quaint chairs and bureaus,
+gathered together out of every other room in the house, had congregated
+here. The space over the mantelpiece was adorned by a splendid portrait
+by Vandyke, flanked irreverently on either side by a series of old
+sporting prints, representing the whole beginning, continuation, and
+end of a steeple-chase course, and which, it is melancholy to state, were
+far more highly appreciated by Sir John than the beautiful and valuable
+picture which they surrounded. Below these, and on the mantelpiece
+itself, were gathered together a heterogeneous collection of pipes,
+spurs, horse-shoes, bits, and other implements, which the superintending
+hands of any lady would have straightway relegated to the stables.
+
+In this library Sir John and his brother fed, smoked, wrote and read,
+and lived, in fact, entirely in full and disorderly enjoyment of their
+bachelorhood and its privileges. The room, consequently, was in a
+condition of untidiness and confusion, which was the despair of Mrs.
+Eccles and the delight of the two men themselves, who had even forbidden
+the entrance of any housemaid into it upon pain of instant dismissal.
+Mrs. Eccles submitted herself with resignation to the inevitable, and
+comforted herself with the reflection that the time of unchecked
+masculine dominion was well-nigh over, and that the days were very near
+at hand when "Miss Vera" was coming to alter all this.
+
+"Ah, well, it won't last long, poor gentleman!" the worthy lady said to
+herself, in allusion to Sir John's uninvaded sanctum; "let him enjoy his
+pigstye while he can. When his wife comes she will soon have the place
+swept clean out for him."
+
+So the papers, and the books, and the pipes, and the tobacco-tins were
+left heaped up all over the tables and chairs, and the fox-terriers sat
+in high places on the sofa cushions; and the brothers smoked their pipes
+after their meals, emptied their ashes on to the tables, threw their
+empty soda-water bottles into a corner of the room, wore their slippers
+at all hours, and lapsed, in fact, into all those delightful methods of
+living at ease practised by the vicious nature inherent in man when he is
+unchecked by female influence; whilst Mrs. Eccles groaned in silence, but
+possessed her soul in patience by reason of that change which she knew to
+be coming over the internal economy of Kynaston Hall.
+
+Maurice Kynaston reclines at ease in the most comfortable arm-chair in
+the room, his feet reposing upon a second chair; his pipe is in his
+mouth, and his hands in his trouser pockets; he wears a loose, gray
+shooting-jacket, and Sir John's favourite terrier, Vic, has curled
+herself into a little round white ball upon his outstretched legs.
+Maurice has just been reading his morning's correspondence, and a letter
+from Helen, announcing that her grandfather is ill and confined to his
+room by bronchitis, is still in his hand. He looks gloomily and
+abstractedly into the red logs of the wood fire. The door opens.
+
+"Any orders for the stable, Captain?"
+
+"None to-day, Mrs. Eccles."
+
+"You are not going out hunting?"
+
+"No, I am going to take a rest. By the way, Mrs. Eccles, I shall be
+leaving to-morrow, so you can see about packing my things."
+
+"Dear me! sir, I hope we shall see you again, at the wedding."
+
+"Very unlikely; I don't like weddings, Mrs. Eccles; the only one I ever
+mean to dance at is yours. When you get married, you let me know."
+
+"Law! sir, how you do go on!" said the old lady, laughing; not
+ill-pleased at the imputation. "Dear me," she went on, looking round the
+room uneasily, "did I ever see such a mess in all my born days. Now Sir
+John is out, sir, I suppose you couldn't let me----"
+
+"_Certainly not_--if you mean bring in a broom and a dust-pan! Just let
+me catch you at it, that's all!"
+
+The housekeeper shook her head with a resigned sigh.
+
+"Ah, well! it can't last long; when Miss Vera comes she'll turn the whole
+place inside-out, and all them nasty pipes, and dogs and things will be
+cleared away."
+
+"Do you think so?" suddenly sitting upright in his chair. "Wait a bit,
+Mrs. Eccles; don't go yet. Do you think Miss Vera will have things her
+own way with my brother?"
+
+"Oh! sir, what do you ask me for?" she answered, with discreet
+evasiveness. "Surely you must know more about Miss Vera than I can tell
+you."
+
+Mrs. Eccles went away, and Maurice got up and leant against the
+mantelpiece looking down gloomingly, into the fire. Vic, dislodged from
+his knee, sat up beside him, resting her little white paws on the edge of
+the fender, warming her nose.
+
+"What a fool I am!" said Maurice, aloud to himself. "I can't even hear
+her name mentioned by a servant without wanting to talk about her. Yes,
+it's clear he loves her--but does she love him? Will she be happy? Yes,
+of course, she will get her own way. Will that be enough for her? Ah!"
+turning suddenly round and taking half-a-dozen steps across the room. "It
+is high time I went. I am a coward and a traitor to linger on here; I
+will go. Why did I say to-morrow--why have I not settled to go this very
+day? If I were not so weak and so irresolute, I should be gone by this
+time. I ought never, knowing what I do know of myself--I ought never to
+have come back at all." He went back to the fire and sat down again,
+lifting the little dog back on to his knee. "I shall get over it, I
+suppose," he murmured. "Men don't die of this sort of thing; she will
+marry, and she will think me unkind because I shall never come near her;
+but even if she knew the truth, it would never make any difference to
+her; and by-and-by I too, I suppose, shall marry." The soliloquy died
+away into silence. Maurice stroked the dog and looked at the fire
+dreamily and somewhat drearily.
+
+Some one tapped at the door.
+
+"Come in! What is it, Mrs. Eccles?" he cried, rousing himself.
+
+The door softly opened and there entered, not Mrs. Eccles, but Vera
+Nevill.
+
+Captain Kynaston sprang hastily to his feet. "Oh, Vera! I beg your
+pardon--how do you do? I suppose you have come for John? You must have
+missed him; he started for the vicarage half-an-hour ago."
+
+"No, I have seen him. I have come to see you, Maurice, if you don't
+mind." She spoke rather timidly, not looking at him.
+
+"I am delighted, of course," he answered, a little constrainedly.
+
+Vera stood up on the hearth divesting herself of her long fur cloak; she
+flung it over the back of a chair, and then took off her hat and gloves.
+Maurice was strangely unlike himself this morning, for he never offered
+to help her in these operations, he only stood leaning against the corner
+of the mantelpiece opposite her, looking at her.
+
+Vera stooped down and stroked the little fox-terrier; when she had done
+so, she raised her head and met his eyes.
+
+Did she see, ere he hastily averted them, all the hunger and all the
+longing that filled them as he watched her? He, in his turn, stooped and
+replenished the fire.
+
+"John sent me to talk to you, Maurice," began Vera, hurriedly, like one
+repeating a lesson; "he tells me you will not be with us on the 27th; is
+that so?"
+
+"I am sorry, but I am obliged to go away," he answered.
+
+"John is dreadfully hurt, Maurice. I hope you will alter your mind."
+
+"Is it John for whom you are speaking, or for yourself?" he asked,
+looking at her.
+
+"For both of us. Of course it will be a great disappointment if you are
+not there. You are his only brother, and he will feel it deeply."
+
+"And you; will you feel it?" he persisted. She coloured a little.
+
+"Yes, I shall be very sorry," she answered, nervously. "I should not like
+John to be vexed on his wedding-day; he has been a kind brother to you,
+Maurice, and it seems hard that you cannot do this little thing to show
+your sense of it."
+
+"Believe me, I show my gratitude to my brother just as well in staying
+away as in remaining," he answered, earnestly. "Do not urge me any
+further, Vera; I would do anything in the world to please John, but
+I cannot be present at your wedding."
+
+There was a moment's silence; the fire flickered up merrily between them;
+a red-hot cinder fell out noisily from the grate; the clock ticked
+steadily on the chimney-piece; the little terrier sniffed at the edge
+of Vera's dress.
+
+Suddenly there came into her heart a wild desire _to know_, to eat for
+once of that forbidden fruit of the tree of Eden, whence the flaming
+swords in vain beckoned her back; to eat, and afterwards, perchance, to
+perish of the poisonous food.
+
+A wild conflict of thought thronged into her soul. Prudence, wisdom, her
+very heart itself counselled her to be still and to go. But something
+stronger than all else was within her too; and something that was new and
+strange, and perilously sweet to her; a something that won the day.
+
+She turned to him, stretching out her hands; the warm glow of the fire
+lit up her lovely face and her eloquent pleading eyes, and flickered over
+the graceful and beautiful figure, whose perfect outlines haunted his
+fancy for ever.
+
+"Stay, for my sake, because I ask you!" she cried, with a sudden passion;
+"or else tell me why you must go."
+
+There came no answering flash into his eyes, only he lowered them beneath
+hers; he sat down suddenly, as though he was weary, on the chair whence
+he had risen at her entrance, so that she stood before him, looking down
+at him.
+
+There was a certain repression in his face which made him look stern and
+cold, as one who struggles with a mortal temptation. He stooped over the
+little dog, and became seemingly engrossed in stroking it.
+
+"I cannot stop," he said, in a cold, measured voice; "it is an
+impossibility. But, since you ask me, I will tell you why. It can make no
+possible difference to you to know; it may, indeed, excite your interest
+or your pity for a few moments whilst you listen to me; but when it is
+over and you go away you will forget it again. I do not ask you to
+remember it or me; it is, in fact, all I ask, that you should forget.
+This is what it is. Your wedding-day is very near; it is bringing you
+happiness and love. I can rejoice in your happiness. I am not so selfish
+as to lament it; but you will not wish me to be there to see it when I
+tell you that I have been fool enough to dare to love you myself. It is
+the folly of a madman, is it not? since I have never had the slightest
+hope or entertained the faintest wish to alter the conditions of your
+life; nor have I even asked myself what effect such a confession as this
+that you have wrung from me can have upon you. Whether it excites your
+pity or your contempt, or even your amusement, it cannot in any case make
+any difference to me. My folly, at all events, cannot hurt you or my
+brother; it can hurt no one but myself: it cannot even signify to you.
+It is only for my own sake that I am going, because one cannot bear more
+than a certain amount, can one? I thought I might have been strong
+enough, but I find that it would be too much; that is all. You will not
+ask me to stay any more, will you?"
+
+Not once had he looked at her; not by a single sign or token had he
+betrayed the slightest emotion or agitation. His voice had been steady
+and unbroken; he spoke in a low and somewhat monotonous manner; it was
+as though he had been relating something that in no way concerned
+himself--some story that was of some other, and that other of no great
+interest either to him who told it or to her who listened to the tale.
+Any one suddenly coming into the room would have guessed him to be
+entirely engrossed in the contemplation of the little dog between his
+hands; that he was relating the story of his own heart would not have
+been imagined for an instant.
+
+When he had done speaking there was an absolute silence in the room. What
+he had spoken seemed to admit of no answer of any sort or kind from his
+listener. He had asked for nothing; he had pleaded neither for her
+sympathy nor her forgiveness, far less for any definite expression of the
+effect of his words upon her. He had not, seemingly, cared to know how
+they affected her. He had simply told his own story--that was all; it
+concerned no one but himself. She might pity him, she might even be
+amused at him, as he had said: anyhow, it made no difference to him;
+he had chosen to present a picture of his inner life to her as a
+doctor might have described some complicated disease to a chance
+acquaintance--it was a physiological study, if she cared to look upon it
+as such; if not, it did not matter. There was no possible answer that she
+could make to him; no form of words by which she could even acknowledge
+that she had heard him speak.
+
+She stood perfectly silent for the space of some two or three seconds;
+she scarcely breathed, her very heart seemed to have ceased to beat; it
+was as if she had been turned to stone. She knew not what she felt; it
+was neither pain, nor joy, nor regret; it was only a sort of dull apathy
+that oppressed her very being.
+
+Presently she put forth her hands, almost mechanically, and reached her
+cloak and hat from the chair behind her.
+
+The soft rustle of her dress upon the carpet struck his ear; he looked up
+with a start, like one waking out of a painful dream.
+
+"You are going!" he said, in his usual voice.
+
+"Yes; I am going."
+
+He stood up, facing her.
+
+"There is nothing more to be said, is there?" He said it not as though he
+asked her a question, but as one asserting a fact.
+
+"Nothing, I suppose," she answered, rather wearily, not looking at him as
+she spoke.
+
+"I shall not see you again, as I leave to-morrow morning by the early
+train. You will, at least, wish me good-bye?"
+
+"Good-bye, Maurice."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera; God bless you."
+
+She opened the door softly and went out. She went slowly away down the
+avenue, wrapping her cloak closely around her; the wind blew cold and
+chill, and she shivered a little as she walked. Presently she struck
+aside along a narrow pathway through the grass that led her homewards by
+a shorter cut. She had forgotten that Sir John was to wait for her at the
+lodge-gates.
+
+She had forgotten his very existence. For she _knew_. She had eaten of
+the tree of knowledge, and the scales had fallen for ever from her eyes.
+
+She knew that Maurice loved her--and, alas! for her--she knew also that
+she loved him. And between them a great gulf was fixed; deep, and wide,
+and impassable as the waters of Lethe.
+
+Out of the calm, unconscious lethargy of her maidenhood's untroubled
+dreams the soul of Vera had awakened at length to the realization of the
+strong, passionate woman's heart that was within her.
+
+She loved! It had come to her at last; this thing that she had scorned
+and disbelieved in, and yet that, possibly, she had secretly longed for.
+She had deemed herself too cold, too wise, too much set upon the good
+things of earth, to be touched by that scorching fire; but now she was no
+colder than any other love-sick maiden, no wiser than every other foolish
+woman who had been ready to wreck her life for love in the world's
+history.
+
+Surely no girl ever learnt the secret of her own heart with such dire
+dismay as did Vera Nevill. There was neither joy nor gladness within her,
+only a great anger against herself and her fate, and even against him
+who, as he had said, had dared to love her. She had courted the avowal
+from his lips, and yet she resented the words she had wrung from him.
+But, more than all, she resented the treachery of the heart that was
+within her.
+
+"Why did I ever see him?" she cried aloud in her bitterness, striking her
+hands wildly against each other. "What evil fate brought us together?
+What fool's madness induced me to go near him to-day? I was happy enough;
+I had all I wanted; I was content with my fate--and now--now!" Her
+passionate words died away into a wail. In her haste and her abstraction
+her foot caught against a long, withered bramble trail that lay across
+her path; she half stumbled. It was sufficient to arrest her steps. She
+stood still, and leant against the smooth, whitened trunk of a beech
+tree. Her hands locked themselves tightly together; her face, white and
+miserable, lifted itself despairingly towards the pitiless winter sky
+above her.
+
+"How am I to live out my life?" she asked herself, in her anguish.
+
+It had not entered into her head that she could alter it. It did not
+occur to her to imagine that she could give up anything to which she now
+stood pledged. To be John Kynaston's wife, and to love his brother, that
+was what struck upon her with horror; no other possible contingency had
+as yet suggested itself to her.
+
+Presently, as she moved slowly onwards, still absorbed in her new-found
+misfortune, a fresh train of thought came into her mind. She thought no
+longer about herself, but about him.
+
+"How cruel I was to leave him like that," she said to herself,
+reproachfully; "without a word, or so much as a look, of
+consolation--for, if I suffer, has not he suffered too!"
+
+She forgot that he had asked her for nothing; she only knew that, little
+enough as she had to give him, she had withheld that little from him.
+
+"What must he think of me?" she repeated to herself, in dismay. "How
+heartless and how cold I must be in his eyes to have parted from him thus
+without one single kind word. I might, at least, have told him that I was
+grateful for the love I cannot take. I wonder," she continued, half aloud
+to herself, "I wonder what it is like to be loved by Maurice----" She
+paused again, this time leaning against the wicket-gate that led out of
+the park into the high road.
+
+A little smile played for one instant about her lips, a soft, far-away
+look lingered in her dreaming eyes for just a moment--just the space of
+time it might take you to count twenty; she let her fancy carry her
+away--_where_?
+
+Ah, sweet and perilous reverie! too dear and too dangerous to be safely
+indulged in. Vera roused herself with a start, passing her hand across
+her brow as though to brush away the thoughts that would fain have
+lingered there.
+
+"Impossible!" she said aloud to herself, moving on again rapidly. "I must
+be a fool to stand here dreaming--I, whose fate is irrevocably fixed; and
+I would sooner die than alter it. The best match in the county, it is
+called. Well, so it is; and nothing less would satisfy me. But--but--I
+think I will see him once again, and wish him good-bye more kindly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+"POOR WISDOM."
+
+ No; vain, alas! the endeavour
+ From bonds so sweet to sever,
+ Poor Wisdom's chance against a glance
+ Is now as weak as ever!
+
+ Thos. Moore.
+
+
+The station at Sutton stood perched up above the village on a high
+embankment, upon which the railway crossed the valley from the hills that
+lay to the north to those that lay to the south of it. Up at the station
+it was always draughty and generally cold. To-day, this very early
+morning, about ten minutes before the first up train is due, it is not
+only cold and draughty, but it is also wet and foggy. A damp, white mist
+fills the valley below, and curls up the bare hill sides above; it hangs
+chillingly about the narrow, open shed on the up side of the station,
+covering the wooden bench within it with thick beads of moisture, so that
+no man dare safely sit down on it, and clinging coldly and penetratingly
+to the garments of a tall young lady in a long ulster and a thick veil,
+who is slowly walking up and down the platform.
+
+The solitary porter on duty eyes her inquiringly. "Going by the up train,
+Miss?" he says, touching his hat respectfully as he passes her.
+
+"No," says Vera, blushing hotly under the thick shelter of her veil, and
+then adds with that readiness of explanation to which persons who have a
+guilty conscience are prone, "I am only waiting to see somebody off." An
+uncalled-for piece of information which has only the effect of setting
+the bucolic mind of the local porter agog with curiosity and wonderment.
+
+Presently the few passengers for the early train begin to arrive; a
+couple of farmers going into the market town, a village girl in a smart
+bonnet, an old woman in a dirty red shawl, carrying a bundle; that is
+all. Maurice is very late. Vera remembers that he always puts off
+starting to catch a train till the very last minute. She stands waiting
+for him at the further end of the platform, as far away as she can from
+the knot of rustic passengers, with a beating heart and a fever of
+impatience within her.
+
+The train is signalled, and at that very minute the dog-cart from
+Kynaston drives up at last! Even then he has to get his ticket, and to
+convey himself and his portmanteau across from the other side of the
+line. Their good-bye will be short indeed!
+
+The train steams up, and Maurice hurries forward followed by the porter
+bearing his rugs and sticks; he does not even see her, standing a little
+back, as she does, so as not to attract more attention than need be. But
+when all his things are put into the carriage, and the porter has been
+duly tipped and has departed, Captain Kynaston hears a soft voice behind
+him.
+
+"I have come to wish you good-bye again." He turns, flushing at the sound
+of the sweet familiar voice, and sees Vera in her long ulster, and her
+face hidden behind her veil, by his side.
+
+"Good Heavens, Vera! _you_--out on such a morning?"
+
+"I could not let you go away without--without--one kind word," she
+begins, stammering painfully, her voice shaking so, as she speaks, that
+he cannot fail to divine her agitation, even though he cannot see the
+lovely troubled face that has been so carefully screened from his gaze.
+
+"This is too good of you," he begins. That very minute a brougham dashes
+rapidly up to the station.
+
+"It is the Shadonake carriage!" cried Vera, casting a terrified glance
+behind her. "Who can it be? they will see me."
+
+"Jump into the train," he answers, hurriedly, and, without a thought
+beyond an instinct of self-preservation for the moment, she obeys him.
+Maurice follows her quickly, closing the carriage door behind him.
+"Nobody can have seen you," he says. "I daresay it is only some visitors
+going away; they could not have noticed you. Oh! Vera," turning with
+sudden earnestness to her; "how am I ever to thank you for this great
+kindness to me?"
+
+"It is nothing; only a five minutes' walk before breakfast. It is no
+trouble to me; and I did not want you to think me unfeeling, or unkind
+to you."
+
+Before she could speak another word the carriage door was violently
+slammed to, and the guard's sharp shrill whistle heralded the departure
+of the train. With a cry, Vera sprang towards the door; before she could
+reach it, Maurice, who had perceived instantly what had happened, had let
+down the window and was shouting to the porter. It was too late. The
+train was off.
+
+Vera sank back hopelessly upon the seat; and Maurice, according to the
+manners and customs of infuriated Britons, gave utterance to a very
+laconic word of bad import below his breath.
+
+"I wouldn't have had this happen for ten thousand pounds!" he said, after
+a minute, looking at her in blank despair.
+
+Vera was taking off her veil mechanically; when he could see her face, he
+perceived that she was very white.
+
+"Never mind," she said, with a faint smile; "there is no real harm done.
+It is unfortunate, that is all. The train stops at Tripton. I can get out
+there and walk home."
+
+"Five miles! and it is I who have got you into this scrape! What a
+confounded fool I was to make you get into the carriage! I ought to have
+remembered how late it was. How are you to walk all that way?"
+
+"Pray don't reproach yourself, Maurice; I shall not mind the walk a bit.
+I shall have to confess my escapade to Marion, and tell her why I am late
+for breakfast--that is all; as it is, I can, at all events, finish what I
+wanted to say to you."
+
+And then she was silent, looking away from him out of the further window.
+The train, gradually accelerating its pace, sped quickly on through the
+fog-blotted landscape. Hills, villages, church spires, all that made the
+country familiar, were hidden in the mist; only here and there, in the
+nearer hedge-rows, an occasional tree stood out bleak and black against
+the white veil beyond like a sentinel alone on a limitless plain.
+Absolute silence--only the train rushing on faster and faster through
+the white, wet world without.
+
+Then, at last, it was Maurice, not Vera, that spoke.
+
+"I blame myself bitterly for this, Vera," he said in a low, pained voice.
+"Had it not been for my foolish, unthinking words to you yesterday, you
+would not have been tempted to do this rash act of kindness. I spoke to
+you in a way that I had no right to speak, believing that my words would
+make no impression upon you beyond the fact of showing you that it was
+impossible for me to stay for your wedding. I never dreamt that your
+kindly interest in me would lead you to waste another thought upon me.
+I did not know how good and pitying your nature is, nor give you credit
+for so much generosity."
+
+She turned round to him sharply and suddenly. "What are you saying?" she
+cried, with a harsh pain in her voice. "What words are you using to me?
+_Kindness, pity, generosity_!--have they any place here between you
+and me?"
+
+There was a moment in which neither of them spoke, only their eyes met,
+and the secret that was hidden in their souls lay suddenly revealed to
+each of them.
+
+In another instant Vera had sunk upon her knees before him.
+
+"While you live," she cried, passionately, lifting her beautiful dark
+eyes, that were filled with a new light and a new glory, to his--"while
+you live I will never be another man's wife!"
+
+And there was no other word spoken. Only a shower of close, hot kisses
+upon her lips, and two strong arms that drew her nearer and tighter to
+the beating heart against which she rested, for he was only human after
+all.
+
+Oh, swift and divine moment of joy, that comes but once in a man's life,
+when he holds the woman he loves for the first time to his heart! Once,
+and once only, he tastes of heaven and forgets life itself in the short
+and delirious draught. What envious deity shall grudge him those moments
+of rapture, all too sweet, and, alas! all too short!
+
+To Vera and Maurice, locked in each other's arms, time had no shore, and
+life was not. It might have been ten seconds, it might have been an
+eternity--they could not have told--no pang entered that serene haven
+where their souls were lapped in perfect happiness; no serpent entered
+into Eden; no harsh note struck upon their enchanted ears, nor jarring
+sight upon their sun-dazzled vision. Where in that moment was the duty
+and the honour that was a part of the man's very self? What to Vera was
+the rich marriage and the life of affluence, and all the glitter and
+tinsel which it had been her soul's desire to attain? She remembered it
+not; like a house of cards, it had fallen shattered to the ground.
+
+They loved, and they were together. There was neither duty, nor faith,
+nor this world's wisdom between them; nothing but that great joy which on
+earth has no equal, and which Heaven itself cannot exceed.
+
+But brief are the moments whilst joy, with bated breath and folded wings,
+pauses on his flight; too soon, alas! is the divine elixir dashed away
+from our lingering lips.
+
+Already, for Maurice and for Vera, it is over, and they have awakened to
+earth once more.
+
+It is the man who is the first to remember. "Good God, Vera!" he cries,
+pushing her back from him, "what terrible misfortune is this? Can it be
+true that you must suffer too, that you love me?"
+
+"Why not?" she answered, looking at him; happy still, but troubled too;
+for already for her also Paradise is over. "Is it so hard to believe? And
+yet many women must have loved you. But I--I have never loved before.
+Listen, Maurice: when I accepted your brother, I liked him, I thought I
+could be very happy with him; and--and--do not think ill of me--I wanted
+so much to be rich; it was so miserable being poor and dependent, and I
+knew life so well, and how hard the struggle is for those who are poor.
+I was so determined I would do well for myself; and he was good, and I
+liked him."
+
+At the mention of the brother, whom he had wronged, Maurice hid his face
+in his hands and groaned aloud.
+
+She laid her hand softly upon his knee; she had half raised herself upon
+the seat by his side, and her head, from which her hat had fallen,
+pillowed itself with a natural caressing action against his shoulder.
+
+At the soft touch he shivered.
+
+"It was dreadful, was it not? But then, I am not perfect, and I liked the
+idea of being rich, and I had never loved--I did not even know what it
+meant. And then I met you--long ago your photograph had arrested my
+fancy; and do you remember that evening at Shadonake when I first saw
+you?"
+
+Could he ever forget one single detail of that meeting?
+
+"You stood at the foot of the staircase, waiting, and I came down softly
+behind you. You did not see me till I was close to you, and then you
+turned, and you took my hands, and you looked and looked at me till my
+eyes could no longer meet yours. There came a vague trouble into my
+heart; I had never felt anything like it before. Maurice, from that
+instant I must have loved you."
+
+"For God's sake, Vera!" he cried out wildly, as though the gentle words
+gave him positive pain, "do not speak of it. Do you not see the abyss
+which lies between us--which must part us for ever?"
+
+"Loving you, I will never marry your brother!" she answered, earnestly.
+
+"And I will never rob my brother of his bride. Darling, darling, do not
+tempt me too far, or God knows what I may say and do! To reach you, love,
+would be to dip my hands in dishonour and basest treachery. Not even for
+you can I do this vile thing. Kiss me once more, sweet, and let me go out
+of your life for ever; believe me, it is better so; best for us both. In
+time you will forget, you will be happy. He will be good to you, and you
+will be glad that you were not tempted to betray him."
+
+"You do not know what you ask of me," she cried, lifting her face, all
+wet with tears, to his. "Leave me, if you will--go your way--forget
+me--it is all the same to me; henceforth there is no other man on earth
+to me but you. I will never swear vows at God's altar that I cannot keep,
+or commit the frightful sin of marrying one man whilst I know that I love
+another. Yes, yes; I know it is a horrible, dreadful misfortune. Have I
+sought it, or gone out of my way to find it? Have I not struggled to
+keep it away from me? striven to blind my eyes to it and to go on as I
+was, and never to acknowledge it to myself? Do I not love wealth above
+all things; do I not know that he is rich, and you poor? And yet I cannot
+help loving you!"
+
+He took her clasped, trembling hands within his own, and held them
+tightly. In that moment the woman was weak, and the man was her master.
+
+"Listen," he said. "Yes, you are right, I am poor; but that is not all.
+Vera, for Heaven's sake, reflect, and pause before you wreck your whole
+life. I cannot marry you--not only because I am poor, but also, alas!
+because I am bound to another woman."
+
+"Helen Romer!" she murmured, faintly; "and you love _her_?" A sick, cold
+misery rushed into her heart. She strove to withdraw her hands from his;
+but he only held them the tighter.
+
+"No; by the God above us, I love you, and only you," he answered her,
+almost roughly; "but I am bound to her. I cannot afford to marry her--we
+have neither of us any money; but I am bound all the same. Only one thing
+can set me free; if, in five years, we are, neither of us, better off
+than now, she has told me that I may go free. Under no other conditions
+can I ever marry any one else. That is my secret, Vera. At any moment she
+can claim me, and for five years I must wait for her."
+
+"Then I will wait for you five years too," she cried, passionately. "Is
+my love less strong, less constant, than hers, do you think? Can I not
+wait patiently too?" She wound her arms about his neck, and drew his face
+down to hers.
+
+"Five years," she murmured; "it is but a small slice out of one's life
+after all; and when it is over, it seems such a little space to look back
+upon. Dearest, some day we shall remember how miserable, and yet how
+happy too, we have been this morning; and we shall smile, as we remember
+it all, out of the fulness of our content."
+
+How was he to gainsay so sweet a prophet? Already the train was
+slackening, and the moment when they must part drew near. The beautiful
+head lay upon his breast; the deep, shadowy eyes, which love for the
+first time had softened into the perfection of their own loveliness,
+mirrored themselves in his; the flower-shaped, trembling lips were close
+up to his. How could he resist their gentle pleading? There was no time
+for more words, for more struggles between love and duty.
+
+"So be it, then," he murmured, and caught her in one last, passionate
+embrace to his heart.
+
+Five minutes later a tall young lady, deeply veiled as when she had
+entered the train, got out of it and walked swiftly away from Tripton
+station down the hill towards the high road. So absorbed was she in her
+own reflections that she utterly failed to notice another figure, also
+female and also veiled, who, preceding her through the mist, went on
+swiftly before her down the road. Nor did she pay the slightest attention
+to the fact until a turn in the road brought her suddenly face to face
+with two persons who stood deep in conversation under the shelter of
+the tall, misty hedge-row.
+
+As Vera approached these two persons sprang apart with a guilty
+suddenness, and revealed to her astonished eyes--Beatrice Miller and Mr.
+Herbert Pryme.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+AN UNLUCKY LOVE-LETTER.
+
+ Heaven first taught letters for some wretch's aid,
+ Some banished lover, or some captive maid.
+
+ Pope, "Eloisa and Abelard."
+
+
+To ascertain rightly how Mr. Pryme and Miss Miller came to be found in
+the parish of Tripton at nine o'clock in the morning, standing together
+under a wet hedge-row, it will be necessary to take a slight retrospect
+of what had taken place in the history of these two people since the time
+when the young barrister had spent that memorable week at Shadonake.
+
+The visit had come to an end uneventfully for either of them; but two
+days after his departure from the house Mr. Pryme had been guilty of a
+gross piece of indiscretion. He had forgotten to observe a golden rule
+which should be strongly impressed upon every man and woman. The maxim
+should be inculcated upon the young with at least as much earnestness as
+the Catechism or the Ten Commandments. In homely language, it runs
+something in this fashion: "Say what you like, but never commit yourself
+to paper."
+
+Mr. Pryme had observed the first portion of this maxim religiously, but
+he had failed to pay equal regard to the latter. He _had_ committed
+himself to paper in the shape of a very bulky and very passionate
+love-letter, which was duly delivered by the morning postman and laid at
+the side of Miss Miller's plate upon the breakfast-table.
+
+Now, Miss Miller, as it happened on that particular morning, had a
+very heavy influenza cold, and had stayed in bed for breakfast. When,
+therefore, Mrs. Miller prepared to send a small tray up to her daughter's
+bedroom with her breakfast, she took up her letters also from the table
+to put upon it with her tea and toast. The very thick envelope of one
+of them first attracted her notice; then the masculine nature of the
+handwriting; and when, upon turning it over, she furthermore perceived a
+very large-sized monogram of the letters "H. P." upon the envelope, her
+mind underwent a sudden revolution as to the sending of her daughter's
+correspondence upstairs.
+
+"There, that will do," she said to the lady's maid, "you can take up
+the tray; I will bring Miss Miller's letters up to her myself after
+breakfast."
+
+After which, without more ado, she walked to the window and opened the
+letter. Some people might have had scruples as to such a strong measure.
+Mrs. Miller had none at all. Her children, she argued, were her own
+property and under her own care; as long as they lived under her roof,
+they had no right over anything that they possessed independently of
+their mother.
+
+Under ordinary circumstances she would not have opened a letter addressed
+to any of her children; but if there was anything of a suspicious nature
+in their correspondence, she certainly reserved to herself the perfect
+right of dealing with it as she thought fit.
+
+She opened the letter and read the first line; it ran thus:--
+
+"My dearest darling Beatrice." She then turned to the end of it and read
+the last; it was this: "Your own most devoted and loving Herbert."
+
+That was quite enough for Mrs. Miller; she did not want to read any more
+of it. She slipped the letter into her pocket, and went back to the
+breakfast-table and poured out the tea and coffee for her husband and her
+sons.
+
+But when the family meal was over, it was with a very angry aspect that
+Mrs. Miller went upstairs and stood by her eldest daughter's bedside.
+
+"Beatrice, here is a letter which has come for you this morning, of which
+I must ask you an explanation."
+
+"You have read it, mamma!" flushing angrily, as she took it from her
+mother's hand.
+
+"I have read the first line and the last. I certainly should not take the
+trouble to wade all through such contemptible trash!" Which was an
+unprovoked insult to poor Beatrice's feelings.
+
+She snatched the letter from her mother's hand, and crumpled it jealously
+under her pillow.
+
+"How can you call it trash, then, if you have not read it?"
+
+It was hard, certainly; to have her letter opened was bad enough, but to
+have it called names was worse still. The letter, which to Beatrice would
+be so full of sacred charm and delight--such a poem on love and its
+sweetness--was nothing more to her mother than "contemptible trash!"
+
+But where in the whole world has a love-letter been indited, however
+delightful and perfect it may be to the writer and the receiver of it,
+that is nothing but an object of ridicule or contempt to the whole world
+beside? Love is divine as Heaven itself to the two people who are
+concerned in its ever new delights; but to us lookers-on its murmurs are
+but fooleries, its sighs are ludicrous, and its written words absolute
+imbecilities; and never a memory of our own lost lives can make the
+spectacle of it in others anything but an irritating and idiotic
+exhibition.
+
+"I have read quite enough," continued Mrs. Miller, sternly, "to
+understand the nature of it. It is from Mr. Pryme, I imagine?"
+
+"Yes, mamma."
+
+"And by what right, may I ask, does Mr. Pryme commence a letter to you in
+the warm terms of affection which I have had the pleasure of reading?"
+
+"By the right which I myself have given him," she answered, boldly.
+
+Regardless of her cold, she sat upright in her bed; a flush of defiance
+in her face, her short dark hair flung back from her brow in wild
+confusion. She understood at once that all had been discovered, and she
+was going to do battle for her lover.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me, Beatrice, that you have engaged yourself to this
+Mr. Pryme?"
+
+"Certainly I have."
+
+"You know very well that your father and I will never consent to it."
+
+"Never is a long day, mamma."
+
+"Don't take up my words like that. I consider, Beatrice, that you have
+deceived me shamefully. You persuaded me to ask that young man to the
+house because you said that Sophy Macpherson was fond of him."
+
+"So she is."
+
+"Beatrice, how can you be so wicked and tell such lies in the face of
+that letter to yourself?"
+
+"I never said he was fond of her," she answered, with just the vestige of
+a twinkle in her eyes.
+
+"If I had known, I would never have asked him to come," continued her
+mother.
+
+"No; I am sure you would not. But I did not tell you, mamma."
+
+"I have other views for you. You must write to this young man and tell
+him you will give him up."
+
+"I certainly shall not do that."
+
+"I shall not give my consent to your engagement."
+
+"I never imagined that you would, mamma, and that is why I did not ask
+for it."
+
+And then Mrs. Miller got very angry indeed.
+
+"What on earth do you intend to do, you ungrateful, disobedient,
+rebellious child?"
+
+"I mean to marry Herbert some day because I love him," answered her
+daughter, coolly; "but I will not run away with him unless you force me
+to it; and I hope, by-and-by, when Geraldine is grown up and can take my
+place, that you will give us your consent and your blessing. I am quite
+willing to wait a reasonable time for the chance of it."
+
+"Is it likely that I shall give my consent to your marrying a young man
+picked up nobody knows where--out of the gutter, most likely? Who are his
+people, I should like to know?"
+
+"I daresay his father is as well connected as mine," answered Beatrice,
+who knew all about her mother's having married a _parvenu_.
+
+"Beatrice, I am ashamed of you, sneering at your own father!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, mamma; I did not mean to sneer, but you say very
+trying things; and Mr. Pryme is a gentleman, and every bit as good as we
+are!"
+
+"And where is the money to be found for this precious marriage, I should
+like to know? Do you suppose Mr. Pryme can support you?"
+
+"Oh dear, no; but I know papa will not let me starve."
+
+And Mrs. Miller knew it too. However angry she might be, and however
+unsuitably Beatrice might choose to marry, Mr. Miller would never allow
+his daughter to be insufficiently provided for. Beatrice's marriage
+portion would be a small fortune to a poor young man.
+
+"It is your money he is after!" she said, angrily.
+
+"I don't think so, mamma; and of course of that I am the best judge."
+
+"He shall never set foot here again. I shall write to him myself and
+forbid him the house."
+
+"That, of course, you may do as you like about, mamma; I cannot prevent
+your doing so, but it will not make me give him up, because I shall never
+marry any one else."
+
+And there Mrs. Miller was, perforce, obliged to let the matter rest. She
+went her way angry and vexed beyond measure, and somewhat baffled too.
+How is a mother to deal with a daughter who is so determined and so
+defiant as was Beatrice Miller? There is no known method in civilized
+life of reducing a young lady of twenty to submission in matters of the
+heart. She could not whip her, or put her on bread and water, nor could
+she shut her up in a dark cupboard, as she might have done had she been
+ten years old.
+
+All she could do was to write a very indignant letter to Mr. Pryme,
+forbidding him ever to enter her doors, or address himself in any way to
+her daughter again. Having sent this to the post, she was at the end of
+her resources. She did, indeed, confide the situation with very strong
+and one-sided colouring to her husband; but Mr. Miller had not the strong
+instincts of caste which were inherent in his wife. She could not make
+him see what dreadful deed of iniquity Herbert Pryme and his daughter
+had perpetrated between them.
+
+"What's wrong with the young fellow?" he asked, looking up from the pile
+of parliamentary blue-books on the library table before him.
+
+"Nothing is wrong, Andrew; but he isn't a suitable husband for Beatrice."
+
+"Why? you asked him here, Caroline. I suppose, if he was good enough to
+stay in the house, he is no different to the boys, or anybody else who
+was here."
+
+"It is one thing to stay here, and quite another thing to want to marry
+your daughter."
+
+"Well, if he's an honest man, and the girl loves him, I don't see the
+good of making a fuss about it; she had better do as she likes."
+
+"But, Andrew, the man hasn't a penny; he has made nothing at the bar
+yet." It was no use appealing to his exclusiveness, for he had none; it
+was a better move to make him look at the money-point of the question.
+
+"Oh, well, he will get on some day, I daresay, and meanwhile I shall give
+Beatrice quite enough for them both when she marries."
+
+"You don't understand, Andrew."
+
+"No, my dear," very humbly, "perhaps I don't; but there, do as you think
+best, of course; I am sure I don't wish to interfere about the children;
+you always manage all these kind of things; and if you wouldn't mind, my
+dear, I am so very busy just now. You know there is to be this attack
+upon the Government as soon as the House meets, and I have the whole of
+the papers upon the Patagonian and Bolivian question to look up, and most
+fraudulent misstatements of the truth I believe them to be; although, as
+far as I've gone, I haven't been able to make it quite out yet, but I
+shall come to it--no doubt I shall come to it. I am going to speak upon
+this question, my dear, and I mean to tell the House that a grosser
+misrepresentation of facts was never yet promulgated from the Ministerial
+benches, nor flaunted in the faces of an all too leniently credulous
+Opposition; that will warm 'em up a bit, I flatter myself; those fellows
+in office will hang their heads in shame at the word Patagonia for weeks
+after."
+
+"But who cares about Patagonia?"
+
+"Oh, nobody much, I suppose. But there's bound to be an agitation against
+the Government, and that does as well as anything else. We can't afford
+to neglect a single chance of kicking them out. I have planned my speech
+pretty well right through; it will be very effective--withering, I
+fancy--but it's just these plaguy blue-books that won't quite tally with
+what I've got to say. I must go through them again though----"
+
+"You had better have read the papers first, and settled your speech
+afterwards," suggested his wife.
+
+"Oh dear, no! that wouldn't do at all; after all, you know, between you
+and me, the facts don't go for much; all we want is, to denounce them;
+any line of argument, if it is ingenious enough, will do; lay on the big
+words thickly--that's what your constituents like. Law bless you! _they_
+don't read the blue books; they'll take my word for granted if I say they
+are full of lies; it would be a comfort, however, if I could find a few.
+Of course, my dear, this is only between you and me."
+
+A man is not always heroic to the wife of his bosom. Mrs. Miller went
+her way and left him to his righteous struggle among the Patagonian
+blue-books. After all, she said to herself, it had been her duty to
+inform him of his daughter's conduct, but it was needless to discuss
+the question further with him. He was incapable of approaching it from
+her own point of view. It would be better for her now to go her own way
+independently of him. She had always been accustomed to manage things her
+own way. It was nothing new to her.
+
+Later in the day she attempted to wrest a promise from Beatrice that
+she would hold no further communication with the prohibited lover. But
+Beatrice would give no such promise.
+
+"Is it likely that I should promise such a thing?" she asked her mother,
+indignantly.
+
+"You would do so if you knew what your duty to your mother was."
+
+"I have other duties besides those to you, mamma; when one has promised
+to marry a man, one is surely bound to consider him a little. If I have
+the chance of meeting him, I shall certainly take it."
+
+"I shall take very good care that you have no such chances, Beatrice."
+
+"Very well, mamma; you will, of course, do as you think best."
+
+It was in consequence of these and sundry subsequent stormy conversations
+that Mr. Herbert Pryme suddenly discovered that he had a very high regard
+and affection for Mr. Albert Gisburne, the vicar of Tripton, the same
+to whom once Vera's relations had wished to unite her.
+
+The connection between Mr. Gisburne and Herbert Pryme was a slender one;
+he had been at college with an elder brother of his, who had died in his
+(Herbert's) childhood. He did not indeed very clearly recollect what this
+elder brother had been like; but having suddenly called to mind that,
+during the course of his short visit to Shadonake, he had discovered the
+fact of the college friendship, of which, indeed, Mr. Gisburne had
+informed him, he now was unaccountably inflamed by a desire to cultivate
+the acquaintance of the valued companion of his deceased brother's youth.
+
+He opened negotiations by the gift of a barrel of oysters, sent down
+from Wilton's, with an appropriate and graceful accompanying note. Mr.
+Gisburne was surprised, but not naturally otherwise than pleased by the
+attention. Next came a box of cigars, which again were shortly followed
+by two brace of pheasants purporting to be of Herbert's own shooting, but
+which, as a matter of fact, he had purchased in Vigo Street.
+
+This munificent succession of gifts reaped at length the harvest for
+which they had been sown. In his third letter of grateful acknowledgment
+for his young friend's kind remembrance of him, Mr. Gisburne, with some
+diffidence, for Tripton Rectory was neither lively nor remarkably
+commodious, suggested how great the pleasure would be were his friend to
+run down to him for a couple of days or so; he had nothing, in truth, to
+offer him but a bachelor's quarters and a hearty welcome; there was next
+to no attraction beyond a pretty rural village and a choral daily
+service; but still, if he cared to come, Mr. Gisburne need not say how
+delighted he would be, etc., etc.
+
+It is not too much to say that the friend jumped at it. On the shortest
+possible notice he arrived, bag and baggage, professing himself charmed
+with the bachelor's quarters; and, burning with an insatiable desire to
+behold the rurality of the village, to listen to the beauty and the
+harmony of the daily choral performances, he took up his abode in the
+clergyman's establishment; and the very next morning he sent a rural
+villager over to Shadonake with a half-crown for himself and a note to be
+given to Miss Miller the very first time she walked or rode out alone.
+This note was duly delivered, and that same afternoon Beatrice met her
+lover by appointment in an empty lime-kiln up among the chalk hills. This
+romantic rendezvous was, however, discontinued shortly, owing to the fact
+of Mrs. Miller having become suspicious of her daughter's frequent and
+solitary walks, and insisting on sending out Geraldine and her governess
+with her.
+
+A few mornings later a golden chance presented itself. Mr. and Mrs.
+Miller went away for the night to dine and sleep at a distant country
+house. Beatrice had not been invited to go with them. She did not venture
+to ask her lover to the house he had been forbidden to enter, but she
+ordered the carriage for herself, caught the early train to Tripton, met
+Herbert, by appointment, outside the station, and stood talking to him in
+the fog by the wayside, where Vera suddenly burst upon their astonished
+gaze.
+
+There was nothing for it but to take Vera into their confidence; and they
+were so much engrossed in their affairs that they entirely failed to
+notice how mechanically she answered, and how apathetically she appeared
+for the first few minutes to listen to their story. Presently, however,
+she roused herself into a semblance of interest. She promised not to
+betray the fact of the stolen interview, all the more readily because it
+did not strike either of them to inquire what she herself was doing in
+the Tripton road.
+
+In the end Vera walked on slowly by herself, and the Shadonake carriage,
+ordered to go along at a foot's pace from Sutton station towards Tripton,
+picked both girls up and conveyed them safely, each to their respective
+homes.
+
+"You will never tell of me, will you, Vera?" said Beatrice to her, for
+the twentieth time, ere they parted.
+
+"Of course not; indeed, I would gladly help you if I could," she
+answered, heartily.
+
+"You will certainly be able to help us both very materially some day,"
+said Beatrice, who had visions of being asked to stay at Kynaston, to
+meet Herbert.
+
+"I am afraid not," answered Vera, with a sigh. Already there was regret
+in her mind for the good things of life which she had elected to
+relinquish. "Put me down at this corner, Beatrice; I don't want to drive
+up to the vicarage. Good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera--and--and you won't mind my saying it--but I like you so
+much."
+
+Vera smiled, and, with a kiss, the girls parted; and Mrs. Daintree never
+heard after all the story of her sister's early visit to Tripton, for she
+returned so soon that she had not yet been missed. The vicar and his
+family had but just gathered round the breakfast-table, when, after
+having divested herself of her walking garments, she came in quietly and
+took her vacant place amongst them unnoticed and unquestioned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+LADY KYNASTON'S PLANS.
+
+ Swift as a shadow, short as any dream,
+ Brief as the lightning in the collied night.
+
+ And ere a man hath power to say, "Behold!"
+ The jaws of darkness do devour it up:
+ So quick bright things come to confusion.
+
+ "Midsummer Night's Dream."
+
+
+Sir John Kynaston sat alone in his old-bachelor rooms in London. They
+were dark, dingy rooms, such as are to be found in countless numbers
+among the narrow streets that encompass St. James's Street. They were
+cheerless and comfortless, and, withal, high-rented, and possessed of
+no other known advantage than that of their undeniably central situation.
+They were not rooms that one would suppose any man would care to linger
+in in broad daylight; and yet Sir John remained in them now a days
+almost from morning till night.
+
+He sat for the most part as he is sitting now--in a shabby, leathern
+arm-chair, stooping a little forward, and doing nothing. Sometimes he
+wrote a few necessary letters, sometimes he made a feint of reading the
+paper; but oftenest he did nothing, only sat still, staring before him
+with a hopeless misery in his face.
+
+For in these days Sir John Kynaston was a very unhappy man. He had
+received a blow such as strikes at the very root and spring of a man's
+life--a blow which a younger man often battles through and is none the
+worse in the end for, but under which a man of his age is apt to be
+crushed and to succumb. Within a week of his wedding-day Vera Nevill
+had broken her engagement to him. It had been a nine days' wonder in
+Meadowshire--the county had rung with the news--everybody had marvelled
+and speculated, but no one had got any nearer to the truth than that Vera
+was supposed to have "mistaken her feelings." The women had cried shame
+upon her for such capriciousness, and had voted her a fool into the
+bargain for throwing over such a match; and if a male voice, somewhat
+less timid than the rest, had here and there uplifted itself in her
+defence and had ventured to hint that she might have had sufficient and
+praiseworthy motives for her conduct, a chorus of feminine indignation
+had smothered the kindly suggestion in a whole whirl-wind of abuse and
+reviling.
+
+As to Sir John, he blamed her not, and yet he knew no more about it than
+any of them; he, too, could only have told you that Vera had mistaken her
+feelings--he knew no more than that--for it was but half the truth that
+she had told him. But it had been more than enough to convince him that
+she was perfectly right. When, after telling him plainly that she found
+she did not love him enough, that there had been other and extraneous
+reasons that had blinded her to the fact at the time she had accepted
+him, but that she had found it out later on; when, after saying this she
+had asked him plainly whether he would wish to have a wife who valued his
+name, and his wealth, and his fine old house at least as much as he did
+himself, Sir John had been able to give her but one answer. No, he would
+not have a wife who loved him in such a fashion. And he had thought well
+of her for telling him the truth beforehand instead of leaving him to
+find it out for himself later. If there had been a little, a very little,
+falling of his idol from the high pillar upon which he had set her up, in
+that she should at any time have been guided by mercenary and worldly
+motives; there had been at the same time a very great amount of respect
+for her brave and straightforward confession of her error at a time when
+most women would have found themselves unequal to the task of drawing
+back from the false position into which they had drifted. No, he could
+not blame her in any way.
+
+But, all the same, it was hard to bear. He said to himself that he was
+a doomed and fated man; twice had love and joy and domestic peace been
+within his grasp, and twice they had been wrested from his arms; these
+things, it was plain, were not for him. He was too old, he told himself,
+ever to make a further effort. No, there was nothing before him now but
+to live out his loveless life alone, to sink into a peevish, selfish old
+bachelor, and to make a will in Maurice's favour, and get himself out of
+the world that wanted him not with as much expedition as might be.
+
+And he loved Vera still. She was still to him the most pure and perfect
+of women--good as she was beautiful. Her loveliness haunted him by day
+and by night, till the bitter thought of what might have been and the
+contrast of the miserable reality drove him half wild with longings
+which he did not know how to repress. He sat at home in his rooms and
+moped; there were more streaks of white in his hair than of old, and
+there were new lines of care upon his brow--he looked almost an old man
+now. He sat indoors and did nothing. It was April by this time, and the
+London season was beginning; invitations of all kinds poured in upon him,
+but he refused them all; he would go nowhere. Now and then his mother
+came to see him and attempted to cheer and to rouse him; she had even
+asked him to come down to Walpole Lodge, but he had declined her request
+almost ungraciously.
+
+He never had much in common with his mother, and he felt no desire now
+for her sympathy; besides, the first time she had come she had been
+angry, and had called Vera a jilt, and that had offended him bitterly; he
+had rebuked her sternly, and she had been too wise to repeat the offence;
+but he had not forgotten it. Maurice, indeed, he would have been glad to
+see, but Maurice did not come near him. His regiment had lately moved to
+Manchester, and either he could not or would not get leave; and yet he
+had been idle enough at one time, and glad to run up to town upon the
+smallest pretext. Now he never came. It added a little to his irritation,
+but scarcely to his misery. On this particular afternoon, as he sat as
+usual brooding over the past, there came the sudden clatter of carriage
+wheels over the flagged roadway of the little back street, followed by a
+sharp ring at his door. It was his mother, of course; no other woman came
+to see him; he heard the rustle of her soft silken skirts up the narrow
+staircase, and her pleasant little chatter to the fat old landlady who
+was ushering her up, and presently the door opened and she came in.
+
+"Good morning, John. Dear me, how hot and stuffy this room is," holding
+up her soft old face to her son.
+
+He just touched her cheek. "I am sorry you find it so--shall I open the
+window?"
+
+"Oh!" sinking down in a chair, and throwing back her cloak; "how can you
+stand a fire in the room, it is quite mild and spring-like out. Have you
+not been out, John? it would do you good to get a little fresh air."
+
+"I shall go round to the club presently, I daresay," he answered,
+abstractedly, sitting down in his arm-chair again; all the pleasant
+flutter that the bright old lady brought with her, the atmosphere of life
+and variety that surrounded her, only vexed and wearied him, and jarred
+upon his nerves. She was always telling him to go somewhere or to do
+something; why couldn't she let him alone? he thought, irritably.
+
+"To your club? No further than that? Why, you might as well stay at home.
+Really, my dear, it's a great pity you don't go about and see some of
+your old friends; you can't mean to shut yourself up like a dormouse for
+ever, I suppose!"
+
+"I haven't the least idea what I mean to do," he answered, not
+graciously; she was his mother, and so he could not very well put her out
+at the door, but that was what he would have liked to do.
+
+"I don't see," continued Lady Kynaston, with unwonted courage, "I don't
+at all see why you should let this unfortunate affair weigh on you for
+ever; there is really no reason why you should not console yourself and
+marry some nice girl; there is Lady Mary Hendrie and plenty more only too
+ready to have you if you will only take that trouble----"
+
+"Mother, I wish you would not talk to me like that," he said,
+interrupting suddenly the easy flow of her consoling suggestions, and
+there was a look of real pain upon his face that smote her somewhat.
+"Never speak to me of marrying again. I shall never marry any one." He
+looked away from her, stern and angry, stooping again over the red ashes
+in the grate; if he had only given her one plea for her pity--if he had
+only added, "I have suffered too much, I love her still"--all her
+mother's heart must have gone out to him who, though he was not her
+favourite, was her first born after all; but he did not want her pity,
+he only wanted her to go away.
+
+"It is a great pity," she answered, stiffly, "because of Kynaston."
+
+"I shall never set foot at Kynaston again."
+
+Her colour rose a little--after all, she was a cunning little old lady.
+The little fox-terrier lay on the rug between them; she stooped down and
+patted it. "Good dog, good little Vic," she said, a little nervously;
+then, with a sudden courage, she looked up at her son again. "John, it
+is a sad thing that Kynaston must be left empty to go to rack and ruin;
+though I have never cared to live there myself, I have always hoped that
+you would. It would have grieved your poor father sadly to have thought
+that the old place was always to lie empty."
+
+"I cannot help it," he answered, moodily, wishing more than ever that she
+would go.
+
+"John;" she fidgeted with her bonnet strings, and her voice trembled a
+little; "John, if you are quite sure you will never live there yourself,
+why should not Maurice have it?"
+
+"Maurice! Has he told you to ask for it?" He sat bolt upright in
+his chair; he was attentive enough now; the idea that Maurice had
+commissioned his mother to ask for something he had not ventured to ask
+for himself was not pleasant to him. "Is it Maurice who has sent you?"
+
+"No, no, my dear John; certainly not; why, I haven't seen Maurice for
+weeks and weeks; he never comes to town now. But I'll tell you why the
+idea came to me. I called just now in Princes Gate; poor old Mr. Harlowe
+has had a stroke--it is certain he cannot live long now, after the severe
+attack he had of bronchitis, too, two months ago. I just saw Helen for a
+minute, she reported him to be unconscious. If he dies, he must surely
+leave Helen something; it may not be all, but it will be at least a
+competency; and I was thinking, John, that if you did not want Kynaston,
+and would let them live there, the marriage might come off at last; they
+have been attached to each other a long time, and to live rent free would
+be a great thing."
+
+"How are they to keep it up? Kynaston is an expensive place."
+
+"Well, I thought, John, perhaps, if Maurice looks after the property, you
+might consider him as your agent, and allow him something, and that and
+her money----"
+
+"Yes, yes, I understand; well, I will see; wait, at all events, till Mr.
+Harlowe is dead. I will think it over. No, I don't see any reason why
+they should not live there if they like;" he sighed, wearily, and his
+mother went away, feeling that she had reason to be satisfied with her
+morning's work.
+
+She was in such a hurry to install her darling there--to see him viceroy
+in the place where now it was certain he must eventually be king. Why
+should he be doomed to wait till Kynaston came to him in the course of
+nature; why should he not enter upon his kingdom at once, since Sir John,
+by his own confession, would never marry or live there himself?
+
+Lady Kynaston was very far from wishing evil to her eldest son, but for
+years she had hoped that he would remain unmarried; for a short time she
+had been forced to lay her dreams aside, and she had striven to forget
+them and to throw herself with interest into her eldest son's engagement;
+but now that the marriage was broken off, all her old schemes and plans
+came back to her again. She was working and planning again for Maurice's
+happiness and aggrandisement. She wanted to see him in his father's
+house, "Kynaston of Kynaston," before she died, and to know that his
+future was safe. To see him married to Helen and living at Kynaston
+appeared to her to be the very best that she could desire for him. In
+time, of course, the title and the money would be his too; meanwhile,
+with old Mr. Harlowe's fortune, an ample allowance from his brother, and
+all the prestige of his old name and his old house, she should live to
+see him take his own rightful place among the magnates of his native
+county. That would be far better than to be a captain in a line regiment,
+barely able to live upon his income. That was all she coveted for him,
+and she said to herself that her ambition was not unreasonable, and that
+it would be hard indeed if it might not be gratified.
+
+As she drove homewards to Walpole Lodge she felt that her schemes were in
+a fair way for success. She was not going to let Maurice know of them too
+soon; by-and-by, when all was settled, she would tell him; she would keep
+it till then as a pleasant surprise.
+
+All the same, she had been unable to refrain from telling Helen Romer
+something of what was in her mind.
+
+"If John does not marry, he might perhaps make Maurice his agent and let
+him live at Kynaston," she had said to her a few days ago when they had
+been speaking of old Mr. Harlowe's illness.
+
+"How would Maurice like to leave the army?" Helen had asked.
+
+"If he marries, he must do so," his mother had replied, significantly;
+and Helen's heart had beat high with hope and triumph.
+
+Again to-day, on her way to her eldest son's rooms, she had stopped at
+Princes Gate and had alluded to it.
+
+"I am on my way to see Sir John; I shall sound him about his intentions
+with regard to Kynaston, but, of course, I must go to work cautiously;"
+and Helen had perfectly understood that she herself had entered into the
+old lady's scheme for her younger son's future.
+
+Sitting alone in the hushed house, where the doctors are coming and
+going in the darkened room above, Helen feels that at last the reward
+of all her long waiting may be at hand. Love and wealth at last seemed
+to beckon to her. Her grandfather dead; his fortune hers; and this offer
+of a home at Kynaston, which Maurice himself would be sure to like so
+much--everything good seemed coming to her at last.
+
+And there was something about the idea of living at Kynaston that
+gratified her particularly. Helen had not forgotten the week at
+Shadonake. Too surely had her woman's instinct told her that Maurice and
+Vera had been drawn to each other by a strong and mutual attraction. The
+wildest jealousy and hatred against Vera burnt fiercely in her lawless,
+untutored heart. She hated her, for she knew that Maurice loved her. To
+live thus under her very eyes as Maurice's wife, in the very house her
+rival herself had once been on the point of inhabiting, was a notion that
+commended itself to her with all the sweetness of gratified revenge, with
+all the charm of flaunting her success and triumph in the face of the
+other woman's failure which is dear to such a nature as Helen's.
+
+She alone, of all those who had heard of Vera's broken engagement, had
+divined its true cause. She loved Maurice--that was plain to Helen; that
+was why she had thrown over Sir John, and at her heart Helen despised her
+for it. A woman must be a fool indeed to wreck herself at the last moment
+for a merely sentimental reason. There was much, however, that was
+incomprehensible to Helen Romer in the situation of things, which she
+only half understood.
+
+If Maurice loved Vera, why was it that he was in Manchester whilst she
+was still in Meadowshire? that was what Helen could not understand. A
+sure instinct told her that Maurice must know better than any one why his
+brother's marriage had been broken off. But, if so, then why were he and
+Vera apart? It did not strike her that his honour to his brother and his
+promises to herself were what kept him away. Helen said to herself,
+scornfully, that they were both of them timid and cowardly, and did not
+half know how to play out life's game.
+
+"In her place, with her cards in my hand, I would have married him by
+this," she said to herself, as she sat alone in her grandfather's
+drawing-room, while her busy fingers ran swiftly through the meshes of
+her knitting, and the doctor and the hired nurse paced about the room
+overhead. "But she has not the pluck for it; his heart may be hers, but,
+for all that, I shall win him; and how bitterly she will repent that she
+ever interfered with him when she sees him daily there--my husband! And
+in time he will forget her and learn to love me; Maurice will never be
+false to a woman when once she is his wife; I am not afraid of that. How
+dared she meddle with him?--_my_ Maurice!"
+
+The door softly opened, and one of the doctors stepped in on tip-toe.
+Helen rose and composed her face into a decorous expression of mournful
+anxiety.
+
+"I am happy to tell you, Mrs. Romer," began the doctor. Helen's heart
+sank down chill and cold within her.
+
+"Is he better?" she faltered, striving to conceal the dismay which she
+felt.
+
+"He has rallied. Consciousness has returned, and partial use of the
+limbs. We may be able to pull your grandfather through this time, I
+trust."
+
+Put off again! How wretched and how guilty she felt herself to be! It was
+almost a crime to wish for any one's death so much.
+
+She sank down again pale and spiritless upon her chair as the doctor left
+the room.
+
+"Never mind," she said to herself, presently; "it can't last for ever. It
+must be soon now, and I shall be Maurice's wife in the end."
+
+But all this time she had forgotten Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet, whom
+she had not seen again since the night she had driven him home from
+Walpole Lodge.
+
+He had left England, she knew. Helen privately hoped he had left this
+earth. Any way, he had not troubled her, and she had forgotten him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+WHAT SHE WAITED FOR.
+
+ Go, forget me; why should sorrow
+ O'er that brow a shadow fling?
+ Go, forget me, and to-morrow
+ Brightly smile and sweetly sing.
+ Smile--though I shall not be near thee;
+ Sing--though I shall never hear thee.
+
+ Chas. Wolfe.
+
+
+All this time what of Vera? Would any one of them at the vicarage ever
+forget that morning when she had come in after her walk with Sir John
+Kynaston, and had stood before them all and, pale as a ghost, had said to
+them,
+
+"I am not going to be married; I have broken it off."
+
+It had been a great blow to them, but neither the prayers of her weeping
+sister, nor the angry indignation of old Mrs. Daintree, nor even the
+gentle remonstrances of her brother-in-law could serve to alter her
+determination, nor would she enter into any explanation concerning her
+conduct.
+
+It was not pleasant, of course, to be reviled and scolded, to be
+questioned and marvelled at, to be treated like a naughty child in
+disgrace; and then, whenever she went out, to feel herself tabooed by her
+acquaintances as a young woman who had behaved very disgracefully; or
+else to be stared at as a natural curiosity by persons whom she hardly
+knew.
+
+But she lived through all this bravely. There was a certain amount of
+unnatural excitement which kept up her courage and enabled her to face
+it. It was no more than what she had expected. The glow of her love and
+her impulse of self-sacrifice were still upon her; her nerves had been
+strung to the uttermost, and she felt strong in the knowledge of the
+justice and the right of her own conduct.
+
+But by-and-by all this died away. Sir John left the neighbourhood;
+people got tired of talking about her broken-off marriage; there was no
+longer any occasion for her to be brave and steadfast. Life began to
+resume for her its normal aspect, the aspect which it had worn in the old
+days before Sir John had ever come down to Kynaston, or ever found her
+day-dreaming in the churchyard upon Farmer Crupps' family sarcophagus.
+The tongue of the sour-tempered old lady, snapping and snarling at her
+with more than the bitterness of old, and the suppressed sighs and
+mournful demeanour of her sister, whose sympathy and companionship she
+had now completely forfeited, and who went about the house with a face
+of resigned woe and the censure of an ever implied rebuke in her voice
+and manner.
+
+Only the vicar took her part somewhat. "Let her alone," he said,
+sometimes, to his wife and mother; "she must have had a better reason
+than we any of us know of; the girl is suffering quite enough--leave her
+alone."
+
+And she was suffering. The life that she had doomed herself to was almost
+unbearable to her. The everlasting round of parish work and parish talk,
+the poor people and the coal-clubs--it was what she had come back to. She
+had been lifted for a short time out of it all, and a new life, congenial
+to her tastes and to her nature, had opened out before her; and yet with
+her own hands she had shut the door upon this brighter prospect, and had
+left herself out in the darkness, to go back to that life of dull
+monotony which she hated.
+
+And what had she gained by it? What single advantage had she reaped
+out of her sacrificed life? Was Maurice any nearer to her--was he not
+hopelessly divided from her--helplessly out of her reach? She knew
+nothing of him, no word concerning him reached her ears: a great blank
+was before her. When she went over the past again and again in her mind,
+she could not well see what good thing could ever come to her from what
+she had done. There were moments indeed when the whole story of her
+broken engagement seemed to her like the wild delusion of madness. She
+had had no intention of acknowledging her love to Maurice when she had
+gone up to the station to see him off; she had only meant to see him
+once more, to hold his hand for one instant, to speak a few kind words;
+to wish him God speed. She asked herself now what had possessed her that
+she had not been able to preserve the self-control of affectionate
+friendship when the unfortunate accident of her being taken on in the
+train with him had left her entirely alone in his society. She did not
+go the length of regretting what she had done for his sake; but she did
+acknowledge to herself that she had been led away by the magnetism of his
+presence and by the strange and unexpected chance which had thus left her
+alone with him into saying and doing things which in a calmer moment she
+would not have been betrayed into.
+
+For a few kisses--for the joy of telling him that his love was
+returned--for a short moment of delirious and transient happiness, and
+alas! for nothing more--she had thrown away her life!
+
+She had behaved hardly and cruelly to a good man who loved her, and whose
+heart she had half broken, and she had lost a great many very excellent
+and satisfactory things.
+
+And Maurice was no nearer to her. With his own lips he had told her
+that he could not marry her. There had been mention, indeed, of that
+problematical term of five years, in which he had bound himself to await
+Mrs. Romer's pleasure--but, even had Mrs. Romer not existed, it was plain
+that Maurice was the last man in the world to take advantage of a woman's
+weakness in order to supplant his brother in her heart.
+
+Instinctively Vera felt that Maurice must be no less miserable than
+herself; that his regret for what had happened between them must be as
+great as her own, and his remorse far greater. They were, indeed, neither
+of them blameless in the matter; for, if it was Maurice who had first
+spoken of his love to his brother's promised wife, it was Vera who had
+made that irrevocable step along the road of her destiny from which no
+going back was now possible.
+
+It was a time of utter misery to her. If she sat indoors there was
+the persecution of Mrs. Daintree's ill-natured remarks, and Marion's
+depression of spirits and half-uttered regrets; and there was also the
+scaffolding rising round the chancel walls to be seen from the windows,
+and the sound of the sawing of the masonry in the churchyard, as a
+perpetual, reproachful reminder of the friend whose kindness and
+affection she had so ill requited. If she went out, she could not go up
+the lane without passing the gates of Kynaston, or towards the village
+without catching sight of the venerable old house among its terraced
+gardens, which, so lately, she had thought would be her home. Sometimes
+she met her old friend, Mrs. Eccles, in her wanderings, but she did not
+venture to speak to her; the cold disapproval in the housekeeper's
+passing salutation made her shrink, like a guilty creature, in her
+presence; and she would hurry by with scarcely an answering sign, with
+downcast eyes and heightened colour.
+
+Somehow, it came to pass in these days that Vera drifted into a degree
+of intimacy with Beatrice Miller that would, possibly, never have come
+about had the circumstances of her life been different. Ever since her
+accidental meeting with the lovers outside Tripton station Vera had,
+perforce, become a confidant of their hopes and fears; and Beatrice was
+glad enough to have found a friend to whom she could talk about her
+lover, for where is the woman who can completely hold her tongue
+concerning her own secrets?
+
+Against all the long category of female virtues, as advantageously
+displayed in contradistinction to masculine vices, there is still this
+one peculiarity which, of itself, marks out the woman as the inferior
+animal.
+
+A man, to be worthy of the name, holds his tongue and keeps the
+secret of his heart to himself, enjoying it and delighting in it the
+more, possibly, for his reticence. A woman may occasionally--very
+occasionally--be silent respecting her neighbour, but concerning herself
+she is bound to have at least one confidant to whom she will rashly tell
+the long story of her loves and her sorrows; and not a consideration
+either of prudence or of worldly wisdom will suffice to restrain her too
+ready tongue.
+
+Beatrice Miller was a clever girl, with a fair knowledge of the world;
+yet she was in no way dismayed that Vera should have discovered her
+secret; on the contrary, she was overjoyed that she had now found some
+one to talk to about it.
+
+Vera became her friend, but Beatrice was not Vera's friend--the
+confidences were not mutual. Over and over again Beatrice was on the
+point of questioning her concerning the story that had been on every
+one's lips for a time; of asking her what, indeed, was the truth about
+her broken engagement; but always the proud, still face restrained her
+curiosity, and the words died away unspoken upon her lips.
+
+Vera's story, indeed, was not one that could be easily revealed. There
+was too much of bitter regret, too great an element of burning shame at
+her heart, for its secrets to be laid bare to a stranger's eye.
+
+Nevertheless, Beatrice's society amused and distracted her mind, and kept
+her from brooding over her own troubles. She was glad enough to go over
+to Shadonake; even to sit alone with Beatrice and her mother was better
+than the eternal monotony of the vicarage, where she felt like a prisoner
+waiting for his sentence.
+
+Yes, she was waiting. Waiting for some sign from the man she loved.
+Sooner or later, whether it was for good or for evil, she knew it must
+come to her; some token that he remembered her existence; some indication
+as to what he would have her do with the life that she had laid at his
+feet. For, after all, when a woman loves a man, she virtually makes him
+the ruler of her destiny; she leaves the responsibility of her fate in
+his hands. For the nonce, Maurice Kynaston held the skein of Vera's life
+in his grasp; it was for him to do what he pleased with it. Some day,
+doubtless, he would tell her what she had to do: meanwhile, she waited.
+
+What else, indeed, can a woman do but wait? To sit still with folded
+hands and bated breath, to possess her soul in patience as best she may,
+to still the wild beatings of her all too eager spirit--that is what a
+woman has to do, and does often enough. God help her, all too badly.
+
+It is so easy when one is old, and the pulses are sluggish, and the hot
+passions of youth are quelled, it is so easy then to learn that lesson
+of waiting; but when we are young, and our best days slipping away, and
+life's hopes all before us, and life's burdens well-nigh unbearable; then
+it is that it is hard, that waiting in itself becomes terrible--more
+terrible almost than the worst of our woes.
+
+So wearily, feverishly, impatiently enough, Vera waited.
+
+Winter died away into spring. The rough wind of March, worn out with its
+own boisterous passions, sobbed itself to rest like a tired child, and
+little green buds came cropping up sparsely and timidly out of the brown
+bosom of the earth; and, presently, all the glory of the golden crocuses
+unfolded itself in long golden lines in the vicarage garden; and there
+were twittering of birds and flutterings of soft breezes among the
+tree-tops, and a voice seemed to go forth over the face of the earth.
+The winter is over, and summer is nigh at hand.
+
+And then it came to her at last. An envelope by the side of her plate
+at breakfast; a few scrawled words in a handwriting she had never seen
+before, and yet identified with an unfailing instinct, ere even she broke
+the seal. One minute of wild hope, to be followed by a sick, chill
+numbness, and the story of her love and its longings shrank away into
+the despair of impossibility.
+
+How small a thing to make so great a misery! What a few words to make a
+wilderness of a human life!
+
+_"Her grandfather is dead, and she has claimed me. Good-bye; forget me
+and forgive me."_
+
+That was all; nothing more. No passionate regrets, no unavailing
+self-pity; nothing to tell her what it cost him to resign her; no word to
+comfort her for the hopelessness of his desertion; nothing but those two
+lines.
+
+There was a chattering going on at the table around her. Tommy was
+clamouring for bread and butter; the vicar was reading out the telegrams
+from the seat of war; Marion was complaining that the butter was not
+good; the maid-servant was bringing in the hot bacon and eggs--it all
+went on like a dream around her; presently, like a voice out of a fog,
+somebody spoke to her:
+
+"Vera, are you not feeling well? You look as if you were going to faint."
+
+And then she crunched the letter in her hand and recalled herself to
+life.
+
+"I am quite well, thanks," and busied herself with attending to the wants
+of the children.
+
+The vicar glanced up over his spectacles. "No bad news, I hope, my dear."
+
+Oh! why could they not let her alone? But somehow she sat through the
+breakfast, and answered all their questions, and bore herself bravely;
+and when it was over and she was free to go away by herself with her
+trouble, then by that time the worst of it was over.
+
+There are some people whom sorrow softens and touches, but Vera was not
+one of them. Her whole soul revolted and rebelled against her fate. She
+said to herself that for once she had let her heart guide her; she had
+cast aside the crust of worldliness and self-indulgence in which she had
+been brought up. She had listened to the softer whisperings of the better
+nature within her--she had been true to herself--and lo! what had come of
+it?
+
+But now she had learnt her lesson; there were to be no more dreams of
+pure and unsullied happiness for her,--no more cravings after what was
+good and true and lovely; henceforth she would go back to the teachings
+of her youth, to the experience which had told her that a handsome woman
+can always command her life as she pleases, and that wealth, which is a
+tangible reality, is better worth striving after than the vain shadow
+called love, which all talk about and so few make any practical
+sacrifices for. Well, she, Vera Nevill, had tried it, and had made her
+sacrifices; and what remained to her? Only the fixed determination to
+crush it down again within her as if it had never been, and to carve out
+her fortunes afresh. Only that she started again at a disadvantage--for
+now she knew to her cost that she possessed the fatal power of
+loving--the knowledge of good and evil, of which she had eaten
+the poisoned fruit.
+
+There were no tears in Vera's eyes as she wandered slowly up and down the
+garden paths between the straight yellow lines of the crocus heads.
+
+Her lover had forsaken her. Well, let him go. She told herself that, had
+he loved her truly, no power on earth would have been great enough to
+keep him from her. She said to herself scornfully--she, Vera Nevill, who
+was prepared to sell herself to the highest bidder--that it was Mrs.
+Romer's money that kept him from her. Well, let him go to her, then? but
+for herself life must begin afresh.
+
+And then she set to work to think about what she could do. To remain here
+at Sutton any longer was impossible. It was absolutely necessary that she
+should get away from it all, from the family upon whose hands she was
+nothing now but a beautiful, helpless burden, and still more from the
+haunting memories of Kynaston and all the unfortunate things that had
+happened to her here.
+
+Suddenly, out of the memories of her girlhood, she recollected the
+existence of a woman who had been her friend once in the old happy days,
+when she had lived with her sister Theodora. It was one of those passing
+friendships which come and go for a month or two in one's life.
+
+A pretty, spoilt girl, married four, perhaps five, years ago to a rich
+man, a banker; who had taken a fancy to Vera, and had pleased herself by
+decking her out in a quaint costume to figure at a carnival party; who
+had kissed her rapturously at parting, swearing eternal friendship,
+giving her her address in London, and making her promise never to be in
+England without going to see her. And then she had gone her way, and had
+never come back again the next winter, as she had promised to do; a
+letter or two had passed between them, and afterwards Vera had forgotten
+her. But somewhere upstairs she must have got her direction still.
+
+It was to this friend she would go; and, turning her back for a time
+at least upon Meadowshire and its memories, she would see whether, in
+the whirl of London life, she could not crush out the pain at her heart,
+and live down the fatal weakness that had led her astray from all the
+traditions of her youth, and from that cold and prudent wisdom which had
+stood her in good stead for so many years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+A MORNING WALK.
+
+ And e'en while fashion's brightest arts decoy,
+ The heart, distrusting, asks if this be joy.
+
+ Goldsmith.
+
+
+A bright May morning, cold, it is true, and with a biting wind from the
+east--as indeed our English May mornings generally are--but sunny and
+cloudless as the heart can desire. On such a morning people do their best
+to pretend that it is summer. Crowds turn out into the park, and sit
+about recklessly on the iron chairs, or lounge idly by the railings; and
+the women-folk, with that fine disregard of what is, when it is
+antagonistic of what they wish it to be, don their white cottons and
+muslins, and put up their parasols against the sun's rays, and, shivering
+inwardly, poor things, openly brave the terrors of rheumatism and
+lumbago, and make up their minds that it _shall_ be summer.
+
+The sunblinds are drawn all along the front windows of a house in Park
+Lane, and though the gay geraniums and calceolarias in the flower-boxes,
+which were planted only yesterday, look already nipped and shrivelled up
+with the cold, the house, nevertheless, presents from the exterior a
+bright and well-cared-for appearance.
+
+Within the drawing-room are two ladies. One, the mistress of the house,
+is seated at the writing-table with her back to the room, scribbling off
+invitations for dear life, cards for an afternoon "at-home," at the rate
+of six per minute; the other sits idle in a low basket-chair doing
+nothing.
+
+There is no sound but the scratching of the quill pen as it flies over
+the paper, and the chirping of a bullfinch in a cage in the bow-window.
+
+"What time is it, Vera?"
+
+"A quarter to twelve."
+
+"Almost time to dress; I've only ten more cards to fill up. What are you
+going to wear--white?"
+
+Vera shivers. "Look how the dust is flying--it must be dreadfully cold
+out--I should like to put on a fur jacket."
+
+"_Do_," says the elder lady, energetically. "It will be original, and
+attract attention. Not that you could well be more stared at than you
+are."
+
+Vera smiles, and does not answer.
+
+Mrs. Hazeldine goes on with her task.
+
+"There! that's done!" she cries, at last, getting up from the table, and
+piling her notes up in a heap on one side of it. "Now, I am at your
+orders."
+
+She comes forward into the room--a pretty, dark-eyed, oval-faced woman,
+with a figure in which her dressmaker has understood how to supplement
+all that nature has but imperfectly carried out. A woman with restless
+movements and an ever-ready tongue--a thorough daughter of the London
+world she lives in.
+
+Vera leans her head back in her chair, and looks at her. "Cissy," she
+says, "I must really go home, I have been with you a month to-day."
+
+"Go home! certainly not, my dear. Don't you know that I have sworn to
+find you a husband before the season is out? I must really get you
+married, Vera. I have half a mind," she adds, reflectively, as she
+smooths down her shining brown hair at the glass, and contemplates, not
+ill satisfied, her image there--"I have really half a mind to let you
+have the boy if I could manage to spare him."
+
+"Do you think he would make a devoted husband?" asks Vera, with a lazy
+smile.
+
+"My dear child, don't be a fool. What is the use of devotion in a
+husband? All one wants is a good fellow, who will let one alone. After
+all, the boy might not answer. I am afraid, Vera," turning round suddenly
+upon her, "I am very much afraid that boy is in love with you; it's
+horrid of you to take him from me, because he is so useful, and I really
+can't well do without him. I am going to pay him out to-night though: he
+is to sit opposite you at dinner; he will only be able to gaze at you."
+
+"That is hard upon us both."
+
+"Pooh! don't waste your time upon him. I shall do better than that for
+you; he is an eldest son, it is true, but Sir Charles looks as young as
+his son, and is quite as likely to live as long. It is only married women
+who can afford the luxury of ineligibles. Go and dress, child."
+
+Half-an-hour later Mrs. Hazeldine and Miss Nevill are to be found upon
+two chairs on the broad and shady side of the Row, where a small crowd of
+men is already gathered around them.
+
+Vera, coming up a stranger, and self-invited to the house of her old
+acquaintance a few weeks ago, had already created a sensation in London.
+Her rare beauty, the strange charm of her quiet, listless manner, the
+shade of melancholy which had of late imperceptibly crept over her,
+aroused a keen admiration and interest in her, even in that city, which
+more than all others is satiated with its manifold types of beautiful
+women.
+
+There was a rush to get introduced to her; a _furore_ to see her. As she
+went through a crowd people whispered her name and made way for her to
+pass, staring at her after a fashion which is totally modern and
+detestably ill-bred; and yet which, sad token of the _decadence_ of
+things in these later days, is not beneath the dignity or the manners
+of persons whose breeding is supposed to be beyond dispute.
+
+Already the "new beauty" had been favourably contrasted with the
+well-known reigning favourites; and it was the loudly expressed opinion
+of more than one-half of the _jeunesse dorée_ of the day that not one of
+the others could "hold a candle to her, by Jove!"
+
+Mrs. Hazeldine was delighted. It was she to whom belonged the honour of
+bringing this new star into notice; the credit of launching her upon
+London society was her own. She found herself courted and flattered and
+made up to in a wholly new and delightful manner. The men besieged her
+for invitations to her house; the women pressed her to come to theirs. It
+was all for Miss Nevill's sake, of course, but, even so, it was very
+pleasant, and Mrs. Hazeldine dearly loved the importance of her position.
+
+It came to pass that, whereas she had been somewhat put out at the letter
+of her old Roman acquaintance, offering to come and stay with her, and
+had been disposed to resent the advent of her self-invited guest as an
+infliction, which a few needlessly gushing words in the past had brought
+upon herself, she had, in a very short time, discovered that she could
+not possibly exist without her darling Vera, and that she would not and
+could not let her go back again to her country vicarage.
+
+It was, possibly, what Vera had counted upon. It was pretty certain to
+have been either one thing or the other. Either her beauty would arouse
+Mrs. Hazeldine's jealousy, and she would be glad to be rid of her as
+quickly as possible, or else she would be proud of her, and wish to
+retain her as an attraction to her house. Fortunately for Vera, Cissy
+Hazeldine, worldly, frivolous, pleasure-loving as she was, was,
+nevertheless, utterly devoid of the mean and petty spitefulness which
+goes far to disfigure many a better woman's character. She was not
+jealous of Vera; on the contrary, she was as unfeignedly proud of her as
+though she had created her. Besides, as she said to herself, "Our style
+is so different, we are not likely to clash."
+
+When she found that in a month's time Vera's beauty had made her house
+the most popular one in London, and that people struggled for her
+invitation-cards and prayed to be introduced to her, Mrs. Hazeldine was
+at the zenith of her delight and self-importance. If only Vera herself
+had been a little more practicable!
+
+"I don't despair of getting you introduced to royalty before the season
+is out," she would say, triumphantly.
+
+"I don't want to be introduced to royalty," Vera would answer
+indifferently.
+
+"Oh! Vera, how can you be so disloyal? And it's quite wicked too; almost
+against Scripture. Honour the King, you know it says somewhere; of course
+that means the Prince of Wales too."
+
+"I can honour him very well without being introduced to him," said Vera,
+who, however, let me assure you, was filled with feelings of profound
+loyalty towards the reigning family.
+
+"But only think what a triumph it would be over those other horrid women
+who think themselves at the top of the tree!" Mrs. Hazeldine would urge,
+with a curious conglomeration of ideas, sacred and profane.
+
+But Vera was indifferent to the honour of becoming acquainted with his
+Royal Highness.
+
+Another of Mrs. Hazeldine's troubles was that she absolutely refused to
+be photographed.
+
+"Your portrait might be in every shop window if you chose!" Mrs.
+Hazeldine would exclaim, despairingly.
+
+"I may be very depraved, Cissy," Vera would answer, indignantly, "but I
+have not yet sunk so low as to desire that every draper's assistant may
+have the privilege of buying my likeness for a shilling to stick up on
+his mantelshelf, with a tight-rope dancer on one side, and a burlesque
+actress on the other!"
+
+"My dear, it is done by every one; and women who are beautiful as you are
+ought not to mind being admired."
+
+"But I prefer being admired by my friends only, and by those of my own
+class. I have no ambition to expose myself, even in effigy, in a shop
+window for the edification of street boys and city clerks."
+
+"Well, you can't help your name having been in _Vanity Fair_ this week!"
+
+"No, and I only wish I could get hold of the man who put it there!" cried
+Miss Nevill, viciously; and it is certain that unfortunate literary
+person would not have relished the interview.
+
+A "beauty" with such strange and unnatural views was, it must be
+confessed, as much of a trial as a triumph to an anxious chaperon.
+
+There was a certain amount of fashionable routine, the daily treadmill
+of pleasure, to which, however, Vera submitted readily enough, and even
+extracted a good deal of enjoyment out of it. There was the morning
+saunter into the Row, the afternoons spent at garden parties or
+"at-homes," the evenings filled up with dinner parties, to be followed
+almost invariably by balls lasting late into the night. All these things
+repeat themselves year after year: they are utter weariness to some of
+us, but to her they were still new, and Vera entered into the daily whirl
+of the London season with an amount of zest which was almost a surprise
+to herself.
+
+Just at first there had been a daily terror upon her, that of meeting Sir
+John Kynaston or his brother; but London is a large place, and you may go
+out to different houses for many nights running without ever coming
+across the friend or the foe whom you desire or dread most to encounter.
+
+After a little while, she forgot to glance hurriedly and fearfully around
+her every time she entered a ball-room, or to look up shudderingly each
+time the door was opened and a fresh guest announced at a dinner-party.
+She never met either of them, nor did the name of Kynaston ever strike
+upon her ear.
+
+She told herself that she had forgotten the two brothers, whose fate had
+seemed at one time so intimately bound up with her own--the one as well
+as the other. They were nothing more to her now--they had passed away out
+of her life. Henceforth she had entered upon a new course, in which her
+beauty and her mother wit were to exact their full value, but in which
+her heart was to count for nothing more. It was to be smothered up within
+her. That, together with all the best, and sweetest, and truest part of
+her, once awakened for a brief space by the magic touch of love, was now
+to be extinguished within her as though they had never been.
+
+Meanwhile Vera enjoys herself.
+
+She looks happy enough now as she sits by her friend's side in the park,
+with a little knot of admirers about her; not taking very much trouble to
+talk to them, indeed, but smiling serenely from one to the other, letting
+herself be talked to and amused, with just a word here and there, to show
+them she is listening to what they say. It is, perhaps, the secret of her
+success that she is so thoroughly indifferent to it all. It matters so
+little to her whether they come or go; there is so little eagerness about
+her, so perfect an _insouciance_ of manner. Other women lay themselves
+out to attract and to be admired; Vera only sits still, and waits with a
+certain queenliness of manner for the worship that is laid at her feet,
+and which she receives as her due.
+
+Behind her, with his hand on the back of her chair, stands a young fellow
+of about two or three and twenty; he does not speak to her much, nor join
+in the merry, empty chatter that is going on around her; but it is easy
+to see by the way he looks down at her, by the fashion in which he
+watches her slightest movement, that Vera exercises no ordinary influence
+over him.
+
+He is a tall, slight-figured boy, with very fair yellow hair and delicate
+features; his blue eyes are frank and pleasant, but his mouth is a trifle
+weak and vacillating, and the lips are too sensitively cut for strength
+of character, whilst his chest is too narrow for strength of body. He is
+carefully dressed, and wears a white, heavy-scented flower in his coat,
+a flower which, five minutes ago, he had ineffectually attempted to
+transfer to Miss Nevill's dress; but Vera had only gently pushed back his
+hand. "My dear boy, pray keep your gardenia; a flower in one's dress is
+such a nuisance, it is always tumbling out."
+
+Denis Wilde, "the boy," as Mrs. Hazeldine called him with a flush on his
+fair face, had put it back quietly in his button-hole, too well bred to
+show the pain he felt by flinging it, as he would have liked to do, over
+the railing, to be trampled under the feet of the horses.
+
+The little group kept its place for some time, the two well-dressed and
+good-looking women sitting down, the two or three idlers who stood in
+front of them gossiping about nothing at all--last night's ball, to-day's
+plans, a little bit of scandal about one passer-by, somebody's rumoured
+engagement, somebody else's reported elopement. Denis Wilde stood behind
+Vera's chair and listened to it all, the well-known familiar chatter
+of a knot of London idlers. There was nothing new or interesting or
+entertaining about it. Only a string of names, some of which were strange
+to him, but most of which were familiar; and always some little story,
+ill-natured or harmless as the case might be, about each name that was
+mentioned. And Vera listened, smiling, assenting, but only half
+attentive, with her eyes dreamily fixed upon the long procession of
+riders passing ever ceaselessly to and fro along the ride.
+
+Suddenly Denis Wilde felt a sudden movement of the chair beneath his
+hand. Vera had started violently.
+
+"Here comes Sir John Kynaston," the man before her was saying to his
+companion. "What a time it is since he has shown himself; he looks as if
+he had had a bad illness."
+
+"Some woman jilted him, I've heard," answered the other man: "some girl
+down in the country. People say, Miss Nevill, he is going to die of that
+old-fashioned complaint, which you certainly will not believe in, a
+broken heart! Poor old boy, he looks as if he had been buried, and had
+come up again for a breath of air!"
+
+Vera followed the direction of their eyes. Sir John was walking slowly
+towards them; he was thin and careworn; he looked aged beyond all belief.
+He walked slowly, as though it were an effort to him, with his eyes upon
+the ground. He had not seen her yet; in another minute he would be within
+a couple of yards of her. It was next to impossible that he could avoid
+seeing her, the centre, as she was, of that noisy, chattering group.
+
+A sort of despair seized her. How was she to meet him--this man whom she
+had so cruelly treated? She could _not_ meet him; she felt that it was an
+impossibility. Like an imprisoned bird that seeks to escape, she looked
+about instinctively from side to side. What possible excuse could she
+frame? In what direction could she fly to avoid the glance of reproach
+that would smite her to the heart.
+
+Suddenly Denis Wilde bent down over her.
+
+"Miss Nevill, there goes a _Dachshund_, exactly like the one you wanted;
+come quickly, and we shall catch him up. He ran away down here."
+
+She sprang up and turned after him; a path leading away from the crowded
+Row, towards the comparatively empty park at the back, opened out
+immediately behind her chair.
+
+Young Wilde strode rapidly along it before her, and Vera followed him
+blindly and thankfully.
+
+After a few minutes he stopped and turned round.
+
+"Where is--the dog--wasn't it a dog, you said? Where is it?" She was
+white and trembling.
+
+"There is no dog," he answered, not looking at her. "I--I saw you wanted
+to get away for a minute. You will forgive me, won't you?"
+
+Vera looked at him with a sudden earnestness. The watchfulness which had
+seen her distress, the ready tact which had guessed at her desire to
+escape, and had so promptly suggested the manner of it, touched her
+suddenly. She put forth her hand gently and almost timidly.
+
+"Thank you," she said, simply. "I did not imagine you were so clever--or
+so kind."
+
+The boy blushed deeply with pleasure. He did not know her trouble, but
+the keen eye of love had guessed at its existence. It had been easy for
+him who watched her every look, who knew every shade and every line of
+her face, to tell that she was in distress, to interpret her pallor and
+her trembling terror aright.
+
+"You don't want to go back?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, no, I cannot go back! Besides, I am tired; it is time to go home."
+
+"Stay here, then, and I will call Mrs. Hazeldine."
+
+He left her standing alone upon the grass, and went back to the crowded
+path. Presently he returned with her friend.
+
+"My dear Vera, what is the matter? The boy says you have such a headache!
+I am so sorry, and I wouldn't let any of those chattering fools come back
+to lunch. Why, you look quite pale, child! Will it be too much for you to
+have the boy, because we will send him away, too, if you like?"
+
+But Vera turned round and smiled upon the boy.
+
+"Oh, no, let him come, certainly; but let us go home, all three of us at
+once, if you don't mind."
+
+The thoughtfulness that had kept her secret for her, even from the eyes
+of the woman who was supposed to be her intimate friend, surely deserved
+its reward.
+
+They walked home slowly together across the park, and, when Vera came
+down to luncheon, a white gardenia had somehow or other found its way to
+the bosom of her dress.
+
+That was Denis Wilde's reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+MAURICE'S INTERCESSION.
+
+ Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret.
+
+ B. Disraeli, "Coningsby."
+
+
+Two or three days later the east wind was still blowing, and the chilled
+sunshine still feebly shining down upon the nipped lilac and laburnum
+blossoms. The garden at Walpole Lodge was shorn of half its customary
+beauty, yet to Helen Romer, pacing slowly up and down its gravel walks,
+it had never possibly presented a fairer appearance. For Mrs. Romer had
+won her battle. All that she had waited for so long and striven for so
+hard was at length within her grasp. Her grandfather was dead, his money
+had been all left to her, her engagement to Captain Kynaston was an
+acknowledged fact, and she herself was staying as an honoured and welcome
+guest in her future mother-in-law's house. Everything in the present and
+the future seemed to smile upon her, and yet there were drawbacks--as are
+there not in most earthly delights?--to the full enjoyment of her
+happiness.
+
+For instance, there was that unreasonable and unaccountable codicil to
+her grandfather's will, of which no one had been able to discern either
+the sense or the meaning, and which stated that, should his beloved
+grand-daughter, Helen Romer, be still unmarried within two months of the
+date of his death, the whole of the previous bequests and legacies were
+to be revoked and cancelled, and, with the exception of five thousand
+pounds which she would retain, the whole bulk of his fortune was to
+devolve upon the Crown, for the special use of the pensioners of
+Greenwich and Chelsea Hospitals.
+
+Why such an extraordinary clause had been added to the old man's will it
+was difficult to say. Possibly he feared that his grand-daughter might be
+tempted to remain unmarried, in order that she might the more freely
+squander her newly-acquired fortune in selfish pleasures; possibly he
+desired to ensure her future by the speedy shelter and support of a
+husband's name and authority, or perhaps he only hoped at his heart that
+she would be unable to fulfil his condition; and, whilst his memory would
+be left free from blame towards his daughter's orphaned child, his money
+might go away from her by her own fault, and enrich the institutions of
+his country at the expense of the grand-daughter, whom he had always
+disliked.
+
+Be that as it may, it was sufficient to place Helen in a very awkward and
+uncomfortable position. She had not only to claim Maurice's promised
+troth to her, but she had also to urge on him an almost immediate
+marriage; the task was a thankless and most unpleasant one.
+
+Besides that, there was the existence of a certain little French vicomte
+which caused Mrs. Romer not a little anxiety. Now, if ever, was the time
+when she had reason to dread his re-appearance with those fatal letters
+with which he had once threatened to spoil her life should she ever
+attempt to marry again.
+
+But her grandfather had died and had left her his money, and her
+engagement and approaching marriage to another man was no secret, yet
+still Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet made no sign, and gave forth no token
+of his promised vengeance.
+
+Helen dared not flatter herself that he was dead, but she did hope,
+and hoped rightly, that he was not in England, and had not heard of
+the change in her fortunes. She had been afraid to make any inquiries
+concerning him; such a step might only excite suspicion, and defeat her
+own object of remaining hidden from him. If only she could be safely
+married before he heard of her again--all, she thought, might yet be well
+with her. Of what use, then, would be his vengeance? for she did not
+think it likely he could be so cruel as to wreak an idle and profitless
+revenge upon her after she herself and her fortune were beyond his power.
+
+Perhaps, had she known that her enemy had been on a distant journey to
+Constantinople, from which he was now returning, and that every hour she
+lived brought him nearer and nearer to her, she would have been less easy
+in her mind concerning him. As it was, she consoled herself by thinking
+in how short a time her marriage would put her out of his power, and
+hoped, for the rest, that things would all turn out right for her.
+Nevertheless, strive how she would, she could not quite put away the
+dread of it out of her mind--it was an anxiety.
+
+And then there was Maurice himself. She had known, of course, for long,
+how slight was her hold upon her lover's heart, but never had he appeared
+so cold, so unloving, so full of apathetic indifference towards her as he
+had seemed to be during the few days since he had arrived at his mother's
+house. His every word and look, the very change in his voice when he
+turned from his mother to her, told her, as plainly as though he had
+spoken it, that she was forcing him into a marriage that was hateful and
+repulsive to him, and which duty alone made him submit to. However little
+pride a woman may retain, such a position must always bring a certain
+amount of bitterness with it.
+
+To Helen it was gall and wormwood, yet she was all the more determined
+upon keeping him. She said to herself that she had toiled, and waited,
+and striven for him for too long to relinquish him now that the victory
+was hers at length.
+
+Poor Helen, with all her good looks, and all her many attractions, she
+had been so unfortunate with this one man whom she loved! She had always
+gone the wrong way to work with him.
+
+Even now she could not let him alone; she was foolishly jealous and
+suspicious.
+
+He had come to her, all smarting and bleeding still with the sacrifice
+he had made of his heart to his duty. He had shut the woman he loved
+determinedly out of his thoughts, and had set his face resolutely to do
+his duty to the woman whom he seemed destined to marry. Even now a little
+softness, a little womanly gentleness and sympathy, and, above all, a
+wise forbearance from probing into his still open wounds, might have won
+a certain amount of gratitude and affection from him. But Helen was
+unequal to this. She only drove him wild with causeless and senseless
+jealousy, and goaded him almost to madness by endless suspicions and
+irritating cross-questioning.
+
+It is difficult to know what she expected more of him. He slept under
+the same roof with her, he dined at his mother's table, and spent the
+evenings religiously in her society. She could not well expect to keep
+him also at her side all day long; and yet his daily visits to town,
+amounting usually to between three and four hours of absence, were a
+constant source of annoyance and disquiet to her. Where did he go? What
+did he do with himself? Whom did he see in these diurnal expeditions into
+London? She wore herself into a fever with her perpetual effort to fathom
+these things.
+
+Even now she is fretting and fuming because he has promised to be home to
+luncheon, and he is twenty minutes late.
+
+She paces impatiently up and down the garden. Lady Kynaston opens the
+French window and calls to her from the house:
+
+"Come, my dear, lunch is on the table; are you not coming in?"
+
+"I had rather wait for Maurice, please; do sit down without me," she
+answers, with the irritation of a spoilt child. Lady Kynaston closes the
+window. "Oh, these lovers!" she groans to herself, somewhat impatiently,
+as she sits down alone to the well-furnished luncheon-table; but she
+bears it pretty composedly because Helen has her grandfather's money, and
+is to bring her son wealth as well as love, and Lady Kynaston is not at
+all above being glad of it. One can stand little faults of manner and
+temper from a daughter-in-law, who is an heiress, which one would be
+justly indignant at were she a pauper.
+
+A sound of wheels turning in at the lodge-gates--it is Maurice's hansom.
+
+Helen hurries forward to meet him in the hall; Captain Kynaston is
+handing a lady out of the hansom; Helen peers at her suspiciously.
+
+"I am bringing you ladies a friend to lunch," says Maurice, gaily, and
+Mrs. Romer's face clears when she sees that it is Beatrice Miller.
+
+"Oh, Beatrice, it is you! I am delighted to see you! Go in to the
+dining-room, you will find Lady Kynaston. Maurice," drawing him back a
+minute, "how late you are again! What have you been doing?"
+
+"I waited whilst Miss Miller put her bonnet on."
+
+"Why, where did you meet her?"
+
+"I met her at her mother's, where I went to call. Have you any
+objection?" He looked at her almost defiantly as he answered her
+questions; it was intolerable to him that she should put him through
+such a catechism.
+
+"You can't have been there all the morning," she continued, suspiciously;
+unable or unwilling, perhaps, to notice his rising displeasure. "Where
+did you go first?"
+
+Maurice bit his lip, but controlled himself with an effort.
+
+"My dear child," he said, lightly, "one can't sell out of the army, or
+prepare for the holy estate of matrimony, without a certain amount of
+business on one's hands. Suppose now we go in to lunch." She stepped
+aside and let him pass her into the dining-room.
+
+"He is shuffling again," she said to herself, angrily; "that was no
+answer to my question. Is it possible that he sees _her_? But no, what
+folly; if she is at Sutton, how can he get at her?"
+
+"Oh, Helen," cried out Beatrice to her from the table as she entered,
+"you and Lady Kynaston are positively out of the world this season. You
+know none of the gossip."
+
+"I go nowhere, of course, now; my grandfather's death is so recent. I
+have so many preparations to make just now; and dear Lady Kynaston is
+good enough to shut herself up on my account."
+
+"Exactly; you are a couple of recluses," cried Beatrice. "Now, I daresay
+you will never guess who is the new beauty whom all the world is talking
+about; no other than our friend Vera Nevill. She is creating a perfect
+sensation!"
+
+"Indeed!" politely, but with frigid unconcern, from Lady Kynaston.
+
+"Yes; I assure you there is a regular rage about her. Oh, how stupid I
+am! Perhaps I ought not to have mentioned her, Lady Kynaston, for of
+course she did not behave very well to Sir John, as we all know; but now
+that is all over, isn't it? and everybody is wild about her beauty."
+
+"I am glad to hear that Miss Nevill is prospering in any way," said her
+ladyship, stiffly. "I owe her no ill-will, poor girl."
+
+Helen Romer is looking at Maurice Kynaston; he has not said one single
+word, nor has he raised his eyes once from his plate; but a deep flush
+has overspread his handsome face at the sound of Vera's name.
+
+"_That_ is where he goes," said Helen, to herself. "I knew it; he has
+seen her, and he loves her still."
+
+The conversation drifted on to other matters. Beatrice passed all the
+gossip and scandal of the town under review for Lady Kynaston's benefit;
+presently Maurice roused himself, and joined in the talk. But Mrs. Romer
+uttered not a word; she sat in her place with a thunder-cloud upon her
+brow until the luncheon was over; then, as they rose from the table, she
+called her lover to her side.
+
+"I want to speak to you," she said, and detained him until the others had
+left the room.
+
+"You knew that Vera Nevill was in town, and you have seen her!" she burst
+forth impetuously.
+
+"If I had seen her, I do not know that it would signify, would it?" he
+answered, calmly.
+
+"Not signify? when you knew that it was for _your_ sake that she threw
+over John, because----"
+
+"Be silent, Helen, you have no right to say that, and no authority for
+such a statement," he said, interrupting her hotly.
+
+"Do you suppose you can deceive me? Did not everybody see that she could
+not keep her eyes off you? What is the use of denying it? You have seen
+her probably; you have been with her to-day."
+
+"As it happens, I have _not_ been with her either to-day or any day; nor
+did I know she was in town until Beatrice Miller told us so just now."
+
+"You have not seen her?"
+
+"No, I have not."
+
+"I don't believe you!" she answered, angrily. Now, no man likes to be
+given the lie direct even by a lady; and Maurice was a man who was
+scrupulously truthful, and proud of his veracity; he lost his temper
+fairly.
+
+"I have never told you a lie yet," he began furiously; "and if you think
+so, it is time----"
+
+"Maurice! Maurice!" she cried, frantically, stopping the outspoken words
+upon his lips, and seeing in one minute that she had gone too far. "My
+darling, forgive me; I did not mean to say it. Yes, of course, I believe
+you; don't say anything unkind to me, for pity's sake. You know how much
+I love you; kiss me, darling. No, Maurice, I won't let you go till you
+kiss me, and say you forgive your foolish, jealous little Helen!"
+
+It was the old story over again; angry reproaches--bitter words--insults
+upon her side; to be succeeded, the minute he turned round upon her, by
+wild cries of regret and entreaties for forgiveness, and by the pleading
+of that love which he valued so little.
+
+She drove him wild with anger and indignation; but she never would let
+him go--no, never, however much he might strain against the chain by
+which she held him.
+
+The quarrel was patched up again; he stooped and kissed her. A man must
+kiss a lady when she asks him. How, indeed, is he to refuse to do so? A
+woman's kisses are the roses of life--altogether sweet, and lovely, and
+precious. No man can say he dislikes a rose, nor refuse so harmless and
+charming a gift when it is freely offered to him without absolute
+churlishness. Maurice could not well deny her the embrace for which her
+upturned lips had pleaded. He kissed her, indeed; but it will be easily
+understood that there was very little spontaneity of affection in that
+kiss.
+
+"Now let me go," he said, putting her from him gently but coldly; "I want
+to speak to my mother."
+
+The two younger ladies wandered out into the garden, whilst Maurice
+sought his mother's room.
+
+"Mother, I have been to see John this morning. I am afraid he is really
+very ill," he said, gravely.
+
+Lady Kynaston shrugged her shoulders. "He is like a baby over that
+foolish affair," she said, impatiently. "He does not seem able to get
+over it; why does he shut himself up in his rooms? If he were to go out
+a little more----"
+
+"He has been out; it is that that has made him ill. He went out a few
+mornings ago--the wind was very cold; he says it is that which gave him a
+chill. But, from what he says, I fancy he saw, or he thinks he saw, Miss
+Nevill."
+
+Lady Kynaston sat at her davenport with all the litter of her daily
+correspondence before her; her son stood up by the mantelpiece, leaning
+his back against it, and looked away out of window at the figures of
+Beatrice and his future wife sauntering up and down the garden walks. She
+could not well see his face as he spoke these last words.
+
+"Tiresome woman!" cried Lady Kynaston, angrily; "there is no end to the
+trouble she causes. John ought to be thankful he is well rid of her. Did
+you hear what Beatrice Miller said at lunch about her? I call it shocking
+bad taste, her coming up to town and flirting and flaunting about under
+poor John's nose--heartless coquette! Creating 'a sensation,' indeed!
+That is one of those horrible American expressions that are the fashion
+just now!"
+
+"It is no wonder she is admired," said Maurice, dreamily: "she is very
+beautiful."
+
+"I wish to goodness she would keep out of John's way. Where did he see
+her?"
+
+"It was in the Row, I think, and, from what he said, he only fancied he
+saw her back, walking away. I told him, of course, it could not be her,
+because I thought she was down at Sutton; but, after what Beatrice told
+us at lunch, I make no doubt that it was her, and that John really did
+see her."
+
+"I should have thought that your brother would have had more spirit than
+to sit down and whine over a woman in that way," said her ladyship,
+sharply; "it is really contemptible."
+
+"But if he is ill in body as well as in mind, poor fellow?"
+
+"Pooh! fiddlesticks! I am quite sure, if Helen jilted you, you would bear
+it a great deal better--losing the money and all--than he does."
+
+Maurice smiled.
+
+"That is very possible; but a man can't help his disposition, and John
+has been utterly shattered by it."
+
+"Well, I am sorry for him, of course; but I confess that I don't see that
+anybody can do anything for him."
+
+And then Maurice was silent for a minute. God only knew what passed
+through his soul at that minute--what agonies of self-renunciation, what
+martyrdom of all that makes life pleasant and dear to a man! It is
+certain his mother did not know it.
+
+"I think," he said, after a minute, and only a slight harshness in his
+voice marked the internal struggle that the words were to cost him--"I
+think, mother, _you_ might do a great deal for him. Miss Nevill is in
+town. Could you not see her?"
+
+"I see her! What on earth for?"
+
+"If you were to tell her how ill John is, how desperately he feels her
+treatment of him--how----"
+
+"Stop, stop, my dear! You cannot possibly suppose that I am going down
+upon my knees to entreat Miss Nevill to marry my son after she has thrown
+him over!"
+
+"It is no question of going on your knees, mother. A few words would
+suffice to show her the misery she is causing to John, and if those few
+words would restore his lost happiness----"
+
+"How can I tell that anything I can say would influence her? I suppose
+she had good reasons for throwing him over. She cared for some one else,
+I suppose, or, at all events, she did not care for him."
+
+"I am quite certain, on the contrary, that she had a very sincere
+affection for my brother; and, as to the some one else, I do not think
+that will prevent her returning to him. Oh, mother!" he cried, with a
+sudden passion, "the world is full of miserable misunderstandings and
+mistakes. For God's sake, let us try to put some of its blunders right!
+Do not let any poor, mean feelings of false pride stand in our way if we
+can make one single life happy!"
+
+She looked up at him, wondering a little at his earnestness. It did not
+strike her at the minute that his interest in Vera was unusual, but only
+that his affection for his brother was stronger than she imagined it to
+be. "You know," she said, "I do not want things to come right in that
+way. I do not want John to marry. I want the old place to come to you and
+your children; and now that John has agreed to let you and Helen live
+there----"
+
+He waved his hand impatiently. "And you know, mother dear, that such
+desires are unlawful. John is the eldest, and I will never move a step to
+take his birthright from him. To stand in the way of his marriage for
+such a cause would be a crime. Is it not better that I should speak
+plainly to you, dear? As to my living at Kynaston, I think it highly
+unlikely that I should do so in any case, much as you and Helen seem to
+wish it. But that has nothing to do with John's affairs. Promise me,
+little mother, that you will try and set that right by seeing Miss
+Nevill?"
+
+"I do not suppose I should do any good," she answered, with visible
+reluctance.
+
+"Never mind; you can but try."
+
+"You can't expect me to go and call upon her for such a purpose, nor
+speak to her, without John's authority."
+
+"You might ask her to come here, or go to some house where you will meet
+her naturally in public."
+
+"Yes, that would be best; perhaps she will be at Lady Cloverdale's ball
+next week."
+
+"It is easy, at all events, to ensure her an invitation to it; ask
+Beatrice Miller to get her one."
+
+"Oh, yes; that is easy enough. Oh, dear me, Maurice, you always manage to
+get your own way with me; but you have given me a dreadfully hard task
+this time."
+
+"As if a woman of your known tact and _savoir faire_ was not capable of
+any hard and impossible task!" answered her son, smiling, as he bent and
+kissed her soft white face.
+
+The gentle flattery pleased her. The old lady sat smiling happily to
+herself, with her hands idle before her, for some minutes after he had
+left her.
+
+How dear he was to her, how good, how upright, how thoroughly generous
+too, and unselfish to think so much of his brother's troubles just now,
+in the midst of all his own happiness.
+
+She got up and went to the window, and watched him as he strolled across
+the garden to join the ladies, smiling and kissing her hand to him when
+he looked back and saw her.
+
+"Dear fellow, I hope he will be happy!" she said to herself, turning away
+with a half sigh. And then suddenly something brought back the ball at
+Shadonake to her recollection. There flashed back into her memory a
+certain scene in a cool, dimly-lit conservatory: two people whispering
+together under a high-swung Chinese lamp, and a background of dark-leaved
+shrubs behind them.
+
+She had been puzzled that night. There had been something going on that
+she had not quite understood. And now again that feeling of unsatisfied
+comprehension came back to her. For the first time it struck her
+painfully that the son whom she idolized so much--whose life and
+character had been her one study and her one delight ever since the day
+of his birth--was nevertheless a riddle to her. That the secret of his
+inner self was as much hidden from her--his mother--as though she had
+been the merest stranger; that the life she had striven so closely to
+entwine with her own was nothing after all but a separate existence, in
+the story of whose soul she herself had no part. He was a man struggling
+single-handed in all the heat and turmoil of the battle of life, and she,
+nothing but a poor, weak old woman, standing feebly aside, powerless to
+help or even to understand the creature to whom she had given birth.
+
+There fell a tear or two down upon her wrinkled little hands as she
+thought of it. She could not understand him; there was something in his
+life she could not fathom. Oh, what did it all mean?
+
+Alas, sooner or later, is not that what comes to every mother concerning
+the child she loves best?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIL.
+
+MR. PRYME'S VISITORS.
+
+ For courage mounteth with occasion.
+
+ Shakespeare, "King John."
+
+
+Mr. Herbert Pryme stood by a much ink-stained and littered table in his
+chambers in the Temple, with his hands in his trousers pockets, whistling
+a slow and melancholy tune.
+
+It was Mr. Pryme's habit to whistle when he was dejected or perplexed;
+and the whistling generally partook of the mournful condition of his
+feelings. Indeed, everything that this young man did was of a ponderous
+and solemn nature; there was always the inner consciousness of the
+dignity of the Bar vested in his own person, to be discerned in his outer
+bearing. Even in the strictest seclusion of the, alas! seldom invaded
+privacy of his chambers Mr. Pryme never forgot that he was a
+barrister-at-law.
+
+But when this young gentleman was ill at ease within himself he was in
+the habit of whistling. He also was given to the thrusting of his hands
+into his pockets. The more unhappy he was, the more he whistled, and the
+deeper he stuffed in his hands.
+
+Just now, to all appearances, he was very unhappy indeed.
+
+The air he had selected for his musical self-refreshment was the lively
+and slightly vulgar one of "Tommy make Room for your Uncle;" but let
+anybody just try to whistle that same vivacious tune to the time of the
+Dead March in "Saul," and with a lingering and plaintive emphasis upon
+each note, with "linked sweetness long drawn out," and then say whether
+the gloomiest of dirges would not be festive indeed in comparison.
+
+Thus did Herbert Pryme whistle it as he looked down upon the piles of
+legal documents heaped up together upon his table.
+
+All of them meant work, but none of them meant money. For Herbert was
+fain to accept the humble position of "devil" to a great legal light who
+occupied the floor below him, and who considered, and perhaps rightly,
+that he was doing the young man above him, who had been sent up from the
+country with a letter of introduction to him from a second cousin, a
+sufficient and inestimable benefit in allowing him to do his dirty work
+gratis.
+
+It was all very useful to him, doubtless, but it was not remunerative;
+and Herbert wanted money badly.
+
+"Oh, if I could only reckon upon a couple of hundred a year," he sighed,
+half aloud to himself, "I might have a chance of winning her! It seems
+hard that heaps of these fellows can make hundreds a week by a short
+speech, or a few strokes of the pen, that cost them no labour and little
+forethought, whilst I, with all my hard work, can make nothing! What
+uphill work it is! Not that the Bar is not a fine profession; quite the
+finest there is," for not even to himself would Herbert Pryme decry the
+legal muse whom he worshipped; "but, I suppose, like every other
+profession, it is overstocked; there are too many struggling for the same
+prizes. The fact is, that England is over-populated. Now, if a law were
+to be passed compelling one-half of the adult males in this country to
+remain in a state of celibacy for the space of fifteen years----" but
+here he stopped short in his soliloquy and smiled; for was not the one
+desire of his life at present to marry Beatrice Miller immediately? And
+how was the extra population to be stayed if every one of the doomed
+quota of marriageable males were of the same mind as himself?
+
+Presently Mr. Pryme sauntered idly to the window, and stood looking
+drearily out of it, still whistling, of course.
+
+The prospect was not a lively one. His chambers looked out upon a little
+square, stone-flagged court, with a melancholy-looking pump in the centre
+of it. There was an arched passage leading away to one side, down which a
+distant footstep echoed drearily now and then, and a side glimpse of the
+empty road at the other end, beyond the corner of the opposite houses.
+Now and then some member of the learned profession passed rapidly across
+the small open space with the pre-occupied air of a man who has not a
+minute to spare, or a clerk, bearing the official red bag, ran hastily
+along the passage; for the rest, the London sparrows had it pretty much
+to themselves. As things were, Mr. Pryme envied the sparrows, who were
+ready clothed by Providence, and had no rates and taxes to pay, as well
+as the clerks, who, at all events, had plenty to do and no time to
+soliloquize upon the hardness and hollowness of life. To have plenty of
+brains, and an indefinite amount of spare time to use them in; to desire
+ardently to hasten along the road towards fortune and happiness, and to
+be forced to sit idly by whilst others, duller-witted, perchance, and
+with less capacity for work, are amassing wealth under your very
+nose--when this is achieved by sheer luck, or good interest, or any other
+of those inadequate causes which get people on in life independent of
+talent and industry--that is what makes a radical of a man. This is what
+causes him to dream unwholesome dreams about equality and liberty, about
+a republic, where there shall be no more principalities and powers, where
+plutocracy, as well as aristocracy, shall be unregarded, and where every
+good man and true shall rise on his own merits, and on none other.
+
+Oh, happy and impossible Arcadia! You must wait for the millennium, my
+friend, before your aspirations shall come to pass. Wait till jealousy,
+and selfishness, and snobbism--that last and unconquerable dragon--shall
+be destroyed out of the British heart, then, and only then, when jobbery,
+and interest, and mammon-worship shall be abolished; then will men be
+honoured for what they are, and not for what they seem to be.
+
+Something of all this passed through our friend's jaundiced mind as he
+contemplated those homely and familiar little birds, born and bred and
+smoke-dried in all the turmoil of the City's heart, who ruffled their
+feathers and plumed their wings with contented chirpings upon the dusty
+flags of the little courtyard.
+
+Things were exceptionally bad with Herbert Pryme just now. His exchequer
+was low--had never been lower--and his sweetheart was far removed out of
+his reach. Beatrice had duly come up with her parents to the family
+mansion in Eaton Square for the London season, but although he had, it is
+true, the satisfaction, such as it was, of breathing the same air as she
+did, she was far more out of his reach in town than she had been in the
+country. As long as she was at Shadonake Mr. Pryme had always been able
+to run down to his excellent friend, the parson of Tripton, and once
+there, it had been easy to negotiate a surreptitious meeting with
+Beatrice. The fields and the lanes are everybody's property. If Tom and
+Maria are caught love-making at the stile out of the wood, and they both
+swear that the meeting was purely accidental, I don't see how any one is
+to prove that it was premeditated; nor can any parents, now that it is no
+longer the fashion to keep grown women under lock and key, prevent their
+daughters from going out in the country occasionally unattended, nor
+forbid strange young men from walking along the Queen's highway in the
+same direction.
+
+But remove your daughter to London, and the case is altered at once. To
+keep a girl who goes out a great deal in the whirl of London society out
+of the way of a man who goes out very little, who is not in the inner
+circle of town life, and is not in the same set as herself, is the
+easiest thing in the world.
+
+So Mrs. Miller found it. She kept Beatrice hard at work at the routine of
+dissipation. Not an hour of her time was unoccupied, not a minute of her
+day unaccounted for; and, of course, she was never alone--it is not yet
+the fashion for young girls to dance about London by themselves--her
+mother, as a matter of course, was always with her.
+
+As a natural sequence, the lovers had a hard time of it. Beatrice had
+been six weeks in London, and Herbert, beyond catching sight of her once
+or twice as she was driven past in her mother's carriage down Bond
+Street, or through the crowd in the Park, had never seen her at all.
+
+Mrs. Miller was congratulating herself upon the success of her tactics;
+she flattered herself that her daughter was completely getting over that
+unlucky fancy for the penniless and briefless barrister. Beatrice gave no
+sign; she appeared perfectly satisfied and contented, and seemed to be
+enjoying herself thoroughly, and to be troubled by no love-sick
+hankerings after her absent swain.
+
+"She has forgotten him," said Mrs. Miller, to herself.
+
+But the mother did not take into account that indomitable spirit and
+stubborn determination in her own character which had served to carry out
+successfully all the schemes of her life, and which she had probably
+transmitted to her child.
+
+In Beatrice's head, under its short thick thatch of dark rough hair, and
+in her sturdily-built little frame, there lurked the tenacity of a
+bulldog. Once she had taken an idea firmly into her mind, Beatrice Miller
+would never relinquish it until she had got her own way. Herbert, in
+the dingy solitude of his untempting chambers, might despair and look
+upon life and its aims as a hopeless enigma. Beatrice did not despair at
+all. She only bided her time.
+
+One day, if she waited for it patiently, the opportunity would come to
+her, and when it came she would not be slow to make use of it. It came to
+her in the shape of a morning visit from Captain Maurice Kynaston.
+
+"Come down and see my mother," Maurice had said to her; "she has not seen
+you for a long while. I am just going back to Walpole Lodge to lunch."
+
+"I should like to come very much. You have no objection, I suppose,
+mamma?"
+
+No; Mrs. Miller could have no possible objection. Lady Kynaston was
+amongst her oldest and most respected friends; under whose house could
+Beatrice be safer? And even Maurice, as an escort, engaged to be married
+so shortly as he was known to be, was perfectly unobjectionable.
+
+Beatrice went, and, as we have seen, lunched at Walpole Lodge. She had
+told her mother not to expect her till late in the afternoon, as, in all
+probability, Lady Kynaston would drive her into town and would drop her
+in Eaton Square at the end of her drive. Mrs. Miller, to whose watchful
+maternal mind the Temple and Kew appeared to be in such totally different
+directions that they presented no connecting suggestions, agreed,
+unsuspiciously, not to expect her daughter back until after six o'clock.
+
+In this way Beatrice secured the whole afternoon to herself to do what
+she liked with it. She was not slow to make use of it. There was all
+the pluck of the Esterworths in her veins, together with all the
+determination and energy which had raised her father's family from
+a race of shopkeepers to take their place amongst gentlemen.
+
+As soon as Captain Kynaston joined the two ladies in the garden at
+Walpole Lodge after luncheon Beatrice requested him to order a hansom to
+be fetched for her.
+
+"Why should you hurry away?" said Maurice, politely. "My mother will take
+you back to town in the carriage if you will wait."
+
+Helen was stooping over the flower-beds, gathering some violets. Beatrice
+stepped closer to Maurice.
+
+"Don't say a word, there's a good fellow, but get me the
+hansom--and--and--please don't mention it at home."
+
+Then Maurice, who was no tyro in such matters, understood that it was
+expected of him that he should ask no questions, but do what he was told
+and hold his tongue.
+
+The sequence of which proceedings was, that a hansom cab drew up at the
+far corner of the little stone-flagged court in the Temple between four
+and five that afternoon.
+
+Mr. Pryme was no longer by the window when it did so, so that he was
+totally unprepared for the visitor, whose trembling and twice-repeated
+tap at his door he answered somewhat impatiently--
+
+"Come in, and be d----d to you, and don't stand rapping at that door all
+day."
+
+The people, as a rule, who solicited admittance to his chambers were
+either the boy from the legal light below, who came to ask whether the
+papers were ready that had been sent up this morning, or else they were
+smiling and sleek-faced tradesmen who washed their hands insinuatingly
+whilst they requested that Mr. Pryme would be kind enough to settle that
+little outstanding account.
+
+Either of these visitors were equally unwelcome, which must be some
+excuse for the roughness of Mr. Pryme's language.
+
+The door was softly pushed ajar.
+
+"Now, then--come in, can't you; who the deuce are you--_Beatrice_!"
+
+Enter Miss Miller, smiling.
+
+"Oh, fie, Herbert! what naughty words, sir."
+
+"Beatrice, is it possible that it is you! Where is your mother? Are you
+alone?" looking nervously round at the door, whilst he caught her
+outstretched hand.
+
+"Yes, I am quite alone; don't be very shocked. I know I am a horrid, bold
+girl to come all by myself to a man's chambers; it's dreadful, isn't it!
+Oh, what would people say of it if they knew--why, even _you_ look
+horrified! But oh, Herbert, I did want to see you so. I was determined to
+get at you somehow--and now I am here for a whole hour; I have managed it
+beautifully--no one will ever find out where I have been. Mamma thinks I
+am driving with Lady Kynaston!"
+
+And then she sat down and took off her veil, and told him all about it.
+
+She had got at her lover, and she felt perfectly happy and secure,
+sitting there with his arm round her waist and her hand in his. Not so
+Herbert. He was pleased, of course, to see her, and called her by a
+thousand fond names, and he admired her courage and her spirit for
+breaking through the conventional trammels of her life in order to come
+to him; but he was horribly nervous all the same. Supposing that boy were
+to come in from below, or the smiling tradesman, or, still worse, if the
+great Q.C. were to catch a glimpse of her as she went out, and recognize
+her from having met her in society, where would Miss Miller's reputation
+be then?
+
+"It is very imprudent of you--most rash and foolish," he kept on
+repeating; but he was glad to see her all the same, and kissed her
+between every other word.
+
+"Now, don't waste any more time spooning," says Beatrice, with decision,
+drawing herself a little farther from him on the hard leather sofa. "An
+hour soon goes, and I have plenty to say to you. Herbert," with great
+solemnity, "_I mean to elope with you!_"
+
+Herbert gives an irrepressible start.
+
+"_Now!_ this minute?" he exclaims, in some dismay, and reflects swiftly
+that, just now he possesses exactly three pounds seven and sixpence in
+ready money.
+
+"No; don't be a goose; not now, because I haven't any clothes." Herbert
+breathes more freely. "But some day, very soon, before the end of the
+season."
+
+"But, my pet, you are not of age," objects her lover; whilst sundry
+clauses in the laws concerning the marriages of minors without the
+consent of their parents pass hurriedly through his brain.
+
+"What do I care about my age?" says Beatrice, with the recklessness of an
+impetuous woman bent upon having her own way. "Of course, I don't wish to
+do anything disreputable, or to make a scandal, but mamma is driving me
+to it by never allowing me to see you, and forbidding you to come to the
+house, and by encouraging all sorts of men whom she wants me to marry."
+
+"Ah! And these men, do they make love to you?" The instinct of the lover
+rises instantly superior to the instinct of legal prudence within him.
+"That is hard for me to bear."
+
+"Now, Herbert, don't be a fool!" cries Beatrice, jumping up and making a
+grimace at herself in the dusty glass over his mantelpiece. "Do I look
+like a girl whom men would make love to? Am I not too positively hideous?
+Oh, you needn't shake your head and look indignant. Of course I am ugly,
+everybody but you thinks so. Of course it's not me, myself, but because
+papa is rich, and they think I shall have money. Oh, what a curse this
+money is!"
+
+"I think the want of it a far greater one," says Herbert, ruefully.
+
+"At any rate," continues Beatrice, "I am determined to put an end to this
+state of things; we must take the law into our own hands."
+
+"Am I to wait for you in a carriage and pair at the corner of Eaton
+Square in the middle of the night?" inquires Herbert, grimly.
+
+"No; don't be foolish; people don't do things now-a-days in the way our
+grandmothers did. I shall go to morning service one day at some out
+of-the-way church, where you will meet me with a licence in your pocket;
+it will be the simplest thing in the world."
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+"Afterwards I shall go home to lunch."
+
+"And what am I to do?"
+
+"Oh! you will come back here, I suppose."
+
+"I don't think that will be very amusing," objects the bridegroom elect,
+dubiously.
+
+"No; but then we shall be really married, and when we know that no one
+can part us, we shan't mind waiting; and then, some day, after about six
+months or so, I shall confess to papa, and there will be a terrible
+scene, ending in tears on my part, and in forgiveness on the part of my
+parents. Once the deed is done, you see, they will be forced to make the
+best of it; and, of course, they will not allow us to starve. I think it
+is a very ingenious plan. What do you think of it, Herbert? You don't
+look very much delighted at the idea."
+
+"I don't think that I should play a very noble part in such a scheme as
+that. Dearly as I love you, Beatrice, I do not think I could consent to
+steal you away in such a pitiful and cowardly manner."
+
+"Pooh! you would have nothing to do with it; it is all my doing, of
+course. Hush! is not that somebody coming up the stairs?"
+
+They were silent for half a minute, listening to the sound of advancing
+steps upon the wooden staircase.
+
+"It is nothing--only somebody to see the man above me. By Jove, though,
+it _is_ for me!" as somebody suddenly stopped outside and knocked at the
+door. "Wait one minute, sir! Good heavens, Beatrice, what am I to do with
+you?"
+
+Herbert looked frightened out of his life. Beatrice, on the contrary,
+could hardly smother her laughter.
+
+"I must hide!" she said, in a choked whisper. "Oh, Herbert, it is like
+a scene out of a naughty French play! I shall die of laughter!"
+
+Without a moment's thought, she fled into the inner room, the door of
+which stood ajar, and which was none other than Mr. Pryme's bed-chamber!
+There was no time to think of any better expedient. Beatrice turned the
+key upon herself, and Herbert called out "Come in!" to the intruder.
+Neither of them had noticed that Beatrice's little white lace sunshade
+lay upon the table with her gloves and veil beside it.
+
+If Mr. Pryme had been alarmed at the bare fact of an unknown and possibly
+unimportant visitor, it may be left to the imagination to describe the
+state of his feelings when the door, upon being opened, disclosed the
+Member for North Meadowshire standing without!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+A WHITE SUNSHADE.
+
+ For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove
+ An unrelenting foe to love,
+ And when we meet a mutual heart,
+ Come in between, and bid us part?
+
+
+"Well, Mr. Pryme, how d'ye do?" said Mr. Miller, in his rough, hearty
+voice, holding out his hand. "I dare say you are surprised to see me
+here. I haven't met you since you were staying down with us at Christmas
+time. Well, and how goes the world with you, young man?"
+
+Herbert, who at first had thought nothing less than that Mr. Miller had
+tracked his daughter to his rooms, and that he was about to have the
+righteous wrath of an infuriated and exasperated parent to deal with, by
+this time began to perceive that, to whatever extraordinary cause his
+visit was owing, Beatrice, at all events, had nothing to do with it. He
+recovered himself sufficiently to murmur, in answer to his visitor's
+greeting, that the world went pretty well with him, and to request his
+guest to be seated.
+
+And then, as he pushed an arm-chair forward for him, his eye fell upon
+Beatrice's things upon the table, and his heart literally stood still
+within him. What was he to do? They lay so close to the father's elbow
+that, to move them without attracting attention was impossible, and to
+attract attention to them was to risk their being recognized.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Miller had put on his spectacles, and was drawing some
+voluminous papers out of his breast coat-pocket.
+
+"Now, I dare say, young man, you are wondering what brings me to see you?
+Well, the fact is, there is a little matter about which I am going to
+law. I'm going to bring an action for libel against a newspaper; it is
+that rascally paper the _Cat o' Nine Tails_. They had an infamous
+paragraph three weeks ago concerning my early life, which, let me tell
+you, sir, was highly respectable in every way, sir--in every way."
+
+"I am quite sure of that, Mr. Miller."
+
+"I've brought the paragraph with me. Oh, here it is. Well, I've had a
+good deal of correspondence with the editor, and he refuses to publish an
+apology, and so I'm tired of the whole matter, and have placed it in the
+hands of my solicitors. I'm going to prosecute them, sir, and I don't
+care what it costs me to do it; and I'll expose the whole system of these
+trumped-up fabrications, that contain, as a rule, one grain of truth to a
+hundredweight of lies. Well, now, Mr. Pryme, I want a clever barrister to
+take up this case, and I have instructed Messrs. Grainge, my solicitors,
+to retain you."
+
+"I am sure, sir, you are very kind; I hardly know how to thank you,"
+faltered poor Herbert. Never in the whole course of his life had he felt
+so overcome with shame and confusion! Here was this man come to do him a
+really great and substantial benefit, whilst his own daughter was hidden
+away in a shameful fashion in the next room! Herbert would sooner that
+Mr. Miller had pointed a pistol at his head and threatened to shoot him.
+The deception that he was practising towards this kind-hearted and
+excellent gentleman struck him to the heart with a sense of guilty
+remorse.
+
+But what on earth was he to do? He could not reveal the truth to the
+unconscious father, nor open the door and disclose Beatrice hiding in his
+bedroom, without absolutely risking the reputation of the girl he loved.
+There was nothing for it but to go on with the serio-comedy as best he
+could, and to try and get Mr. Miller off the premises as speedily as
+possible.
+
+He made an effort to decline the proffered employment.
+
+"It is most kind, most generous of you to have thought of me, but I must
+tell you that there are many better men, even amongst the juniors, who
+would do your case more justice than I should."
+
+"Oh! I believe you have plenty of talent, Mr. Pryme. I've been making
+inquiries about you. You only want an opportunity, and I like giving a
+young fellow a chance. One must hold out a helping hand to the young ones
+now and then."
+
+"Of course, sir, I would do my very best for you, but I really think you
+are risking your own case by giving it to me."
+
+"Nonsense--take it and do what you can for me; if you fail, I shall not
+blame you;" and here suddenly Mr. Miller's eyes rested upon the sunshade
+and the gloves upon the table half-a-yard behind his arm. Now, had it
+been Miss Miller's mother who, in the place of her father, had been
+seated in Herbert's wooden arm-chair, the secret of her proximity would
+have been revealed the very instant the maternal eyes had been set upon
+that sunshade and those gloves. Mrs. Miller could have sworn to that
+little white lace, ivory-handled toy, with its coquettish pink ribbon
+bows, had she seen it amongst a hundred others, nor would it have been
+easy to have deceived the mother's eyes in the matter of the gray _peau
+de suède_ gloves and the dainty little veil, such as her daughter was in
+the habit of wearing. But a father's perceptions in these matters are not
+accurate. Mr. Miller had not the remotest idea what his child's sunshade
+was like, nor, indeed, whether she had any sunshade at all. Nevertheless,
+as his eyes alighted upon these indications of a feminine presence which
+lay upon the young barrister's table, they remained fixed there with
+distinct disapproval. These obnoxious articles of female attire of course
+conveyed clearly to the elder man's perceptions, in a broad and general
+sense, the fatal word "woman," and woman in this case meant "vice."
+
+Mr. Miller strove to re-direct his attention to his case and the papers
+in his hand. Herbert made a faint and ineffectual attempt to remove the
+offending objects from the table. Mr. Miller only looked back at them
+with an ever-increasing gloom upon his face, and Herbert's hand, morally
+paralyzed by the glance, sank powerlessly down by his side. He imagined,
+of course, that the father had recognized his daughter's property.
+
+"Well, to continue the subject," said Mr. Miller, looking away with
+an effort, and turning over the papers he had brought with him; "there
+are several points in the case I should like to mention to you." He
+paused for a minute, apparently to collect his thoughts, and to
+Herbert's sensitive ears there was a sudden coldness and constraint
+in his voice and manner. "You will, of course, take instructions in
+the main from Grainge and Co.; but what I wished to point out to you
+was--ahem----" here his voice unaccountably faltered, and his eyes, as
+though drawn by a magnet, returned once more with ominous displeasure to
+that little heap of feminine finery that lay between them. Mr. Miller
+flung down his papers, and turning round in his chair, rested both elbows
+upon the table.
+
+"Mr. Pryme," he said, with decision, "I think it is best that I should be
+frank with you!" He looked the young barrister full in the face.
+
+"Certainly, certainly, if you please, Mr. Miller," said Herbert, not
+quite knowing what he had to fear, and turning hot and cold alternately
+under his visitor's scrutinizing gaze.
+
+"Well, then, let me tell you fairly that I came to seek you to-day with
+the friendliest motives."
+
+"I am sure you did, and you are most kind to me, sir," murmured Herbert,
+playing nervously with an ivory paper-cutter that lay on the table.
+
+Mr. Miller waved his hand, as though to dispense with his grateful
+acknowledgments.
+
+"The fact is," he continued, "I had understood from Mrs. Miller that you
+were a suitor for my daughter's hand. Well, sir, Mrs. Miller, as you
+know, disapproves of your suit. My daughter will be well off, Mr. Pryme,
+and you, I understand, have no income at all. You have no other resource
+than a profession, at which, as yet, you have made nothing. There is some
+reason in Mrs. Miller's objection to you. Nor should I be willing to let
+my daughter marry an idle man who will live upon her money. Then, on the
+other hand, Mr. Pryme, I find that my girl is fond of you, and, if this
+is the case, I am unwilling to make her unhappy. I said to myself that I
+would give you an opening in this case of mine, and if you will work hard
+and make yourself known and respected in your profession, I should not
+object, in the course of time, to your being engaged to her, and I would
+endeavour to induce her mother to agree to it. I came here to-day, Mr.
+Pryme, to give you a fair chance of winning her."
+
+"You are too good, Mr. Miller," cried Herbert, with effusion, stretching
+forth his hand. "I do not know how to thank you enough, nor how to assure
+you of my grateful acceptance of your terms."
+
+But Mr. Miller drew back from the young man's proffered hand.
+
+"Wait, there is no occasion to thank me;" and again his eyes fell sternly
+upon that unlucky little heap of lace and ribbon. "I am sorry to tell you
+that, since I have come here, my friendly and pleasant intentions towards
+you have undergone a complete change."
+
+"Sir!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pryme; I came here prepared to treat you--well, I may as well
+confess it--as a son, under the belief that you were an upright and
+honourable man, and were sincerely and honestly attached to my daughter."
+
+"Mr. Miller, is it possible that you can doubt it?"
+
+The elder man pointed with contemptuous significance to the sunshade
+before him.
+
+"I find upon your table, young man, the evidences of the recent presence
+of some wretched woman in your rooms, and your confusion of manner shows
+me too plainly that you are not the kind of husband to which a man may
+safely entrust his daughter's happiness."
+
+"Mr. Miller, I assure you you are mistaken; it is not so."
+
+"Every man in this country has a right to justify himself when he is
+accused. If I am mistaken, Mr. Pryme, explain to me the meaning of
+_that_," and the heavy forefinger was again levelled at the offending
+objects before him.
+
+Not one single word could Herbert utter. In vain ingenious fabrications
+concerning imaginary sisters, maiden aunts, or aged lady clients rushed
+rapidly through his brain; the natural answer on Mr. Miller's part to all
+such inventions would have been, "Then, where is she?"
+
+Mr. Miller must know as well as he did himself that the lady, whoever she
+might be, must still be in his rooms, else why should her belongings be
+left on his table; and if in the rooms, then, as there was no other
+egress on the staircase than the one by which he had entered, clearly,
+she must be secreted in his bedroom. Mr. Miller was not a young man, and
+his perceptions in matters of intrigue and adventure might no longer be
+very acute, but it was plain to Herbert that he probably knew quite as
+well as he did himself that the owner of the gloves and sunshade was in
+the adjoining room.
+
+"Have you any satisfactory explanation to give me?" asked Mr. Miller,
+once more, after a solemn silence, during which he glared in a stern and
+inquisitorial manner over his spectacles at the young man.
+
+"I have nothing to say," was the answer, given in a low and dejected
+voice.
+
+Mr. Miller sprang to his feet and hurriedly gathered up his papers.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, furiously, "I shall wish you good afternoon; and
+let me assure you, most emphatically, that you must relinquish all claim
+to my daughter's hand. I will never consent to her union with a man whose
+private life will not bear investigation; and should she disobey me in
+this matter, she shall never have one single shilling of my money."
+
+There was a moment's silence. Mr. Miller was buttoning-up his coat with
+the air of a man who buttons up his heart within it at the same time. He
+regarded the young man fiercely, and yet there was a lingering
+wistfulness, too, in his gaze. He would have given a good deal to hear,
+from his lips, a satisfactory explanation of the circumstances which told
+so suspiciously against him. He liked the young barrister personally, and
+he was fond enough of his daughter to wish that she might be happy in her
+own way. He spoke one word more to the young man.
+
+"Have you nothing to say; Mr. Pryme?"
+
+Herbert shook his head, with his eyes gloomily downcast.
+
+"I can only tell you, sir, that you are mistaken in what you imagine. If
+you will not believe my word, I can say nothing more."
+
+"And what of _these_, Mr. Pryme--what of _these_?" pointing furiously
+downwards to Beatrice's property.
+
+"I cannot explain it any further to you, Mr. Miller. I can only ask you
+to believe me."
+
+"Then, I do not believe you, sir--I do not believe you. Would any man in
+his senses believe that you haven't got a woman hidden in the next room?
+Do you suppose I'm a fool? I have the honour of wishing you good day,
+sir, and I am sorry I ever took the trouble of calling upon you. It is,
+of course, unnecessary for you to trouble yourself concerning my case, in
+these altered circumstances, Mr. Pryme; I beg to decline the benefit of
+your legal assistance. Good afternoon."
+
+The door closed upon him, and the sound of his retreating footsteps
+echoed noisily down the stairs. Herbert sank into a chair and covered his
+face with his hands. So lately hope and fortune seemed to have smiled
+upon him for one short, blissful moment, only to withdraw the sunshine
+of their faces again from him more completely, and to leave him more
+utterly in the dark than ever. Was ever man so unfortunate, and so
+unlucky?
+
+But for the _contretemps_ concerning that wretched sunshade, he would now
+have been a hopeful, and almost a triumphant, lover. Now life was all
+altered for him!
+
+The door between the two rooms opened softly, and Beatrice, no longer
+brave, and defiant, and laughing as she had been when she went in, but
+white, and scared, and trembling, crept hesitatingly forth, and knelt
+down by her lover's side.
+
+"Oh, Herbert! what has happened? It was papa--I heard his voice; but I
+could not hear what you talked about, only I heard that he was angry at
+the last, when he went away. Oh! tell me, dearest, what has happened?"
+
+Herbert pointed bitterly to her belongings on the table.
+
+"What fatality made me overlook those wretched things?" he cried,
+miserably; "they have ruined us!"
+
+Beatrice uttered an exclamation of dismay.
+
+"Papa saw them--he recognized them!"
+
+"Not as _yours_, thank God!"
+
+"What then?"
+
+"He thinks me unworthy of you," answered the lover, in a low voice, and
+Beatrice understood. "He has forbidden me ever to think of you now; and
+he will leave you penniless if you disobey him; it is a terrible
+misfortune, my darling; but still, thank God that your good name is
+safe!"
+
+"Yes, at the expense of yours, Herbert!" cried the girl, frantically; "I
+see it all now, and, if I dared, I would confess to papa the truth."
+
+"Do not think of it!"
+
+"I dare not; but, Herbert, don't despair; I see now how wicked and how
+foolish I was to come here to-day, and what a terrible risk I have run,
+for if papa knew that it was I who was in the next room, he would never
+forgive me; we can do nothing now but wait until brighter and happier
+days; believe me, Herbert, if you will be true to me, I will be true to
+you, and I will wait for you till I am old and grey."
+
+He strained her passionately to his heart.
+
+"I will never forget what you have done for me to-day, never!" said the
+girl, as she clung to his neck.
+
+And then she put on her gloves and veil, and took up the sunshade that
+had been the cause of such a direful ending to her escapade, and went her
+way. And after she was gone, Mr. Pryme, with his hands in his pockets,
+began once more to whistle, as though the events of the afternoon had
+never taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+HER SON'S SECRET.
+
+ But love is such a mystery,
+ I cannot find it out,
+ For when I think I'm best resolved,
+ I then am most in doubt."
+
+ Sir J. Suckling.
+
+
+Lady Kynaston sat alone in her little morning-room; as far as she knew,
+she was alone in the house; Mrs. Romer had driven into London, on the
+cares of her trousseau intent, and she believed that Maurice had gone
+with her; at all events, she had heard him state his intention of going,
+and the departing carriage had, some time since, driven away from the
+door.
+
+The morning-room looked on to the garden side of the house, and the
+windows were wide open; the east wind had departed, and summer had set in
+at last. Real summer, coming in with a rush when it did come, with warm
+whiffs of flower-scented wind, with flutterings of lime blossoms from the
+trees along the high brick wall, with brown bees and saffron butterflies
+hovering over the reviving flower-borders, and dragon-flies darting out
+of the shadows into the hot blinding sunshine. Summer at last; and oh,
+how welcome when it comes upon our rain-drenched and winter-pinched land.
+
+The gardener was bedding out the geraniums along the straight ribbon
+border. Lady Kynaston went out once to superintend his operations,
+holding up a newspaper in her hand to shield her head from the rays of
+the sun. But it was hot, and old McCloud, the Scotch gardener, was
+intelligent enough to be safely left to his own devices, so she did not
+stop out long.
+
+She came in again, and sat down in a low basket-chair by the window, and
+thought how wise she had been to settle herself down in the old house
+with its velvet lawns and its wide shadowy trees, instead of in the heat
+and turmoil of a London home.
+
+She looked a little anxious and worried to-day--she was not happy about
+her eldest son--somebody had told her last night that he was talking
+about going to Australia, and turning sheep farmer. Lady Kynaston was
+annoyed at the report; it did not strike her as seemly or right that the
+head of the Kynaston family should become a sheep farmer. Moreover, she
+knew very well that he only wanted to get himself away out of the country
+where no one would know of his story, or remind him of his trouble again.
+The man's heart was broken. He did not want to farm sheep, or to take to
+any other rational or healthful employment; he only wanted, like a sick
+animal, to creep away and hide his hurt. Little as Lady Kynaston had in
+common with her eldest son, she was sorry for him. She would have done
+what she could to help him had she known how. She had written to him only
+yesterday, begging him to come to her, but he had not replied to her
+letter.
+
+The Cloverdales' ball had come and gone, and Lady Kynaston had taken
+pains to ensure that an invitation might be sent to Mrs. Hazeldine and
+Miss Nevill. She had also put herself to some inconvenience in order to
+be present at it herself, but all to no purpose--Vera was not there.
+Perhaps she had had another engagement that evening.
+
+The old lady's promise to her youngest son was still unfulfilled. She
+half repented now that she had given him any such promise. What good was
+she to do by interceding between her son and Miss Nevill? and why was she
+to lay herself open to the chance of a rebuff from that young lady? It
+had been a senseless and quixotic idea on Maurice's part altogether.
+Young women do not take back a jilted lover because the man's mother
+advises them to do so; nor is a broken-off marriage likely to get itself
+re-settled in consequence of the interference of a third person.
+
+The old lady had taken out her fancy-work, a piece of crewel work such as
+is the fashion of the day. But she was not fond of work; the leaves of
+muddy-shaded greens grew but slowly under her fingers, and, truth to say,
+the occupation bored her. It was artistic, certainly, and it was
+fashionable; but Lady Kynaston would have been happier over a pair of
+cross-stitch slippers for her son, or a knitted woollen petticoat for the
+old woman at her lodge gate. All the same, she took out her crewels and
+put in a few stitches; but the afternoon was warm, there was a humming of
+insects in the summer air, a click-clicking from the gardener as he
+dropped one empty red flower-pot into the other along the edge of the
+ribbon border, a cawing of rooks from the elms over the wall, a very
+harmony of soft soothing sounds, just enough to lull worry to rest, not
+enough to scare drowsiness from one's brain.
+
+By degrees, it all became mixed up in a delicious confusion. The rooks,
+and the bees, and the gardener made one continuous murmur to her, like
+the swishing of summer waves upon a sandy shore, or the moaning of soft
+winds in the tree tops.
+
+Then the crewel work slipped off her lap, and Lady Kynaston slept.
+
+How long she was asleep she could not rightly have said: it might have
+been an hour, it might have been but twenty minutes; but suddenly she
+awoke with a start.
+
+The rustle of a woman's dress was beside her, and somebody spoke her
+name.
+
+"Lady Kynaston! Oh, I am so sorry I have disturbed you; I did not see you
+were asleep."
+
+The old lady opened her eyes wide, and came back suddenly from dreamland.
+Vera Nevill stood before her.
+
+"Vera, is it _you_? Good gracious! how did you get in? I never even heard
+the door open."
+
+"I came in by the front-door quite correctly," said Vera, smiling and
+reaching out her hand for a chair, "and was duly announced by the
+footman; but I had no idea you were asleep."
+
+"Only dozing. Sit down, my dear, sit down; I am glad to see you." And,
+somehow, all the awkwardness of the meeting between the two vanished. It
+was as though they had parted only yesterday on the most friendly terms.
+In Vera's absence, Lady Kynaston had thought hard things of her, and had
+spoken condemning words concerning her; but in her presence all this
+seemed to be altered.
+
+There was something so unspeakably refreshing and soothing about Vera;
+there was a certain quiet dignity in her movements, a calm serenity in
+her manner, which made it difficult to associate blame and displeasure
+with her. Faults she might have, but they could never be mean or ignoble
+ones; there was nothing base or contemptible about her. The pure, proud
+profile, the broad grave brow, the eyes that, if a trifle cold, were as
+true withal as the soul that looked out, sometimes earnestly, sometimes
+wistfully, from their shadowy depths; everything about her bade one judge
+her, not so much by her actions, which were sometimes incomprehensible,
+but by a certain standard that she herself created in the minds of
+all who knew her.
+
+Lady Kynaston had called her a jilt and a heartless coquette; she had
+made no secret of saying, right and left, how badly she had behaved: what
+shameful and discreditable deductions might be drawn from her conduct
+towards Sir John. Yet, the very instant she set eyes upon her, she felt
+sorry for the hard things she had said of her, and ashamed of herself
+that she should have spoken them.
+
+Vera drew forward a chair, and sat down near her. The dress she wore was
+white, of some clear and delicate material, softened with creamy lace; it
+had been one of kind-hearted Cissy Hazeldine's many presents to her.
+Looking at her, Lady Kynaston thought what a lovely vision of youth and
+beauty she made in the sombre quiet of the little room.
+
+"They tell me half the men in London have gone mad over you," were her
+first words following the train of her own thoughts, and she liked her
+visitor none the less, that world-loving little old woman, because she
+could not but acknowledge the reasonableness of the madness of which
+she accused her of being the object.
+
+"I care very little for the men in London, Lady Kynaston," answered Vera,
+quietly.
+
+"My dear, what _do_ you care for?" asked her ladyship, with earnestness,
+and Vera understood that she was expected to state her business.
+
+"Lady Kynaston, I have come to ask you about your son," she answered,
+simply.
+
+"About John?"
+
+"Of course, it is Sir John I mean," she said, quickly, a hot flush
+rising for one instant to her face, and dying away rapidly again, to
+leave her a trifle paler than before. "I know," she continued, with a
+little hesitation--"I know that I have no right to inquire--but I cannot
+forget all that is past--all his goodness and generosity to me. I shall
+never forget it; and oh, I hear such dreadful things of him, that he is
+ill--that he is talking of going to Australia. Oh, Lady Kynaston, is it
+all true?"
+
+She had clasped her hands together, and bent a little forward towards
+the old lady in her earnestness; she looked at her piteously, almost
+entreatingly.
+
+"Does she love him after all?" thought Lady Kynaston, as she watched her;
+and the meaning of the whole story of her son's love seemed more
+unfathomable than ever.
+
+"John is neither well nor happy," she said, aloud. "I think, Vera, you
+must know the reason of it better than any of us."
+
+"It is my fault--my doing," cried the girl, with a ring of deep regret in
+her voice. "Yes," she added, looking away sadly out of the open window;
+"that is why I have come. Do you know that I saw him once? I don't think
+he saw me--it was in the Park one morning. He looked so aged, so
+saddened, I realized then what I had done--his face haunts me."
+
+"Vera, you could alter all that if you chose," said the old lady,
+earnestly.
+
+A sudden flush sprang to her face; she looked startled.
+
+"You don't suppose I came here to say _that_, Lady
+Kynaston?"
+
+"No, my dear; but I have decided to say it to you. Vera, I entreat you to
+tell me the truth. What is it that stands between you and John?"
+
+She was silent, looking down upon her hands that lay crossed one over the
+other upon her knee.
+
+"I cannot tell you, Lady Kynaston," she answered, at length, in a low
+voice.
+
+Lady Kynaston sighed; she was a little disappointed.
+
+"And you cannot, marry him?"
+
+Vera shook her head.
+
+"No, it would not be right."
+
+The old lady bent forward and laid her hand upon her visitor's arm.
+
+"Forgive me for asking you. Do you love some one else? is it that?"
+
+She bent her head silently.
+
+"Have you any hopes of marrying the man you love?"
+
+"Oh no, none--not the slightest," she said, hurriedly; "I shall never
+marry."
+
+"Then, Vera, will you listen to an old woman's advice?"
+
+"Yes, dear Lady Kynaston."
+
+"My dear, if you cannot marry the man you love, put him out of your
+mind."
+
+"I must do that in any case," she said, wearily.
+
+"Listen to me, my dear. Don't sacrifice your own life and the life of a
+man who is good and loves you dearly to a caprice of your heart. Hush!
+don't interrupt me; I dare say you don't think it a caprice; you think it
+is to last for ever. But there is no 'for ever' in these matters; the
+thing comes to us like an ordinary disease; some of us take it strongly,
+and it half kills us; some of us are only a very little ill; but we all
+get over it. There is a pain that goes right through one's heart: it is
+worse to bear than any physical suffering: but, thank God, that pain
+always wears itself out. My dear, I, who speak to you, have felt it, and
+I tell you that no man is worth it. You can cure yourself of it if you
+will; and the remedy is work and change of the conditions of your life.
+You don't think I look very much like a blighted being, do you? and yet I
+did not marry the man I loved. I could not; he was poor, and my parents
+would not allow it. I thought I should die, but you see I did not. I took
+up my life bravely, and I married a most estimable man; I lived an active
+and healthy life, so that by degrees it became a happy one. Now, Vera,
+why should you not do the same? Your people have a right to expect that
+you should marry; they cannot afford to support you for always. Because
+you are disappointed in one thing, why are you not to make the best you
+can of your life?"
+
+"I do mean to marry--in time," said Vera, brokenly, with tears in her
+eyes.
+
+"Then why not marry John?"
+
+There was a minute's silence. Was it possible that Lady Kynaston did not
+know? Vera asked herself. Was it possible that she could, in cold blood,
+advise her to marry one son whilst the other one loved her! That was what
+was so terrible to her mind. To marry was simple enough, but to marry Sir
+John Kynaston! She thought of what such an action might bring upon them
+all. The daily meetings, the struggles with temptation, the awful
+tampering with deadly sin. Could any one so constituted as she was walk
+deliberately and with open eyes into such a situation?
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"I cannot do it," she said, wringing her hands together; "don't ask me;
+I cannot do it!"
+
+Lady Kynaston got up, and went and stood by her chair.
+
+"Vera, I entreat you not to let any false pride stand in the way of
+this. Do not imagine that I ask you to do anything that would wound your
+vanity, or humble you in your own eyes. It would be so easy for me to
+arrange a meeting between you and John; it shall all come about simply
+and naturally. As soon as he sees you again, he will speak to you."
+
+"It is not that, it is not that!" she murmured, distractedly; but Lady
+Kynaston went on as if she had not heard her.
+
+"You must know that I should not plead like this with you if I were not
+deeply concerned. For myself, I had sooner that John remained unmarried.
+I had sooner that Maurice's children came into Kynaston. It is wrong, I
+know, but it is the case, because Maurice is my favourite. But when we
+hear of John shutting himself up, of his refusing to see any of his
+friends, and of his talking of going to Australia, why, then we all feel
+that it is you only who can help us; that is why I have promised Maurice
+to plead with you."
+
+She looked up quickly.
+
+"You promised Maurice! It is _Maurice_ who wants me to marry his
+brother." She turned very pale.
+
+"Certainly he does. You don't suppose Maurice likes to see his brother so
+unhappy."
+
+The darkened room, the spindle-legged furniture, Lady Kynaston's little
+figure, in her black dress and soft white tulle cap, the bright garden
+outside, the belt of trees beyond the lawn, all swam together before her
+eyes.
+
+She drew a long breath; then she rose slowly from her place, a little
+unsteadily, perhaps, and walked across the Persian rug to the empty
+fireplace. She stood there half a minute leaning with both hands upon the
+mantelshelf, her head bent forwards.
+
+_Maurice wished it!_ To him, then, there were no fears, and no dangers.
+He could look forward calmly to meeting her constantly as his brother's
+wife; it would be nothing to him, that temptation that she dreaded so
+much; nothing that an abyss which death itself could never bridge over
+would be between them to all eternity!
+
+And then the woman's pride, without which, God help us, so many of us
+would break our hearts and die, came to her aid.
+
+Very well, then, if he was strong, she would learn to be strong too;
+if the danger to him was so slight that he could contemplate it with
+calmness and with indifference, then she, too, would show him that it was
+nothing to her. Only, then, what a poor thing was this love of his! And
+surely the man she had loved so fatally was not Maurice Kynaston at all,
+but only some creature of her own imagination, whom she had invested with
+things that the man himself had not lost because he had never possessed
+them.
+
+If this was so, then why, indeed, listen to the voice of her heart when
+everything urged her to stifle it? Why not make Sir John Kynaston happy
+and herself prosperous and rich, as everybody round her seemed to
+consider it her duty to do?
+
+It passed rapidly through her mind what a fine place Kynaston was; how
+dear everything that wealth can bring had always been to her, what a wise
+and prudent match it was in every way for her, and what a good indulgent
+husband Sir John would be.
+
+Who in the wide world would blame her for going back to him? Would not
+everybody, on the contrary, praise her for reconsidering her folly, and
+for becoming Lady Kynaston, of Kynaston? The errors of the successful
+in this world's race are leniently treated; it is only when we are
+unfortunate and our lives become failures that our friends turn their
+backs upon our misdeeds in righteous condemnation.
+
+"So long as thou doest well unto thyself men will speak good of thee."
+
+Surely, surely, it was the best and the wisest thing she could do. And
+yet even at that moment Eustace Daintree's pale, earnest face came for
+one instant before her. What side in all this would he take--he of the
+pure heart, of the stainless life? If he knew all, what would he say?
+
+Pooh! he was a dreamer--an idealist, a man of impossible aims; his
+theories, indeed, were beautiful, but impracticable. Vera knew that he
+expected better things of her; but she had striven to be what he would
+have desired, and if she had failed, was it her fault? was it not rather
+the fault of the world and the generation in which her life had been
+cast?
+
+She had struggled, and she had failed; henceforth let her life be as fate
+should ordain for her.
+
+"What is it you wish me to say, Lady Kynaston?" she asked, turning
+suddenly towards Maurice's mother.
+
+"My dear child, I only want you to say that if John asks you again to be
+his wife, you will consent, or say only, if you like it better, that you
+will agree to meet him here. There shall be nothing unpleasant for you; I
+will write to him and settle everything."
+
+"If you write to him, I will come," she said, briefly, and then Lady
+Kynaston came up to her and kissed her, taking her hands within her own,
+and drawing her to her with motherly tenderness. "My dear, everybody will
+think well of you for this."
+
+And the words ran so nearly in the current of her own bitter thoughts
+that Vera laughed, shortly and disdainfully, a low laugh of scorn at the
+world, whose mandates she was prepared to obey, even though she despised
+herself for doing so.
+
+"You will be glad by-and-by that you were so sensible and so reasonable,"
+said Lady Kynaston.
+
+"Yes--I dare say I shall be glad by-and-by; and now I am going, dear Lady
+Kynaston; I have a hansom waiting all this time, and Mrs. Hazeldine will
+be wondering what has become of me."
+
+At this moment they both heard the sound of a carriage driving up to the
+door.
+
+"It must be some visitors," said Lady Kynaston; "wait a minute, or you
+will meet them in the hall. Oh, stay, go through this door into the
+dining-room, and you can get through the dining-room window by the garden
+round to the front of the house; I dare say you would rather not meet
+anybody--you might know them."
+
+"Thank you--yes, I should much prefer to get away quickly and quietly--I
+will go through the dining-room; do not come with me, I can easily find
+my way."
+
+She gathered up her gloves and her veil and opened the door which
+communicated between the morning-room and the dining-room. She heard the
+chatter of women's voices and the fluttering of women's garments in the
+hall; it seemed as though they were about to be ushered into the room she
+was leaving.
+
+She did not want to be seen; besides, she wanted to get away quickly and
+return to London. She closed the morning-room door behind her, and took a
+couple of steps across the dining-room towards the windows.
+
+Then she stopped suddenly short; Maurice sat before her at the table. He
+lifted his eyes and looked at her; he did not seem surprised to see her,
+but there was a whole world of grief and despair in his face. It was as
+though he had lived through half a lifetime since she had last seen him.
+
+Pride, anger, wounded affection, all died away within her--only the woman
+was left, the woman who loved him. Little by little she saw him only
+through the blinding mist of her own tears.
+
+Not one single word was spoken between them. What was there that they
+could say to each other? Then suddenly she turned away, and went swiftly
+back into the room she had just left, closing the door behind her.
+
+It was empty. Lady Kynaston was gone. Vera stooped over the
+writing-table, and, taking up a sheet of paper, she wrote in pencil:--
+
+"Do not write to Sir John--it is beyond my strength--forgive me and
+forget me. Vera." And then she went out through the other door,
+and got herself away from the place in her hansom.
+
+Twenty minutes later, when her bevy of chattering visitors had left her,
+Lady Kynaston came back into her morning-room and found the little pencil
+note left upon her writing-table. Wondering, perplexed and puzzled beyond
+measure, she turned it over and over in her fingers.
+
+What had happened? Why had Vera so suddenly altered her mind again? What
+had influenced her? Half by accident, half, perhaps, with an instinct of
+what was the truth, she softly opened the door of communication between
+the morning-room and the dining-room, opened it for one instant, and then
+drew back again, scared and shocked, closing it quickly and noiselessly.
+What she had seen in the room was this--
+
+Maurice, half stretched across the table, his face downwards upon his
+arm, whilst those tearless, voiceless sobs, which are so terrible to
+witness in a man, sobs which are the gasps of a despairing heart, shook
+the strong broad shoulders and the down-bent head that was hidden from
+her sight.
+
+And then the mother knew at last the secret of her son's heart. It was
+Vera whom Maurice loved.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+ST. PAUL'S, KNIGHTSBRIDGE.
+
+ Hide in thy bosom, poor unfortunate,
+ That love which is thy torture and thy crime,
+ Or cry aloud to those departed hosts
+ Of ghostly lovers! can they be more deaf
+ To thy disaster than the living world?
+ Who, with a careless smile, will note the pain
+ Caused by thy foolish, self-inflicted wound.
+
+ Violet Fane, "Denzil Place."
+
+
+Upon the steps of the Charing Cross Hotel stood, one morning in June, a
+little French gentleman buttoning his lavender gloves. He wore a glossy
+new hat, a frock-coat, and a flower in his button-hole; he had altogether
+a smart and jaunty appearance.
+
+He hailed a passing hansom and jumped into it, taking care as he did so
+to avoid brushing against the muddy wheel, lest he should tarnish the
+glories of his light-coloured trousers. Monsieur D'Arblet was more than
+usually particular about his appearance this morning. He said to himself,
+with a chuckle, as he was driven west-ward, that he was on his way to win
+a bride, and a rich bride, too. It behoved him to be careful of his outer
+man on such an occasion.
+
+He had heard of Mr. Harlowe's death and of his grand-daughter's good
+fortune when he was at Constantinople, for he had friends in London who
+kept him _au courant_ with the gossip of society, and he had straightway
+made his preparations to return to England. He had not hurried himself,
+however, for what he had not heard of was that clause in the old man's
+will which made his grand-daughter's marriage within two months the _sine
+quâ non_ of her inheriting his fortune. Such an idea as that had never
+come into Monsieur D'Arblet's head; he had no conception but that he
+should be in plenty of time.
+
+When he got to the house in Princes Gate he found it shut up. This,
+however, did not disconcert him, it was no more than he expected. After
+a considerable amount of ringing at both bells, there was a grating sound
+within as of the unfastening of bolts and chains, and an elderly woman,
+evidently fresh from her labours over the scouring of the kitchen grate,
+appeared at the door, opening it just a couple of inches, as though she
+dreaded the invasion of a gang of housebreakers.
+
+"Will you please tell me where Mrs. Romer is now living?"
+
+The woman grinned. "She has been living at Walpole Lodge, at Kew--Lady
+Kynaston's, sir."
+
+"Oh, thank you;" and he was preparing to re-enter his hansom.
+
+"But I don't think you will see her to-day, sir."
+
+"Why not?" turning half-round again.
+
+"It is Mrs. Romer's wedding-day."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+That elderly female, who had been at one time a housemaid in Mr.
+Harlowe's household, confided afterwards to her intimate friend, the
+kitchenmaid next door, that she was so frightened at the way that
+foreign-looking gentleman shouted at her, that she felt as if she should
+have dropped. "Indeed, my dear, I was forced to go down and get a drop of
+whisky the very instant he was gone, I felt so fluttered, like."
+
+Monsieur Le Vicomte turned round to her, with his foot midway between the
+pavement and the step of the hansom, and shouted at her again.
+
+"_What_ did you say it was, woman?"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Romer's wedding-day, to be sure, sir; and no such wonder after
+all, I should say; and a lovely morning for the wedding it be, too."
+
+Lucien D'Arblet put his hand vaguely up to his head, as though he had
+received a blow; she had escaped him, then, after all.
+
+"So soon after the old man's death," he murmured, half aloud; "who could
+have expected it?"
+
+"Well, sir, and soon it is, as you say," replied the ancient
+ex-housemaid, who had caught the remark; "but people do say as how Mr.
+Harlowe, my late master, wished it so, and of course Mrs. Romer, she were
+quite ready, so to speak, for the Captain had been a-courting her for
+ever so long, as we who lived in the house could have told."
+
+The vicomte was fumbling at his breast-coat pocket, his face was as
+yellow as the rose in his button-hole.
+
+"Where was the wedding to be? At Kew?"
+
+"No, sir; at Saint Paul's church, in Wilton Crescent. Mrs. Romer would
+have it so, because that's the place of worship she used to go to when
+she lived here. You'd be in time to see them married now, sir, if you was
+to look sharp; it was to be at half-past eleven, and it's not that yet;
+my niece and a young friend has just started a-foot to go there. I let
+her go, because she'd never seen a grand wedding. I'd like to have gone
+myself, but, in course, we couldn't both be out of the house----"
+
+The gentleman was listening no longer; he had sprung into his hansom.
+
+"Drive to Saint Paul's, Knightsbridge, as fast as your horse can go," he
+called out to the cabman. "I might even now be in time; it would be a
+_coup d'état_," he muttered.
+
+Round the door of Saint Paul's church a crowd had gathered, waiting to
+see the bridal party come out; there was a strip of red cloth across the
+pavement, and a great many carriages were standing down the street; big
+footmen were lounging about, chatting amicably together; a knot of
+decently-dressed women were pressing up as close to the porch as the
+official personage, with a red collar on his coat and gold lace on his
+hat, would allow them to go; and an indiscriminate collection of those
+chance passers-by who never seem to be in any hurry, or to have anything
+better to do than to stand and stare at any excitement, great or small,
+that they may meet on their road, were blocking up the pavement on either
+side of the red cloth carpeting.
+
+Two ladies came walking along from the direction of the Park.
+
+"There's a wedding going on; do let us go in and see it, Vera."
+
+"My dear Cissy, I detest looking at people being married; it always makes
+me low-spirited."
+
+"And I love it. I always get such hints for dresses from a wedding. I'd
+go anywhere to see anybody married. I've been to the Jewish synagogue, to
+Spurgeon's tabernacle, and to the pro-cathedral, all in one week, before
+now just to see weddings."
+
+"There must be a sameness about the performances. Don't you get sick of
+them?"
+
+"Never. I wonder whose wedding it is; there must be thirty carriages
+waiting. I'll ask one of these big footmen. Whose wedding is it?"
+
+"Captain Kynaston's, ma'am."
+
+"Oh, I used to know him once; he is such a handsome fellow. Come along,
+Vera."
+
+"Cissy, I _cannot_ come."
+
+"Nonsense, Vera; don't be so foolish; make haste, or we shan't get in."
+
+Somebody just then dashed up in a hansom, and came hurrying up behind
+them. Somehow or other, what with Mrs. Hazeldine dragging her by the arm,
+and an excited-looking gentleman pushing his way through the crowd behind
+her, Vera got swept on into the church.
+
+"You are very late, ladies," whispered the pew-opener, who supposed them
+to belong to the wedding guests; "it is nearly over. You had better take
+these seats in this pew; you will see them come out well from here." And
+she evidently considered them to be all one party, for she ushered them
+all three into a pew; first, Mrs. Hazeldine, then Vera, and next to her
+the little foreign-looking gentleman who had bustled up so hurriedly.
+
+It was an awful thing to have happened to Vera that she should have been
+thus entrapped by a mere accident into being present at Maurice's
+wedding; and yet, when she was once inside the church, she felt not
+altogether sorry for it.
+
+"I can at least see the last of him, and pray that he may be happy," she
+said to herself, as she sank on her knees in the shelter of the pew, and
+buried her face in her hands.
+
+The church was crowded, and yet the wedding itself was not a particularly
+attractive one, for, owing to the fact that the bride was a widow, there
+was, of course, no bevy of bridesmaids in attendance in diaphanous
+raiment. Instead of these, however, there was a great concourse of the
+best-dressed women in London, all standing in rows round the upper end of
+the nave; and there was a little old lady, in brown satin and point lace,
+who stood out conspicuously detached from the other groups, who bent her
+head solemnly over the great bouquet of exotics in her hands, and prayed
+within herself, with a passionate fervour such as no other soul present
+could pray, save only the pale, beautiful girl on her knees, far away
+down at the further end of the church. Surely, if God ever gave happiness
+to one of his creatures because another prayed for it, Maurice Kynaston,
+with the prayers of those two women being offered up for him, would have
+been a happy man.
+
+And the mother, by this time, knew that it was all a mistake--a mistake,
+alas, which she, in her blindness, had fostered.
+
+No wonder that she trembled as she prayed.
+
+The service, that portion of it which makes two people man and wife,
+was over; the clergyman was reading the final exhortation to the
+newly-married pair.
+
+They stood together close to the altar rails. The bride was in a pale
+lavender satin, covered with lace, which spread far away behind her
+across the tesselated pavement. The bridegroom stood by her side, erect
+and handsome, but pale and stern, and with a far-away look in his eyes
+that would have made any one fancy, had any one been near enough or
+attentive enough to remark it, that he was only an indifferent spectator
+of the scene, in no way interested in what was going on. He looked as if
+he were thinking of something else.
+
+He was thinking of something else. He was thinking of a railway carriage,
+of a train rushing onwards through a fog-blotted landscape, and of two
+arms, warm and soft, cast up round his neck, and a trembling, passionate
+voice, ever crying in his ears--
+
+"While you live I will never marry another man."
+
+That was what the bridegroom was thinking about.
+
+As to the bride, she was debating to herself whether she should have the
+body of her wedding-dress cut V or square when she left it with her
+dressmaker to be altered into a dinner-dress.
+
+Meanwhile the clergyman, who mumbled his words slightly, and whose
+glasses kept on tumbling off his nose, waded through the several duties
+of husbands towards their wives, and of wives towards their husbands, as
+expounded by Scripture, in a monotonous undertone, until, to the great
+relief of the weary guests, the ceremony at last came to an end.
+
+Then the best man, Sir John, who stood behind his brother, looking, if
+possible, more like a mute at a funeral even than the bridegroom himself,
+stepped forward out of the shadow. The new-married couple went into the
+vestry, followed by Sir John, his mother, and a select few, upon which
+the door was closed. All the rest of the company then began to chatter
+in audible whispers together; they fidgeted backwards and forwards,
+from one pew to the other. There were jokes, and smiles, and nods, and
+hand-shakings between the different members of the wedding party. All in
+a low and decorous undertone, of course, but still there was a distinct
+impression upon every one that all the religious part of the business
+being well got over, they were free to be jolly about it now, and to
+enjoy themselves as much as circumstances would admit of.
+
+All at once there was a sudden hush, everybody scuffled back into their
+places. The best man put his nose out of the vestry door, and the
+"Wedding March" struck up. Then came a procession of chorister boys down
+the church, each bearing a small bouquet of fern and white flowers. They
+ranged themselves on either side of the porch, and the bride and
+bridegroom came down the aisle alone.
+
+Then it was that Monsieur D'Arblet, leaning forward with the rest to see
+them pass, caught sight of the face of the girl who stood by his side.
+
+She was pale as death; a look as of the horror of despair was in her
+eyes, her teeth were set, her hands were clenched together as one who has
+to impose a terrible and dreadful task upon herself. Nobody in all that
+gaily-dressed chattering crowd noticed her, for were not all eyes fixed
+upon the bride, the queen of the day? Nobody save the man who stood by
+her side. Only he saw that fixed white look of despair, only he heard the
+long shuddering sigh that burst from her pale lips as the bridegroom
+went by. Monsieur D'Arblet said, to himself:
+
+"This woman loves Monsieur le Capitaine! _Bon!_ Two are better than one;
+we will avenge ourselves together, my beautiful incognita."
+
+And then he looked sharply at her companion, and found that her face was
+familiar to him. Surely he had dined at that woman's house once. Oh, yes!
+to be sure, it was that insufferable little chatterbox, Mrs. Hazeldine.
+He remembered all about her now.
+
+There was a good deal of pushing and cramming at the doorway. By the time
+Vera could get out of the stifling heat of the crowded church most of the
+wedding party had driven off, and the rest were clamouring wildly for
+their carriages; she herself had got separated from her companion, and
+when she could rejoin her in the little gravelled yard outside, she found
+her shaking hands with effusion with the foreign-looking gentleman who
+had sat next her in the church, but whom, truth to say, she had hardly
+noticed.
+
+"Let me present to you my friend," said Cissy. "Miss Nevill, Monsieur
+D'Arblet--you will walk with us as far as the park, won't you?"
+
+"I shall be enchanted, Mrs. Hazeldine."
+
+"And wasn't it a pretty wedding," continued Mrs. Hazeldine, rapturously,
+as they all three walked away together down the shady side of the street;
+"so remarkably pretty considering that there were no bridesmaids; but
+Mrs. Romer is so graceful, and dresses so well. I don't visit her myself,
+you know; but of course I know her by sight. One knows everybody by sight
+in London; it's rather embarrassing sometimes, because one is tempted to
+bow to people one doesn't visit, or else one fancies one ought not to bow
+to somebody one does. I've made some dreadfully stupid mistakes myself
+sometimes. Did you notice the rose point on that old lady's brown satin,
+Vera?"
+
+"That was Lady Kynaston."
+
+"Oh, was it? By the way, of course, you must know some of the Kynastons,
+as they come from your part of the world. I wonder they didn't ask you to
+the wedding."
+
+Vera murmured something unintelligible. Monsieur D'Arblet looked at her
+sharply. He saw that she had in no way recovered her agitation yet, and
+that she could hardly bear her companion's brainless chatter over this
+wedding.
+
+"That has been no ordinary love affair," said this astute Frenchman to
+himself. "I must decidedly cultivate this young lady's acquaintance, for
+I mean to pay you out well yet, ma belle Hélène."
+
+"How fortunate it was we happened to be passing just as it was going on.
+I wouldn't have missed seeing that lovely lavender satin the bride wore
+for worlds; did you notice the cut of the jacket front, Vera; it was
+something new; she looked as happy as possible too. I daresay her first
+marriage was a _coup manqué_; they generally are when women marry again."
+
+"Suppose we take these three chairs in the shade," suggested Monsieur
+D'Arblet, cutting short, unceremoniously the string of her remarks, which
+apparently were no more soothing to himself than to Miss Nevill.
+
+They sat down, and for the space of half an hour Monsieur D'Arblet
+proceeded to make himself politely agreeable to Miss Nevill, and he
+succeeded so well in amusing her by his conversation, that by the time
+they all got up to go the natural bloom had returned to her cheeks, and
+she was talking to him quite easily and pleasantly, as though no
+catastrophe in her life had happened but an hour ago.
+
+"You will come back with us to lunch, Monsieur D'Arblet?"
+
+"I shall be delighted, madame."
+
+"If you will excuse me, Cissy, I am not going to lunch with you to-day,"
+said Vera.
+
+"My dear! where are you going, then?"
+
+"I have a visit to pay--an engagement, I mean--in--in Cadogan Place. I
+will be home very soon, in time for your drive, if you don't mind my
+leaving you."
+
+"Oh, of course, do as you like, dear."
+
+Lucien D'Arblet was annoyed at her defection, but, of course, having
+accepted Mrs. Hazeldine's invitation, there was nothing for it but to go
+on with her; so he swallowed his discomfiture as best he could, and
+proceeded to make himself agreeable to his hostess.
+
+As to Vera, she turned away and retraced her steps slowly towards St.
+Paul's Church. It was a foolish romantic fancy, she could not tell what
+impelled her to it, but she felt as though she must go back there once
+more.
+
+The church was not closed. She pushed open the swing-door and went in. It
+was all hushed and silent and empty. Where so lately the gay throng of
+well-dressed men and women had passed in and out, chattering, smiling,
+nodding--displaying their radiant toilettes one against the other, there
+were only now the dark, empty rows of pews, and the bent figure of one
+shabbily-dressed old woman gathering together the prayer-books and
+hymn-books that had been tumbled out of their places in the scuffle, and
+picking up morsels of torn finery that had dropped about along the nave.
+
+Vera passed by her and went up into the chancel. She stood where Maurice
+had stood by the altar rails. A soft, subdued light came streaming in
+through the coloured glass window; a bird was chirping high up somewhere
+among the oak rafters of the roof, the roar of the street without was
+muffled and deadened; the old woman slammed-to the door of a pew, the
+echo rang with a hollow sound through the empty building, and her
+departing footsteps shuffled away down the aisle into silence.
+
+Vera lifted her eyes; great tears welled down slowly, one by one, over
+her cheeks--burning, blistering tears, such as, thank God, one sheds but
+once or twice in a lifetime--that seem to rend our very hearts as they
+rise.
+
+Presently she sank down upon her knees and prayed--prayed for him, that
+he might be happy and forget her, but most of all for herself, that she
+might school her rebellious heart to patience, and her wild passion of
+misery into peace and submission.
+
+And by degrees the tempest within her was hushed. Then, ere she rose from
+her knees, something lying on the ground, within a yard of where she
+knelt, caught her eye. It was a little Russia-leather letter-case. She
+recognized it instantly; she had often seen Maurice take it out of his
+pocket.
+
+She caught at it hungrily and eagerly, as a miser clutches a
+treasure-trove, pressing it wildly to her bosom, and covering it with
+passionate kisses. Dear little shabby case, that had been so near his
+heart; that his hand, perchance, only on hour ago had touched. Could
+anything on earth be more priceless to her than this worn and faded
+object!
+
+It seemed to be quite empty. It had fallen evidently from his pocket
+during the service. If he ever missed it, there was nothing in it to
+lose; and now it was hers, hers by every right; she would never part with
+it, never. It was all she had of him; the one single thing he had touched
+which she possessed.
+
+She rose hurriedly. She was in haste now to be gone with her treasure,
+lest any one should wrest it from her. She carried it down the church
+with a guilty delight, kissing it more than once as she went. And then,
+as she opened the church door, some one ran up the steps outside, and she
+stood face to face with Sir John Kynaston.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE RUSSIA-LEATHER CASE.
+
+ "Never again," so speaketh one forsaken,
+ In the blank desolate passion of despair:
+ Never again shall the bright dream I cherished
+ Delude my heart, for bitter truth is there:
+ The Angel Hope shall still my cruel pain;
+ Never again, my heart--never again!
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+"Vera!"
+
+Sir John Kynaston fell back a step or two and turned very white.
+
+"How do you do?" said Vera, quietly, and put out her hand.
+
+They stood in the open air. There was a carriage passing, some idle
+cabmen on the stand with nothing to do but to stare at them, a gaping
+nursery-maid and her charges at the gate. Whatever people may feel on
+suddenly running against each other after a deadly quarrel, or a
+heart-rending separation, or after a long interval of heart-burnings and
+misunderstandings, there are always the externals of life to be observed.
+It is difficult to rush into the tragedy of one's existence at a gulp; it
+is safer to shake hands and say, "How do you do?"
+
+That is what Vera felt, and that was what these two people did. Sir John
+took her proffered hand, and responded to her stereotyped greeting. By
+the time he had done so he had recovered his presence of mind.
+
+"What an odd thing to meet you at the door of this church," he said,
+rather nervously. "Do you know that my brother was married here this
+morning?"
+
+"Yes; I was in the church."
+
+"Were you? How glad I am I did not know it," almost involuntarily.
+
+There was a little pause; then Vera asked him if he was going to Walpole
+Lodge.
+
+"Eventually; but I have come back here to look for something. My brother
+has lost a little Russia-leather case; he thinks he may have dropped it
+in the church; there were two ten-pound notes in it. I am going in to
+look for it. Why, what is that in your hand? I believe that is the very
+thing."
+
+"I--I--just picked it up," stammered Vera. She began searching in the
+pockets of the case. "I did not think there was anything in it. Yes, here
+are the notes, quite safe."
+
+She took them out and gave them to him. He held out his hand mechanically
+for the case also.
+
+"Thank you; you have saved me the trouble of looking for it. I will take
+it back to him at once."
+
+But she could not part with her treasure; it was all she had got of him.
+
+"The letter-case is very shabby," she said, crimsoning with a painful
+confusion. "I do not think he can want it at all; it is quite worn out."
+
+Sir John looked at her with a slight surprise.
+
+"It can be very little use to him. One likes sometimes to have a little
+remembrance of those--of people--one has known; he would not mind my
+keeping it, I think. Tell him--tell him I asked for it." The tears were
+very near her voice; she could scarcely keep them back out of her eyes.
+
+John Kynaston dropped his hand, and Vera slipped the little case quickly
+into her pocket.
+
+"Would you mind walking a little way with me, Vera?" he said, gently and
+very gravely.
+
+She drew down her veil, and went with him in silence. They had walked
+half-way down Wilton Crescent before he spoke to her again; then he
+turned towards her, and looked at her earnestly and sadly.
+
+"Why did you go back again into the church, Vera?"
+
+"I wanted to think quietly a little," she murmured. There was another
+pause.
+
+"So _that_ is what parted us!" he exclaimed, with a sudden bitterness, at
+length.
+
+She looked up, startled and pale.
+
+"What do you mean?" she stammered.
+
+"Oh, child! I see it all now. How blind I have been. Ah, why did you not
+trust me, love? Why did you fear to tell me your secret? Do you not think
+that I, who would have laid down my life for you to make you happy, do
+you not suppose I would have striven to make your path smooth for you?"
+
+She could not answer him; the kind words, the tender voice, were too much
+for her. Her tears fell fast and silently.
+
+"Tell me," he said, turning to her almost roughly, "tell me the truth.
+Has he ill-treated you, this brother of mine, who stole you from me, and
+then has left you desolate?"
+
+"No, no; do not say that; it was never his fault at all, only mine; and
+he was always bound to her. He has been everything that is good and loyal
+and true to you and to her; it has been only a miserable mistake, and now
+it is over. Yes, thank God, it is over; never speak of it again. He was
+never false to you; only I was false. But it is ended."
+
+They were walking round Belgrave Square by this time, not near the
+houses, but round the square garden in the middle. All recollection of
+his brother's marriage, of the wedding breakfast at Walpole Lodge, of the
+speech the best man would be expected to make, had gone clean out of his
+head; he thought of nothing but Vera and of the revelation concerning her
+that had just come to him. It was the quiet hour of the day; there were
+very few people about; everybody was indoors eating heavy luncheons,
+with sunblinds drawn down to keep out the heat. They were almost as much
+alone as in a country lane in Meadowshire.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself?" he said to her, presently.
+"What use are you going to make of your life?"
+
+"I don't know," she answered, drearily; "I suppose I shall go back to
+Sutton. Perhaps I shall marry."
+
+"But not me?"
+
+She looked up at him piteously.
+
+"Listen, child," he said, eagerly. "If I were to go away for a year, and
+then come back to you, how would it be? Oh, my darling! I love you so
+deeply that I could even be content to do with but half your heart, so
+that I could win your sweet self. I would exact nothing from you, love,
+no more than what you could give me freely. But I would love you so well,
+and make your life so sweet and pleasant to you, that in time, perhaps,
+you would forget the old sorrow, and learn to be happy, with a quiet kind
+of happiness, with me; I would ask for no more. Look, child, I have
+grieved sorely for you; I have sat down and wept, and mourned for you as
+though I had no strength or life left in me. But now I am ashamed of my
+weakness, for it is unworthy of _you_. I am going away abroad, across the
+world, I care not where, so long as I can be up and doing, and forget the
+pain at my heart. Vera, tell me that I may come back to you in a year.
+Think with what fresh life and courage I should go if I had but that hope
+before my eyes. In a year's time your pain will be less; you will have
+forgotten many things; you will be content, perhaps, to come to me,
+knowing that I will never reproach you with the past, nor expect more
+than you can give me in the future. Vera, let me come back and claim you
+in a year!"
+
+How strange it was that the chance of marrying this man was perpetually
+being presented to her. Never, perhaps, had the temptation been stronger
+to her than it was now. He had divined her secret; there would be no
+concealment between them; he would ask her for no love it was not in her
+power to give; he would be content with her as she was, and he would love
+her, and worship her, and surround her with everything that could make
+her life pleasant and easy for her. Could a man offer more? Oh! why could
+she not take him at his word, and give him the hope he craved for?
+
+Alas! for Vera; she had eaten too deeply of the knowledge of good and
+evil--that worldly wisdom in whose strength she had started in life's
+race, and in the possession of which she had once deemed herself so
+strong--so absolutely invulnerable to the things that pierce and wound
+weaker woman--this was gone from her. The baser part of her nature,
+wherewith she would so gladly have been content, was uppermost no longer;
+her heart had triumphed over her head, and, with a woman of strong
+character, this is generally only done at the expense of her happiness.
+
+To marry Sir John Kynaston, to be lapped in luxury, to receive all the
+good things of this world at his hands, and all the while to love his
+brother with a guilty love, this was no longer possible to Vera Nevill.
+
+"I cannot do it; do not ask me," she said, distractedly. "Your goodness
+to me half breaks my heart; but it cannot be."
+
+"Why not, child? In a year so much may be altered."
+
+"I shall not alter."
+
+"No; but, even so, you might learn to be happy with me."
+
+"It is not that; you do not understand. I daresay I could be happy
+enough; that is not why I cannot marry you."
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"_I dare not_," she said, in a low voice.
+
+He drew in his breath. "Ah!" he said, between his teeth, "is it so bad
+with you as that?"
+
+She bent her head in silent assent.
+
+"That is hard," he said, almost to himself, looking gloomily before him.
+Presently he spoke again. "Thank you, Vera," he said, rather brokenly.
+"You are a brave woman and a true one. Many would have taken my all,
+and given me back only deception and falseness. But you are incapable of
+that, and--and you fear your own strength; is that it?"
+
+"Whilst he lives," she said, with a sudden burst of passion, "I can know
+no safety. Never to see his face again can be my only safeguard, and with
+you I could never be safe. Why, even to bear your name would be to scorch
+my heart every time I was addressed by it. Forgive me, John," turning to
+him with a sudden penitence, "I should not have pained you by saying
+these things; you who have been so infinitely good to me. Go your way
+across the world, and forget me. Ah! have I not been a curse to every one
+who bears the name of Kynaston?"
+
+He was silent from very pity. Vera was no longer to him the goddess of
+his imagination; the one pure and peerless woman, above all other women,
+such as he had once fancied her to be. But surely she was dearer to him
+now, in all her weakness and her suffering, than she had ever been on
+that lofty pedestal of perfection upon which he had once lifted her.
+
+He pitied her so much, and yet he could not help her; her malady was past
+remedy. And, as she had told him, it was no one's fault--it was only a
+miserable mistake. He had never had her heart--he saw it plainly now.
+Many little things in the past, which he had scarcely remembered at the
+time, came back to his memory--little details of that week at Shadonake,
+when Maurice had lived in the same house with her, whilst he had only
+gone over daily to see her. Always, in those days, Maurice had been by
+her side, and Vera had been dreamily happy, with that fixed look of
+content with which the presence of the man she loves best beautifies and
+poetises a woman's face. Sir John was not a very observant man; but now,
+after it was all over, these things came back to him. The night of the
+ball, Mrs. Romer's mysterious hints, and his own vague disquietude at her
+words; later on Maurice's reasonless refusal to be present at his
+wedding, and Vera's startled face of dismay when he had asked her to go
+and plead with him to stay for it.
+
+They had struggled against their hearts, it was clear, these poor lovers,
+whose lives were both tied up and bound before ever they had met each
+other. But nature had been too strong for them; and the woman, at least,
+had torn herself free from the chains that had become insupportable to
+her.
+
+They walked on silently, side by side, round the square. Some girls were
+playing at lawn-tennis within the garden. There was an occasional shout
+or a ringing laugh from their fresh young voices. A footman was walking
+along the pavement opposite, with two fat pugs and a white Spitz in the
+last stage of obesity in tow, which it was his melancholy duty to parade
+daily up and down for their mid-day airing. An occasional hansom dashing
+quickly by broke the stillness of the "empty" hour. Years and years
+afterwards every detail of the scene came back to his memory with the
+distinctness of a photograph when he passed once more through the square.
+
+"You have been no curse to me, Vera," he said, presently, breaking the
+silence. "Do not reproach yourself; it is I who was a madman to deem that
+I could win your love. Child, we are both sufferers; but time heals most
+things, and we must learn to wait and be patient. Will you ever marry,
+Vera?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps I may be obliged to. It might be better for me. I
+cannot say. Don't speak of it. Why, is there nothing else for a woman to
+do but to marry? John, it must be late. Ought you not to go back--to--to
+your mother's?"
+
+Insensibly, she resumed a lighter manner. On that other subject there was
+nothing left to be said. She had had her last chance of becoming John
+Kynaston's wife. After what she had said to him, she knew he would never
+ask her again. That chapter in her life was closed for ever.
+
+They parted, unromantically enough, in front of St. George's Hospital. He
+called a hansom for her, and stood holding her hand, one moment longer,
+possibly, than was strictly necessary, looking intently into her face as
+he did so.
+
+"Will you think of me sometimes?"
+
+"Yes, surely."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera."
+
+"Good-bye, John. God bless you wherever you may go."
+
+She got into her hansom, and he told the cabman where to drive her; then
+he lifted his hat to her with grave politeness, and walked away in the
+opposite direction. It was a common-place enough parting, and yet these
+two never saw each other's faces again in this world.
+
+So it is with our lives. Some one or other who has been a part of our
+very existence for a space goes his way one day, and we see him no more.
+For a little while our hearts ache, and we shed tears in secret for him
+who is gone, but by-and-by we get to understand that he is part of our
+past, never, to be recalled, and after a while we get used to his
+absence; we think of him less and less, and the death of him, who was
+once bound up in our very lives, strikes us only with a mild surprise,
+hardly even tinged with a passing melancholy.
+
+"Poor old so-and-so, he is dead," we say. "What a time it is since we
+met," and then we go our way and think of him no more.
+
+But Vera knew that, in all human probability, she would never see him
+again, this man, who had once so nearly been her husband. It was another
+link of her past life severed. It saddened her, but she knew it was
+inevitable.
+
+The little letter-case, at all events, was safely hers; and for many a
+night Vera slept with it under her pillow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+DINNER AT RANELAGH.
+
+ Here is the whole set, a character dead at every word.
+
+ Sheridan.
+
+
+It was the fag end of the London season; people were talking about
+Goodwood and the Ryde week, about grouse and about salmon-fishing.
+Members of Parliament went about, like martyrs at the stake, groaning
+over the interminable nature of every debate, and shaking their heads
+over the prospect of getting away. Women in society knew all their own
+and their neighbours' dresses by heart, and were dead sick of them all;
+and even the very gossip and scandal that is always afloat to keep up the
+spirits of the idlers and the chatterers had lost all the zest, all the
+charm of novelty that gave flavour and piquancy to every _canard_ that
+was started two months ago.
+
+It was all stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+
+What was the use of constantly asserting, on the very best authority,
+that Lady So-and-so was on the eve of running away with that handsome
+young actor, whose eyes had taken the female population by storm, when
+Lady So-and-so persisted in walking about arm-in-arm with her husband day
+after day, with a child on either side of them, in the most provoking
+way, as though to prove the utter fallacy of the report, and her own
+incontestable domestic felicity? Or, what merit had a man any longer who
+had stated in May that the heiress _par excellence_ of the season was
+about to sell herself and her gold to that debauched and drunken marquis,
+who had evidently not six months of life left in him in which to enjoy
+his bargain, when the heiress herself gave the lie to the _on dit_ in
+July by talking calmly about going to Norway with her papa for a month's
+retirement and rest after the fatigues of the season?
+
+What a number of lies are there not propounded during the months of May
+and June by the inventive Londoner, and how many of them are there not
+proved to be so during the latter end of July!
+
+Heaven only knows how and where the voice of scandal is first raised. Is
+it at the five o'clock tea-tables? Or, is it in the smoking-rooms of the
+clubs that things are first spoken of, and the noxious breath of slander
+started upon its career? Or, are there evil-minded persons, both men and
+women, prowling about, like unclean animals, at the skirts of that
+society into whose inner recesses they would fain gain admittance,
+picking up greedily, here and there, in their eaves-dropping career,
+some scrap or morsel of truth out of which they weave a well-varnished
+tale wherewith to delight the ears of the vulgar and the coarse-minded?
+There are such men and such women; God forgive them for their wickedness!
+
+Do any of these scandal-mongers ever call to mind, I wonder, an ancient
+and, seemingly, a well-nigh forgotten injunction?
+
+"Thou shalt not bear false witness," said the same Voice who has also
+said, "Thou shalt do no murder."
+
+And which is the worst--to kill a man's body, or to slay a man's honour,
+or a woman's reputation?
+
+In truth, there seems to me to be but little difference between the two;
+and the man or the woman who will do the one might very possibly be
+guilty of the other--but for the hanging!
+
+We should all do a great many more wicked things than we do if there were
+no consequences.
+
+It is a very trite observation, which is, nevertheless, never spoken with
+more justice or more truth than at or about Hyde Park Corner between May
+and July, that the world we live in is a very wicked one.
+
+Well, the season, as I have said, was well-nigh over, and all the scandal
+had run dry, and the gossip, for the most part, been proved to be
+incorrect, and there was nobody in all London who excited so much
+irritation among the talkers as the new beauty, Vera Nevill.
+
+For Vera was Miss Nevill still, and there was every prospect of her
+remaining so. What on earth possessed the girl that she would not marry?
+Had not men dangled at her elbow all the season? Could she not have had
+such and such elder sons, or such and such wealthy commoner? What was she
+waiting for? A girl without a penny, who came nobody knew from where,
+ushered in under Mrs. Hazeldine's wings, with not a decent connection
+in the world to her name! What did she want--this girl who had only her
+beauty to depend upon? and everybody knows how fleeting _that_ is!
+
+And then, presently, the women who were envious of her began to whisper
+amongst themselves. There was something against her; she was not what she
+seemed to be. The men flirted, of course--men will always flirt! but
+they were careful not to commit themselves! And even that mysterious word
+"adventuress," which has an ugly sound, but of which no one exactly knows
+the precise meaning, began to be bruited about.
+
+"There was an unpleasant story about her, somebody told me once," said
+one prettily-dressed nonentity to another, as they wandered slowly up and
+down the velvet lawns at Ranelagh. "She was mixed up in some way with the
+Kynaston family. Sir John was to have married her, and then something
+dreadful came out, and he threw her over."
+
+"Oh, I thought she jilted him."
+
+"I daresay it was one or the other; at all events, there was some fracas
+or other. I believe her mother was--hum, hum--you understand--she
+couldn't be swallowed by the Kynastons at any price; they must have been
+thankful to get out of it."
+
+"It looks very bad, her not marrying any one, with all the fuss there has
+been made over her."
+
+"Yes; even Cissy Hazeldine told me, in confidence, yesterday, she could
+not try her again next season. It wouldn't do, you know; it would look
+too much as if she had some object of her own in getting her married.
+Cissy must find something else for another year. Of course, with a
+husband, she could sail her own course and make her own way; but a girl
+can't go on attracting attention with impunity--she gets herself talked
+about--it is only we married women can do as we like."
+
+"Exactly. Do you suppose _that_ will come to anything?" casting a glance
+towards the further end of the lawn, where Vera Nevill sat in a low
+basket-chair, under the shadow of a spreading tulip-tree, whilst a slight
+boyish figure, stretched at her feet, alternately chewed blades of grass
+and looked up worshippingly into her face.
+
+"_That!_" following the direction of her companion's eyes. "Oh dear, no!
+Denis Wilde is too wideawake to be caught, though he is such a boy! They
+say she is crazy to get him; everybody else has slipped through her
+fingers, you see, and he would be better than nothing. Now we are in the
+last week in July, I daresay she is getting desperate; but young Wilde
+knows pretty well what he is about, I expect!"
+
+"He seems to admire her."
+
+"Oh, yes, I daresay; those large kind of women do get admired; men look
+upon them as fine animals. _I_ should not care to be admired in that way,
+would you?"
+
+"No, indeed! it is disgusting," replied the other, who was fain to
+conceal the bony corners of her angular figure with a multiplicity of
+lace ruchings and puffings.
+
+"As to Miss Nevill, she is nothing else. A most material type; why, her
+waist must be twenty-two inches round!"
+
+"Quite that, dear," with sweetness, from the owner of a nineteen-inch
+article, which two maids struggled with daily in order to reduce it to
+the required measurement.
+
+"Well, I never could--between you and me--see much to admire in her."
+
+"Neither could I, although, of course, it has been the fashion to rave
+over her."
+
+And, with that, these two amiable young women fell at it tooth and nail,
+and proceeded to cry down their victim's personal appearance in the most
+unmeasured and sweeping terms.
+
+After the taking away of a fellow-woman's character, comes as a natural
+sequence the condemnation of her face and figure, and it is doubtful
+which indictment is the most grave in eyes feminine. Meanwhile the
+object of all this animadversion sat tranquilly unconscious under her
+tulip-tree, whilst Denis Wilde, that astute young gentleman, whom they
+had declared to be too well aware of what he was about to be entrapped
+into matrimony, was engaged in proposing to her for the fourth time.
+
+"I thought we had settled this subject long ago, Mr. Wilde," says Vera,
+tranquilly unfolding her large, black, feather fan--for it is hot--and
+slowly folding it up again.
+
+"It will never be settled for me, Vera; never, so long as you are
+unmarried."
+
+"What a dreadful mistake life is!" sighs Vera, wearily, more to herself
+than to the boy at her feet. Was anybody ever happy in this world? she
+began to wonder.
+
+"I know very well," resumed Denis Wilde, "that I am not good enough for
+you; but, then, who is? My prospects, such as they are, are very distant,
+and your friends, I daresay, expect you to marry well."
+
+"How often must I tell you that that has nothing to do with it," cries
+Vera, impatiently. "If I loved a beggar, I should marry him."
+
+Young Wilde plucked at the grass again, and chewed a daisy up almost
+viciously. There was a supreme selfishness in the way she had of
+perpetually harping upon her lack of love for him.
+
+"There is always some fellow or other hanging about you," grumbles the
+young man, irritably; "you are an inveterate flirt!"
+
+"No woman is worthy of the name who is not!" retorts Vera, laughing.
+
+"I _hate_ a flirt," angrily.
+
+"This is very amusing when you know that your flirtation with Mrs.
+Hazeldine is a chronic disease of two years' standing!"
+
+"Pooh!--mere child's play on both sides, and you know it is! You are very
+different; you lead a fellow on till he doesn't know whether his very
+soul is his own, and then you turn round and snap your fingers in his
+face and send him to the devil."
+
+"What an awful accusation! Pray give me an instance of a victim to this
+shocking conduct."
+
+"Why, there's that wretched little Frenchman whom you are playing the
+same game with that you have already done with me; he follows you like
+a shadow."
+
+"Poor Monsieur D'Arblet!" laughed Vera, and then grew suddenly serious.
+"But do you know, Mr. Wilde, it is a very singular thing about that
+man--I can't think why he follows me about so."
+
+"_Can't_ you!" very grimly.
+
+"I assure you the man is in no more love with me than--than----"
+
+"_I_ am! I suppose you will say next."
+
+"Oh dear, no, you are utterly incorrigible and quite in earnest; but
+Monsieur D'Arblet is _pretending_ to be in love with me."
+
+"He makes a very good pretence of it, at all events. Here he comes,
+confound him! If I had known Mrs. Hazeldine had asked _him_, I would
+never have come."
+
+At which Vera, who had heard these outbursts of indignant jealousy
+before, and knew how little poor Denis meant the terrible threats he
+uttered, only laughed with the pitiless amusement of a woman who knows
+her own power.
+
+Lucien D'Arblet came towards her smiling, and sank down into a vacant
+basket-chair by her side with the air of a man who knows himself to be
+welcome.
+
+He had been paying a great deal of attention latterly to the beautiful
+Miss Nevill; he had followed her about everywhere, and had made it patent
+in every public place where he had met her that she alone was the sole
+aim and object of his thoughts. And yet, with it all, Monsieur Le Vicomte
+was only playing a part, and not only that, but he was pretty certain
+that she knew it to be so. He gazed rapturously into her beautiful face,
+he lowered his voice tenderly in speaking to her, he pressed her hand
+when she gave it to him, and even on occasions he raised it furtively to
+his lips; but, with all this, he knew perfectly well that she was not one
+whit deceived by him. She no more believed him to be in love with her
+than he believed it of himself. She was clever and beautiful, and he
+admired and even liked her, but in the beginning of their acquaintance
+Monsieur D'Arblet had had no thought of making her the object of any
+sentimental attentions. He had been driven to it by a discovery that he
+had made concerning her character.
+
+Miss Nevill had a good heart. She was no enraged, injured woman,
+thirsting for revenge upon the woman who had stolen her lover from
+her--such as he had desired to find in her; she was only a true-hearted
+and unhappy girl, who was not in any case likely to develop into the
+instrument of vengeance which he sought for.
+
+It was a disappointment to him, but he was not completely disheartened.
+It was through her that he desired to punish Helen for daring to brave
+him, and he swore to himself that he would do it still; only he must now
+set about it in a different way, so he began to make love to Miss Nevill.
+
+And Vera was shrewd enough to perceive that he was only playing a part.
+Nevertheless, there were times when she felt so completely puzzled by his
+persistent adoration, that she could hardly tell what to make of it. Was
+he trying to make some other woman jealous? It even came into her head,
+once or twice, to suspect that Cissy Hazeldine was the real object of his
+devotion, so utterly incomprehensible did his conduct appear to her.
+
+If she had been told that Lucien D'Arblet's real quest was not love, but
+revenge, she would have laughed. An Englishman does not spend his time
+nor his energies in plotting a desperate retaliation on a lady who has
+disregarded his threats and evaded his persecution; it is not in the
+nature of any Briton, however irascible, to do so; but a Frenchman is
+differently constituted. There is something delightfully refreshing to
+him in an atmosphere of plotting and intrigue. There is the same instinct
+of the chase in both nationalities, but it is more amusing to the
+Frenchman to hunt down his fellow-creatures than to pursue unhappy little
+beasts of the field; and he understands himself in the pursuit of the
+larger game infinitely better.
+
+Nevertheless, Monsieur D'Arblet had no intention of getting himself into
+trouble, nor of risking the just fury of an indignant British husband,
+who stood six feet in his stockings, nor did he desire, by any anonymous
+libel, to bring himself in any way under the arm of the law. All he meant
+to do was to dig his trench and to lay his mine, to place the fuse in
+Vera Nevill's hands--leave her to set fire to it--and then retire
+himself, covered with satisfaction at his cleverness, to his own side
+of the Channel.
+
+Who could possibly grudge him so harmless an entertainment?
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet, as he sat down by her side under the tulip-tree, began
+by paying Miss Nevill a prettily turned compliment upon her fresh white
+toilette; as he did so Vera smiled and bent her head; she had seen him
+before to-day.
+
+"Fine evening, Mr. Wilde," said the Frenchman, turning civilly, but with
+no evident _empressement_, towards the gentleman he addressed.
+
+Denis only answered by a sulky grunt.
+
+Then began that process between the two men which is known in polite
+society as the endeavour to sit each other out.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet discoursed upon the weather and the beauty of the
+gardens, with long and expressive pauses between each insignificant
+remark, and the air of a man who wishes to say, "I could talk about much
+more interesting things if that other fellow was out of the way."
+
+Denis Wilde simply reversed himself, that is to say, he lay on his
+back instead of his face, stared up at the sky, and chewed grass
+perseveringly. He had evidently no intention of being driven off the
+field.
+
+"I had something of great importance to say to you this evening,"
+murmured Monsieur D'Arblet, at length, looking fixedly at his enemy's
+upturned face.
+
+"All right, go ahead, don't mind me," says the young gentleman, amiably.
+"I'm never in the way, am I, Miss Nevill?"
+
+"Never, Mr. Wilde," answers Vera, sweetly. Like a true woman, she quite
+appreciates the fun of the situation, and thoroughly enjoys it; "pray
+tell me what you have to say, monsieur."
+
+"Ah! Ces choses-là ne se disent qu'à deux!" murmurs he Frenchman, with a
+sentimental sigh.
+
+"It is no use your saying it in French," says Denis, with a chuckle,
+twisting himself round again upon his chest, "because I have the good
+fortune, D'Arblet, to understand your charming language like a native,
+absolutely like a native."
+
+"You have a useful proverb in English, which says, that two is company,
+and three is none," retorts D'Arblet, with a smile.
+
+"I'm awfully sorry, old fellow; but I am so exceedingly comfortable, I
+really can't get up; if I could oblige you in any other way, I certainly
+would."
+
+"Come to dinner!" cries out Mrs. Hazeldine, coming towards them from the
+garden side of the lawn; "we are all here now."
+
+The two men sprang simultaneously to their feet. This is, of course, the
+moment that they have both been waiting for. Each offers an arm to Miss
+Nevill; Monsieur D'Arblet bends blandly and smilingly forward; Denis
+Wilde has a thunder-cloud upon his face, and holds out his arm as though
+he were ready to knock somebody down with it.
+
+"What am I to do?" cries Vera, laughing, and looking with feigned
+indecision from one to the other.
+
+"Make haste and decide, my dear," says Mrs. Hazeldine; "for whichever of
+you two gentlemen does _not_ take in Miss Nevill must go and take that
+eldest Miss Frampton for me."
+
+The eldest Miss Frampton is thirty-five if she is a day; she is large and
+bony, much given to beads and bangles, and to talking about the military
+men she has known, and whom she usually calls by their surnames alone,
+like a man. She goes familiarly amongst her acquaintance by the name of
+the Dragoon.
+
+A cold shiver passes visibly down Mr. Wilde's back; unfortunately Miss
+Nevill perceives it, and makes up her mind instantly.
+
+"I would not deprive you of so charming a companion," she says, smiling
+sweetly at him, and passes her arm through that of the French vicomte.
+
+At dinner, poor Denis Wilde curses Monsieur D'Arblet; Miss Frampton, and
+his own fate, indiscriminately and ineffectually. He is sitting exactly
+opposite to his divinity, but he cannot even enjoy the felicity of
+staring at her, for Miss Frampton will not let him alone. She chatters
+unceasingly and gushingly. At an early period of the repast the string of
+her amber-bead necklace suddenly gives way with a snap. The beads trickle
+slowly down, one by one; half a dozen of them drop with a cracking noise,
+like little marbles, upon the polished floor, where there is a general
+scramble of waiters and gentlemen under the table together after them;
+two fall into her own soup, three more on to Denis Wilde's table-napkin;
+as fast as the truants are picked up others are shed down in their wake
+from the four apparently inexhaustible rows that garnish her neck.
+
+Miss Frampton bears it all with serene and smiling good temper.
+
+"Dear me, I am really very sorry to give so much trouble. It doesn't
+signify in the least, Mr. Wilde--thanks, that is one more. Oh, there goes
+another into the sweet-breads; but I really don't mind if they are lost.
+Jameson, of the 17th, gave them to me. Do you know Jameson? cousin of
+Jameson, in the 9th; he brought them from Italy, or Turkey, or somewhere.
+I am sure I don't remember where amber comes from; do you, Mr. Wilde?"
+
+Mr. Wilde, if he is vague as to where it comes from, is quite decided
+as to where he would desire it to go. At this moment he had crunched a
+tender tooth down upon one of these infernal beads, having helped himself
+to it unconsciously out of the sweetbread dish.
+
+Is he doomed to swallow amber beads for the remainder of the repast? he
+asks himself.
+
+"Did you ever meet Archdale, the man who was in the 16th?" continues Miss
+Frampton, glibly, unconscious of his agonies; "he exchanged afterwards
+into the 4th--he is such a nice fellow. I lunched every day at Ascot this
+year on the 16th's drag. The first day I met Lester--that's the major,
+you know--and Lester is _such_ a pet! He told me to come every day to
+lunch, and bring any of my friends with me; so, of course, I did, and
+there wasn't a better lunch on the course; and, on the cup-day, Archdale
+came up and talked to me--he abused the champagne-cup, though; he said
+there was more soda-water than champagne in it--the more he drank of it
+the more dreadfully sober he got. However, I am invited to lunch with the
+4th at Goodwood. They are going to have a spread under the trees, so I
+shall be able to compare notes about the champagne-cup. I know two other
+men in the 4th; Hopkins and Lambert; do you know them?" and so on, until
+pretty well half the army list and all the luncheon-giving regiments in
+the service had been passed under review.
+
+And there, straight opposite to him, was Vera, laughing at his
+discomfiture, he was sure, but also listening to the flattering rubbish
+which that odious little Frenchman was pouring into her ears.
+
+Did ever young man sit through such a detestable and abominable repast?
+
+If Denis Wilde had been rash enough to nourish insane hopes with regard
+to moonlight wanderings in the pleasant garden after dinner, these hopes
+were destined to be blighted.
+
+They were a party of twelve; the waiting was bad, and the courses
+numerous; the dinner was a lengthy affair altogether. By the time it was
+over, and coffee had been discussed on the terrace outside the house, the
+carriages came round to the door, and the ladies of the party voted that
+it was time to go home.
+
+Soon everybody stood clothed in summer ulsters or white dust-cloaks,
+waiting in the hall. The coach started from the door with much noise
+and confusion, with a good deal of plunging from the leaders, and some
+jibbing from the wheelers, accompanied by a very feeble performance on
+that much-abused instrument, the horn, by an amateur who occupied a back
+seat; and after it had departed, a humble train of neat broughams and
+victorias came trooping up in its wake.
+
+"You will see," said nonentity number one, in her friend's ear; "you will
+see that Nevill girl will go back in some man's brougham--that is what
+she has been waiting for; otherwise, she would have perched herself up on
+the box-seat of the coach, in the most conspicuous place she could find."
+
+"What a disgraceful creature she must be!" is the indignantly virtuous
+reply.
+
+The "Nevill girl," however, disappointed the expectations of both these
+charitable ladies by quietly taking her place in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+brougham, by her friend's side, amid a shower of "Good-nights" from the
+remainder of the party.
+
+"Ah!" said the nonentity, with a vicious gasp, "you may be sure she has
+some disreputable supper of men, and cigars, and brandies and sodas
+waiting for her up in town, or she would never go off so meekly as that
+in Mrs. Hazeldine's brougham. Still waters run deep, my dear!"
+
+"She is a horrid, disreputable girl, I am quite sure of that," is the
+answer. "I am very thankful, indeed, that I haven't the misfortune of
+knowing her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+MRS. HAZELDINE'S "LONG ELIZA."
+
+ Now will I show myself to have more of the serpent than the
+ dove; that is, more knave than fool.
+
+ Christopher Marlowe.
+
+
+ For every inch that is not fool is rogue.
+
+ Dryden.
+
+
+The scene is Mrs. Hazeldine's drawing-room, in Park Lane, the hour is
+four o'clock in the afternoon, and the _dramatis personæ_ are Miss
+Nevill, very red in the face, standing in a corner, behind an oblong
+velvet table covered with china ornaments, and Monsieur Le Vicomte
+D'Arblet, also red in the face, gesticulating violently on the further
+side of it.
+
+Miss Nevill, having retired behind the oblong table, purely from
+prudential motives of personal safety, is devoured with anxiety
+concerning the too imminent fate of her hostess' china. There is a little
+Lowestoft tea-service that was picked up only last week at Christie and
+Manson's, a turquoise blue crackle jar that is supposed to be priceless,
+and a pair of "Long Eliza" vases, which her hostess loves as much as she
+does her toy terrier, and far better than she loves her husband.
+
+What will become of her, Vera Nevill, if Mrs. Hazeldine comes in
+presently and finds these treasures lying in a thousand pieces upon the
+floor? And yet this is what she is looking forward to, as only too
+probable a catastrophe.
+
+Vera feels much as must have felt the owner of the proverbial bull
+in the crockery shop--terror mingled with an overpowering sense of
+responsibility. All personal considerations are well-nigh merged in
+the realization of the danger which menaces her hostess' property.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, I must implore you to calm yourself," she says,
+desperately.
+
+"And how, mademoiselle, I ask you, am I to be calm when you speak of
+shattering the hopes of my life?" cries the vicomte, who is dancing about
+frantically backwards and forwards, in a clear space of three square
+yards, between the different pieces of furniture by which he is
+surrounded, all equally fragile, and equally loaded with destructible
+objects.
+
+"_Pray_ be careful, Monsieur D'Arblet, your sleeve nearly caught then in
+the handle of that Chelsea basket," cries Vera, in anguish.
+
+"And what to me are Chelsea baskets, or china, or trash of that kind,
+when you, cruel one, are determined to scorn me?"
+
+"Oh, if you would only come outside and have it out on the staircase,"
+murmurs Vera, piteously.
+
+"No, I will never leave this room, never, mademoiselle, until you give
+me hope; never will I cease to importune you until your heart relents
+towards the _miserable_ who adores you!"
+
+Here Monsieur D'Arblet made an attempt to get at his charmer by coming
+round the end of the velvet table.
+
+Vera felt distracted. To allow him to execute his maneuver was to run
+the chance of being clasped in his arms; to struggle to get free was the
+almost certainty of upsetting the table.
+
+She cast a despairing glance across the room at the bell-handle, which
+was utterly beyond her reach. There was no hope in that direction.
+Apparently, moral persuasion was her only chance.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, I _forbid_ you to advance a step nearer to me!"
+
+He fell back with a profound sigh.
+
+"Mademoiselle, I love you to distraction. I am unable to disobey your
+commands."
+
+"Very well, then, listen to me. I cannot understand this violent outburst
+of emotion. You have done me the honour to propose to marry me, and I
+have, with many thanks for your most flattering distinction, declined
+your offer. Surely, between a lady and a gentleman, there can be nothing
+further to say; it is not incumbent upon you to persecute me in this
+fashion."
+
+"Miss Nevill, you have treated me with a terrible cruelty. You have
+encouraged my ardent passion for you until you did lift me up to Heaven."
+Here Monsieur D'Arblet stretched up both his arms with a suddenness which
+endangered the branches of the tall Dresden candelabra on the high
+mantelpiece behind him. "After which you do reject me and cast me down
+to hell!" and down came both hands heavily upon the velvet table between
+them. The blue crackle jar, the two "Long Eliza" vases, and all the
+Lowestoft cups and saucers, literally jumped upon their foundations.
+
+"For Heaven's sake!" cried Vera.
+
+"Ah!" in a tone of deep reproach, "do not plead with me, mademoiselle;
+you have broken my heart."
+
+"And you have nearly broken the china," murmured Vera.
+
+"What is this miserable china that you talk about in comparison with my
+happiness?" and the vicomte made as though he would tear his hair out
+with both hands.
+
+The comedy of the situation began to be too much for Vera's self-control;
+another ten minutes of it, and she felt that she should become
+hysterical; all the more so because she knew very well that the whole
+thing was nothing but a piece of acting; with what object, however, she
+was at a loss to imagine.
+
+"For goodness sake, do be reasonable, Monsieur D'Arblet; you know
+perfectly well that I never encouraged you, as you call it, for the very
+good reason that there has never been anything to encourage. We have been
+very good friends, but never anything more."
+
+"Mademoiselle, you do me injustice."
+
+"On the contrary, I give you credit for a great deal more common sense,
+as a rule, than you seem disposed to evince to-day. I am quite certain
+that you have never entertained any warmer feeling towards me than
+friendship."
+
+This was an injudicious statement. Monsieur D'Arblet felt that his
+reputation as a _galant homme_ and an adorer of the fair sex was
+impugned; he instantly flew into the most violent passion, and jumped
+about amongst the gipsy tables and the _étagères_, and the dainty little
+spindle-legged cabinets more vehemently than ever.
+
+"_I_, not love you! Lucien D'Arblet profess a sentiment which he does not
+experience! _Ah! par exemple, Mademoiselle, c'est trop fort!_ Next you
+will say that I am a _menteur_, a _fripon_, a _lâche_! You will tell me
+that I have no honour, and no sense of the generosity due to a woman;
+that I am a brute and an imbecile," and at every epithet he dashed his
+hands violently out in front of him, or thrust them wildly through his
+disordered locks. The whole room shook, every ornament on every table
+shivered with the strength of his agitation.
+
+"Oh, I will say any single thing you like," cried Vera, "if only you will
+keep still----"
+
+"Do not insult me by denying my affection!"
+
+"I will deny nothing," said poor Vera, at her wits' ends. "If what I have
+said has pained you, I am sincerely sorry for it; but for Heaven's sake
+control yourself, and--and--_do_ go away!"
+
+Then Monsieur D'Arblet stood still and looked at her fixedly and
+mournfully; his hands had dropped feebly by his side, there was an air
+of profound melancholy in his aspect; he regarded her with a searching
+intensity. He was asking himself whether his agitation and his despair
+had produced the very slightest effect upon her; and he came to the
+conclusion they had not.
+
+"_Peste soit de cette femme!_" he said to himself. "She is the first I
+ever came across who refused to believe in vows of eternal love. As a
+rule, women never fail to give them credit, if they are spoken often
+enough and shouted out loud enough the more one despairs and declares
+that one is about to expire, the more the dear creatures are impressed,
+and the more firmly they are convinced of the power of their own charms.
+But this woman does not believe in me one little bit. Love, despair,
+rage--it is all the same to her--I might as well talk to the winds! She
+only wants to get rid of me before her friend comes in, and before I
+break her accursed china. Ah it is these miserable little pots and jugs
+that she is thinking about! Very well, then, it is by them that I will do
+what I want. A great genius can bend to small things as well as soar to
+large ones--Voyons done, ma belle, which of us will be the victor!"
+
+All this time he was gazing at her fixedly and dejectedly.
+
+"Miss Nevill," he said, gloomily, "I will accept your rejection;
+to-morrow I will say good-bye to this country for ever!"
+
+"We are all going away this week," said Vera, cheerfully: "this is the
+end of July. You will come back again next year, and enjoy your season as
+much as ever."
+
+"Never--never. Lucien D'Arblet will visit this country no more. The words
+that I am about to speak to you now--the request that I am about to make
+of you are like the words of a dying man; like the parting desire of one
+who expires. Mademoiselle, I have a request to make of you."
+
+"I am sure," began Vera, politely, "if there is anything I can do
+for you----" She breathed more freely now he talked about going away
+and dying; it would be much better that he should so go away, and so
+die, than remain interminably on the rampage in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+drawing-room. Vera had stood siege for close upon an hour. The moment of
+her deliverance was apparently drawing near; in the hour of victory she
+felt that she could afford to be generous; any little thing that he liked
+to ask of her she would be glad enough to do with a view to expediting
+his departure. Perhaps he wanted her photograph, or a lock of her hair;
+to either he would be perfectly welcome.
+
+"There is something I am forced to go away from England without having
+done; a solemn duty I have to leave unperformed. Miss Nevill, will you
+undertake to do it for me?"
+
+"Really, Monsieur D'Arblet, you are very mysterious; it depends, of
+course, upon what this duty is--if it is very difficult, or very
+unpleasant."
+
+"It is neither difficult nor unpleasant. It is only to give a small
+parcel to a gentleman who is not now in England; to give it him yourself,
+with your own hands."
+
+"That does not sound difficult, certainly," said Vera, smiling; after
+all, she was glad he had not asked for a photograph, or a lock of hair;
+"but how am I to find this friend of yours?"
+
+"Miss Nevill, do you know a man called Kynaston? Captain Maurice
+Kynaston?" He was watching her keenly now.
+
+Vera turned suddenly very white: then controlling herself with an effort,
+she answered quietly.
+
+"Yes, I know him. Why?"
+
+"Because that is the man I want you to give my parcel to." He drew
+something out of his breast coat-pocket, and handed it to her across the
+oblong table that was still between them. She took it in her hands, and
+turned it over doubtfully and uneasily. It was a small square parcel,
+done up in brown paper, fastened round with string, and sealed at both
+ends.
+
+It might have been a small book; it probably was. She had no reason to
+give why she should not do his commission for him, and yet she felt a
+strange and unaccountable reluctance to undertake it.
+
+"I had very much rather that you asked somebody else to do this for you,
+Monsieur D'Arblet," she said, handing the packet back to him. He did not
+attempt to take it from her.
+
+"It concerns the most sacred emotions of my heart, mademoiselle," he
+said, sensationally. "I could not entrust it to an indifferent person.
+You, who have plunged me into such an abyss of despair by your cruel
+rejection of my affection, cannot surely refuse to do so small a thing
+for me."
+
+Miss Nevill was again looking at the small parcel in her hands.
+
+"Will it hurt or injure Captain Kynaston in any way?" she asked.
+
+"Far from it; it will probably be of great service to him. Come, Miss
+Nevill, promise me that you will give it to him; any time will do before
+the end of the year, any time that you happen to see him, or to be near
+enough to visit him; I only want to be sure that it reaches him. All you
+have to do is to give it him into his hands when no one else is near.
+After all, it is a very small favour I ask you."
+
+"And it is precisely because it is so small, Monsieur D'Arblet," said
+Vera, decidedly, "that I cannot imagine why you should make such a point
+of a trifle like this; and as I don't like being mixed up in things I
+don't understand, I must, I think, decline to have anything to do with
+it."
+
+"_Allons donc!_" said the vicomte to himself. "I am reduced to the
+china."
+
+He took an excited turn up and down the room, then came back again to
+where she stood.
+
+"Miss Nevill!" he cried, with rising anger, "you seem determined to wound
+my feelings and to insult my self-respect. You reject my offers, you
+sneer at my professions of affection; and now you appear to me to throw
+sinister doubts upon the meaning of the small thing I have asked you to
+do for me." At each of these accusations he waved his arm up and down to
+emphasize his remarks; and now, as if unconsciously, his hand suddenly
+fell upon the neck of one of the "Long Eliza" vases on the table before
+him. He lifted it up in the air.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, Monsieur D'Arblet, take care--please put down that
+vase," cried Vera; suddenly returning to her former terrors.
+
+He looked at the object in his hand as though it were utterly beneath
+consideration.
+
+"Vase! what is a vase, I ask? Do you not suppose, before relinquishing
+what I ask of you, I would dash a hundred vases such as this into ten
+thousand fragments to the earth?" He raised his arm above his head as
+though on the point of carrying his threat into execution.
+
+Vera uttered a scream.
+
+"Good gracious! What on earth are you doing? It is Mrs. Hazeldine's
+favourite piece of china; she values it more than anything she has got.
+If you were to break it, she would go half out of her mind."
+
+"Never mind this wretched vase. Answer me, Mademoiselle Nevill, will you
+give that parcel to Captain Kynaston?"
+
+"I am not at all likely to meet him; I assure you nothing is so
+improbable. I know him very little. Ah! what are you doing?"
+
+The infuriated Frenchman was whirling the blue-and-white treasure madly
+round in the air.
+
+"You are, then, determined to humiliate and to insult me; and to prove to
+you how great is my just indignation, I will dash----"
+
+"No, no, no!" cried Vera, frantically; "for Heaven's sake, do not be so
+mad. Mrs. Hazeldine will never forgive me. Put it down, I entreat you.
+Yes, yes, I will promise anything you like. I am sure I have no wish to
+insult you."
+
+"Ah, then, you will give that to him?" He paused with the vase still
+uplifted, looking at her.
+
+Vera felt convinced by this time that she had to do with a raving
+lunatic. After all, was it not better to do this small thing for him, and
+to get rid of him. She knew that, sooner or later, down at Sutton, or up
+in London, she and Maurice were likely to meet. It would not be much
+trouble to her to place the small parcel in his hands. Surely, to deliver
+herself from this man--to save Cissy's beloved china, and, perchance,
+her own throat--for what might he not take a fancy to next!--from the
+clutches of this madman, it would be easier to do what he wanted.
+
+"Yes, I will give it to him. I promise you, if you will only put that
+vase down and go away."
+
+"You will promise me faithfully?"
+
+"Faithfully."
+
+"On your word of honour, and as you hope for salvation?"
+
+"Yes, yes. There is no need for oaths; if I have promised, I will do it."
+
+"Very well." He placed the vase back upon the table and walked to the
+door. "Mademoiselle," he said, making her a low bow, "I am infinitely
+obliged to you;" and then, without another word, he opened the door and
+was gone.
+
+Three minutes later Mrs. Hazeldine came in. She was just back from
+her drive. She found Vera lying back exhausted and breathless in an
+arm-chair.
+
+"My dear, what have you done to Monsieur D'Arblet? I met him running out
+of the house like a madman, and laughing to himself like a little fiend.
+He nearly knocked me down. What has happened! Have you accepted him?"
+
+"No, I have refused him," gasped Vera; "but, thank God, I have saved your
+'Long Eliza,' Cissy!"
+
+Early the following morning one of Mrs. Hazeldine's servants was
+despatched in a hansom with a small brown paper parcel and a note to the
+Charing Cross Hotel.
+
+During the night watches Miss Nevill had been seized with misgivings
+concerning the mysterious mission wherewith she had been charged.
+
+But the servant, the parcel, and the note all returned together just as
+they had been sent.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet has left town, Miss; he went by the tidal train last
+night on his way to the Continent, and has left no address."
+
+So Vera tore up her own note, and locked up the offending parcel in her
+dressing-case.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+A WEDDING TOUR.
+
+ Thus Grief still treads upon the heels of Pleasure;
+ Married in haste, we may repent at leisure.
+
+ Congreve.
+
+
+We all know that weddings are as old as the world, but who is it
+that invented wedding tours? Owing to what delusion were they first
+instituted?
+
+For a wedding feast there is a reasonable cause, just as there is for
+a funeral luncheon, or a christening dinner. There has been in each
+instance a trying ordeal to be gone through in a public church. It is
+quite right that there should be eating and drinking, and a certain
+amount of jollification afterwards amongst the unoffending guests who
+have been dragged in as spectators on the occasion. But why on earth,
+when the day is over, cannot the unhappy couple be left alone to eat
+a Darby-and-Joan dinner together in the house in which they propose to
+live, and return peacefully on the morrow to the avocation of their
+daily lives? Why must they be sent off amid a shower of rice and
+shabby satin shoes into an enforced banishment from the society of their
+fellow-creatures, and so thrown upon each other that, in nine cases out
+of ten, for want of something better to do, they have learnt the way to
+quarrel, tooth and nail, before the week is out?
+
+I believe that a great many marriages that are as likely as not to turn
+out in the end very happily are utterly prevented from doing so by that
+pernicious and utterly childish custom of keeping up the season known as
+the honeymoon. "Honey," by the way, is very sweet, doubtless; but there
+is nothing on earth which sensible people get sooner tired of. Three days
+of an exclusively saccharine diet is about as much as any grown man or
+woman can be reasonably expected to stand; after that period there comes
+upon the jaded appetite unlawful longings after strong meats and
+anchovies, after turtle-soup and devilled bones, such as no sugar-fed
+couple has the poetic right to indulge in. Nevertheless, like a snake in
+the grass, the insidious desire will creep into the soul of one or other
+of the two. There will be, doubtless, a noble struggle to stifle the
+treacherous thought; a vigorous effort to bring back the wandering mind
+into the path of duty; a conscientious effort to go on enjoying honeycomb
+as though no flavour of richer viands had been wafted to the nostrils of
+the imagination. The sweet and poetical food will be lifted once more
+resolutely to the lips, but only to create a sickening satiety from which
+the nauseated victim finally revolts in desperation. Then come yearnings
+and weariness, loss of appetite, and consequent loss of temper; tears on
+the one side, an oath or two on the other, and the "happy couple" come
+home eventually very much wiser, as a rule, than they started, and
+certainly in a position to understand several unpleasant truths
+concerning each other of which they had not a suspicion before they went
+away.
+
+Now, if this is too often the melancholy finale to a wedding trip, even
+with regard to persons who start forth on it full of hopes of happiness,
+of faith in each other, and of fervent affection on both sides, how much
+worse is not the case when there are small hopes of happiness, no faith
+whatever on one side, and of affection none at all on the other?
+
+This was how it was with Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston on their six
+weeks' wedding trip abroad. They went to a great many places they had
+neither of them seen before. They stayed a week in Paris, where Helen
+bought more dresses and declared herself supremely happy; they visited
+the falls of the Rhine, which Maurice said deafened him; and ran
+through Switzerland, which they both voted detestably uncomfortable and
+dirty--the hotels, _bien entendu_, not the mountains. They stopped a
+night on the St. Gothard, which was too cold for them, and a week or two
+at the Italian lakes, which were too hot. They sauntered through the
+picture-galleries of Milan and Turin, at which places Maurice's yawns
+became prolonged and audible; and they floated through the canals of
+Venice in gondolas, which Helen asserted to be more ragged and full of
+fleas than any London four-wheeler. And then they turned homewards, and
+by the time they neared the shores of the Channel once more they had had
+so many quarrels that they had forgotten to count them, and they had both
+privately discovered that matrimony is an egregious and, alas! an
+irreparable mistake. Such a discovery was possibly inevitable; perhaps
+they would have come in time to the same conclusion had they remained at
+home, but they certainly found it out all the quicker for having gone
+abroad.
+
+Helen, perhaps, was the most to be pitied of the two. For Maurice there
+had been no illusions to dispel, no dreams to be dissipated, no castles
+built upon the sand to fall shattered into atoms; he had known very well
+what he had to expect; he did not love the wife he was marrying, and he
+did love somebody else. It had not, therefore, been a brilliant prospect
+of bliss. Nevertheless, he had certainly hoped, with that vague kind of
+hope in which Englishmen are prone to indulge, that things would "come
+right" in some fashion, and that he and Helen would manage "to get on"
+together. That they did not do so was an annoyance, but hardly a surprise
+to him.
+
+But to Helen there was a good deal of unexpected grief and mortification
+of soul. She, at all events, had loved him; it was her own strength of
+will, the fervour of her own lawless passion for him that had carried the
+day, and had, in the end, made her his wife. And she had said to herself
+that, once married to him, she would make him love her.
+
+Alas, in love there is no such thing as compulsion! The heart that loves,
+loves freely, spontaneously, unreasonably; and, where love is dead, there
+neither entreaties nor prayers, nor yet a whole ocean of tears can serve
+to re-awaken the frail blossom into life.
+
+But Helen had made sure that, once absolutely her own, once irrevocably
+separated from the girl whom instinct had taught her to regard as her
+rival, Maurice would return to the old allegiance, and learn to love her
+once more, as in days now long gone by.
+
+A very short experience served to convince her of the contrary. Maurice
+yawned too openly, was too evidently wearied and bored with her society,
+too utterly indifferent to her sayings and her doings, for her to delude
+herself long with the hope of regaining his affection. It was all the
+same to him whatever she did. If she showered caresses upon him, he
+submitted meekly, it is true, but with so evident a distaste to the
+operation that she learnt to discontinue the kisses he cared for so
+little; if she tried to amuse him with her conversation, he appeared to
+be thinking of other things; if she gave her opinion, he hardly seemed to
+listen to it. Only when they quarrelled did the slightest animation enter
+into their conjugal relations; and it was almost better to quarrel than
+to be at peace on such terms as these.
+
+And then Helen got angry with him; angry and sore, wounded in her heart,
+and hurt in her vanity. She said to herself that she had been ready to
+become the best and most devoted of wives; to study his wishes, to defer
+to his opinion, to surround him with loving attentions; but since he
+would not have it so, then so much the worse for him. She would be no
+model wife; no meek slave, subservient to his caprices. She would go her
+own way, and follow her own will, and make him do what she liked, whether
+it pleased him or not.
+
+Had Maurice cared to struggle with her for the mastery, things might have
+ended differently, but it did not seem worth his while to struggle; as
+long as she let him alone, and did not fret him with her incessant
+jealousies and suspicions, he was content to let her do as she liked.
+
+Even in that matter of living at Kynaston he learnt, in the end, to
+give way to her. Sir John, who had already started for Australia, had
+particularly requested him to occupy the house. Lady Kynaston did nothing
+but urge it in every letter. Helen herself was bent upon it. There was
+no good reason that he could bring forward against so reasonable and
+sensible a plan. The house was all ready, newly decorated, and newly
+furnished; they had nothing to do but to walk into it. It would save
+all trouble in looking out for a country home elsewhere, and would,
+doubtless, be an infinitely pleasanter abode for them than any other
+house could be. It was the natural and rational thing for them to do.
+Maurice knew of only one argument against it, and that one was in his own
+heart, and he could speak of it to no one.
+
+And yet, after all, what did it matter, what difference would it make? A
+little nearer, a little further, how could it alter things for either of
+them? How lessen the impassable gulf between her and him? It was in the
+natural course of things that he must meet her at times; there would be
+the stereotyped greeting, the averted glance, the cold shake of hands
+that could never hope to meet without a pang; these things were almost
+inevitable for them. A little oftener or a little seldomer, would it
+matter very much then?
+
+Maurice did not think it would; bound as he was to the woman whom he had
+made his wife--tied to her by every law of God and of man, of honour, and
+of manly feeling--that there should be any actual danger to be run by the
+near proximity of the woman he had loved, did not even enter into his
+head. If he had known how to do his duty towards Helen before he had
+married her, would he not tenfold know how to do so now? Possibly he
+over-rated his own strength; for, however high are our principles,
+however exalted is our sense of honour--after all, we are but mortals,
+and unspeakably weak at the very best.
+
+It did not in any case occur to him to look at the question from Vera's
+point of view. It is never easy for a man to put himself into a woman's
+place, or to enter into the extra sensitiveness of soul with which she is
+endowed.
+
+So it was that he agreed to go straight back to Kynaston, and to make the
+old house his permanent home according to his wife's wishes.
+
+It was whilst the newly-married couple were passing through Switzerland
+on their homeward journey that they suddenly came across Mr. Herbert
+Pryme, who had been performing a melancholy and solitary pilgrimage in
+the land of tourists.
+
+It was at the table d'hôte at Vevay, upon coming down to that lengthy
+and untempting repast, chiefly composed of aged goats and stringy hens,
+which the inventive Swiss waiter exalts, with the effort of a soaring
+imagination, into "Chamois," and "Salmi de Poulet," that Captain and Mrs.
+Kynaston, who had scarcely recovered from a passage of arms in the
+seclusion of their bed-chamber, suddenly descried a familiar face amongst
+the long array of uncongenial people ranged down either side of the
+table.
+
+What the print of a hob-nailed boot must be to the lonely traveller
+across the desert, what the sight of a man from one's own club going down
+Pall Mall is in mid-September, or as a draught of Giesler's '68 to an
+epicure who has been about to perish on ginger-beer--so did Herbert
+Pryme's face shine upon Maurice Kynaston out of the arid waste of that
+Vevay _salle-à-manger_.
+
+In England he had been only an acquaintance--at Vevay he became his most
+intimate friend. The delight of having a man to speak to, and a man who
+knew others of his friends, was almost intoxicating. To think of getting
+one evening--nay, one hour of liberty from that ever-present chain of
+matrimonial intercourse which was galling him so sorely, was a bliss for
+which he could hardly find words to express his gratitude.
+
+Herbert, who could not quite understand the reason of it, was almost
+overpowered by the warmth of Captain Kynaston's greeting. To have his
+place removed next to his own, and to grasp him heartily by both hands,
+wringing them with affectionate fervour, was the work of a few seconds.
+And then, who so lively, so full of anecdote and laughter, so interested
+in all that could be said to him, as Maurice Kynaston during that dinner?
+
+It made Helen angry to hear him. He could be agreeable enough, she
+thought, bitterly, to a chance acquaintance, picked up nobody knew where;
+he could find plenty of conversation for this almost unknown young man;
+it was only when they were alone together that he sat by glumly and
+silently, without a smile and without a word!
+
+She did not take it into account how surfeited the man was with his
+honeycomb. Herbert Pryme, individually, was nothing much to him; but he
+came as the sight of a distant sail is to a shipwrecked mariner. It is
+doubtful, indeed, whether, under the circumstances, Maurice would not
+have been equally delighted to have met his tailor or his bootmaker.
+After dinner was over the two men went out and smoked their cigars
+together. This was a fresh offence to Mrs. Kynaston; usually she enjoyed
+an evening stroll with her husband after dinner, but when he asked her to
+come out with him on this occasion, she refused, shortly and
+ungraciously.
+
+"No, thank you; if you and Mr. Pryme are going to smoke, I could not
+possibly come; you know that I hate smoke."
+
+Poor Herbert was about to protest that nothing would induce him to smoke;
+but Maurice passed his arm hurriedly through his.
+
+"Come along, then, and have a cigar in the garden," he said, with
+scarcely concealed eagerness; he felt like a schoolboy let out of school.
+
+Helen went up to her bedroom, and sat sulkily by her open window, looking
+over the lake on to the mountains. Long after it was dark she could see
+the two red specks of their cigars wandering about like fire-flies in the
+garden, and could hear the crush of the rough gravel under their
+footsteps, and the low murmur of their voices as they talked.
+
+"You are coming into Meadowshire, are you not?" asked Maurice, ere they
+parted.
+
+Herbert shook his head.
+
+"Not to the Millers?"
+
+"No, I am afraid I shall never be asked to Shadonake again," answered the
+younger man, gloomily.
+
+"Why, I thought you and Beatrice--forgive me--but is it not the case?"
+
+"Her parents have stopped all that, Kynaston."
+
+"But I am sure Beatrice herself will never let it stop; I know her too
+well," said Maurice, cheerily.
+
+"There are laws in connection with minors," began Mr. Pryme, solemnly.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" was Maurice's rejoinder. "There are no laws to prevent
+young women falling in love, or the world would not be in such a
+confounded muddle as it frequently is. Don't be downhearted, Pryme; you
+stick to her, and it will all come right; and look here, if they won't
+ask you to Shadonake, I ask you to Kynaston; drop me a line, and come
+whenever you like--as soon as you get home."
+
+"You are exceedingly kind; I shall be only too delighted."
+
+"When will you be home?"
+
+"I can be home at any time--there is nothing to keep me."
+
+"Well, then, come as soon as you like, the sooner the better. And now
+I must say good-night and good-bye too, I fear, for we are off early
+to-morrow. I shall be glad enough to be home; I'm dead sick of the
+travelling. Good-night, old fellow; it has been a real pleasure to meet
+you."
+
+And, positively, this was the only evening out of his whole wedding-trip
+that Maurice had thoroughly enjoyed.
+
+"What on earth kept you out so late with that solemn young prig?" says
+his wife to him as he opens her door.
+
+"I find him a very pleasant companion, and I have asked him to come to
+Kynaston," answers Maurice, shortly.
+
+"Umph!" grunts Helen, and inwardly determines that his visit shall be a
+short one.
+
+Four days later they were in England again.
+
+It was only when the train had actually stopped at Sutton, and he was
+handing his wife into her own carriage under the arch of greenery across
+the road, and amid the ringing cheers of the rustics, who had gathered
+to see them arrive, that Maurice began to realise how powerfully that
+home-coming was to be tinged in his own mind with thoughts of her who was
+once so nearly going as a bride to the same house where now he was taking
+Helen.
+
+All along the lane, as they drove under the arches of flags and flowers
+that had been put up from the station to the park gates, and as they
+responded to the hearty welcome from the village-folk who lined the road,
+Maurice was asking himself, with a painful anxiety, whether _she_ was at
+Sutton now; whether her eyes had rested upon these rustic decorations,
+whether her steps had passed along under these mottoes of welcome and of
+happiness. And then, as they neared the church, the clang of the bells
+burst forth loudly and jarringly.
+
+Was _she_, perchance, there in the house, kneeling alone, white and
+stricken by her bedside, whilst those joy-bells rang out their deafening
+clamour from the church hard by?
+
+For the life of him, Maurice could not help casting a glance at the
+vicarage as they drove swiftly by it.
+
+The windows were wide open, but no one looked out of them, the muslin
+blinds fluttered in the wind, the Gloire de Dijon roses nodded upon the
+wall, the Virginia creeper hung in crimson festoons over the porch; but
+there was not a living creature to be seen.
+
+He had caught no glimpse of the woman that was ever in his heart; and it
+was a great pity that he had looked for her, because his wife, whose
+sharp eyes nothing ever escaped, had seen him look.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+"IF I COULD DIE!"
+
+ Why cannot I forgo, forget
+ That ever I loved thee, that ever we met?
+ There is not a single link or sign
+ To bind thy life in this world with mine.
+
+ M. W. Praed.
+
+
+But it was not until Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston had been at home
+for more than a fortnight that Vera came back to her brother-in-law's
+house.
+
+She had kept away, poor girl, as long as she could. She had put off the
+evil hour of her return as long as possible. The Hazeldines had gone to
+Scotland, and Vera had, in desperation, accepted an invitation to stay
+with some acquaintances whom she neither knew very well nor liked
+overmuch. It had kept her from Sutton a little longer. But the visit had
+come to an end at last, and what was she to do? She had no other visits
+to prolong her absence, and her sister wrote to her perpetually, urging
+her to return. Her home was at Sutton; she had no other place to go to.
+She had told Sir John that in absence from his brother lay her only hope
+of safety. But where was she to seek that safety? Where find security,
+when he; reckless, or, perchance, heedless of her danger, had come to
+plant himself at her very doors? They should have been far as the poles
+asunder, and a malevolent fate had willed that the same parish should
+contain them.
+
+For whatever Maurice did, Vera in no way underrated the danger. Too well
+she knew her own heart; too surely she estimated the strength of a
+passion which, repressed and thwarted, and half-smothered, as it had been
+within her, yet burnt but the fiercer and the wilder. For that is the way
+with love: if it may not flourish and thrive openly and bravely before
+the eyes of the world, it will eat into the very heart and life, till all
+that is fair and sweet in the garden of the soul is choked and blighted
+and overgrown, till the main-spring of life becomes poisoned, and all
+things that are happy, withered and dried up.
+
+In Vera's love for Maurice there had been nothing of joy, and all of
+pain. There had never been for her that sweet illusion of dawning
+affection--that intangible sense of delight in the consciousness of an
+unspoken sympathy that is the very essence of a happy love. She had no
+memories that were serene and untroubled--no days of calm and delicious
+happiness to recall. His first conscious look had been a terror to her;
+his words of hopeless love had given her a shock that had been almost
+physical; and his few passionate kisses had burnt into her very soul till
+they had seemed to have been printed upon her lips in fire. Vera's love
+had brought her no good thing that she could count. But it had done one
+thing for her: if it had cursed her life, it had purified her soul.
+
+The Vera who had come back to Sutton Vicarage in August was no longer the
+same woman who had stood months ago on the terrace at Kynaston among the
+falling autumn leaves, and who had told herself that it was money
+alone that was worth living for.
+
+She came back to everything that was full of pain, and to much in which
+there was absolute fear.
+
+Five minutes after she had entered the vicarage drawing-room her tortures
+began.
+
+"You have not asked after the bride and bridegroom," says old Mrs.
+Daintree, as she sits in her corner, darning everlastingly at those brown
+worsted socks of her son's. Vera thinks she must have been sitting there
+darning incessantly, day and night, ever since she had been away. "We are
+all full of it down here. Such a pretty welcome home they had--arches
+across the road, and processions with flags, and a band inside the
+lodge-gates. You should have been here to have seen it. Everybody is
+making much of Mrs. Kynaston; she is a very pretty woman, I must say,
+and called here three days ago in the most beautiful Paris gown."
+
+"She seemed very sorry not to see you," says Marion, "and quite disposed
+to be friendly. I do hope you and she will get on, Vera, in spite of the
+awkwardness of her being in your place, as it were."
+
+"What do you mean?" rather sharply.
+
+"Only, of course, dear, that it will be rather painful to you just at
+first to see anybody else the mistress at Kynaston, where you yourself
+might have been----"
+
+"If you had not been a fool," interpolated the old lady, bluntly.
+
+"I don't think I shall mind that much," says Vera, quietly. "Where is
+Eustace?"
+
+"Oh, he will be in presently; he has gone up to the Hall about the
+chancel. The men have made all kinds of mistakes about the tesselated
+pavement; the wrong pattern was sent down from town, and we have had so
+much trouble about it, and there has been nobody to appeal to to set
+things right. Captain Kynaston is all very well, and now he is back, I
+hope we may get things into a little order; but I am sorry to say he
+takes very little interest in the church or the parish; he is not half
+so good a squire as poor dear Sir John." And there was a whole volume of
+unspoken reproach in the sigh with which Marion wound up her remarks.
+
+"Decidedly," said Vera, to herself, as she went slowly upstairs to her
+own little room; "decidedly I must get away from all this. I shall have
+to marry." She leant out of her open window in a frame-work of roses
+and jessamine, and looked out over the lime-trees towards the Hall.
+Now that the trees were in full leaf, she could catch no glimpse of its
+red-stacked chimneys and its terraced gardens; but, by-and-by, when the
+leaves were down and the trees were bare, she knew she should see it.
+Every morning when she got up the sun would be shining full upon it;
+every night when she went to bed she would see the twinkling lights of
+the many windows gleaming through the darkness; she would be in her
+room alone, and _he_ would be out there, happy with his wife.
+
+"I shall not be able to bear it," said Vera, slowly, speaking aloud to
+herself. "I had better marry, and go away; there is nothing else to be
+done. Poor Denis! He is worthy of a better woman; but I think he will be
+good to me."
+
+For it had come to this now, that when Vera thought about marrying, it
+was upon Denis Wilde that she also pondered.
+
+To be at Sutton, and not to come face to face with Maurice, was of course
+an impossibility. Carefully as Vera confined herself to the house and
+garden for the next three days, she could not avoid going to church when
+Sunday came. And at church were Captain and Mrs. Kynaston. During the
+service she only saw his back, erect and broad-shouldered, in the seat in
+front of her, for the pews had been cleared away, and open sittings had
+been substituted all through the church. Maurice looked neither to the
+right nor to the left; he stood, or sat, or knelt, and scarcely turned
+his head an inch, but Helen's butterfly bonnet was twisted in every
+direction throughout the service. It is certain that she very soon knew
+who it was who had come into the vicarage seat behind her.
+
+When Vera came out of church, having purposely lingered as long as she
+could inside, until the rest of the congregation had all gone out, she
+found the bride and bridegroom waiting for her in the churchyard.
+
+Helen stood with her hand twined with easy familiarity round her
+husband's arm; possibly she had studied the attitude with a view to
+impressing Vera with the perfection of her conjugal happiness. She turned
+quite delightedly to greet her.
+
+"Oh, here you are at last, Miss Nevill. We have been waiting for you,
+have we not, Maurice dear? We both felt how pleased we should be to see
+you. I am very glad you have come back; it will make it much more
+pleasant for me at Kynaston; you will come up to see me, won't you?
+I should like you to see my boudoir, it is lovely!"
+
+"You forget that Miss Nevill has seen it all long ago," said Maurice,
+gravely; their hands had just met, but he had not looked at her.
+
+"Oh, yes, to be sure; how stupid I am! Of course, I remember now, it was
+all done up for _you_ by poor dear old John. Doesn't it seem funny that
+I should be going to live in the house? Ah, how d'ye do, Mr. Daintree?"
+as Eustace came out of the vestry door; "here we are, chattering to your
+sister. What a delightful sermon, dear Mr. Daintree, and what a treat to
+be in a Christian church--I mean a Protestant church--again after those
+dreadful Sundays on the Continent."
+
+Vera had turned to Maurice.
+
+"Have you any news of Sir John yet?"
+
+"No; we cannot expect to hear of his arrival till next month. I dare say
+you will like to hear about him. I will let you know as soon as he
+writes."
+
+"Thank you; I should like to know about him very much."
+
+Helen, in the middle of Eustace's polite acknowledgment of her compliment
+to his sermon, was casting furtive glances at her husband; even the two
+or three grave words he had exchanged with Vera were sufficient to make
+her uneasy. She desired to torture Vera with envy and with jealousy; she
+had forgotten to take into account how very easily her own suspicious
+jealousy could be aroused. She interrupted the vicar in the very middle
+of his speech.
+
+"Now, really, we must run away. Come, Maurice, darling, we shall be late
+for lunch; you and Miss Nevill must finish your confidences another day.
+You will come up soon, won't you? Any day at five I am in--good-bye."
+She shook hands with them, and hurried her husband away.
+
+"What an odd thing it is that you and that girl never can meet without
+having all sorts of private things to say to each other," she said,
+angrily, as soon as they were out of earshot.
+
+"Private things! what can you possibly mean, Helen? Miss Nevill was
+asking me if I had heard of John's arrival."
+
+"I wonder she has the face to mention John's name!"
+
+"Why, pray?"
+
+"After her disgraceful conduct to him."
+
+"I think you know very little about Miss Nevill's conduct, Helen."
+
+"No, I dare say not. And _you_ have always known a great deal more about
+it than anybody else. That I have always understood, Maurice."
+
+Maurice looked very black, but he was silent.
+
+"I am very glad I told her about the boudoir," continued Helen,
+spitefully. "How mortified she must feel to think that it has all slipped
+through her fingers and into mine. I do hope she will come up to the
+house. I shall show her all over it; she will wish she had not been
+such a fool!"
+
+Maurice was looking at his wife with a singular expression.
+
+"I begin to think you have a very bad heart, Helen," he said, with
+a contempt in his voice that was very near akin to disgust.
+
+She looked up, a little startled, and put her hand back, caressingly,
+under his arm.
+
+"Oh, don't look at me like that, Maurice; I don't want to vex you. You
+know very well how much I love you--and--and"--looking up with a little
+smile into his face that was meant as a peace offering--"I suppose I am
+jealous!"
+
+"Suppose you wait to be jealous until I give you cause to be so,"
+answered her husband, gravely and coldly, but not altogether unkindly,
+for he meant to do his duty to her, God helping him, as far as he knew
+how.
+
+But all the way home he walked silently by her side, and wondered whether
+the sacrifice he had made of his love to his duty had been, indeed, worth
+it.
+
+It had been hard for him, this first meeting with Vera. He had felt it
+more than he had believed possible. Instinctively he had realized what
+she must have suffered; and that her sufferings were utterly beyond his
+power to console. It began to come into his mind that, meaning to deal
+rightly by Helen, he had dealt cruelly and badly by Vera. He had
+sacrificed the woman he loved to the woman he did not love.
+
+Had it, indeed, been such a right and praiseworthy action on his part?
+Maurice lost himself in speculation as to what would have happened had he
+broken his faith to Helen, and allowed himself to follow the dictates of
+his heart rather than those of his conscience.
+
+That was what Vera had done for his sake; but what he had been unable to
+do for hers.
+
+There was a certain hardness about the man, a rigid sense of honour that
+was almost a fault; for, if it be a virtue to cleave to truth and good
+faith above everything, to swear to one's neighbour and disappoint him
+not--even though it be to one's own hindrance--it is certainly not a fine
+or noble thing to mistake tenderness for a weakness only fit to be
+crushed out of the soul with firm hands and an iron determination.
+
+Guilty once of one irreparable action of weakness, Maurice had set
+himself determinedly ever after to undo the evil that he had done.
+
+To be true to his brother, to keep his faith with Helen, these had been
+the only objects he had steadily kept in view: he had succeeded in his
+efforts, but had scarcely realized that, in doing so, he had not only
+wrecked his own life, but also that of the woman whom he had so
+infinitely wronged.
+
+But when he saw her once again--when he held for an instant the cold hand
+within his own--when he marked, with a pang, the dark circles round the
+averted eyes that spoke so mutely and touchingly of sleepless vigils and
+of many tears--when he noted how the lovely sensitive lips trembled a
+little as she spoke her few common-place words to him--then Maurice began
+to understand what he had done to her; and, for the first time, something
+that was almost remorse, with regard to his own conduct towards her, came
+into his soul.
+
+Such meditations were not, however, safe or profitable to indulge in for
+long. Maurice recalled his wandering thoughts with an effort, and with
+something of repentance for having given them place, turned his attention
+resolutely to his wife's chatter during the remainder of the walk home.
+
+Meanwhile Vera and the vicar are walking back, side by side, to the
+vicarage.
+
+"Something," says Eustace, with solemn displeasure, "something must
+really be done, and that soon, about Ishmael Spriggs; that man will drive
+me into my grave before my time! Anything more fearfully and awfully out
+of tune than the Te Deum I never heard in the whole course of my life. I
+can hear his voice shouting and bellowing above the whole of the rest of
+the choir; he leads all the others wrong. It is not a bit of use to tell
+me that he is the best behaved man in the parish; it is not a matter of
+conduct, as I told Mr. Dale; it is a matter of voice, and if the man
+can't be taught to sing in tune, out of the choir he shall go; it's a
+positive scandal to the Service. Marion says we shall turn him into an
+enemy if we don't let him sing, and that he will go to the dissenting
+chapel, and never come to church any more. Well, I can't help that; I
+must give him up to the dissenters. As to keeping him in the choir, it is
+out of the question after that Te Deum. I shall never forget it. It will
+give me a nightmare to-night, I am convinced. Wasn't it dreadful, Vera?"
+
+"Yes, very likely, Eustace," answered Vera, at random. She has not heard
+one single word he has said.
+
+Eustace Daintree looks round at her sharply. He sees that she is very
+white, and that there are tears upon her cheeks.
+
+"Why, Vera!" he cries, standing still, you have not listened to a word
+I have been saying. "What is the matter, child? Why are you crying?"
+
+They are in the vicarage garden now; among the beds of scarlet geraniums,
+and the tall hollyhocks, and the glaring red gladioli; a whole bank of
+greenery, rhododendrons and lauristinas, conceals them from the windows
+of the house; a garden bench sheltered beneath a nook of the laurel
+bushes is close by.
+
+With a sudden gesture of utter misery Vera sinks down upon it, and bursts
+into a passion of tears.
+
+"My dear child; my poor Vera! What is it? What has happened? What can be
+the reason of this?"
+
+Mr. Daintree is infinitely distressed and puzzled; he bends over her,
+taking her hand between his own. There is something in this wild outburst
+of grief, from one habitually so calm and self-contained as Vera, that is
+an absolute shock to him. He had learnt to love her very dearly; he had
+thought he had understood all the workings of her candid maiden soul; he
+had fancied that the story of her broken engagement was no secret to him,
+that it was but the struggle of a conscientious nature after what was
+true and honest. It had seemed to him that there had been no mystery in
+her conduct, for he could appreciate all her motives. And surely, as she
+had done right, she must be now at peace. He had told himself that the
+pure instincts of a naturally stainless soul had triumphed in Vera over
+the carelessness and worldliness of her early training; and lo, here was
+the passionate weeping of a tempest-tossed woman, whose agony he could
+not fathom, and whose sorrows he knew not how to divine.
+
+"Vera, will you not tell me?" he asked her, in his distress. "Will you
+not make a friend of me? My dear, forget that I am a clergyman; remember
+only that I am your brother, and that I shall know how to feel for
+you--for you, my dear sister."
+
+But she could not tell him. There are some troubles that must be kept for
+ever buried within our own souls; to speak of some things is only to make
+them worse. Only she choked back her sobs, and lifted her face, white
+and tear-stained; there was a look of hunted despair in her eyes, that
+bewildered, and even half-terrified him.
+
+"Tell me," she said, with a sort of anger, "tell me, you that are a
+clergyman--Do you think God has made us only to torment us? You have got
+a daughter, Eustace; pray God, night and morning, that she may have a
+hard heart, and that she may never have one gleam of womanly tenderness
+within her; for only so are women happy!"
+
+He did not answer her wild words. Instinctively he felt that common-place
+speeches of rebuke or of consolation would be trivial and out of place
+before the great anguish of her heart. The man's soul was above the
+narrow limits of his training; he felt, dimly, that here was something
+with which it were best not to intermeddle, some trouble for which he
+could offer no consolation.
+
+She rose and stood before him, holding his hands and gazing earnestly at
+his anxious face.
+
+"It has come to this with me," she said, below her voice, "that there are
+times when there is but one good thing in all the world that I know any
+longer how to desire. God has so ordered my life that there is no road
+open for me that does not lead to sin or to misery. Surely, if He were
+merciful, He would take back the valueless gift."
+
+"Vera! what do you mean?"
+
+"I mean," she exclaimed, wearily, "that if I could die, I should be at
+peace."
+
+She had walked slowly on; her voice, that had trembled at first with a
+passionate wildness, had sunk into the spiritless apathy of despair; her
+head was bent, her hands clasped before her; her dress trailed with a
+soft rustle across the grass, sweeping over a whole wilderness of white
+daisies, that bent their heads beneath its folds as she walked. A gleam
+of sunshine fell upon her hair, and a bird sang loud and shrill in the
+lime trees overhead.
+
+Often and often, in the after days, Eustace Daintree thought of her thus,
+and remembered with a pang the sole sad gift that she had craved at
+Heaven's hands. Often and often the scene came back to him; the sunny
+garden, the scarlet geraniums flaring in the borders, the smooth green
+lawn, speckled with shadows from the trees, the wide open windows of his
+pleasant vicarage beyond, and the beautiful figure of the girl at his
+side, with her bent head, and her low broken voice--the girl who, at
+twenty-three, sighed to be rid of the life that had become too hard for
+her; that precious gift of life which, too often, at three-score years
+and ten, is but hardly resigned!
+
+"If I could die, I should be at peace," she had said. And she was only
+twenty-three!
+
+Eustace Daintree never forgot it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AN EVENTFUL DRIVE.
+
+ Ill blows the wind that profits nobody.
+
+ Shakespeare, "Henry IV."
+
+
+I imagine that the most fretting and wearing of all the pains and
+penalties which it is the lot of humanity to undergo in this troublesome
+and naughty world are those which, by our own folly, our own
+shortsightedness, and our own imprudence, we have brought upon ourselves.
+
+There is a degree of irritation in such troubles which adds a whole
+armoury of small knife-cuts to intensify the agony of the evil from which
+we suffer. It is more dreadful to be moaning over our own mistakes than
+over the inscrutable perversity of an unpropitious fate.
+
+Somebody once has said that most men grieve over the smallest mistake
+more bitterly than over the greatest sin. This is decidedly a perversion
+of the moral nature; nevertheless, there is a good deal of truth in it.
+
+"If only I had not been such a fool! If I could only have foreseen such
+and such results?"
+
+These are more generally the burden of our bitterest self-reproaches.
+
+And this was what Miss Miller was perpetually repeating to herself during
+the months of August and September. Beatrice, in these days, was a
+thoroughly miserable young woman. She was more utterly separated than
+ever from her lover, and that entirely by her own fault. That foolish
+escapade of hers to the Temple had been fatal to her; her father, who
+had been inclined to become her lover's friend, had now peremptorily
+forbidden her ever to mention his name again, and her own lips were
+sealed as to the unlucky incident in which she had played so prominent
+a part.
+
+Beatrice knew that, in going alone and on the sly to her lover's
+chambers, she had undoubtedly compromised her own good name. To confess
+to her own folly and imprudence was almost beyond her power, and to clear
+her lover's name at the expense of her own was what she felt he himself
+would scarcely thank her for.
+
+Mr. Miller had, of course, said something of what he had discovered at
+Mr. Pryme's chambers to the wife of his bosom.
+
+"The young man is not fit for her," he had said; "his private life will
+not bear investigation. You must tell Beatrice to put him out of her
+head."
+
+Mrs. Miller had, of course, been virtuously indignant over Mr. Pryme's
+offences, but she had also been triumphantly elated over her own
+sagacity.
+
+"Did I not tell you he was not a proper husband for her? Another time,
+Andrew, you will, I hope, allow that I am the best judge in these
+matters."
+
+"My dear, you are always right," was the meekly conjugal reply, and then
+Mrs. Miller went her way and talked to Beatrice for half-an-hour over the
+sinful lives which are frequently led by young men of no family residing
+in the Temple, and the shame and disgrace which must necessarily accrue
+to any well-brought-up young woman who, in an ill-advised moment, shall
+allow her affections to rove towards such unsanctified Pariahs of
+society.
+
+And Beatrice, listening to her blushingly, knew what she meant, and yet
+had no words wherewith to clear her lover's character from the defamatory
+evidence furnished against him by her own sunshade and gloves.
+
+"Your father has seen with his own eyes, my dear, that which makes it
+impossible for us ever to consent to your marrying that young man."
+
+How was Beatrice to say to her mother, "It was I--your daughter--who was
+there, shut up in Mr. Pryme's bedroom." She could not speak the words.
+
+The sunshine twinkled in Shadonake's many windows, and flooded its
+velvet lawns. Below, the Bath slumbered darkly in the shadow of its
+ancient steps and its encircling belt of fir-trees; and beyond the
+flower-gardens, half-an-acre of pineries, and vineries, and
+orchard-houses glittered in a dazzling parterre of glass-roofs and white
+paint. Something new--it was an orchard-house--was being built. There was
+always something new, and Mr. Miller was superintending the building of
+it. He stood over the workmen who were laying the foundation, watching
+every brick that was laid down with delighted and absorbed interest. He
+held a trowel himself, and had tucked up his shirt cuffs in order to lend
+a helping hand in the operations. There was nothing that Andrew Miller
+loved so well. Fate and his Caroline had made him a member of Parliament,
+and had placed him in the position of a gentleman, but nature had
+undoubtedly intended him for a bricklayer.
+
+Beatrice came out of the drawing-room windows across the lawn to him. She
+was in her habit, and stood tapping her little boot with her riding whip
+for some minutes by her father's side.
+
+"I am going to see uncle Tom, papa," she said; "have you any message?"
+
+"Going to Lutterton? Ah, that's right; the ride will do you good, my
+dear. No; I have no message."
+
+Beatrice went back into the house; her little bay mare stood at the door.
+She met her mother in the hall.
+
+"I am going to see uncle Tom," she said, to her also.
+
+Mrs. Miller always encouraged her children in their attentions to her
+brother. He was rich, and he was a bachelor; he must have saved a good
+deal one way or another. Who could tell how it would be left? And then
+Beatrice was undoubtedly his favourite. She nodded pleasantly to her
+daughter.
+
+"Tell uncle Tom to come over to lunch on Sunday, and, of course, he must
+come here early for Guy's birthday next week," for there were to be great
+doings on Guy's birthday. "Ride slowly, Beatrice, or you will get so
+hot."
+
+Lutterton Castle was a good six miles off. The house stood well, and even
+imposingly, on a high wooded knoll that overlooked the undulating park,
+and the open valley at its feet. It was a great rambling building with a
+central tower and four smaller ones at each corner. When Mr. Esterworth
+was at home, which was almost always, it was his vanity to keep a red
+flag flying from the centre tower as though he had been royalty. All the
+reception-rooms and more than half the bedrooms were permanently
+shuttered up, and there was a portly and very dignified housekeeper,
+who rattled her keys at her châtelaine, and went through all the unused
+apartments daily, followed by a meek phalanx of housemaids, to see that
+all the rooms were well-aired and well kept in order, so that at any
+minute they might be fit for occupation. Five or six times during the
+hunting season the large rooms were all thrown open, and there was a hunt
+breakfast held in the principal dining-hall; but, with that exception,
+Mr. Esterworth rarely entertained at all.
+
+He occupied three rooms opening out of each other in the small western
+tower. They consisted of a bedroom, a dressing-room, and a small and
+rather inconvenient study, where the huntsman, whips, and other official
+personages connected with the hunt were received at all hours of the day
+and night. The room was consequently pervaded by a faint odour of stables
+and tobacco; there were usually three or four dogs upon the hearthrug,
+and it was a rare thing to find Mr. Esterworth in it unaccompanied by
+some personage in breeches and gaiters, wearing a blue spotted neckcloth
+and a horseshoe pin.
+
+Such an individual was receiving an audience at the moment of Miss
+Miller's arrival, and shuffled awkwardly and hurriedly out of the room by
+one door as she entered it by another.
+
+"All right, William," calls the M.F.H. after his departing satellite.
+"Look in again to-night. I shall have her fired, I think, and throw her
+up till December. Hallo! Pussy, how are you?"
+
+All the four dogs rose from the hearthrug and wagged their tails solemnly
+in respectful greeting to her. Beatrice had a pat and a word for each,
+and a kiss for her uncle, before she sat down on the chair he pulled
+forward for her.
+
+"What brings you, Pussy? What are you riding?"
+
+"Kitty; they have taken her round to the stable. I thought I'd have lunch
+with you, uncle Tom."
+
+"Very well; you won't get anything but a mutton-chop."
+
+"I don't ask for anything better."
+
+Beatrice felt that her heart was beating. She had taken a desperate
+resolution during her six miles' solitary ride; she had determined to
+take her uncle into her confidence. He had always been indulgent and kind
+to her; perhaps he would not view her sin in so heinous a light as her
+mother would; and who knows? perhaps he would help her.
+
+"Uncle Tom, I'm in dreadful trouble, and I want to tell you about it,"
+she began, trembling.
+
+"I'm very sorry, Pussy; what is it?"
+
+"I did a shocking, dreadful thing when I was in London. I went to a young
+man's rooms, and got shut up in his bedroom."
+
+"The deuce you did!" says Tom Esterworth, opening his eyes.
+
+"Yes," continues Beatrice, desperately, and crimson with shame and
+confusion; "and the worse of it is, that I left my sunshade in the
+sitting-room; and papa came in, and, of course, he did not know it was
+mine, and--and--he thinks--he thinks----"
+
+"That's the best joke I ever heard in my life!" cries Mr. Esterworth,
+laying his head back in the chair and laughing aloud.
+
+"Uncle Tom!" Beatrice could hardly believe her ears.
+
+"Good lord, what a situation for a comedy!" cries her uncle, between the
+outbursts of his mirth. "Upon my word, Pussy, you are a good plucked one;
+there isn't much Miller blood in your veins. You are an Esterworth all
+over."
+
+"But, uncle, indeed, it's no laughing matter."
+
+"Well, I don't see much to cry at if your father did not find you out;
+the young man is never likely to talk."
+
+"Oh, but uncle Tom; papa and mamma think so badly of him, and I can't
+tell them that I was there; and they will never let me marry him."
+
+"Oh! so you are in love, Pussy?"
+
+"Yes, uncle."
+
+Tom Esterworth smote his hand against his corduroy thigh.
+
+"What a mistake!" he exclaimed; "a girl who can go across country as you
+do--what on earth do you want to be married for? Is it Mr. Pryme, Pussy?"
+
+Beatrice nodded.
+
+"And he can't go a yard," said her uncle, sorrowfully and reproachfully.
+
+"Oh, I think he goes very well, uncle; his seat is capital; it is only
+his hands that are a bit heavy; but then he has had very little
+practice."
+
+"Tut--tut, don't talk to me, child; he is no horseman. He may be a good
+young man in his way, but what can have made you take a fancy to a fellow
+who can't ride is a mystery to me! Now tell me the whole story, Pussy."
+
+And then Beatrice made a clean breast of it.
+
+"I will see if I can help you," said her uncle, seriously, when she had
+finished her story; "but I can't think how you can have set your heart
+upon a fellow who can't ride!"
+
+This was evidently a far more fatal error in Tom Esterworth's eyes than
+the other matter of her being shut up in Mr. Pryme's rooms. Beatrice
+began to think she had not done anything so very terrible after all.
+
+"I must turn it over in my mind. Now come and eat your mutton-chop,
+Pussy, and when we have finished our lunch, you shall come out with me
+in the dog-cart. I am going to put Clochette into harness for the first
+time."
+
+"Will she go quietly?"
+
+"Like a lamb, I should say. You won't be nervous?"
+
+"Dear, no! I am never nervous; I shall enjoy the fun."
+
+The mutton-chop over, Clochette and the dog-cart came round to the door.
+She was a raking, bright chestnut mare, with a coat like satin. Even as
+she stood at the door she chafed somewhat at her new position between
+the shafts. This, however, was no more than might have been expected. Mr.
+Esterworth declining the company of the groom, helped his niece up and
+took the reins.
+
+"We will go round by Tripton and back by the common," he said, "and talk
+this matter well over, Pussy; we shall enjoy ourselves much better with
+nobody in the back seat. A man sits there with his arms crossed and his
+face like a blank sheet of paper, but one never knows how much they hear,
+and their ears are always cocked, like a terrier's on the scent of a
+rat."
+
+Clochette went off from the door with a bound, but soon settled down into
+a good swinging trot. She kept turning her head nervously from side to
+side, and there was evidently a little uncertainty in her mind as to
+whether she should keep to the drive, or deviate on to the grass by the
+side of it; but, upon the whole, she behaved fairly well, and turned out
+of the lodge gates into the high road with perfect docility and good
+breeding.
+
+There was a whole avalanche of dogs in attendance. A collie, rushing on
+tumultuously in front; a "plum-pudding" dog between the wheels; a couple
+of fox-terriers snapping joyfully at each other in the rear; and there
+was also an ill-conditioned animal--half lurcher, half terrier--who
+killed cats, and murdered fowls, and worried sheep, and flew at the
+heels of unwary strangers; and was given, in short, to every sort of
+canine iniquity, and who possessed but one redeeming feature in his
+character--that of blind adoration to his master.
+
+This animal, who followed uncle Tom whithersoever he went, came skurrying
+out of the stables as the dog-cart drove off, and joined in the general
+scamper.
+
+Perhaps the dogs may have been too much for Clochette's nerves, or
+perhaps the effort of behaving well as far as the park gates with those
+horrible wheels rattling behind her was as much as any hunter born and
+bred could be expected to do, or perhaps uncle Tom was too free with that
+whip with which he caressed her shining flanks; but be that as it may, no
+sooner was Clochette's head well turned along the straight high-road with
+its high-tangled hedge-rows on either side than she began to show symptoms
+of behaving very badly indeed. She bucked and pranced, and stood on her
+hind legs; she whipped suddenly round, pirouetted upon her own axis with
+the dexterity of a circus performer, and demonstrated very plainly that,
+if she only dared, she would like to take to her heels in the reverse
+direction to that which her driver desired her to go.
+
+All this was, however, equally delightful and exciting both to Tom
+Esterworth and his niece. There was no apprehension in Beatrice's mind,
+for her uncle drove as well as he rode, and she felt perfectly secure in
+the strong, supple hands that guided Clochette's erratic movements.
+
+"There is not a kick in her," uncle Tom had said, as they started, and he
+repeated the observation now; and kicking being out of the category of
+Clochette's iniquities, there was nothing else to fear.
+
+No sooner, however, had the words left his lips than a turn of the road
+brought them within sight of a great volume of black smoke rushing slowly
+but surely towards them; whilst a horrible roaring and howling, as of an
+antediluvian monster in its wrath, filled the silence of the summer
+afternoon with a hideous and unholy confusion.
+
+Talk about there being no wild animals in our peaceful land! What
+could have been the Megatherium and the Ichthyosaurus, and all the
+fire-spitting dragons of antiquity compared to the traction engines of
+the nineteenth century?
+
+"It's a steam plough!" ejaculated Beatrice, below her breath.
+
+"D----n!" cried her uncle, not at all below _his_ breath.
+
+As to Clochette, she stood for an instant stock still, with her ears
+pricked and her head well up, facing the horrors of her situation; next
+she gave an angry snort as though to say, "No! _this_ is too much!" Then
+she turned short round and began a series of peculiar bounds and plunges,
+accompanied by an ominous uplifting of her hind quarters, which had
+plainly but one object in view--the correct conjugation of the verb
+active "to kick."
+
+There was a crunching of woodwork, a cracking as of iron hoofs against
+the splash-board. Beatrice instinctively put up her hands before her
+face, but she did not utter a sound.
+
+"Do you think you could get down, Pussy, and go to her head?"
+
+"Shall I hold the reins, uncle?"
+
+"No, you couldn't hold her; she'll be over the hedge if I let go of her.
+Get down if you can."
+
+It was not easy. Beatrice was in her habit, and to jump from the
+vacillating height of a dog-cart to the earth is no easy matter even to
+a man unencumbered with petticoats.
+
+"Try and get over the back," said her uncle, who was in momentary terror
+lest the mare's heels should be dashed into her face. And Beatrice, with
+that finest trait of a woman's courage in danger, which consists in doing
+exactly what she is told, began to scramble over the back of her seat.
+
+The situation was critical in the extreme; the traction engine came on
+apace, the man with the red flag having paused at a public-house round
+the corner, was only now running back into his place. Uncle Tom shouted
+vainly to him; his voice was drowned in the deafening roar of the
+advancing monster.
+
+But already help was at hand, unheard and unperceived by either uncle or
+niece; a horseman had come rapidly trotting up the road behind them. To
+spring from his horse, who was apparently accustomed to traction engines,
+and stood quietly by, to rush to the plunging, struggling mare, and to
+seize her by the head was the work of a moment.
+
+"All right, Mr. Esterworth," shouted the new comer. "I can hold her if
+you can get down; we can lead her into the field; there is a gate ten
+yards back."
+
+Uncle Tom threw the reins to his niece and slipped to the ground; between
+them the two men contrived to quiet the terrified Clochette, and to lead
+her towards the gate.
+
+In another three minutes they were all safely within the shelter of the
+hedge. The traction engine passed, snorting forth fire and smoke, on its
+devastating way; and Clochette stood by, panting, trembling, and covered
+with foam. Beatrice, safely on the ground, was examining ruefully the
+amount of damage done to the dog-cart, and Mr. Esterworth was shaking
+hands with his deliverer.
+
+It was Herbert Pryme.
+
+"That's the last time I ever take a lady out, driving without a
+man-servant behind me," quoth the M.F.H. "What we should have done
+without your timely assistance, sir, I really cannot say; in another
+minute she would have kicked the trap into a thousand bits. You have
+saved my niece's life, Mr. Pryme."
+
+"Indeed, I did very little," said Herbert, modestly, glancing at Beatrice
+who was trembling and rather pale; but, perhaps, that was only from her
+recent fright. She had not spoken to him, only she had given him one
+bewildered glance, and then had looked hastily away.
+
+"You have saved her life," repeated Mr. Esterworth, with decision. "I
+hope you do not mean to contradict my words, sir? You have saved
+Beatrice's life, sir, and it's the most providential thing in this world
+for you, as Clochette very nearly kicked her to pieces under your nose.
+I shall tell Mr. and Mrs. Miller that they are indebted to you for their
+daughter's life. Young people, I am going to lead this brute of a mare
+home, and, if you like to walk on together to Lutterton in front of me,
+why you may."
+
+That was how Herbert Pryme came to be once more re-instated in the good
+graces of his lady love's father and mother.
+
+Mr. Esterworth contrived to give them so terrifying an account of
+the danger in which Beatrice had been placed, and so graphic and
+highly-coloured a description of Herbert Pryme's pluck and sagacity in
+rushing to her rescue, that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had no other course left
+than to shake hands gratefully with the man to whom, as uncle Tom said,
+they literally owed her life.
+
+"I could not have saved her without him," said uncle Tom, drawing
+slightly upon his imagination; "in another minute she must have been
+kicked to pieces, or dashed violently to the earth among the broken
+fragments of the cart, and"--with a happy after-thought--"the steam
+plough would have crushed its way over her mangled body."
+
+Mrs. Miller shuddered.
+
+"Oh, Tom, I never can trust her to you again!"
+
+"No, my dear; but I think you must trust her to Mr. Pryme; that young man
+deserves to be rewarded."
+
+"But, my dear Tom, there are things against his character. I assure you,
+Andrew himself saw----"
+
+"Pooh! pooh!" interrupted Mr. Esterworth. "Young men who sow their wild
+oats early are all the better husbands for it afterwards. I will give him
+a talking to if you like, but you and your husband must let Pussy have
+her own way; it is the least you can do after his conduct; and don't
+worry about his being poor, Caroline; I have nothing better to do with my
+money, and I shall take care that Pussy is none the worse off for my
+death. She is worth all the rest of your children put together--an
+Esterworth, every inch of her!"
+
+That, it is to be imagined, was the clenching argument in Mrs. Miller's
+mind. Uncle Tom's money was not to be despised, and, by reason of his
+money, uncle Tom's wishes were bound to carry some weight with them.
+
+Mr. Pryme, who had been staying for a few days at Kynaston, where,
+however, the cordial welcome given to him by its master was, in a great
+measure, neutralised by the coldness and incivility of its mistress,
+removed himself and his portmanteau, by uncle Tom's invitation, to
+Lutterton, and his engagement to Miss Miller became a recognised fact.
+
+"All the same, it is a very bad match for her," said Mrs. Miller, in
+confidence, to her husband.
+
+"And I should very much like to know who that sunshade belonged to,"
+added the M.P. for Meadowshire, severely.
+
+"I think, my dear, we shall have to overlook that part of the business,
+for, as Tom will leave them his money, why----"
+
+"Yes, yes, I quite understand; we must hope the young man has had a good
+lesson. Let bygones be bygones, certainly," and Mr. Miller took a pinch
+of snuff reflectively, and wondered what Tom Esterworth would "cut up
+for."
+
+"But I am _determined_," said Mrs. Miller, ere she closed the discussion,
+"I am determined that I will do better for Geraldine."
+
+After all, the mother had a second string to her bow, so the edict went
+forth that Beatrice was to be allowed to be happy in her own way, and the
+shadow of that fatal sunshade was no longer to be suffered to blacken the
+moral horizon of her father's soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+BY THE VICARAGE GATE.
+
+ Before our lives divide for ever,
+ While time is with us and hands are free,
+ (Time swift to fasten, and swift to sever
+ Hand from hand....)
+ I will say no word that a man might say
+ Whose whole life's love goes down in a day;
+ For this could never have been. And never
+ (Though the gods and the years relent) shall be.
+
+ Swinburne.
+
+
+The peacocks had it all to themselves on the terrace walk at Kynaston.
+They strutted up and down, craning and bridling their bright-hued necks
+with a proud consciousness of absolute proprietorship in the place, and
+their long tails trailed across the gravel behind them with the soft
+rustle of a woman's garments. Now and then their sad, shrill cries echoed
+weirdly through the deserted gardens.
+
+There was no one to see them--the gardeners had all gone home--and no one
+was moving from the house. Only one small boy, with a rough head and a
+red face, stood below the stone balustrade, half-hidden among the
+hollyhocks and the roses, looking wistfully up at the windows of the
+house.
+
+"What am I to do with it?" said Tommy Daintree, half-aloud to himself,
+and looked sorely perplexed and bewildered.
+
+Tommy had a commission to fulfil, a commission from Vera. He carried a
+little note in his hands, and he had promised Vera faithfully that he
+would wait near the house till he saw Captain Kynaston come in from his
+day's shooting, and give him the note into his own hands.
+
+"You quite understand, Tommy; no one else."
+
+"Yes, auntie, I quite understand."
+
+And Tommy had been waiting there an hour, but still there was no sign of
+Captain Kynaston's return; he was getting very tired and very hungry by
+this time, for he had had no tea. He had heard the dressing-bell ring
+long ago in the house--it must be close upon their dinner hour. Tommy
+could not guess that, by an unaccustomed chance, the master of the house
+had gone in by the back-door to-day, and that he had been in some time.
+
+Presently some one pushed aside the long muslin curtains, and came
+stepping out of the long French window on to the terrace. It was Helen.
+
+She was dressed for dinner; she wore a pale blue dress, cut open at the
+neck, a string of pearls and a jewelled locket hung at her throat; she
+turned round, half laughing, to some one who was following her.
+
+"You will see all the county magnates at Shadonake to-morrow. You will
+have quite enough of them, I promise you; they are neither lively nor
+entertaining."
+
+A young man, also in evening dress, had followed her out on to the
+terrace; it was Denis Wilde; he had arrived from town by the afternoon
+train. Why he should have thrown over several very good invitations to
+country houses in Norfolk and Suffolk, where there were large and
+cheerful parties gathered together, and partridge shooting to make a man
+dream of, in order to come down to the poor sport of Kynaston and the
+insipid society of a newly married couple, with whom he was not on very
+intimate terms, is a problem which Mr. Wilde alone could have
+satisfactorily solved. Being here, he was naturally disposed to make
+himself extremely agreeable to his hostess.
+
+"You can't think how anxious I am to inspect the _élite_ of Meadowshire!"
+he said, laughing. "My life is an incomplete thing without a sight of
+it."
+
+"You will witness the last token of mental aberration in a
+decently-brought up young woman in the person of Beatrice Miller. You
+know her. Well, she has actually engaged herself to a barrister whom
+nobody knows anything about, and who--_bien entendu_--has no briefs--they
+never have any. He was staying here for a couple of days; a slow, heavy
+young man, who quoted Blackstone. Maurice took a fancy to him abroad;
+however, he was clever enough to save Beatrice's life by stopping a
+run-away horse. Some people say the accident was the invention of the
+lovers' own imaginations; however, the parents believed in it, and it
+turned the scales in his favour; but he has taken himself off, I am
+thankful to say, and is staying at Lutterton with her uncle. Beatrice
+might have married well, but girls are such fools. Hallo, Topsy, what are
+you barking at?"
+
+Mrs. Kynaston's pug had come tearing out of the house with a whole chorus
+of noisy yappings. The peacocks, deeply wounded in their tenderest
+feelings, instantly took wing, and went sailing away majestically over
+the crimson and gold parterre of flowers below.
+
+"What can possess her to bark at the peacocks?" said Helen. "Be quiet,
+Topsy."
+
+But Topsy refused to be tranquillized.
+
+"She is barking at something below the terrace; perhaps there is a cat
+there," said Denis.
+
+"If so, it would be Dutch courage, indeed," answered Helen, laughing.
+They went to the edge of the stone parapet and looked over; there stood
+Tommy Daintree below them, among the hollyhocks.
+
+"Why, little boy, who are you, and what do you want? Why, are you not Mr.
+Daintree's little boy?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then what are you waiting for?"
+
+"I want to give a note to Captain Kynaston," said Tommy, crimson with
+confusion. "Is he ever coming in?"
+
+"He is in now; give me the note."
+
+"I was to give it to himself, to nobody else."
+
+"Who told you?"
+
+"Aunt Vera."
+
+"Oh!" There was a whole volume of meaning in the simple exclamation.
+Mrs. Kynaston held out her hand. "You can give it to me, I am Captain
+Kynaston's wife, you know. Give it to me, Tommy. Your name is Tommy,
+isn't it? Yes, I thought so. Mr. Wilde, will you be so kind as to fetch
+Tommy a peach off the dinner-table? Give the note to me, my dear, and you
+can tell your aunt that it shall be given to Captain Kynaston directly."
+
+When Denis returned from his mission to the dining-room he only found
+Tommy waiting for his peach upon the terrace steps. Mrs. Kynaston had
+gone back into the house.
+
+Tommy went off devouring his prey with, it must be confessed, rather a
+guilty conscience over it. Somehow or other, he felt that he had failed
+in the trust his aunt had placed in him; but then, Mrs. Kynaston had been
+very kind and very peremptory; she had almost taken the letter out of his
+hand, and she had smiled and looked quite like a fairy princess out of
+one of Minnie's story-books in her pretty blue silk dress and shining
+locket--and then, peaches were so very nice!
+
+What happened to Denis Wilde after the small boy's departure was this. He
+sauntered back to the drawing-room windows and looked in; no one was
+there. He then wandered further down the terrace till he came opposite
+the window of the boudoir--Mrs. Kynaston's own boudoir--which Sir John's
+loving hands had once lined with blue and silver for his Vera. Here he
+caught sight of Mrs. Kynaston's fair head and slender figure. Her back
+was turned to him; he was on the point of calling out to her, when
+suddenly the words upon his lips were arrested by something which he saw
+her doing. Instead of speaking, he simply stood still and stared at her.
+
+Mrs. Kynaston, unconscious of observation, held the note which Tommy had
+just given her over the steam of a small jug of hot water, which she had
+hastily ordered her maid to bring to her. In less than a minute the
+envelope unfastened of itself. Helen then deliberately took out the note
+and read it.
+
+What she read was this:--
+
+ "Dear Captain Kynaston,--I have something that I have promised to give
+ to you when you are alone. Would you mind coming round to the vicarage
+ after dinner to-night, at nine o'clock? You will find me at the
+ gate.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "Vera Nevill."
+
+Then Helen lit a candle, and fastened the letter up again with
+sealing-wax.
+
+And Denis Wilde crept away from the window on tip-toe with a sense of
+shocked horror upon him such as he never remembered having experienced in
+his life before.
+
+All at once his pretty, pleasant hostess, with whom he had been glad
+enough to banter, and with whom even he had been ready to enter upon a
+mild and innocent flirtation, became horrible and hateful to him; and
+there came into his mind, like an inspiration, the knowledge of her
+enmity to Vera; for it was Vera's note that she had opened and read. Then
+his instincts were straightway all awake with the acuteness of a danger,
+to something--he knew not what--that threatened the woman he loved.
+
+"Thank God, I am here," he said to himself. "That woman is her foe, and
+she will be dangerous to her. I would not have come to her house had I
+known it; but now I am here, I will stay, for it is certain that she will
+need a friend."
+
+At dinner-time the note lay by Maurice's side on the table. Whilst the
+soup was being helped he took it up and opened it. He little knew how
+narrowly both his wife and his guest watched him as he read it.
+
+But his face was inscrutable. Only he talked a little more, and seemed,
+perhaps, in better spirits than usual; but that is what a stranger could
+not have noticed, although it is possible that Helen may have done so.
+
+"By the vicarage gate," she had said, and it was there that he found her.
+Behind her lay the dark and silent garden, beyond it the house, with its
+wide-open drawing-room windows, and the stream of yellow light from the
+lamp within, lying in a golden streak across the lawn. She leant over the
+gate; an archway of greenery, dark in the night's dim light, was above
+her head, and clusters of pale, creamy roses hung down about her on every
+side.
+
+It was that sort of owl's light that has no distinctness in it, and yet
+is far removed from darkness. Vera's perfect figure, clad in some white,
+clinging garment that fell about her in thick, heavy folds, stood out
+with a statue-like clearness against the dark shrubs behind her. She
+seemed like some shadowy queen of the night. Out of the dimness, the
+clear oval of her perfect face shone pale as the waning moon far away
+behind the church tower, whilst the dusky veil of her dark hair lost
+itself vaguely in the shadows, and melted away into the background.
+A poet might have hymned her thus, but no painter could have painted her.
+
+And it was thus that he found her. For the first time for many weary
+weeks and months he was alone with her; for the first time he could speak
+to her freely and from his heart. He knew not what it was that had made
+her send for him, or why it was that he had come. He did not remember her
+note, or that she had said that she had something for him. All he knew
+was, that she had sent for him, and that he was with her.
+
+There was the gate between them, but her white soft hands were clasped
+loosely together over the top of it. He took them feverishly between his
+own.
+
+"I am late--you have waited for me, dear? Oh, Vera, how glad I am to be
+with you!"
+
+There was a dangerous tenderness in his voice that frightened her. She
+tried to draw away her hands.
+
+"I had something for you, or I should not have sent--please, Captain
+Kynaston--Maurice--please let my hands go."
+
+He was alone under the star-flecked heavens with the woman he loved,
+there was all the witchery of the pale moonlight about her, all the
+sweet perfumes of the summer night to intensify the fascination of her
+presence. There was a nameless glamour in the luminous dimness--a subtle
+seduction to the senses in the silence and the solitude; a bird chirruped
+once among the tangled roses overhead, and a soft, sighing breeze
+fluttered for one instant amid its long, trailing branches. And then,
+God knows how it came to pass, or what madness possessed the man;
+but suddenly there was no longer any faith, or honour, or truth for
+him--nothing on the face of the whole earth but Vera.
+
+He caught her passionately in his arms, and showered upon her lips the
+maddest, wildest kisses that man ever gave to woman.
+
+For one instant she lay still upon his heart; all the fury of her misery
+was at rest--all the storm of her sorrow was at peace--for one instant of
+time she tasted of life's sublimest joy ere the waters of blackness and
+despair closed in once more over her soul. For one instant only--then she
+remembered, and withdrew herself shudderingly from his grasp.
+
+"For God's sake, have pity upon me, Maurice!" she wailed. It was the cry
+of a broken heart that appealed to his manhood and his honour more surely
+and more directly than a torrent of reproach or a storm of indignation.
+
+"Forgive me," he murmured, humbly; "I am a brute to you. I had forgotten
+myself. I ought to have spared you, sweet. See, I have let you go; I will
+not touch you again; but it was hard to see you alone, to be near you,
+and yet to remember how we are parted. Vera, I have ruined your life; it
+is wonderful that you do not hate me."
+
+"A true woman never hates the man who has been hard on her," she
+answered, smiling sadly.
+
+"If it is any comfort to you to know it, I too am wretched; now it is too
+late: I know that my life is spoilt also."
+
+"No; why should that comfort me?" she said, wearily. She leant half back
+against the gate--if he could have seen her well in the uncertain light,
+he would have been shocked at the worn and haggard face of his beautiful
+Vera.
+
+Presently she spoke again.
+
+"I am sorry that I asked you to come--it was not wise, was it, Maurice?
+How long must you stop at Kynaston? Can you not go away? We are neither
+of us strong enough to bear this--I, I cannot go--but you, _must_ you be
+always here?"
+
+"Before God," he answered, earnestly, "I swear to you that I will go away
+if it is in my power to go."
+
+"Thank you." Then, with an effort, she roused herself to speak to him:
+"But that is not what I wanted to say; let me tell you why I sent for
+you. I made a promise, a wretched, stupid thing, to a tiresome little man
+I met in London--a Monsieur D'Arblet, a Frenchman; do you know him?"
+
+"D'Arblet! I never heard the name in my life that I know of."
+
+"Really, that seems odd, for I have a little parcel from him to you, and,
+strangely enough, he made me promise on my word of honour to give it to
+you when no one was near. I did not know how to keep my promise, for,
+though we may sometimes meet in public, we are not often likely to meet
+alone. I have it here; let me give it to you and have done with the
+thing; it has been on my mind."
+
+She drew a small packet from her pocket, and was about to give it to him,
+when suddenly his ear caught the sound of an approaching footstep; he
+looked nervously round, then he put forth his hand quickly and stopped
+her.
+
+"Hush, give me nothing now!" he said, in a low, hurried voice. "To-morrow
+we shall meet at Shadonake; if you will go near the Bath some time
+during the day after lunch is over, I will join you there, and you can
+give it to me; it can be of no possible importance; go in now quickly;
+good-night. It is my wife."
+
+She turned and fled swiftly back to the house through the darkness, and
+Maurice was left face to face with Helen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+DENIS WILDE'S LOVE.
+
+ A mighty pain to love it is,
+ And 'tis a pain that love to miss;
+ But, of all pains, the greatest pain
+ Is to love, but love in vain.
+
+ Cowley.
+
+
+He had not been mistaken. It was Helen who had crept out after him in the
+darkness, and whose slight figure, in her pale blue dress, stood close by
+him in an angle of the road.
+
+How long she had stood there and what she had heard he did not know. He
+expected a torrent of abuse and a storm of reproaches from her, but she
+refrained from either. She passed her arm within his, and walked beside
+him for several minutes in silence. Maurice, who felt rather guilty, was
+weak enough to say, hesitatingly,
+
+"The night was so fine, I strolled out to smoke----"
+
+"_Qui s'excuse s'accuse_," quoted Helen; "only you are not smoking,
+Maurice!"
+
+"My cigar has gone out; I--I met Miss Nevill at the gate of the
+vicarage."
+
+"So I saw," rather significantly.
+
+"I stopped to have a little talk to her. There is no harm, I suppose, in
+that!" he added, irritably.
+
+Helen laughed shortly and harshly.
+
+"Harm! oh dear, no; whoever said there was? By the way, is not this freak
+of yours of going out into the roads to smoke, as you say, alone, rather
+a slight on your guest? Here is Mr. Wilde; how very amusing! we all seem
+to be drawn out towards the vicarage to-night."
+
+Denis Wilde, in fact, had followed in the wake of his hostess, and they
+met him now by the lodge gates.
+
+"How very strange!" called out Helen to him, in her scornful, bantering
+voice; "how strange that we should all have gone out for solitary
+rambles, and all meet in the same place; and there was Miss Nevill out
+in the vicarage garden, also on a solitary ramble."
+
+"Is Miss Nevill there? I think I will go on and call upon her," said
+Denis.
+
+"You too, Mr. Wilde!" cried Helen. "Have you fallen a victim to the
+beauty? We heard enough of her in town; she turned all the men's heads;
+even married men are not safe from her snares, and yet it is singular
+that none of her admirers care to marry her; there are some women whom
+all men make love to, but whom none care to make wives of!"
+
+And Maurice was a coward, and spoke no word in her defence; he did not
+dare; but young Denis Wilde drew himself up proudly.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston," he said, sternly, "I must ask you not to speak
+slightingly of Miss Nevill."
+
+"Good gracious, why not? I suppose we are all free to use our tongues and
+our eyes in this world! Why should you become the woman's champion?"
+
+"Because," answered Denis, gravely, "I hope to make her my wife."
+
+Maurice was man enough to hold out his hand to him in the darkness.
+
+"I am glad of it," he said, rather hoarsely; "make her happy, Denis, if
+you can."
+
+"Thanks. I shall go on to see her now."
+
+Helen murmured an unintelligible apology, and Denis Wilde passed onwards
+towards the vicarage.
+
+He had taken her good name into his keeping, he had shielded her from
+that other woman's slandering tongue; but he had done so in his despair.
+He had spoken no lie in saying that he hoped to make her his wife; but it
+was no doubt a fact that Helen and her husband would now believe him to
+be engaged to her. Would Vera be induced to verify his words, and to
+place herself and her life beneath the shelter of his love, or would she
+only be angry with him for venturing to presume upon his hopes? Denis
+could not tell.
+
+Ten minutes later he stood alone with her in the vicarage dining-room;
+he had sent in his card with a pencilled line upon it to ask for a few
+minutes' conversation with her.
+
+Vera had desired that her visitor might be shown into the dining-room.
+Old Mrs. Daintree had been amazed and scandalized, and even Marion had
+opened her eyes at so unusual a proceeding; but the vicar was out by a
+sick bedside in the village, and no one else ever controlled Vera's
+actions.
+
+Nevertheless, she herself looked somewhat surprised at so late a visit
+from him. And then, somehow or other, Denis made it plain to her how it
+was he had come, and what he had said of her. Her name, he told her, had
+been lightly spoken of; to have defended it without authority would have
+been to do her more harm than good; to take it under his lawful
+protection had been instinctively suggested to him by his longing to
+shield her. Would she forgive him?
+
+"It was Mrs. Kynaston who spoke evil things of me," said Vera, wearily.
+She was very tired, she hardly understood, she scarcely cared about what
+he was saying to her; it mattered very little what was said to her. There
+was that other scene under the shadow of the roses of the gateway so
+vividly before her; the memory of Maurice's passionate kisses upon her
+lips, the sound of his beloved voice in her ears. What did anything else
+signify?
+
+And meanwhile Denis Wilde was pouring out his whole soul to her.
+
+"My darling, give me the right to defend you now and always," he pleaded;
+"do not refuse me the happiness of protecting your dear name from such
+women. I know you don't love me, dear, not as I love you, but I will not
+mind that; I will ask you for nothing that you will not give me freely;
+only try me--I think I could make you happy, love. At any rate, you shall
+have anything that tenderness and devotion can give you to bring peace
+into your life. Vera, darling, answer me."
+
+"Oh, I am very tired," was all she said, moaningly and wearily, passing
+her hand across her aching brow like a worn-out child.
+
+It was life or death to him. To her it was such a little matter! What
+were all his words and his prayers beside that heartache that was driving
+her into her grave! He could do her no good. Why could he not leave her
+in peace?
+
+And yet, at length, something of the fervour and the passion of his love
+struck upon her soul and arrested her attention. There is something so
+touching and so pitiful in that first boy-love that asks for nothing in
+return, craves for no other reward than to be suffered to exist; that
+amongst all the selfish and half-hearted passions of older and wiser men,
+it must needs elicit some response of gratitude at least, if not of
+answering love, in the heart of the woman who is the object of such rare
+devotion.
+
+It dawned at length upon Vera, as she listened to his fervent pleading,
+and as she saw the tears that rose in poor Denis's earnest eyes, and
+the traces of deep emotion on his smooth, boyish face, that here was,
+perchance, the one utterly pure and noble love that had ever been laid
+at her feet.
+
+There arose a sentiment of pity in her heart, and a vague wonder as to
+his grief. Did he suffer, she asked herself, as she herself suffered?
+
+"Vera, Vera, I only ask you to be my wife. I do not ask you for your
+heart; only give me your dear self. Only let me be always with you to
+brighten your life and to take care of you."
+
+How was she to resist such absolute unselfishness?
+
+"Oh, Denis, how good you are to me!" burst from her lips. "How can I take
+you at your word? Do you not know that my heart is gone from me? I have
+no love to give you."
+
+"Yes, yes, darling," he said, quickly, pressing her hand to his lips. "Do
+not pain yourself by speaking of it. I have guessed it. I have always
+seemed to know it. But it is hopeless, is it not? And I--I would so
+gladly take you away and comfort you if I could."
+
+And so, in the end, she half yielded to him. What else was she to do? She
+gave him a sort of promise.
+
+"If I can, it shall be as you wish," she said; "but give me till
+to-morrow night. I will think of it all day, and if you will come here
+again to-morrow evening, I will answer you. Give me one more day--only
+one," she repeated, with a dull reiteration, out of her utter weariness.
+
+"One day will soon be gone," he said, joyfully, as he bade her good
+night.
+
+Alas, how little he knew what that day was to bring forth!
+
+That night the heavens were overcast with heavy clouds, and torrents of
+rain poured down upon the face of the earth, and peal after peal of
+thunder boomed through the heavy heated air. Helen could not sleep; she
+rose, feverish and unrested from her husband's side, and paced wildly and
+miserably about the room. Then she went to the window and drew back the
+curtain, and looked out upon the storm-driven world. The clouds racked
+wildly across the sky; the trees bent and swayed before the howling wind;
+the rain beat in floods upon the ground; yet greater and fiercer still
+was the tempest that raged in Helen Kynaston's heart. Hatred, jealousy,
+and malice strove and struggled within her, and something direr still--a
+terror that she could not quench nor stifle; for late that night her
+husband had said to her suddenly, without a word of warning or
+preparation--
+
+"Helen, do you know a Frenchman called D'Arblet?"
+
+Helen had been at her dressing-table--her back was turned to him--he did
+not see the livid pallor which blanched her cheeks at his question.
+
+A little pause, during which she busied herself among the trifles upon
+the table.
+
+"No, I never heard the name in my life," she said, at length.
+
+"That is odd--because neither have I--and yet the man has sent me a
+parcel." It was of so little importance to him, that it did not occur
+to him that there could possibly be any occasion for secresy concerning
+Vera's commission. What could an utter stranger have to send to him that
+could possibly concern him in any way?
+
+It did not strike him how strained and forced was the voice in which his
+wife presently asked him a question.
+
+"And the parcel! You have opened it?"
+
+"No, not yet," began Maurice, stifling a yawn; and he would have gone
+on to explain to her that it was not yet actually in his possession,
+although, probably, he would not have told her that it was Vera who was
+to give it to him; only at that minute the maid came into the room, and
+he changed the subject.
+
+But Helen had guessed that it was Vera who was the bearer of that parcel.
+How it had come to pass she could not tell, but too surely she divined
+that Vera had in her possession those fatal letters that she had once
+written to the French vicomte; the letters that would blast her for ever
+in her husband's estimation, and turn his luke-warmness and his coldness
+into actual hatred and repulsion.
+
+And was it likely that Vera, with such a weapon in her hands, would spare
+her? What woman, with so signal a revenge in her power, would forego the
+delight of wreaking it upon the woman who had taken from her the man she
+loved? Helen knew that in Vera's place she would show no mercy to her
+rival.
+
+It was all clear as daylight to her now; the appointment at the vicarage
+gate, the something which she had said in her note she had for him; the
+whole mystery of the secret meeting between them--it was Vera's revenge.
+Vera, whom Maurice loved, and whom she, Helen, hated with such a deadly
+hatred!
+
+And then, in the silence of the night, whilst her husband slept, and
+whilst the thunder and the wind howled about her home, Helen crept forth
+from her room, and sought for that fatal packet of letters which her
+husband had told her he had "not yet" opened.
+
+Oh, if she could only find them and destroy them before he ever saw them
+again! Long and patiently she looked for them, but her search was in
+vain. She ransacked his study and his dressing-room; she opened every
+drawer, and fumbled in every pocket, but she found nothing.
+
+She was frightened, too, to be about the house like a thief in the night.
+Every gust of wind that creaked among the open doors made her start,
+every flash of lightning that lighted up the faces of the old family
+portraits, looking down upon her with their fixed eyes, made her turn
+pale and shiver, lest she should see them move, or hear them speak.
+
+Only her jealousy and her hatred burnt fiercely above her terror; she
+would not give in, she told herself, until she found it.
+
+Denis Wilde, who was restless too, had heard her soft footsteps along the
+passage outside his door; and, with a vague uneasiness as to who could be
+about at such an hour, he came creeping out of his room, and peeped in at
+the library door.
+
+He saw her sitting upon the floor, a lighted candle by her side, an open
+drawer, out of her husband's writing-table, upon her lap, turning over
+papers, and bills, and note-books with eager, trembling hands. And he saw
+in her white, set face, and wild, scared eyes, that which made him draw
+back swiftly and shudderingly from the sight of her.
+
+"Good God!" he murmured to himself, as he sought his room again, "the
+woman has murder in her face!"
+
+And at last she had to give it up; the letters were not to be found. The
+storm without settled itself to rest, the thunder died away in the far
+distance over the hills, and Helen, worn out with fatigue and emotion,
+sought a troubled slumber upon the sofa in her dressing-room.
+
+"She cannot have given it to him," was the conclusion she came to at
+last. "Well, she will do so to-morrow, and I--I will not let her out of
+my sight, not for one instant, all the day!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+A GARDEN PARTY.
+
+ I have done for ever with all these things:
+ The songs are ended, the deeds are done;
+ There shall none of them gladden me now, not one.
+ There is nothing good for me under the sun
+ But to perish--as these things perished.
+
+ A. L. Gordon.
+
+
+Mr. Guy Miller is a young gentleman who has not played an important part
+in these pages; nevertheless, but for him, sundry events which took place
+at Shadonake at this time would not have had to be recorded.
+
+It so happened that Guy Miller's twenty-first birthday was in the third
+week of September, and that it was determined by his parents to celebrate
+the day in an appropriate and fitting manner. Guy was a youth of no
+particular looks, and no particular manners; he had been at Oxford,
+but his father had lately taken him away from it, with a view to his
+travelling, and seeing something of the world before he settled down
+as a country gentleman. He had had no opportunity, therefore, of
+distinguishing himself at college; but as he was not overburdened with
+brains, and had, moreover, never been known to study with interest any
+profounder literature than "Handley Cross" and "Mr. Sponge's Sporting
+Tour," it is possible that, even had he been left undisturbed to pursue
+his studies at the university, he would never have developed into a
+bright or shining ornament at that seat of learning.
+
+As it was, Guy came home to the paternal mansion an ignorant but amiable
+and inoffensive young man, with a small, fluffy moustache, and no
+particular bent in life beyond smoking short pipes, and loafing about the
+premises with his hands in his trousers pockets.
+
+He was a tolerable shot, and a plucky, though not a graceful horseman. He
+hated dancing because he trod on his partner's toes, and shunned ladies'
+society because he had to make himself agreeable to them. Nevertheless,
+having been fairly "licked into shape" by a course successively of Eton
+and of Oxford, he was able to behave like a gentleman in his mother's
+house when it was necessary for him to do so, and he quite appreciated
+the fact of his being an important personage in the Miller family.
+
+It was to celebrate the coming of age of this interesting young gentleman
+that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had settled to give a monster entertainment to
+several hundreds of their fellow-creatures.
+
+The proceedings were to include a variety of instructive and amusing
+pastimes, and were to last pretty nearly all day. There was to be a
+country flower-show in a big tent on the lawn; that was pure business,
+and concerned the farmers as much as the gentry. There were also to be
+athletic sports in a field for the active young men, lawn-tennis for the
+active young women, an amateur polo match got up by the energy and pluck
+of Miss Beatrice and her uncle Tom; a "cold collation" in a second tent
+to be going on all the afternoon; the whole to be finished up with a
+dance in the large drawing room, for a select few, after sunset.
+
+The programme, in all conscience, was varied enough; and the day broke
+hopefully, after the wild storm of the previous night, bright and cool
+and sunny, with every prospect of being perfectly fine.
+
+Beatrice, happy in the possession of her lover, was full of life and
+energy; she threw herself into all the preparations of the _fête_ with
+her whole heart. Herbert, who came over from Lutterton at an early hour,
+followed her about like a dog, obeying her orders implicitly, but
+impeding her proceedings considerably by a constant under-current of
+love-making, by which he strove to vary and enliven the operation of
+sticking standard flags into the garden borders, and nailing up wreaths
+of paper roses inside the tent.
+
+Mrs. Miller, having consented to the engagement, like a sensible woman,
+was resolved to make the best of it, and was, if not cordial, at least
+pleasantly civil to her future son-in-law. She had given over Beatrice
+as a bad job; she had resolved to find suitable matches for Guy and for
+Geraldine.
+
+By one o'clock the company was actually beginning to arrive, the small
+fry of the neighbourhood being, of course, the first to appear. By-and-by
+came the rank and fashion of Meadowshire, and by three o'clock the
+gardens were crowded.
+
+It was a brilliant scene; there was the gaily-dressed crowd going in and
+out of the tents, groups of elderly people sitting talking under the
+trees, lawn-tennis players at one end of the garden, the militia band
+playing Strauss's waltzes at the other, the scarlet and white flags
+floating bravely over everybody in the breeze, and a hum of many voices
+and a sound of merry laughter in every direction.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Miller, and Guy, the hero of the day, moved about amongst
+the guests from group to group. Guy, it must be owned, looking
+considerably bored. Beatrice, with her lover in attendance, looking
+flushed and rosy with the many congratulations which the news of her
+engagement called forth on every side; and the younger boys, home from
+school for the occasion, getting in everybody's way, and directing their
+main attention to the ices in the refreshment-tent. Such an afternoon
+party, it was agreed, had not been held in Meadowshire within the memory
+of man; but then, dear Mrs. Miller had such energy and such a real talent
+for organization; and if the company _was_ a little mixed, why, of
+course, she must recollect Mr. Miller's position, and how important it
+was for him, with the prospect of a general election coming on, to make
+himself thoroughly popular with all classes.
+
+No one in all the gay crowd was more admired or more noticed than "the
+bride," as she was still called, young Mrs. Kynaston. Helen had surpassed
+herself in the elaboration of her toilette. The country dames and
+damsels, in their somewhat dowdy home-made gowns, could scarcely remember
+their manners, so eager were they to stare at the marvels of that
+wondrous garment of sheeny satin, and soft, creamy gauze, sprinkled over
+with absolute works of art in the shape of wreaths of many-hued
+embroidered birds and flowers, with which the whole dress was cunningly
+and dexterously adorned. It was a masterpiece of the great Worth; rich
+without being gaudy, intricate without losing its general effect of
+colour, and, above all, utterly and absolutely inimitable by the hands
+of any meaner artist.
+
+Mrs. Kynaston looked well; no one had ever seen her look better; there
+was an unusual colour in her cheeks, an unusual glitter in her blue eyes,
+that always seemed to be roving restlessly about her as though in search
+of something even all the time she was saying her polite commonplaces in
+answer to the pleasant and pretty speeches that she received on all sides
+from men and women alike.
+
+But through it all she never let Vera Nevill out of her sight; where Vera
+moved, she moved also. When she walked across the lawn, Mrs. Kynaston
+made some excuse to go in the same direction; when she entered either of
+the tents, Helen also found it necessary to go into them. But the crowd
+was too great for any one to remark this; no one saw it save Denis Wilde,
+whose eyes were sharpened by his love.
+
+Once Helen saw that Maurice and Vera were speaking to each other. She
+could not get near enough to hear what they said, but she saw him bend
+down and speak to her earnestly, and there was a sad, wistful look in
+Vera's upturned eyes as she answered him. Helen's heart beat with a wild,
+mad jealousy as she watched them; and yet it was but a few words that had
+passed between them.
+
+"Vera, young Wilde says you are going to marry him; is it true?"
+
+"He wants me to do so, but I don't think I can."
+
+"Why not? It would be happier for you, child; forget the past and begin
+afresh. He is a good boy, and by-and-by he will be well off."
+
+"You, too--you advise me to do this?" she answered with unwonted
+bitterness. "Oh, how wise and calculating one ought to be to live happily
+in this miserable world!"
+
+He looked pained.
+
+"I cannot do you any good," he said, rather brokenly. "God knows I would
+if I could. I can only be a curse to you. Give me at least the credit of
+unselfishly wishing you to be less unhappy than you are."
+
+And then the crowd, moving onwards, parted them from each other.
+
+"Do not forget to meet me at the Bath," she called out to him as he went.
+
+"Oh, to be sure! I had forgotten. I will be there just before the dancing
+begins."
+
+And then Denis Wilde took his place by her side.
+
+If Mrs. Kynaston surpassed herself in looks and animation that day, Vera,
+on the contrary, had never looked less well.
+
+Her eyes were heavy with sleepless nights and many tears; her movements
+were slower and more languid than of wont, and her face was pale and
+thin.
+
+Meadowshire generally, that had ceased to trouble itself much about her
+when she had thrown over the richest baronet in the county, considered
+itself, nevertheless, to be somewhat aggrieved by the falling off in her
+appearance, and passed its appropriate and ill-natured comments upon the
+fact.
+
+"How ill she looks," said one woman to another.
+
+"Positively old. I suppose she thought she could whistle poor Sir John
+back again whenever she chose; now he is out of the country she would
+give her eyes for him!"
+
+"I daresay; and looks as if she had cried them out; but he must be glad
+to have escaped her! Well, it serves her right for behaving so badly. I'm
+sure I don't pity her."
+
+"Nor I, indeed."
+
+And the two amiable women passed onwards to discuss some other ill-fated
+victim.
+
+But to the two men who loved her Vera that day was as beautiful as ever;
+for love sees no flaw in the face that reigns supreme in the soul. And
+Vera sat still in her corner of the tent where she had taken refuge, and
+leant her tired, aching head against a gaudy pink-and-white striped
+pillar. It was the tent where the flower-show was going on. From her
+sheltered nook there was not much that was lovely to be seen, not a
+vestige of a rose or a carnation to refresh her tired eyes, only a
+counter covered with samples of potatoes and monster cauliflowers;
+and there was a slab of white wood with pats of yellow butter, done up in
+moss and ferns, which had been sent from the principal dairy-farms of the
+county, and before which there was a constant succession of elderly and
+interested housewives tasting and comparing notes. There seemed some
+difficulty in deciding to whom the butter prize was to be awarded, and at
+last a committee of ladies was formed; they all tasted, solemnly, of each
+sample all round, and then they each gave their verdict differently, so
+that it had all to be done over again amidst a good deal of laughter and
+merriment.
+
+Vera was vaguely amused by this scene that went on just in front of her.
+When the knotty point was settled, the committee moved on to decide upon
+something else, and she was left again to the uninterrupted contemplation
+of the Flukes and the York Regents.
+
+Denis Wilde had sat by her for some time, but at last she had begged him
+to leave her. Her head ached, she said; if he would not mind going, and
+he went.
+
+Presently, Beatrice, beaming with happiness, found her out in her corner.
+
+"Oh, Vera!" she said, coming up to her, all radiant with smiles, "you are
+the only one of my friends who has not yet wished me joy."
+
+"That is not because I have not thought of you, Beatrice, dear," she
+answered, heartily grasping her friend's outstretched hands. "I was so
+very glad to hear that everything has come right for you at last. How did
+it all happen?"
+
+"I will come over to the vicarage to-morrow, and tell you the whole
+story. Oh! do you remember meeting Herbert and me, that foggy morning,
+outside Tripton station?"
+
+Would Vera ever forget it?
+
+"I little thought then how happily everything was to end for us. I used
+to think we should have to elope! Poor Herbert, he was always frightened
+out of his life when I said that. But we have had a very narrow escape
+of being blighted beings to the end of our lives. If it hadn't been for
+uncle Tom and that dear darling mare, Clochette, whom I should like
+to keep in a gold and jewelled stall to the end of her ever-blessed
+days!----Ah, well! I've no time to tell you now--I will come over to
+Sutton to-morrow, and I may bring him, may I not?"
+
+"Him," of course, meaning Mr. Herbert Pryme. Vera requested that he might
+be brought by all means.
+
+"Well, I must run away now--there are at least a hundred of these stupid
+people to whom I must go and make myself agreeable. By the way, Vera, how
+dull you look, up in this corner by yourself. Why do you sit here all
+alone?"
+
+"My head aches; I am glad to be quiet."
+
+"But you mean to dance by-and-by, I hope?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I daresay. Go back to your guests, Beatrice; I am getting on
+very well."
+
+Beatrice went off smiling and waving her hand. Vera could watch her
+outside in the sunshine, moving about from group to group, shaking hands
+with first one and then another, laughing at some playful sally, or
+smiling demurely over some graver words of kindness. She was always
+popular, was Beatrice, with her bright talk and her plain clever face,
+and there was not a man or woman in all that crowd who did not wish her
+happiness.
+
+And so the day wore away, and the polo match--very badly played--was
+over, and the votaries of lawn-tennis were worn out with running up and
+down, and the flowers and the fruits in the show-tent began to look
+limp and dusty. The farmers and those people of small importance who had
+only been invited "from two to five," began now to take their departure,
+and their carriage wheels were to be heard driving away in rapid
+succession from the front door. Then the hundred or so of the "best
+county people," who were remaining later for the dancing, began to think
+of leaving the lawns before the dew fell. There was a general move
+towards the house, and even the band "limbered up," and began to transfer
+itself from the garden into the hall, where its labours were to begin
+afresh.
+
+Then it was that Vera crept forth out of her sheltered corner, and,
+unseen and unnoticed save by one watchful pair of eyes, wended her way
+through the shrubbery walks in the direction of the Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+SHADONAKE BATH.
+
+ A jolly place--in times of old,
+ But something ails it now:
+ The spot is cursed!
+
+ Wordsworth.
+
+
+Calm and still, like the magic mirror of the legend, Shadonake Bath lay
+amongst its everlasting shadows.
+
+The great belt of fir-trees beyond it, the sheltering evergreens on
+the nearer side, the tiers of grey, moss-grown steps that encompassed
+it about, all found their image again upon its smooth and untroubled
+surface. There was a golden light from the setting sun to the west,
+and the pale mist of a shadowy crescent moon had risen in the east.
+
+It was all quiet here--faint echoes of distant voices and far-away
+laughter came up in little gusts from the house; but there was no trace
+of the festivities down by the desolate water, nothing but the dark
+fir-trees above it, and the great white heads of the water-lilies that
+lay like jewels upon its silent bosom.
+
+Vera sat down upon the steps, and rested her chin in her hands, and
+waited. The house and the gardens behind her were shut out by the thick
+screen of laurels and rhododendrons. Before her, on the other side, were
+the fir-trees, with their red, bronzed trunks, and the soft, dark brown
+carpet that lay at their feet; there was not even a squirrel stirring
+among their branches, nor a bird that fluttered beneath their shadows.
+
+Vera waited. She was not impatient nor anxious. She had nothing to say
+to Maurice when he came--she did not mean to keep him, not even for five
+minutes, by her side; she did not want to run any further risks with
+him--it was better not--better that she should never again be alone with
+him. She only meant just to give him that wretched little brown paper
+parcel that weighed upon her conscience with the sense of an unfulfilled
+vow, and then to go back with him to the house at once. They could have
+nothing more to say to each other.
+
+Strangely enough, as she sat there musing all her life came back in
+review before her. The old days at Rome, with the favourite sister who
+was dead and gone; her own gay, careless life, with its worldly aims and
+desires; her first arrival at Sutton, her determination to make herself
+Sir John Kynaston's wife, and then her fatal love for his brother; it all
+came back to her again. All kinds of little details that she had long
+forgotten came flooding in upon her memory. She remembered how she had
+first seen Maurice standing at the foot of the staircase, with the light
+of the lamp upon his handsome head; and then, again, how one morning she
+and he had stood together in this very place by the Bath, and how she had
+told him, shuddering, that it would be dreadful to be drowned there, and
+she had cried out in a nameless terror that she wished she had not seen
+it for the first time with him by her side; and then Helen had come down
+from the house and joined them, and they had all three gone away
+together. She smiled a little to herself over that foolish, reasonless
+terror. The quiet pool of water did not look dreadful to her now--only
+cool, and still, and infinitely restful.
+
+By-and-by other thoughts came into her mind. She recalled her interview
+with old Lady Kynaston at Walpole Lodge, when she had so nearly promised
+her to give back her hand to her eldest son, when she would have done so
+had it not been for that sight of Maurice's face in the adjoining room.
+She wondered what Lady Kynaston had thought of her sudden change of mind;
+what she had been able to make of it; whether she had ever guessed at
+what had been the truth. It seemed only yesterday that the old lady had
+told her to be wise and brave, and to begin her life over again, and to
+make the best of the good things of this world that were still left to
+her.
+
+"There is a pain that goes right through the heart," Maurice's mother had
+said to her; "I who speak to you have felt it. I thought I should die of
+it, but you see I did not."
+
+Alas! did not Vera know that pain all too well; that heartache that
+banishes peace by day and sleep by night, and that will not wear itself
+out?
+
+And yet other women had borne it, and had lived and been even happy in
+other ways; but she could not be happy. Was it because her heart was
+deeper, or because her sense of pain was greater than that of others?
+
+Vera could not tell. She only wished, and longed, and even prayed that
+she might have the strength to become Denis Wilde's wife; that she might
+taste once more of peace, if not of joy; and yet all her longings and all
+her prayers only made her realize the more how utterly the thing was
+beyond her power.
+
+To Maurice, and Maurice alone, belonged her life and her soul, and Vera
+felt that it would be easier for her to be true to the sad, dim memory
+of his love than to give her heart and her allegiance to any other upon
+earth.
+
+So she sat and mused, and pondered, and the amber light in the east faded
+away into palest saffron, and the solemn shadows deepened and lengthened
+upon the still bosom of the water.
+
+Suddenly there came a sharp footstep and the rustle of a woman's silken
+skirts across the stone flags behind her. She looked up quickly; Helen
+stood beside her. Helen, in all the sheen of her gay Paris garments,
+with the evening light upon her uncovered head, and the glow of a
+passion, fiercer than madness, in her glittering eyes. Some prescience
+of evil--she knew not of what--made Vera spring to her feet.
+
+Helen spoke to her shortly and defiantly.
+
+"Miss Nevill, you are waiting here for my husband, are you not?"
+
+A faint flush rose in Vera's face.
+
+"Yes," she answered, very quietly. "I am waiting to speak a few words to
+him."
+
+"You have something to give him, have you not? Some letters that are
+mine, and which you have probably read."
+
+Helen said the words quickly and feverishly; her voice shook and
+trembled. Vera looked surprised and even indignant.
+
+"I don't understand you, Mrs. Kynaston," she began, coldly.
+
+"Oh, yes, you understand me perfectly. Give me my letters, Miss Nevill;
+you have no doubt read them all," and she laughed harshly and sneeringly.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, you are labouring under some delusion," said Vera,
+quietly; "I have no letters of yours, and if I had," with a ring of utter
+contempt, "I should not be likely to have opened them."
+
+For it did not occur to her that Helen was speaking of Monsieur
+D'Arblet's parcel; that did not in the least convey the idea of letters
+to her mind; nor had it ever entered into her head to speculate about
+what that unhappy little packet could possibly contain; she had never
+even thought about it.
+
+"I have no letters of yours," she repeated.
+
+"You are saying what is false," cried Helen, angrily. "How can you dare
+to deny it? You know you have got them, you are here to give them to
+Maurice, knowing that they will ruin me. You _shall_ not give them to
+him. I have come to take them from you--I _will_ have them."
+
+"I do not even know what you are speaking about," answered Vera. "Why
+should I want to ruin you, if, indeed, such a thing is to be done?"
+
+"Because you hate me as much as I hate you."
+
+"Hate is an ugly word," said Vera, rather scornfully. "I have no reason
+to hate you, and I do not know why you should hate me."
+
+"Don't imagine you can put me off with empty words," cried Helen, wildly.
+She made a step forward; her white hands clenched themselves together
+with a reasonless fury; she was as white as the crescent moon that rose
+beyond the trees.
+
+"Give me my letters--the letters you are waiting here to give to my
+husband!" she cried.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, do not be so angry," said Vera, becoming almost
+bewildered by her violence; "you are really mistaken--pray calm yourself.
+I have no letters: what I was going to give your husband was only a
+little parcel from a man who is abroad--he is a foreigner. I do not think
+it is of the slightest importance to anybody. I have not opened it, I
+have no idea what it contains, and your husband himself said it was
+nothing--only I have promised to give it him alone; it was a whim of the
+little Frenchman who entrusted me with it, and whom, I must honestly tell
+you, I believe to have been half-mad. Only, unfortunately, I have
+promised to deliver it in this manner."
+
+Mrs. Kynaston was looking at her fixedly; her anger seemed to have died
+away.
+
+"Yes," she said, "it was Monsieur D'Arblet who gave them to you."
+
+"That was his name, D'Arblet. I did not like the man; but he bothered me
+until I foolishly undertook his commission. I am sorry now that I did so,
+as it seems to vex you so much; but I do not think there are letters in
+the parcel, and I certainly have not opened it."
+
+Helen was silent again for a minute, looking at her intently.
+
+"I don't believe you," she said; "they are my letters, sure enough, and
+you have read them. What woman would not do so in your place? and you
+know that they will ruin me with my husband."
+
+"It is you yourself that tell me so!" cried Vera, impatiently, beginning
+to lose her temper. "I do not even know what you are talking about!"
+
+"Miss Nevill!" cried Helen, suddenly changing her tone; "give that parcel
+to me, I entreat you."
+
+"I am very sorry, Mrs. Kynaston; I cannot possibly do so."
+
+"Oh yes, you can--you will," said Helen, imploringly. "What can it matter
+to you now? It is I who am his wife; you cannot get any good out of a
+mere empty revenge. Why should you spoil my chance of winning his heart?
+I know well enough that he loves you, but----"
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, pray, pray recollect yourself; do not say such words to
+me!" cried Vera, deeply distressed.
+
+"Why should I not say them! You and I know well enough that it is true.
+I hate you, I am jealous of you, for I know that my husband loves you;
+and yet, if you will only give me that parcel, I will forgive you--I
+will try to live at peace with you--I will even pray and strive for your
+happiness! Let me have a chance of making him love me!"
+
+"For God's sake, Mrs. Kynaston, do not say these things to me!" cried
+Vera. She was crimson with pain and shame, and shocked beyond measure
+that his wife should be so lost to all decency and self-respect as to
+speak so openly of her husband's love for herself.
+
+"I will not and cannot listen to you!"
+
+"But you will not be so cruel as to ruin me?" pleaded Helen; "only give
+me that parcel, and I shall be safe! You say you have not opened it;
+well, I can hardly believe it, because in your place I should have read
+every word; yet, if you will give them to me, I will forgive you."
+
+"You do not understand what you are saying!" cried Vera, impatiently.
+"How can I give you what is not mine to give? I have no right to dispose
+of this parcel"--she held it in her hand--"and I have given my word that
+I will give it to your husband alone. How could I be so false as to do
+anything else with it? You are asking impossibilities, Mrs. Kynaston."
+
+"You will not give it to me?" There was a sudden change in Helen's
+voice--she pleaded no longer.
+
+"No, certainly not."
+
+"And that is your last word?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+There was a silence. Helen looked away over the water towards the
+fir-trees. She was pale, but very quiet; all her angry agitation seemed
+to have died away. Vera stood a little beneath her on the lowest step,
+close down to the water; she held the little parcel that was the object
+of the dispute in her hands, and was looking at it with an expression of
+deep annoyance; she was wishing heartily that she had never seen either
+it or the wretched little Frenchman who had insisted upon confiding it to
+her care.
+
+Neither of them spoke; for an instant neither of them even moved. There
+was a striking contrast between them: Helen, slight and fragile in her
+bird-of-paradise garments, with jewels about her neck, and golden chains
+at her wrist; her pretty piquant face, almost childish in the contour of
+the small, delicate features. Vera, in her plain, tight-fitting dress,
+whose only beauty lay in the perfect simplicity with which it followed
+the lines of her glorious figure; her pure, lovely face, laden with its
+burden of deep sadness, a little turned away from the other woman who had
+taken everything from her, and left her life so desolate. And there was
+the silent pool at their feet, and the darkening belt of fir-trees
+beyond, and the pale moon ever brightening in the shadowy heavens. It was
+a picture such as a painter might have dreamt of.
+
+Not a sound--only once the faint cry of some wild animal in the far-off
+woods, and the flutter of a night-moth on the wing. Helen's face was
+turned eastwards towards the fast-fading evening glow.
+
+What is it that sends the curse of Cain into the human heart?
+
+Did some foul and evil thing, wandering homeless around that fatal spot,
+enter then and there, unbidden, into her sin-stained soul? Or had the
+hellish spirit been always there within her, only biding its time to
+burst forth in all its naked and hideous horror?
+
+God only knows.
+
+"Vera, gather me a water-lily! See how lovely they are. I am going back
+to dance; I want a water-lily."
+
+Vera looked up startled. The sudden change of manner and the familiar
+mention of her name struck her as strange. Helen was leaning towards her,
+all flushed and eager, pointing with her glistening, jewelled fingers
+over the water.
+
+"Don't you see how white they are, and how they gleam in the moonlight
+like silver? Would not one of them look lovely in my hair?"
+
+"I do not think I can reach them," said Vera, slowly. She was puzzled and
+half-frightened by the quick, feverish words and manner.
+
+"Yes, yes, your arms are long--much longer than mine; you can reach them
+very well. See, I will hold the sleeve of your dress like this; it is
+very strong. I can hold you quite safely. Kneel down and reach out for
+it, Vera. Do, please, I want it so much. There is one so close there,
+just beyond your hand. Stoop over a little further; don't be afraid;
+I have got you tightly."
+
+And Vera knelt and stretched out over the dark face of the waters.
+
+Then, all at once, there was a cry--a wild struggle--a splash of the
+dark, seething waves--and Helen stood up again in her bright raiment
+alone on the margin of the pool; whilst ever-widening circles stretched
+hurriedly away and away, as though terror-stricken, from the baleful
+spot where Vera Nevill had sunk below the ill-fated waters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Someone came madly rushing out of the bushes behind her. Helen screamed
+aloud.
+
+"It was an accident! She slipped forward--her footing gave way!" gasped
+the unhappy woman in her terror. "Oh, Maurice, for pity's sake, believe
+me; it was an accident!" She sunk upon her knees, with wildly
+outstretched arms, and trembling, and uplifted hands.
+
+"Stand aside," he said, hoarsely, pushing her roughly from him, so that
+she almost fell to the earth, and he plunged deep into the still
+quivering waters.
+
+It was the water-lilies that brought her to her death. The long clinging
+stems amongst which she sank held her fair body in their cold, clammy
+embraces, so that she never rose again. It was long before they found
+her.
+
+And, oh! who shall ever describe that dreadful scene by the margin of
+Shadonake Bath, whilst the terrified crowd that had gathered there
+quickly waited for her whom all knew to be hopelessly gone from them for
+ever!
+
+The sobbing, frightened women; the white, stricken faces of the men; the
+agony of those who had loved her; the distress and dismay of those who
+had only admired her; and there was one trembling, shuddering wretch, in
+her satin and her jewels, standing white and haggard apart, with knees
+that shook together, and teeth that clattered, and tearless sobs that
+shook her from head to foot, staring with a half-maddened stare upon the
+fatal waters.
+
+Then, when all was at an end and the worst was known, when the poor
+dripping body had been reverently covered over and borne away by loving
+arms amid a torrent of sobs and wailing tears towards the house, then
+some one came near her and spoke to her--some one off whom the water came
+pouring in streams, and whose face was white and wild as her own.
+
+"Get you away out of my sight," said the man whom she had loved so
+fruitlessly to her.
+
+"Have pity! have pity!" was the cry of despair that burst from her
+quivering lips. "Was it not all an accident?"
+
+"Yes, let it be so to the world, because you bear my name, and I will not
+have it dragged through the mire--to all others it is an accident--but
+never to me, for _I saw you let her go_! There is the stain of murder
+upon your hands. I will never call you wife, nor look upon your face
+again; get yourself away out of my sight!"
+
+With a low sobbing cry she turned and fled away from him, and away from
+the place, out among the shadows of the fir-trees. Once again some one
+stopped her in her terror-stricken flight.
+
+It was Denis Wilde, who came striding towards her under the trees, and
+caught her roughly by the wrist.
+
+"It is _you_ who have killed her!" he said, savagely.
+
+"What do you mean?" she murmured, faintly.
+
+"I saw it in your face last night when you were wandering about the house
+during the thunderstorm; you meant her death then. I saw it in your eyes.
+My God! why did I not watch over her better, and save her from such a
+devil as you?"
+
+"No, no, it is not true; it was an accident. Oh, spare me, spare me!"
+with a piteousness of terror, was all she could say.
+
+"Yes; I will spare you, poor wretch, for your husband's sake--because she
+loved him--and his burden, God help him! is heavy enough as it is. Go!"
+flinging her arm rudely from him. "Go, whilst you have got time, lest the
+thirst for your blood be too strong for me."
+
+And this time no one saw her go. Like a hunted animal, she fled away
+among the trees, her gleaming many-hued dress trailing all wet and
+drabbled on the sodden earth behind her, and the darkness of the
+gathering night closed in around her, and covered her in mercy with
+its pitiful mantle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+AT PEACE.
+
+ Open, dark grave, and take her:
+ Though we have loved her so,
+ Yet we must now forsake her:
+ Love will no more awake her:
+ Oh bitter woe!
+ Open thine arms and take her
+ To rest below!
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+So Vera was at peace at last. The troubled life was over; the vexed
+question of her fate was settled for her. There was to be no more
+struggling of right against wrong, of expediency against truth, for her
+for evermore. She had all--nay, more than all she wanted now.
+
+"It was what she desired herself," said the vicar, brokenly, as he knelt
+by the side of her who had been so dear and precious to him. "Only a
+Sunday or two ago she said to me 'If I could die, I should be at peace.'"
+
+And Maurice, with hidden face at the foot of the bed, could not answer
+him for tears.
+
+It was there, by that white still presence, that lay so calm and so
+lovely amongst the showers of heavy-scented waxen flowers, wherewith
+loving hands had decked her for her last long sleep; it was there that
+Eustace learnt at last the secret of her life, and the fatal love that
+had so wrecked her happiness. It was all clear to him now. Her struggles,
+her temptations, her pitiful moments of weakness and misery, her
+courageous strife against the hopelessness of her fate--all was made
+plain now: he understood her at last.
+
+In Maurice Kynaston's passion of despairing grief he read the story of
+her sad life's trouble.
+
+Truly, Maurice had enough to bear; for he alone, and one other, who spoke
+no word of it to him, knew the terrible secret of her death; to all else
+it was "an accident;" to him and to Denis Wilde alone it was "murder." To
+him, too, the motive of the foul, cowardly deed had been revealed; for,
+tightly clasped in that poor dead hand, true to the last to the trust
+that had been given her, was the fatal packet of letters that had been
+the cause of her death. They were all blotted and blurred, and sodden
+with the water, but there were whole sentences in the inner folds that
+were sufficient for him to recognize his wife's handwriting, and to see
+what was the drift and the meaning of them.
+
+Whom they were written to, when they had been penned, he neither knew nor
+cared to discover; it was enough for him that they had been written by
+her, and that they were altogether shameful and sinful. With a deep and
+sickened disgust, he set fire to the whole packet, and scattered the
+blackened and smouldering ashes into the empty grate. They had cost a
+human life, those reckless, sinful letters; but for them, Vera would not
+have died.
+
+The terrible tragedy came to an end at last. They buried her beneath the
+coloured mosaic floor of the new chancel, which Sir John had built at her
+desire; and Marion smothered herself and her children in crape, and
+people shook their heads and sighed when they spoke of her; and Shadonake
+was shut up, and the Millers all went to London; and then the world went
+its way, and after a time it forgot her; and Vera Nevill's place knew her
+no more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Christmas there was a wedding in Eaton Square; a wedding small and
+not at all gay. Indeed, Geraldine Miller considered her sister next door
+to a lunatic, and she told herself it would be hardly worth while to be
+married at all if there was to be no more fuss made over her marriage
+than over Beatrice's. For there were no bridesmaids and no wedding
+guests, only all the Millers, from the eldest down to the youngest, uncle
+Tom, and an ancient Miss Esterworth, unearthed from the other end of
+England for the occasion; and there were also a Mr. and Mrs. Pryme,
+a grave and aged couple--uncle and aunt to the bridegroom.
+
+There was, however, one remarkable feature at this particular wedding:
+when the family party came down into the dining-room to take their places
+for the conventional breakfast upon the plate of the bride's father were
+to be seen some very curious things.
+
+These were a faded white lace parasol with pink bows; a pair of soiled
+grey _peau de suède_ gloves, and a little black wisp of a spotted net
+veil.
+
+"Bless my soul!" said the member for Meadowshire, putting up his
+eye-glasses; "what on earth is all this?"
+
+"I think you have seen them before, papa," says the bride, demurely,
+whilst uncle Tom bursts into a loud and hearty guffaw of laughter.
+
+"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, turning rather red, and looking
+bewilderedly from his daughter to his wife: "I don't really understand.
+Caroline, my dear, do you know the meaning of these--these--most
+extraordinary objects?"
+
+Mrs. Miller draws near and examines the little heap of faded finery
+critically. "Why, Beatrice!" she exclaims, in astonishment, "it is your
+last summer's sunshade, and a pair of your old gloves: how on earth did
+they come here on your papa's plate?"
+
+"I put them there; I thought papa would like to see them again," cries
+Beatrice, laughing; "he met them in Herbert's rooms in the Temple one day
+last summer."
+
+"_Beatrice!_" falters her father, staring in amazement at her.
+
+"Yes, papa, dear, don't be too dreadfully shocked at me; it was I, your
+very naughty daughter, who had gone on the sly to see Herbert in the
+Temple, and I ran into the next room to hide myself when I heard you come
+in, and left those stupid tell-tale things on the table! I don't think,
+now I am Herbert's wife, that it matters very much how much I confess of
+my improprieties, does it?"
+
+"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, solemnly, and then turns round and
+shakes hands with his son-in-law. "And I might have retained you for that
+libel case after all, instead of getting in a young fool who lost it for
+me!" was all he said. And then the sunshade and the gloves were swept
+away, and they all sat down and ate a very good breakfast, and drank to
+the bride and bridegroom's health none the less heartily for that curious
+little explanatory scene at the beginning of the feast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maurice Kynaston has joined his brother in Australia, where, report says,
+they are doing very well, and rapidly making a large fortune; although no
+one thinks that either brother will ever leave the country of his
+adoption and return to England.
+
+Old Lady Kynaston lives on alone at Walpole Lodge; she is getting very
+aged, and is a dull, solitary old woman now, with an ever-present sadness
+at her heart.
+
+Before he left England Maurice told her the story of his love for Vera,
+and the whole truth about her death. The old lady knows that Vera and her
+fatal beauty has wrecked the lives of both her sons. There will be no
+tender filial hands to close her dying eyes, no troops of merry
+grandchildren to cheer and brighten her closing years. They will live
+away from her, and she will die alone. She knows it--and she is very,
+very sad.
+
+In South Kensington there lives a gay, world-loving woman who keeps open
+house, and entertains perpetually. She has horses and carriages, and a
+box at the opera, and is always to be seen faultlessly dressed and the
+gayest of the gay at every race meeting, and at every scene of pleasure.
+
+People admire her and flatter her, and speak lightly of her too,
+sometimes, for it is generally known that Mrs. Kynaston is "separated"
+from her husband; and though a separation is a perfectly respectable
+thing, and has no possible connection with a divorce, yet there are ugly
+whispers in this case as to what is the cause of the dissension between
+the husband in Australia and the wife in London; whispers that often
+do not fall very far short of the truth. And, gay as she is, and
+light-hearted as she seems to be, there are times when pretty Mrs.
+Kynaston is more to be pitied than any wretched beggar who toils along
+the streets, for always there is the terror of detection at her heart,
+and the fear that her dreadful secret, known as it is to at least two
+persons on earth, may ooze out--be guessed by others.
+
+There are things Mrs. Kynaston can never do: to read of some dreadful
+murder such as occasionally fills all the papers for days with its
+sickening details makes her shut herself in her own room till the
+horrible tragedy is over and forgotten; to hear of such things spoken
+of in society causes her to faint away with terror. To walk by a pond,
+or even to speak of being rowed upon a lake or river, fills her with
+such horror of soul that none of her friends ever care to suggest a
+water-party of any kind to her.
+
+"She saw that poor Miss Nevill drowned," say her compassionate
+acquaintances; "it has upset her nerves, poor dear; she cannot bear the
+sight of water." And there are a few who think, and who are not ashamed
+to whisper their thoughts with bated breath, that she saw Miss Nevill's
+sad death too near and too well to be utterly spotless in the matter.
+
+That she allowed her to perish without attempting to save her, because
+she was jealous of her, is the generally received impression; but there
+is no one who has quite realized that she was actually guilty of her
+death.
+
+Did they think so, they could not eat her dinners with decency. And they
+do eat her dinners, which are uncommonly good ones; and they flock to her
+house, and they sit in her carriage and her opera-box, and they take all
+they can get from her, although at their hearts they do not care to be
+intimate with her. But then money covers a multitude of sins. And a great
+many crimes may be glossed over if we are only rich enough and popular
+enough, and sufficiently the fashion.
+
+As to Denis Wilde, he was young, and in time he got over it and married
+an amiable young lady who bore him three children and loved him
+devotedly, so that after a while he forgot his first love.
+
+Shadonake Bath has been drained. Mr. Miller has at last been allowed to
+have his own way about it. It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good,
+and there could be found no voice to plead for its preservation after
+that terrible tragedy of which it was the scene.
+
+So the old steps have all been cleared away, and brick walls line the
+straight deep sides, whereon grow the finest peaches and nectarines in
+the county, whilst a parterre of British Queens and Hautboys cover the
+spot where Vera died with their rich red fruit and their luxuriant
+foliage.
+
+And at Sutton things go on much the same as of old. Old Mrs. Daintree is
+dead, and no one sorrowed much for her loss, whilst the domestic harmony
+is decidedly enhanced by her absence. Tommy and Minnie are growing big
+and lanky, and the subject of schools and education is beginning to
+occupy the minds of Marion and her husband.
+
+But the vicar has grown grey and old; his back is more bent and his face
+more careworn than it used to be. He has never been quite the same since
+Vera's death.
+
+There is a white marble monument in the middle of the chancel, raised by
+the loving hands of two brothers far away in Australia. It is by the best
+sculptor of the day, and on it lies a pale white figure, with a pure
+delicate profile, and hands always meekly crossed upon the bosom.
+
+Every Sunday, as Eustace Daintree passes from his place at the
+reading-desk up to the altar to read the Communion Service, there falls
+upon it a streak of sunshine from the painted window above, which he
+himself and his wife had put up to her memory, lighting up the pale
+marble image with a chequered glory of gold and crimson. And the vicar's
+eye as he passes alights for a moment with a never-dying sadness upon the
+simple words carved at the foot of her tomb--
+
+ Vera Nevill, aged 23.
+
+ AT PEACE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. CAMERON'S NOVELS.
+
+Jack's Secret.
+
+A Sister's Sin.
+
+A Lost Wife.
+
+The Cost of a Lie.
+
+This Wicked World.
+
+A Devout Lover.
+
+A Life's Mistake.
+
+Worth Winning.
+
+Vera Neville.
+
+Pure Gold.
+
+In a Grass Country.
+
+
+ "Mrs. Cameron's numerous efforts in the line of fiction have
+ won for her a wide circle of admirers. Her experience in novel
+ writing, as well as her skill in inventing and delineating characters,
+ enables her to put before the reading public stories that
+ are full of interest and pure in tone."--_Harrisburg Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Vera Nevill;, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Vera Nevill
+ Poor Wisdom's Chance
+
+Author: Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2006 [EBook #18385]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VERA NEVILL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mary Meehan and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>VERA NEVILL;</h1>
+
+<h4>OR, POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.</h4>
+
+<h3><i>A NOVEL</i>.</h3>
+
+<h2>BY MRS. H. LOVETT CAMERON</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Author of "Pure Gold," "In a Grass Country," etc., etc</span>.</h4>
+
+<h4>PHILADELPHIA:<br />
+J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.<br />
+1893.</h4>
+
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"No. Vain, alas! th' endeavour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From bonds so sweet to sever.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Poor Wisdom's Chance<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Against a glance<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is now as weak as ever."<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Moore's Melodies</i>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<span class="smcap">The Vicar's Family</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II. <span class="smcap">Kynaston Hall</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III. <span class="smcap">Fanning Dead Ashes</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV. <span class="smcap">The Lay Rector</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V. <span class="smcap">"Little Pitchers"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI. <span class="smcap">A Soir&eacute;e at Walpole Lodge</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII. <span class="smcap">Evening Reveries</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII. <span class="smcap">The Member for Meadowshire</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX. <span class="smcap">Engaged</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X. <span class="smcap">A Meeting on the Stairs</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI. <span class="smcap">An Idle Morning</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII. <span class="smcap">The Meet at Shadonake</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII. <span class="smcap">Peacock's Feathers</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV. <span class="smcap">Her Wedding Dress</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV. <span class="smcap">Vera's Message</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI. "<span class="smcap">Poor Wisdom</span>"</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII. <span class="smcap">An Unlucky Love-Letter</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII. <span class="smcap">Lady Kynaston's Plans</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX. <span class="smcap">What She Waited For</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX. <span class="smcap">A Morning Walk</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI. <span class="smcap">Maurice's Intercession</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII. <span class="smcap">Mr. Pryme's Visitors</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII. <span class="smcap">A White Sunshade</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV. <span class="smcap">Her Son's Secret</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV. <span class="smcap">St. Paul's, Knightsbridge</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI. <span class="smcap">The Russia-Leather Case</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII. <span class="smcap">Dinner at Ranelagh</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Hazeldine's "Long Eliza"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX. <span class="smcap">A Wedding Tour</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX. <span class="smcap">"If I could Die!"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI. <span class="smcap">An Eventful Drive</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII. <span class="smcap">By the Vicarage Gate</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII. <span class="smcap">Denis Wilde's Love</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV. <span class="smcap">A Garden Party</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV. <span class="smcap">Shadonake Bath</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI. <span class="smcap">At Peace</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VERA_NEVILL" id="VERA_NEVILL"></a>VERA NEVILL</h2>
+
+<h4>OR</h4>
+
+<h3>POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.</h3>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VICAR'S FAMILY.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">With that regal indolent air she had<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So confident of her charm.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i10"><span class="smcap">Owen Meredith</span>.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i10"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Amongst the divers domestic complications into which short-sighted man is
+prone to fall there is none which has been more conclusively proved to be
+an utter and egregious failure than that family arrangement which, for
+lack of a better name, I will call a "composite household."</p>
+
+<p>No one could have spoken upon this subject with greater warmth of
+feeling, nor out of the depths of a more painful experience, than
+could the Rev. Eustace Daintree, sometime vicar of the parish of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Daintree's family circle consisted of himself, his mother, his wife,
+and his wife's sister, and I should like to know how a man could expect
+to lead a life of peace and tranquillity with such a combination of
+inharmonious feminine elements!</p>
+
+<p>There were two children also, who were a fruitful source of discord and
+disunion. It is certain that, had he chosen to do so, the Rev. Eustace
+might have made many heart-rending and harrowing revelations concerning
+the private life and customs of the inhabitants of his vicarage. It is
+equally certain, however, that he would not have chosen to do so, for he
+was emphatically a man of peace and gentleness, kind hearted and given
+to good works; and was, moreover, sincerely anxious to do his duty
+impartially to those whom Providence or fate, or a combination of chances
+and changes, had somehow contrived to bring together under his roof.</p>
+
+<p>Things had not always been thus with him. In the early days of their
+married life Eustace Daintree and Marion his wife had had their home to
+themselves, and right well had they enjoyed it. A fairly good living
+backed up by independent means, a small rural parish, a pleasant
+neighbourhood, a pretty and comfortable vicarage-house&mdash;what more can the
+hearts of a clergyman of the Church of England and his wife desire? Mr.
+and Mrs. Daintree, at all events, had wished for nothing better. But this
+blissful state of things was not destined to last; it was, perhaps,
+hardly to be expected that it should, seeing that man is born to trouble,
+and that happiness is known to be as fleeting as time or beauty or any
+other good thing.</p>
+
+<p>When Eustace Daintree had been married five years, his father died,
+and his mother, accepting his warmly tendered invitation to come to
+Sutton-in-the-Wold upon a long visit, took up her abode in the pleasant
+vicarage-house.</p>
+
+<p>Her visit was long indeed. In a weak moment her son consented to her
+urgent request to be allowed to subscribe her quota to the household
+expenses&mdash;this was as good as giving her a ninety-nine years' lease of
+her quarters. The thin end of the wedge thus inserted, Mrs. Daintree
+<i>m&egrave;re</i> became immovable as the church tower or the kitchen chimney, and
+the doomed members of the family began to understand that nothing short
+of death itself was likely to terminate the old lady's residence amongst
+them. For the future her son's house became her home.</p>
+
+<p>But, even thus, things were not at their worst. Marion Daintree was a
+soft-hearted, gentle-mannered little woman. It cannot be said that she
+regarded the permanent instalment of her mother-in-law in her home with
+pleasurable feelings; she would have been more than human had she done
+so. But then she was unfeignedly fond of her husband, and desired so
+earnestly to make his home happy that, not seeing her way to oust the
+intruder without a warfare which would have distressed him, she
+determined to make the best of the situation, and to preserve the
+family peace and concord at all risks.</p>
+
+<p>She succeeded in her praiseworthy efforts, but at what cost no one but
+herself ever knew. Marion's whole life became one propitiatory sacrifice
+to her mother-in-law. To propitiate Mrs. Daintree was a very simple
+matter. Bearing in mind that her leading characteristics were a bad
+temper and an ungovernable desire to ride rough-shod over the feelings of
+all those who came into contact with her, in order to secure her favour
+it was only necessary to study her moods, and to allow her to tread you
+under foot as much as her soul desired. Provided that she had her own way
+in these little matters, Mrs. Daintree became an amiable old lady. Marion
+did all that was needful; figuratively speaking, she laid down in the
+dust before her, and the Juggernaut of her fate consented to be appeased
+by the lowly attitude, and crushed its way triumphantly over her fallen
+body.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Marion accepted her fate, and peace was preserved in her husband's
+house. But by-and-by there came somebody into the family who would by no
+manner of means consent to be so crushed and trodden under foot. This
+somebody was Vera Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>In order duly to set forth who and what was this young woman, who thus
+audaciously set at defiance the powers that were, it will be necessary
+that I should take a brief survey of Marion's family history.</p>
+
+<p>Marion, then, be it known, was the eldest of three sisters; so much the
+eldest, that when Mr. Daintree had met her and married her in Rome during
+one of his brief holidays, the two remaining sisters had been at the time
+hardly more than children. Colonel Nevill, their father, had married an
+Italian lady, long since dead, and had lived a nomad life ever since he
+had become a widower; moving about chiefly between Nice, Rome, and Malta.
+Wherever pleasant society was to be found, there would Colonel Nevill and
+his daughters instinctively drift, and year after year they became more
+and more enamoured of their foreign life, and less and less disposed to
+venture back to the chill fogs and cloudy skies of their native land.</p>
+
+<p>Three years after Marion had left them, and gone away with her husband to
+his English vicarage; Theodora, the second daughter, had at eighteen
+married an Italian prince, whose lineage was ancient, but whose acres
+were few; and Colonel Nevill, dying rather suddenly almost immediately
+after, Vera, the youngest daughter, as was most natural, instantly found
+a home with Princess Marinari.</p>
+
+<p>All this time Marion lived at Sutton-in-the-Wold, and saw none of them.
+She wept copiously at the news of her father's death, regretting bitterly
+her inability to receive his parting blessing; but, her little Minnie
+being born shortly after, her thoughts were fortunately diverted into a
+happier channel, and she suffered from her loss less keenly and recovered
+from it more quickly than had she had no separate life and no separate
+interests of her own to engross her. Still, being essentially
+affectionate and faithful, she clung to the memory of the two sisters now
+separated so entirely from her. For some years she and Theodora kept up a
+brisk correspondence. Marion's letters were full of the sayings and
+doings of Tommy and Minnie, and Theodora's were full of nothing but Vera.</p>
+
+<p>What Vera had looked like at her first ball, how Prince this and Marquis
+so-and-so had admired her; how she had been smothered with bouquets and
+bonbons at Carnival time; how she had sat to some world-famed artist, who
+had entreated to be allowed to put her face into his great picture, and
+how the house was literally besieged with her lovers. By all this, and
+much more in the same strain, Marion perceived that her young sister,
+whom she had last seen in all the raw unformed awkwardness of early
+girlhood, had developed somehow into a beautiful woman.</p>
+
+<p>And there came photographs of Vera occasionally, fully confirming the
+glowing accounts Princess Marinari gave of her; fantastic photographs,
+portraying her in strange and different ways. There was Vera looking out
+through clouds of her own dark hair hanging loosely about her face; Vera
+as a Bacchante crowned with vine leaves, laughing saucily; Vera draped as
+a <i>d&eacute;vote</i>, with drooping eyes and hands crossed meekly upon her bosom.
+Sometimes she would be in a ball-dress, with lace about her white
+shoulders; sometimes muffled up in winter sables, her head covered with
+a fur cap. But always she was beautiful, always a young queen, even in
+these poor, fading photographs, that could give but a faint idea of her
+loveliness to those who knew her not.</p>
+
+<p>"She must be very handsome," Eustace Daintree would say heartily, as his
+wife, with a little natural flush of pride, handed some picture of her
+young sister across the breakfast-table to him. "How I wish we could see
+her, she must be worth looking at, indeed. Mother, have you seen this
+last one of Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beauty is a snare," the old lady would answer viciously, hardly deigning
+to glance at the lovely face; "and your sister seems to me, Marion, to be
+dressed up like an actress, most unlike my idea of a modest English
+girl."</p>
+
+<p>Then Marion would take her treasure away with her up into her own room,
+out of the way of her mother-in-law's stern and repelling remarks.</p>
+
+<p>But one day there came sad news to the vicarage at Sutton. Theodora,
+Princess Marinari, caught the Roman fever in its worst form, and after
+a few agonizing letters and telegrams, that came so rapidly one upon the
+other that she had hardly time to realize the dreadful truth, Marion
+learnt that her sister was dead.</p>
+
+<p>After that, the elder sister's English home became naturally the right
+and fitting place for Vera to come to. So she left her gay life and her
+lovers, her bright dresses and all that had hitherto seemed to her worth
+living for, and came back to her father's country and took up her abode
+in Eustace Daintree's quiet vicarage, where she became shortly her
+sister's idol and her sister's mother-in-law's mortal foe.</p>
+
+<p>And then it was that the worthy clergyman came to discover that to put
+three grown-up women into the same house, and to expect them to live
+together in peace and amity, is about as foolhardy an experiment as to
+shut up a bulldog, a parrot, and a tom-cat in a cupboard, and expect
+them to behave like so many lambs.</p>
+
+<p>It is now rather more than a year since Vera Nevill came to live in her
+brother-in-law's house. Let me waste no further time, but introduce her
+to you at once.</p>
+
+<p>The time of the year is October&mdash;the time of day is five o'clock. In the
+vicarage drawing-room the afternoon tea-table has just been set out, and
+the fire just lit, for it is chilly; but one of the long French windows
+leading into the garden is still open, and through it Vera steps into
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>There is a background of brown and yellow foliage behind her, across the
+garden, all aglow with the crimson light of the western sky, against
+which the outlines of her figure, in its close-fitting dark dress, stand
+out clearly and distinctly. Vera has the figure, not of a sylph, but of
+a goddess; it is the absolute perfection of the female form. She is
+tall&mdash;very tall, and she carries her head a little proudly, like a young
+queen conscious of her own power.</p>
+
+<p>She comes in with a certain slow and languid grace in her movements, and
+pauses for an instant by the hearth, holding out her hand, that is white
+and well-shaped, though perhaps a trifle too long-fingered, to the
+warmth.</p>
+
+<p>The glow of the newly-lit fire flickers up over her face&mdash;her face, with
+its pure oval outlines, its delicate, regular features, and its dreamy
+eyes, that are neither blue nor gray nor hazel, but something vague and
+indistinctly beautiful, entirely peculiar to themselves. Her hair, a soft
+dusky cloud, comes down low over her broad forehead, and is gathered up
+at the back in some strange and thoroughly un-English fashion that would
+not suit every one, yet that somehow makes a fitting crown to the stately
+young head it adorns.</p>
+
+<p>"Tea, Vera?" says Marion, from behind the cups and saucers.</p>
+
+<p>Old Mrs. Daintree sits darning socks, severely, by the fading light.
+There is a sound of distant whimpering from the shadowy corner behind the
+piano; it is Tommy in disgrace. Vera turns round; Marion's kind face
+looks troubled and distressed; the old lady compresses her lips firmly
+and savagely.</p>
+
+<p>Vera takes the cup from her sister's hands, and putting it down again on
+the table, proceeds to cut a slice of bread from the loaf, and to spread
+it thickly with strawberry jam.</p>
+
+<p>"Come here, Tommy, and have some of Auntie's bread and jam."</p>
+
+<p>Out comes a small person, with a very swollen face and a very dirty
+pinafore, from the distant seclusion of the corner, and flies swiftly
+to Vera's sheltering arm.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Daintree drops her work angrily into her lap.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, I must beg of you not to interfere with Tom; are you aware that he
+is in the corner by my orders?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly, Mrs. Daintree; and also that he was there before I went out,
+exactly three-quarters of an hour ago; there are limits to all human
+endurance."</p>
+
+<p>"I consider it extremely impertinent," begins the old lady, nodding her
+head violently.</p>
+
+<p>"Darling Vera," pleads Marion, almost in tears; "perhaps you had better
+let him go back."</p>
+
+<p>"Tommy is quite good now," says Vera, calmly passing her hand over the
+rough blonde head. Master Tommy's mouth is full of bread and jam, and he
+looks supremely indifferent to the warfare that is being carried on on
+his account over his head.</p>
+
+<p>His crime having been the surreptitious purloining of his grandmamma's
+darning cotton, and the subsequent immersion of the same in the inkstand,
+Vera feels quite a warm glow of approval towards the little culprit and
+his judiciously-planned piece of mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, I <i>insist</i> upon that child being sent back into the corner!"
+exclaims Mrs. Daintree, angrily, bringing her large fist heavily down
+upon her knee.</p>
+
+<p>"The child has been over-punished already," she answers, calmly, still
+administering the soothing solace of strawberry jam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Vera, <i>pray</i> keep the peace!" cries Marion, with clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, I am thankful to say, comes my son;" as a shadow passes the
+window, and Eustace's tall figure with the meekly stooping head comes
+in at the door. "Eustace, I beg that you will decide who is to be in
+authority in this house&mdash;your mother or this young lady. It is
+insufferable that every time I send the children into the corner Vera
+should call them out and give them cakes and jam."</p>
+
+<p>Eustace Daintree looks helplessly from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother&mdash;my dear girls&mdash;what is it all about? I am sure Vera does
+not mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Vera only means to be kind, grandmamma," cries Marion, nervously;
+"she is so fond of the children&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Marion, and don't take your sister's part so
+shamelessly!"</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Vera rises silently and pushes Tommy and all his enormities
+gently by the shoulders out of the room. Then she turns round and faces
+her foe.</p>
+
+<p>"Judge between us, Eustace!" the old lady is crying; "am I to be defied
+and set at nought? are we all to bow down and worship Miss Vera, the most
+useless, lazy person in the house, who turns up her nose at honest men
+and prefers to live on charity, a burden to her relations?"</p>
+
+<p>"Vera is no burden, only a great pleasure to me, my dear mother," said
+the clergyman, holding out his hand to the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandmamma, how unkind you are," says Marion, bursting into tears.
+But Vera only laughs lazily and amusedly, she is so used to it all! It
+does not disturb her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she to be mistress here, I ask, or am I?" continues Mrs. Daintree,
+furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Marion is the mistress here," says Vera, boldly; "neither you nor I have
+any authority in her house or over her children." And then the old lady
+gathers up her work and sails majestically from the room, followed by her
+weak, trembling daughter-in-law, bent on reconciliation, on cajolement,
+on laying herself down for her own sins, and her sister's as well, before
+the avenging genius of her life.</p>
+
+<p>The clergyman stands by the hearth with his head bent and his hands
+behind him. He sighs wearily.</p>
+
+<p>Vera creeps up to him and lays her hand softly upon his coat sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a firebrand, am I not, Eustace?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, no, not that; but if you could try a little to keep the peace!"
+He stayed the caressing hand within his own and looked at her tenderly.
+His face is a good one, but not a handsome one; and, as he looks at his
+wife's young sister, it is softened into its best and kindest. Who can
+resist Vera, when she looks gentle and humble, with that rare light in
+her dark eyes?</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, why don't you look like that at Mr. Gisburne?" he says, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Eustace! am I indeed a burden to you, as your mother says?" she
+exclaims, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my dear, but it seems hard for you here; a home of your own
+might be happier for you; and Gisburne is a good man."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like good men who are poor!" says Vera, with a little grimace.</p>
+
+<p>Her brother-in-law looks shocked. "Why do you say such hard worldly
+things, Vera? You do not really mean them."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't I? Eustace, look at me: do I look like a poor clergyman's wife? Do
+survey me dispassionately." She holds herself at arm's length from him,
+and looks comically up and down the length of her gray skirts. "Think of
+the yards and yards of stuff it takes to clothe me; and should not a
+woman as tall as I am be always in velvet and point lace, Eustace? What
+is the good of condemning myself to workhouse sheeting for the rest of my
+days?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Daintree looks at her admiringly; he has learnt to love her; this
+beautiful southern flower that has come to blossom in his home. Women
+will be hard enough on Vera through her life&mdash;men, never.</p>
+
+<p>"You have great gifts and great temptations, my child," he says,
+solemnly. "I pray that I may be enabled to do my duty to you. Do not say
+you do not like good men, Vera, it pains me to hear you say it."</p>
+
+<p>"I like <i>one</i> good man, and his name is Eustace Daintree!" she answers,
+softly; "is not that a hopeful sign?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are a little flatterer, Vera," he says, kissing her; but, though he
+is a middle-aged clergyman and her brother-in-law, he is by no means
+impervious to the flattery.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, upstairs, Marion is humbling herself into the dust, at the
+footstool of her tyrant. Mrs. Daintree is very angry with Marion's
+sister, and Mr. Gisburne is also the text whereon she hangs her sermon.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish her no harm, Marion; why should I? She is most impertinent to me,
+but of that I will not speak."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, grandmamma, you do not understand Vera. I am sure she&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, excuse me, my dear, I understand her perfectly&mdash;the
+impertinence to myself I waive&mdash;I hope I am a Christian, but I cannot
+forgive her for turning up her nose at Mr. Gisburne&mdash;a most excellent
+young man; what can a girl want more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Mrs. Daintree, does Vera look like a poor clergyman's wife?" said
+Marion, using unconsciously Vera's own arguments.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Marion, I have no patience with such folly! Whom do you suppose she
+is to wait for? We haven't got any Princes down at Sutton to marry her;
+and I say it's a shame that she should go on living on her friends, a
+girl without a penny! when she might marry a respectable man, and have
+a home of her own."</p>
+
+<p>And then even Marion said that, if Vera could be brought to like Mr.
+Gisburne, it might possibly be happier for her to marry him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>KYNASTON HALL.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Only the wind here hovers and revels<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In a round where life seems barren as death.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here there was laughing of old, there was weeping,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Haply of lovers none ever will know.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Swinburne</span>, "A Forsaken Garden."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>It seemed to be generally acknowledged by the Daintree family that if
+Vera would only consent to yield to the solicitations of the Reverend
+Albert Gisburne, and transfer herself to Tripton Rectory for life, it
+would be the simplest and easiest solution of a good many difficult
+problems concerning her.</p>
+
+<p>In point of fact, Vera Nevill was an incongruous element in the Daintree
+household. In that quiet humdrum country clergyman's life she was as much
+out of her proper place as a bird of paradise in a chicken yard, or a
+Gloire de Dijon rose in a field of turnips.</p>
+
+<p>It was not her beauty alone, but her whole previous life which unfitted
+her for the things amongst which she found herself suddenly transplanted.
+She was no young unformed child, but a woman of the world, who had been
+courted and flattered and sought after; who had learnt to hold her own,
+and to fight her battles single-handed, and who knew far more about
+the dangers and difficulties of life than did the simple-hearted
+brother-in-law, under whose charge she now found herself, or the timid,
+gentle sister who was so many years her senior.</p>
+
+<p>But if she was cognizant of the world and its ways, Vera knew absolutely
+nothing about the life of an English vicarage. Sunday schools and
+mothers' meetings were enigmas to her; clothing clubs and friendly
+societies, hopeless and uninteresting mysteries which she had no desire
+to solve. She had no place in the daily routine. What was she to do
+amongst it all?</p>
+
+<p>Vera did what was most pleasant and also most natural to her&mdash;she did
+nothing. She was by habit and by culture essentially indolent. The
+southern blood she inherited, the life of the Italian fine lady she had
+led, made her languid and fond of inaction. To lie late in bed, to sip
+chocolate, and open her letters before she rose; to be dressed and
+re-dressed by a fashionable lady's maid; to recline in luxurious
+carriages, and to listen lazily to the flattery and adulation that had
+surrounded her&mdash;that had been Vera's life from morning till night ever
+since she grew up.</p>
+
+<p>How, with such antecedents, was she to enter suddenly into all the
+activity of an English clergyman's home? There were the schools, and the
+vestry meetings, and the sick and the destitute to be fretted after from
+Monday morning till Saturday night&mdash;Eustace and Marion hardly ever had a
+moment's respite or a leisure hour the whole week; whilst Sunday, of
+course, was the hardest day's work of all.</p>
+
+<p>But Vera could not turn her life into these things. She would not have
+known how to set about them, and assuredly she had no desire to try.</p>
+
+<p>So she wandered about the garden in the summer time, or sat dreamily by
+the fire in winter. She gathered flowers and decorated the rooms with
+them; she spoilt the children, she quarrelled with their grandmother, but
+she did nothing else; and the righteous soul of Eustace Daintree was
+disquieted within him on account of her. He felt that her life was
+wasted, and the responsibility of it seemed, to his over-sensitive
+conscience, to rest upon himself.</p>
+
+<p>"The girl ought to be married," he would say to his wife, anxiously. "A
+husband and a home of her own is what she wants. If she were happily
+settled she would find occupation enough."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see whom she could marry, Eustace; men are so scarce, and there
+are so many girls in the county."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she might have had Barry." Barry was a curate whom Vera had lately
+scorned, and who had, in consequence of the crushed condition of his
+affections, incontinently fled. "And then there is Gisburne. Why couldn't
+she marry Gisburne? He is quite a catch, and a good young man too."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is a pity; perhaps she may change her mind, and he will ask her
+again after Christmas; he told me as much."</p>
+
+<p>"You must try and persuade her to think better of it by then, my dear.
+Now I must be off to old Abraham, and be sure you send round the port to
+Mary Williams; and you will find the list for the blanket club on my
+study table, love."</p>
+
+<p>Her husband started on his morning rounds, and Marion, coming down into
+the drawing-room, found old Mrs. Daintree haranguing Vera on the same
+all-important topic.</p>
+
+<p>"I am only speaking for your good, Vera; what other object could I have?"
+she was saying, as she dived into the huge basket of undarned socks on
+the floor before her, and extracted thereout a ragged specimen to be
+operated upon. "It is sheer obstinacy on your part that you will not
+accept such a good offer. And there was poor Mr. Barry, a most worthy
+young man, and his second cousin a bishop, too, quite sure of a living,
+I should say."</p>
+
+<p>"Another clergyman!" said Vera, with a soft laugh, just lifting up her
+hands and letting them fall down again upon her lap, with a little,
+half-foreign movement of impatience. "Are there, then, no other men but
+the clergy in this country?"</p>
+
+<p>"And a very good thing if there were no others," glared the old lady,
+defiantly, over her spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not like them," said Vera, simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Not like them! Considering that I am the daughter, the widow, and the
+mother of clergymen, I consider that remark a deliberate insult to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Mrs. Daintree, I am sure Vera never meant&mdash;&mdash;" cried Marion,
+trembling for fear of a fresh battle.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't interrupt me, Marion; you ought to have more proper pride than to
+stand by and hear the Church reviled."</p>
+
+<p>"Vera only said she did not like them."</p>
+
+<p>"No more I do, Marion," said Vera, stifling a yawn&mdash;"not when they are
+young; when they are old, like Eustace, they are far better; but when
+they are young they are all exactly alike&mdash;equally harmless when out of
+the pulpit, and equally wearisome when in it!"</p>
+
+<p>A few moments of offended silence on the part of the elder lady,
+during which she tugs fiercely and savagely at the ragged sock in her
+hands&mdash;then she bursts forth again.</p>
+
+<p>"You may scorn them as much as you like, but let me tell you that the
+life of a clergyman's wife&mdash;honoured, respected, and useful&mdash;is a more
+profitable one than the idle existence which you lead, utterly
+purposeless and lazy. You never do one single thing from morning till
+night."</p>
+
+<p>"What shall I do? Shall I help you to darn Eustace's socks?" reaching at
+one of them out of the basket.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Daintree wrenched it angrily from her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious! as if you could! What a bungle it would be. Why, I never
+saw you with a piece of work in your hand in my life. I dare say you
+could not even thread a needle."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure I have never threaded one yet," laughed Vera, lazily. "I
+might try; but you see you won't let me be useful, so I had better resign
+myself to idleness." And then she rose and took her hat, and went out
+through the French window, out among the fallen yellow leaves, leaving
+the other women to discuss the vexed problem of her existence.</p>
+
+<p>She discussed it to herself as she walked dreamily along under the trees
+in the lane beyond the garden, her head bent, and her eyes fixed upon the
+ground; she swung her hat idly in her hand, for it was warm for the time
+of year, and the gold-brown leaves fluttered down about her head and
+rustled under the dark, trailing skirts behind her.</p>
+
+<p>About half a mile up the lane, beyond the vicarage, stood an old iron
+gateway leading into a park. It was flanked by square red-brick columns,
+upon whose summits two stone griffins, "rampant," had looked each other
+in the face for the space of some two hundred years or so, peering grimly
+over the tops of the shields against which they stood on end, upon which
+all the family arms and quarterings of the Kynastons had become softly
+coated over by an indistinct veil of gray-green moss.</p>
+
+<p>Vera turned in at this gate, nodding to the woman at the lodge within,
+who looked out for a minute at her as she passed. It was her daily walk,
+for Kynaston was uninhabited and empty, and any one was free to wander
+unreproved among its chestnut glades, or to stand and gossip to its
+ancient housekeeper in the great bare rooms of the deserted house.</p>
+
+<p>Vera did so often. The square, red-brick building, with its stone
+copings, the terrace walk before the windows, the peacocks sunning
+themselves before the front door, the fountain plashing sleepily in the
+stone basin, the statues down the square Italian garden&mdash;all had a
+certain fascination for her dreamy poetical nature. Then turning in at
+the high narrow doorway, whose threshold Mrs. Eccles, the housekeeper,
+had long ago given her free leave to cross, she would stroll through the
+deserted rooms, touching the queer spindle-legged furniture with gentle
+reverent fingers, gazing absorbedly at the dark rows of family portraits,
+and speculating always to herself what they had been like, these dead and
+gone Kynastons, who had once lived and laughed, and sorrowed and died, in
+the now empty rooms, where nothing was left of them save those dim and
+faded portraits, and where the echo of her own footsteps was the only
+sound in the wilderness of the carpetless chambers where once they had
+reigned supreme.</p>
+
+<p>She got to know them all at last by name&mdash;whole generations of them.
+There was Sir Ralph in armour, and Bridget, his wife, in a ruff and a
+farthingale; young Sir Maurice, who died in boyhood, and Sir Penrhyn, his
+brother, in long love-locks and lace ruffles. A whole succession of Sir
+Martins and Sir Henrys; then came the first Sir John and his wife in
+powder and patches, with their fourteen children all in a row, whose
+elaborate marriages and family histories, Vera, although assisted by Mrs.
+Eccles, who had them all at her fingers' ends, had considerable
+difficulty in clearly comprehending. It was a relief to be firmly landed
+with Sir Maurice, in a sad-coloured suit and full-bottomed wig, "the
+present baronet's grandfather," and, lastly, Sir John, "the present
+baronet's father," in a deputy-lieutenant's scarlet uniform, with a
+cocked hat under his arm&mdash;by far the worst and most inartistic painting
+in the whole collection.</p>
+
+<p>It was all wonderful and interesting to Vera. She elaborated whole
+romances to herself out of these portraits. She settled their loves and
+their temptations, heart-broken separations, and true lovers' meetings
+between them. Each one had his or her history woven out of the slender
+materials which Mrs. Eccles could give her of their real lives. Only one
+thing disappointed her, there was no portrait of the present Sir John.
+She would have liked to have seen what he was like, this man who was
+unmarried still, and who had never cared to live in the house of his
+fathers. She wondered what the mystery had been that kept him from it.
+She could not understand that a man should deliberately prefer dark,
+dirty, dingy London, which she had only once seen in passing from one
+station to the other on her way to Sutton, to a life in this quiet
+old-world red-brick house, with the rooks cawing among trees, and the
+long chestnut glades stretching away into the park, and all the venerable
+associations of those portraits of his ancestors. Some trouble, some
+sorrow, must have kept him away from it, she felt.</p>
+
+<p>But she would not question Mrs. Eccles about him; she encouraged her to
+talk of the dead and gone generations as much as she pleased, but of the
+man who was her master Vera would have thought it scarcely honourable to
+have spoken to his servant. Perhaps, too, she preferred her dreams. One
+day, idly opening the drawer of an old bureau in the little room which
+Mrs. Eccles always called religiously "My lady's morning room," Vera came
+upon a modern photograph that arrested her attention wonderfully.</p>
+
+<p>It represented, however, nothing very remarkable; only a
+broad-shouldered, good-looking young man, with an aquiline noise and a
+close-cropped head. On the reverse side of the card was written in
+pencil, "My son&mdash;for Mrs. Eccles." Lady Kynaston, she supposed, must
+therefore have sent it to the old housekeeper, and of course it was Sir
+John. Vera pushed it back again into the drawer with a little flush, as
+though she had been guilty of an indiscretion in looking at it, and she
+said no word of her discovery to the housekeeper. A day or two later she
+sought for it again in the same place, but it had been taken away.</p>
+
+<p>But the face thus seen made an impression upon her. She did not forget
+it; and when Sir John Kynaston's name was mentioned, she invested him
+with the living likeness of the photograph she had seen.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular October morning that Vera strolled up idly to the old
+house she did not feel inclined to wander among the deserted rooms; the
+sunshine came down too pleasantly through the autumn leaves; the air was
+too full of the lingering breath of the dying summer for her to care to
+go indoors. She paused a minute by the open window of the housekeeper's
+room, and called the old lady by name.</p>
+
+<p>The room, however, was empty and she received no answer, so she wandered
+on to the terrace and leant over the stone parapet that looked over the
+gardens and the fountains, and the distant park beyond, and she thought
+of the photograph in the drawer.</p>
+
+<p>And then and there there came into Vera Neville's mind a thought that,
+beginning with nothing more than an indistinct and idle fancy, ended in
+a set and determined purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The thought was this:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If Sir John Kynaston ever comes down here, I will marry him."</p>
+
+<p>She said it to herself, deliberately and calmly, without the slightest
+particle of hesitation or bashfulness. She told herself that what her
+relations were perpetually impressing upon her concerning the
+desirableness of her marrying and making a home of her own, was perfectly
+just and true. It would undoubtedly be a good thing for her to marry; her
+life was neither very pleasant nor very satisfactory to herself or to any
+one else. She had never intended to end her days at Sutton Vicarage; it
+had only been an intermediate condition of things. She had no vocation
+for visiting the poor, or for filling that useful but unexciting family
+office of maiden aunt; and, moreover, she felt that, with all their
+kindness to her, her brother-in-law and his wife ought not to be burdened
+with her support for longer than was necessary. As to turning governess,
+or companion, or lady-help, there was an incongruity in the idea that
+made it too ludicrous to contemplate even for an instant. There is no
+other way that a handsome and penniless woman can deliver her friends
+of the burden of her existence than by marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Marriage decidedly was what Vera had to look to. She was in no way averse
+to the idea, only she intended to look at the subject from the most
+practical and matter-of-fact point of view.</p>
+
+<p>She was not going to render herself wretched for life by rashly
+consenting to marry Mr. Gisburne, or any other equally unsuitable husband
+that her friends might choose to press upon her. Vera differed in one
+important respect from the vast majority of young ladies of the present
+day&mdash;she had no vague and indistinct dreams as to what marriage might
+bring her. She knew exactly what she wanted from it. She wanted wealth
+and position, because she knew what they were and what life became
+without them; and because she knew that she was utterly unfitted to be
+the wife of any one but a rich man.</p>
+
+<p>And therefore it was that Vera looked from the square red house behind
+her over the wide gardens and broad lawns, and down the noble avenues
+that spread away into the distance, and said to herself, "This is what
+will suit me, to be mistress of a place like this; I should love it
+dearly; I should find real happiness and pleasure in the duties that such
+a position would bring me. If Sir John Kynaston comes here, it is he whom
+I will marry, and none other."</p>
+
+<p>As to what her feelings might be towards the man whom she thus proposed
+to marry it cannot be said that Vera took them into consideration at all.
+She was not, indeed, aware whether or no she possessed any feelings; they
+had never incommoded her hitherto. Probably they had no existence. Such
+vague fancy as had been ever roused within her had been connected with a
+photograph seen once in a writing-table drawer. The photograph of Sir
+John Kynaston! The reflection did not influence her in the least, only
+she said to herself also, "If he is like his photograph, I should be sure
+to get on with him."</p>
+
+<p>She was an odd mixture, this Vera. Ambitious, worldly-wise, mercenary
+even, if you will; conscious of her own beauty, and determined to exact
+its full value; and yet she was tender and affectionate, full of poetry
+and refinement, honest and true as her own fanciful name.</p>
+
+<p>The secret of these strange contradictions is simply this. Vera has never
+loved. No one spark of divine fire has ever touched her soul or warmed
+the latent energies of her being. She has lived in the thick of the
+world, but love has passed her scatheless. Her mind, her intellect, her
+brain, are all alive, and sharpened acutely; her heart slumbers still.
+Happier for her, perhaps, had it never awakened.</p>
+
+<p>She leant upon the stone parapet, supporting her chin upon her hand,
+dreaming her dreams. Her hat lay by her side, her long dark dress fell in
+straight heavy folds to her feet. The yellow leaves fluttered about her,
+the peacocks strutted up and down, the gardeners in the distance were
+sweeping up the dead leaves on the lawns, but Vera stirred not; one
+motionless, beautiful figure giving grace, and life, and harmony to the
+deserted scene.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Some one was passing along among the upper rooms of the house, followed
+by Mrs. Eccles, panting and exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure, Sir John, I am quite ashamed that you should see the place so
+choked up with dust and lumber. If you had only let me have a day's
+notice, instead of being took all of a sudden like, I'd have had the
+house tidied up a bit; but what with not expecting to see any of the
+family, and my being old, and not so quick at the cleaning as I used to
+be&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Mrs. Eccles; I had just as soon see it as it is. I only
+wanted to see if you could make three or four rooms tolerably habitable
+in case I thought of bringing my horses down for a month or so. The
+stables, I find, are in good repair."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir John, and so is the house; though the furniture is that
+old-fashioned, that it is hardly fit for you to use."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! it will do well enough; besides, I have not made up my mind at all.
+It is quite uncertain whether I shall come&mdash;&mdash;Who is that?" stopping
+suddenly short before the window.</p>
+
+<p>"That! Oh, bless me, Sir John, it's Miss Vera, from the vicarage. I hope
+you won't object to her being here; of course, she could not know you was
+back. I had given her leave to walk in the grounds."</p>
+
+<p>"The vicarage! Has Mr. Daintree a daughter so old as that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, law! no, Sir John. It is Mrs. Daintree's sister. She came from
+abroad to live with them last year. A very nice young lady, Sir John, is
+Miss Nevill, and seems lonely like, and it kind of cheers her up to come
+and see me and walk in the garden. I am sure I hope you won't take it
+amiss that I should have allowed her to come."</p>
+
+<p>"Take it amiss&mdash;good gracious, no! Pray, let Miss&mdash;Miss Nevill, did you
+say?&mdash;come as often as she likes. What about the cellars, Mrs. Eccles?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will get the key, Sir John." The housekeeper precedes him out of the
+room, but Sir John stands still by the window.</p>
+
+<p>"What a picture," he says to himself below his breath; "how well she
+looks there. She gives to the old place just the one thing it lacks&mdash;has
+always lacked ever since I have known it&mdash;the presence of a beautiful
+woman. Yes, Mrs. Eccles, I am coming." This last aloud, and he hastens
+downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later, Sir John Kynaston says to his housekeeper,</p>
+
+<p>"You need not scare that young lady away from the place by telling her
+I was here to-day and saw her. And you may get the rooms ready, Mrs.
+Eccles, and order anything that is wanted, and get in a couple of maids,
+for I have made up my mind to bring my horses down next month."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>FANNING DEAD ASHES.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sorrow calls no time that's gone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Violets plucked, the sweetest rain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Makes not fresh, nor grow again.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Fletcher.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>"Have you heard of Sir John's latest vagary, grandpapa? He is gone down
+to Kynaston to hunt&mdash;so there's an end of <i>him</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! Where did you hear that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've been lunching at Lady Kynaston's."</p>
+
+<p>The speaker stood by the window of one of the large houses at Prince's
+Gate overlooking the Horticultural Gardens. She was a small, slight
+woman, with fair pale features and a mass of soft yellow hair. She had a
+delicate complexion and very clear blue eyes. Altogether she was a pretty
+little woman. A stranger would have guessed her to be a girl barely out
+of her teens. Helen Romer was in reality five-and-twenty, and she had
+been a widow four years.</p>
+
+<p>Of her brief married life few people could speak with any certainty,
+although there were plenty of surmises and conjectures concerning it. All
+that was known was that Helen had lived with her grandfather till she was
+nineteen; that one fine morning she had walked out of the house and had
+been married to a man whom her grandfather disapproved of, and to whom
+she had always professed perfect indifference. It was also known that
+eighteen months later her husband, having rapidly wasted his existence by
+drink and other irregular courses, had died in miserable poverty; and
+that Helen, not being able to set up a home of her own, upon her slender
+fortune of some five or six thousand pounds, had returned to her
+grandfather's house in Prince's Gate, where she had lived ever since.</p>
+
+<p>Why she had married William Romer no one ever exactly knew&mdash;perhaps Helen
+herself least of any one. It certainly was not for love; it could hardly
+have been from any worldly motive. Some people averred, and possibly they
+were not far wrong, that she had done so out of pique because the man she
+loved did not want her.</p>
+
+<p>However that might be, Mrs. Romer returned a widow, and not a very
+disconsolate one, to her grandfather's house.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain that she would not have lived there could she have helped
+it. She did not love old Mr. Harlowe, neither did Mr. Harlowe love her. A
+sense of absolute duty to his dead daughter's child on the one side, a
+sense of absolute necessity on the other, kept the two together. Their
+natures were inharmonious. They kept up a form of affection and intimacy
+openly; in reality, they had not one single thought in common.</p>
+
+<p>It is not too much to say that Mr. Harlowe positively disliked his
+grand-daughter. He had, perhaps, good reason for it. Helen had been
+nothing but a trouble to him. He had not desired to bring up a young
+lady in his house; he had not wished for the society which her presence
+entailed, nor for the dissipations of London life into which he was
+dragged more or less against his will. Added to which, Helen had not
+striven to please him in essential matters. She had married a gambling,
+drinking blackguard, whom he had forbidden to enter his doors; and now,
+when she might retrieve her position, and marry well and creditably, she
+refused to make the slightest effort to meet his views.</p>
+
+<p>Helen's life was a mystery to all but herself. To the world she was a
+pretty, lively little widow, with a good house to live in, and sufficient
+money of her own to spend to very good effect upon her back, with not a
+single duty or responsibility in her existence, and with no other
+occupation in life than to amuse herself. At her heart Helen knew herself
+to be a soured and disappointed woman, who had desired one thing all her
+life, and who, having attained with great pains and toil that forbidden
+fruit which she had coveted, had found it turn, as such fruits too often
+do, to dust and ashes between her teeth. It was to have been sweet as
+honeydew&mdash;and behold, it was nothing but bitterness!</p>
+
+<p>She stood at the window looking out at the waning light of the November
+afternoon. She was handsomely dressed in dark-green velvet, with a heavy
+old-fashioned gold chain round her neck; every now and then she looked at
+her watch, and a frown passed over her brow. The old man was bending over
+the fire behind her.</p>
+
+<p>"Gone to Kynaston, is he? Humph! that is your fault, you frightened him
+off."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I set my cap at him so palpably then?" said Helen, with a short,
+hard laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You know very well what I mean," answered her grandfather, sulkily. "Set
+your cap! No, you only do that to the men you know I don't approve of,
+and who don't want you."</p>
+
+<p>Helen winced a little. "You put things very coarsely, grandpapa," she
+said, and laughed again. "I am sorry I have been unable to make love to
+Sir John Kynaston to please you. Is that what you wanted me to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to look after a respectable husband, who can afford to keep
+you. What is the meaning of that perpetual going to Lady Kynaston's then?
+And why have you dragged me up to town at this confounded time of the
+year if it wasn't for that? You have played your cards badly as usual.
+You might have had him if you had chosen."</p>
+
+<p>"I have never had the least intention of casting myself at Sir John's
+head," said Helen, scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You can cast yourself, as you call it, at that good-for-nothing young
+spendthrift's head fast enough if you choose it."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't in the least know whom you mean," she said, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>The old man chuckled. "Oh, yes, you know well enough&mdash;the brother who
+spends his time racing and betting. You are a fool, Helen; he doesn't
+want you; and if he did, he couldn't afford to keep you."</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we leave Captain Kynaston's name out of the discussion,
+grandpapa," she said, quietly, but her face flushed suddenly and her
+hands twisted themselves nervously in and out of her heavy chain. "Are
+you not going to your study this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I'm going, fast enough. You want me out of the way, I suppose.
+Somebody coming to tea, eh? Oh yes, I'll clear out. I don't want to
+listen to your rubbish."</p>
+
+<p>The old man gathered up his books and papers and shuffled out of the
+room, muttering to himself as he went.</p>
+
+<p>The servant came in, bringing the lamp, replenished the fire and drew the
+curtains, shutting out the light of day.</p>
+
+<p>"Any one to tea, ma'am?" he inquired, respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"One gentleman&mdash;no one else. Bring up tea when he comes."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, ma'am;" and the servant withdrew. Mrs. Romer paced
+impatiently up and down the room, stopping again and again before the
+clock.</p>
+
+<p>"Late again! A whole half-hour behind his time! It is insufferable that
+he should treat me like this. He would go quickly enough to see some new
+face&mdash;some fresh fancy that had attracted him."</p>
+
+<p>She took out her watch and laid it on the table. "Let me see if he will
+come before the minute-hand touches the quarter; he <i>must</i> be here by
+then!"</p>
+
+<p>She continued to pace steadily up and down the room. The clock ticked on,
+the minute-hand of the watch crept ever stealthily forward over the
+golden dial; now and then a passing vehicle without made her heart beat
+with sudden hope, and then sink down again with disappointment, as the
+sound of the wheels went by and died away in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she sank into an arm-chair, covering her face with her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what a fool&mdash;what a fool I am!" she exclaimed aloud. "Why have I not
+strength of mind to go out before he comes, to show him that I don't
+care? Why, at least, can I not call up grandpapa, and pretend I had
+forgotten he was coming? That would be the best way to treat him; the way
+to show him that I am not the miserable slave he thinks me. Why can I,
+who know so well how to manage all other men, never manage the one man
+whose love I want? That horrid old man was right&mdash;he does not want me&mdash;he
+never did. Oh, if I only could be proud, and pretend I do not care! But I
+can't, I can't&mdash;there is always this miserable sickening pain at my heart
+for him, and he knows it. I have let him know it!"</p>
+
+<p>A ring at the bell made her spring to her feet, whilst a glad flush
+suddenly covered her face.</p>
+
+<p>In another minute the man she loved was in the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Nearly three-quarters of an hour late!" she cried, angrily, as he
+entered. "How shamefully you treat me!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood in front of the fire, pulling off his dogskin gloves:
+a broad-shouldered, handsome fellow, with an aquiline nose and a
+close-cropped head.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I late?" he said, indifferently. "I really did not know it. I have
+had fifty places to go to in as many minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I shall forgive you if you have been so busy," she said,
+softening at once. "Maurice, darling, are you not going to kiss me?" She
+stood up by his side upon the hearthrug, looking at him with all her
+heart in her eyes, whilst his were on the fire. She wound her arms round
+his neck, and drew his head down. He leant his cheek carelessly towards
+her lips, and she kissed him passionately; and he&mdash;he was thinking of
+something else.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little woman," he said, almost with an effort recalling himself
+to the present; he patted her cheek lightly and turned round to toss
+his gloves into his hat on the table behind him. "How cold it has
+turned&mdash;aren't you going to give me some tea?" And then he sat down on
+the further side of the fire and stretched himself back in his arm-chair,
+throwing his arms up behind his head.</p>
+
+<p>Helen rang the bell for the tea.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all you have to say to me?" she said, poutingly.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice Kynaston looked distressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word, Helen, I am sure I don't know what you expect. I haven't
+heard any particular news. I saw you only yesterday, you know. I don't
+know what you want me to say."</p>
+
+<p>Helen was silent. She knew very well what she wanted, she wanted him to
+say and do things that were impossible to him&mdash;to play the lover to her,
+to respond to her caresses, to look glad to see her.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice was so tired of it all! tired alike of her reproaches and her
+caresses. The first irritated him, the second gave him no pleasure. There
+was no longer any attraction to him about her, her love was oppressive to
+him. He did not want it, he had never wanted it; only somehow she had
+laid it so openly and freely at his feet, that it had seemed almost
+unmanly to him not to put forth his hand and take it. And now he was
+tired of his thraldom, sick of her endearments, satiated with her kisses.
+And what was it all to end in? He could not marry her, he would not have
+desired to do so had he been able; but as things were, there was no money
+to marry on either side. At his heart Maurice Kynaston was glad of it,
+for he did not want her for a wife, and yet he feared that he was bound
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>Man-like, he had no courage to break the chains that bound him, and yet
+to-night he had said to himself that he would make the effort&mdash;the state
+of his affairs furnished him with a sufficiently good pretext for
+broaching the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"There is something I wanted to say to you," he said, after the tea had
+been brought in and they were alone again. He sat forward in his chair
+and stroked his moustache nervously, not looking at her as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Helen came and sat on the hearthrug at his feet, resting her cheek
+caressingly against his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Maurice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's about myself. I have been awfully hard hit this last week at
+Newmarket, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, so you told me. I am so sorry, darling." But she did not care much
+as long as he was with her and was kind to her&mdash;nothing else signified
+much to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but I am pretty well broke this time&mdash;I had to go to John again. He
+is an awfully good fellow, is old John; he has paid everything up for me.
+But I've had to promise to give up racing, and now I've got to live on
+my pay."</p>
+
+<p>"I could lend you fifty pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Fifty pounds! pooh! what nonsense! What would be the good of fifty
+pounds to me?"</p>
+
+<p>He said it rather ungraciously, perhaps, and her eyes filled with tears.
+When a man does not love a woman, her little childish offers of help do
+not touch him as they would if he loved her. He would not have taken five
+thousand from her, yet he was angry with her for talking of fifty pounds.</p>
+
+<p>"What I wanted to say to you, Helen, was that, of course, now I am so
+hard up it's no good thinking of&mdash;of marrying&mdash;or anything of that kind;
+and don't you think it would be happiest if you and I&mdash;I mean, wisest for
+us both&mdash;for you, of course, principally&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What!</i>" She lifted her head sharply. She saw what he meant at once. A
+wild terror filled her heart. "You mean that you want to throw me over!"
+she said, breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, do be reasonable. Throw you over! of course not&mdash;but what
+is it all to lead to? How can we possibly marry? It was bad enough
+before, when I had my few hundreds a year. But now even that is gone.
+A captain in a line regiment is not exactly in a position to marry. Why,
+I shall hardly be able to keep myself, far less a wife too. I cannot drag
+you down to starvation, Helen; it would not be right or honourable to
+continue to bind you to my broken fortunes."</p>
+
+<p>She was standing up now before him very white and very resolute.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you make so many excuses? You want to be rid of me."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, how unjust you are."</p>
+
+<p>"Am I unjust? Wait! let me speak. How have we altered things? Could you
+marry me any more before you lost this money? You know you could not.
+Have we not always agreed to wait till better times? Why cannot we go on
+waiting?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would not be fair to tie you."</p>
+
+<p>He had not the courage to say, "I do not love you&mdash;money or no money, I
+do not wish to marry you." How indeed is a man who is a gentleman to say
+such a discourteous thing to a lady for whom he has once professed
+affection? Maurice Kynaston, at all events, could not say so.</p>
+
+<p>"It would not be fair to tie you; it would be better to let you be free:"
+that was all he could find to say. And then Helen burst forth
+impetuously,</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to be tied&mdash;I do not want to be free&mdash;I will not marry any other
+man on earth but you. Oh! Maurice, my love, my darling!" casting herself
+down again at his feet and clasping her arms wildly round him. "Whom else
+do I want but you&mdash;whom else have I ever loved? You know I have always
+been yours&mdash;always&mdash;long ago, in the old days when you never even gave me
+a look, and I was so maddened with misery and despair that I did not care
+what became of me when I married poor Willie, hardly knowing what I was
+doing, only because my life was so unbearable at home. And now that I
+have got you, do you think I will give you up? And you love me&mdash;surely,
+surely, you <i>must</i> love me. You said so once, Maurice&mdash;tell me so again.
+You do love me, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>What was a man to do? Maurice moved uneasily under her embrace as though
+he would withdraw her arms from about his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said, nervously; "of course, I am fond of you, and all
+that, but we can't marry upon less than nothing. You must know that as
+well as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but we can wait."</p>
+
+<p>"What are we to wait for?" he said, irritably.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a hundred things might happen&mdash;your brother might die."</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid!" he said, pushing her from him, in earnest this time.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we will hope not that, perhaps; but grandpapa can't live for ever,
+and he ought to leave me all his money, and then we should be rich."</p>
+
+<p>"It is horrible waiting for dead people's shoes," said Maurice, with a
+little shudder; "besides, Mr. Harlowe is just as likely as not to leave
+his money to a hospital, or to the British Museum, or the National
+Gallery&mdash;you could not count upon anything."</p>
+
+<p>"We could at all events wait and see."</p>
+
+<p>"And be engaged all that time on the off-chance?" he said, drearily;
+"that is a miserable prospect."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you do wish to get rid of me!" she said, looking at him
+suspiciously; "you have seen some other woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! what a little fool you are!" He jumped up angrily from his chair,
+leaving her there upon the hearthrug. A woman makes a false move when she
+speaks of "another woman" to the man whose affection for her is on the
+wane. In the present instance the accusation was utterly without
+foundation. Many as were his self-reproaches on her account, that one had
+never been amongst them. If he did not love her, neither had he the
+slightest fancy for any other woman. Her remark irritated him beyond
+measure; it seemed to annul and wipe out the score of his own
+shortcomings towards her, and to make himself, not her, the injured one.</p>
+
+<p>"Women are the most irrational, the most unjust, the most thoroughly
+pig-headed set of creatures on the face of the earth!" he burst forth,
+angrily.</p>
+
+<p>She saw her mistake by this time. She was no fool; she was quick
+enough&mdash;sharp as a needle&mdash;where her love did not, as love invariably
+does, warp and blind her judgment.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, Maurice," she said, humbly. "I did not mean to doubt you, of
+course. Have you not said you love me? Sit down again, please."</p>
+
+<p>He sat down only half appeased, looking glum and sulky. She felt that
+some concession on her part was necessary. She took his hand and stroked
+it softly. She knew so well that he did not love her, and yet she clung
+so desperately to the hope that she could win him back; she would not own
+to herself even in the furthermost recesses of her own heart that his
+love was dead. She would not believe it; to put it in words to herself
+even would have half killed her; but still she was forced to acknowledge
+that unless she met him half-way she might lose him altogether.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what I will do, Maurice," she said thoughtfully. "I will
+consent to let our engagement be in abeyance for the present; I will
+cease to write to you unless I have anything particular to say, and I
+will not expect you to write to me. If people question us, we will deny
+any engagement between us&mdash;we will say that we are each of us free&mdash;but
+on one condition only, that you will promise me most solemnly, on your
+honour as a gentleman, that should either of us be left any money&mdash;should
+there be, say, a clear thousand a year between us, within the next five
+years&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Helen, I am as likely to have a thousand a year as to be
+presented with the regalia."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. If it is unlikely, so much the worse&mdash;or the better,
+whichever you may like to call it. But if such a thing does happen, give
+me your word of honour that you will come to me at once&mdash;that, in fact,
+our engagement shall be renewed. If things are no better, our prospects
+no brighter, in five years from now&mdash;well, then, let us each be free to
+marry elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment or two of silence between them. Maurice bent forward
+in his chair, leaning his arms upon his knees, and staring moodily into
+the fire. He was weighing her proposition. It was something; but it was
+not enough. It virtually bound him to her for five years, for, of course,
+an engagement that is to be tacitly consented to between the principal
+contractors is an engagement still, though the whole world be in
+ignorance of it. But then it gave him a chance, and a very good chance
+too, of perfect liberty in five years' time. It was something, certainly;
+though, as he had wanted his freedom at once, it could hardly be said to
+be altogether satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>Helen knelt bolt upright in front of him, watching his face. How
+passionately she desired to hear him indignantly repudiate the
+half-liberty she offered him! How ardently she desired that he should
+take her in his arms, and swear to her that he would never consent to her
+terms, no one but herself could know. It had been her last expedient to
+revive the old love, to rekindle the dead ashes of the smouldering fire.
+Surely, if there was but a spark of it left, it must leap up into life
+and vitality again at her words. But, as she watched him, her heart, that
+had beat so wildly, sank cold and colder within her. She felt that his
+heart was gone from her; she had cast her last die and lost. But, for all
+that, she was not minded to let him go free&mdash;her wild, ungoverned passion
+for him was too deeply rooted within her; since he would not be hers
+willingly, he should be hers by force.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," she said, wistfully, "you cannot find my terms too hard to
+consent to&mdash;you who&mdash;who love me?"</p>
+
+<p>He turned to her quickly and took her hands, every feeling of
+gentleman-like honour, every spark of manly courtesy towards her, aroused
+by her gentle words.</p>
+
+<p>"Say no more, Helen&mdash;you are too good&mdash;too generous to me. It shall be as
+you say."</p>
+
+<p>And then he left, thankful to escape from her presence and to be alone
+again with his thoughts in the raw darkness of the November evening.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LAY RECTOR.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Or art thou complaining<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of thy lowly lot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, thine own disdaining,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dost ask what thou hast not?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the future dreaming,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Weary of the past,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For the present scheming<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All but what thou hast.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">L. E. Landon.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>In the churchyard at Sutton-in-the-Wold was a monument which, for
+downright ugliness and bad taste, could hardly find its fellow in the
+whole county. It was a wonderful and marvellous structure of gray
+granite, raised upon a flight of steps, and consisted of an object like
+unto Cleopatra's Needle surmounting a family tea-urn. It had been erected
+by one Nathaniel Crupps, a well-to-do farmer in the parish, upon the
+death of his second wife. The first partner of his affections had been
+previously interred also in the same spot, but it was not until the death
+of the second Mrs. Crupps, who was undoubtedly his favourite, that
+Nathaniel bethought him of immortalizing the memory of both ladies by one
+bold stroke of fancy, as exemplified by this portentous granite
+monstrosity. On it the virtues of both wives were recorded, as it was
+touchingly and na&iuml;vely stated, by their "sorrowing husband with strict
+impartiality."</p>
+
+<p>It was upon this graceful structure that Vera Nevill leant one foggy
+morning in the first week of November, and surveyed the church in front
+of her. She was not engaged in any sentimental musings appropriate to the
+situation. She was neither meditating upon the briefness of life in
+general, nor upon the many virtues of the ladies of the Crupps family,
+over whose remains she was standing. She was simply waiting for Jimmy
+Griffiths, and looking at the church because she had nothing else to look
+at. The church, indeed, afforded her some food for reflection, purely, I
+regret to state, of a practical and mundane character. It was a large and
+handsome building, with a particularly fine old tower, that was sadly out
+of repair; but the chancel was a modern and barn-like structure of brick
+and plaster, which ought, of course, to be entirely swept away, and a new
+and more appropriate one built in its stead. The chancel belonged, as
+most chancels do, to the lay rector, and the lay rector was Sir John
+Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it became bruited abroad that Sir John was coming down to the
+old house for the winter, there was a general excitement throughout the
+parish, but no one partook of the excitement to a greater degree than did
+its worthy vicar.</p>
+
+<p>It was the dream of Eustace Daintree's life to get his church restored,
+and more especially to get the chancel rebuilt. There had been a
+restoration fund accumulating for some years, and could he have had the
+slightest assistance from the lay rector concerning the chancel, Mr.
+Daintree would assuredly have sent for the architect, and the builders,
+and the stone-cutters, and have begun his church at once with that
+beautiful disregard of the future chances of being able to get the money
+to pay for it, and with that sparrow-like trust in Providence, which is
+usually displayed by those clerical gentlemen who, in the face of an
+estimate which tells them that eight thousand pounds will be the sum
+total required, are ready to dash into bricks and mortar upon the actual
+possession of eight hundred. But there was the chancel! To leave it as it
+was whilst restoring the nave would have been too heart-rending; to touch
+it without Sir John Kynaston's assistance, impossible and illegal.
+Several times Eustace Daintree had applied to Sir John in writing upon
+the subject. The answers had been vague and unsatisfactory. He would
+promise nothing at all; he would come down and see it some day possibly,
+and then he would be able to say more about it; meanwhile, for the
+present, things must remain as they were.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, the news was known that Sir John was actually coming
+down, Mr. Daintree's thoughts flew at once to his beloved church.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we shall get the chancel done at last," he said to his wife
+gleefully, rubbing his hands. And the very day after Sir John's arrival
+Eustace went up to the Hall after dinner to see him upon the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you not better wait a day or two?" counselled his more prudent wife.
+"Wait till you meet him, naturally. You don't very well know what kind of
+man he is, nor how he will take it."</p>
+
+<p>"What is the use of waiting? I knew him well enough eight years ago; he
+was a pleasant fellow enough then. He won't kill me, I suppose, and the
+chancel is a disgrace&mdash;a positive disgrace to him. It is my duty to point
+it out to him; the thing can't afford to wait, it ought to be done at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>So he disregarded Marion's advice, and Vera helped him on with his
+great-coat in the hall, and wound his woollen comforter round his neck,
+and bade him good luck on his expedition to Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>He came back sorrowful and abashed. Sir John had been civil, very civil;
+he had insisted on his sitting down at his table&mdash;for he had apparently
+not finished his dinner&mdash;and had opened a bottle of fine old port in his
+honour. He had inquired about many of the old people, and had expressed
+a friendly interest in the parish generally; but with regard to the
+chancel, he had been as adamant.</p>
+
+<p>He did not see, he had said, why it could not go on well enough as it
+was. If it was in bad repair, Davis should see to it; a man with a
+barrowful of bricks and a shovelful of mortar should be sent down. That,
+of course, it was his duty to do. Sir John did not understand that more
+could possibly be expected of him. The chancel had been good enough for
+his father, it would probably be good enough for him; it would last his
+time, he supposed, in any case.</p>
+
+<p>But the soul of the Rev. Eustace became as water within him. It was
+not of a barrowful of bricks and shovelful of mortar that he had been
+dreaming, but of lancet windows and stone mouldings; of polished oak
+rafters within, and of high gables and red tiles without.</p>
+
+<p>He came down from the Hall disheartened and discomfited, with all the
+spirit crushed out of him; and the ladies of his family, for once,
+were of one mind about the matter. There arose about him a storm of
+indignation and a gush of sympathy, which could not fail to soothe him
+somewhat. Eustace went to rest that night sore and heavy-hearted, it is
+true, but with all the damnatory verses in the Scriptures concerning the
+latter end of the "rich man" ringing in his head; a course of meditation
+which, upon the whole, afforded him a distinct sensation of consolation
+and comfort.</p>
+
+<p>And the next morning in the churchyard Vera leant against the Cruppsian
+sarcophagus, and thought about it.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor old Eustace," she said to herself; "how I wish I were very rich,
+and could do his chancel for him! How pleased he would be; and what a
+good fellow he is! How odd it is to think what different aims there are
+in people's lives! There are Eustace and Marion simply miserable this
+morning because of that hideous barn they can't get rid of. Well, it <i>is</i>
+hideous certainly; but it doesn't disturb my peace of mind in the least.
+What a mean curmudgeon Sir John must be, by the way! I should not have
+thought it from his photograph; such a frank, open, generous face he
+seemed to have. However, we all know how photographs can mislead one.
+I wonder where that wretched boy can be!"</p>
+
+<p>The "wretched boy" was Jimmy Griffiths afore-mentioned; he was the youth
+who was in the habit of blowing the organ. The schoolmaster, who was also
+the organist, was ill, and had sent word to Mr. Daintree that he would be
+unable to be at the church on the morrow. Eustace had asked Vera to take
+his place. Now Vera was not accomplished; she neither sang, nor played,
+nor painted in water-colours; but she had once learnt to play the organ
+a little&mdash;a very little. So she professed herself willing to undertake
+the office of organ-player for once, that is to say, if she found she
+could do it pretty well, only she must go into church and try all the
+chants over. So Jimmy Griffiths was sent for from the village, and Vera,
+with the church key in her pocket, strolled idly into the churchyard,
+and, whilst awaiting him, meditated upon the tomb of the two Mrs. Crupps.</p>
+
+<p>She had come in from the private gate of the vicarage, and the vicarage
+garden&mdash;very bleak and very desolate by this time&mdash;lay behind her. To the
+right, the public pathway led down through the lych-gate into the
+village. Anybody coming up from the village could have seen her as she
+stood against the granite monument. She wore a long fur cloak down almost
+to her feet, and a round fur cap upon her head; they were her sister
+Theodora's sables, which she had left to her. Old Mrs. Daintree always
+told her she ought to sell them, a remark which made Vera very angry. Her
+back was turned to the village and to the lych-gate, and she was looking
+up at poor Eustace's bug-bear&mdash;the barn-like chancel.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly somebody came up close behind her and spoke to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you tell me, please, where the keys of the church are kept?"</p>
+
+<p>A gentleman stood beside her, lifting his hat as he spoke. Vera started
+a little at being so suddenly spoken to, but answered quite quietly and
+unconfusedly,</p>
+
+<p>"They are generally kept at the vicarage, or else in the clerk's
+cottage."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you; then I will go and fetch them."</p>
+
+<p>"But they are not there now," said Vera, as though finishing her former
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will kindly tell me where I can find them," continued the
+stranger, very politely, "I will go and get them."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you can't do that," said Vera, with just the vestige of a
+smile playing upon her face, "because they are at present in my pocket."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I beg your pardon;" and the stranger smiled outright.</p>
+
+<p>"But I will let you into the church, if you like; if that is what you
+wish?" she said, quite simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if you please." Vera moved up the path to the porch, the gentleman
+following her. She turned the key in the heavy door and held it open. "If
+you will go in, please, I will take the keys; I must not leave them in
+the door." The gentleman went in, and Vera looked at him as he passed by.</p>
+
+<p>Most uninteresting! was her verdict as he passed her; forty at the very
+least! What a beautiful situation for an adventure! What a romantic
+incident! And how excessively tame is the <i>d&eacute;nouement</i>! A middle-aged
+gentleman, tall and slightly bald, with close-cropped whiskers and grave,
+set features; who on earth could he be? A stranger, evidently; perhaps he
+was staying at some neighbouring country house, and had walked over to
+Sutton for the sake of exercise; but what on earth could he want to see
+the church for!</p>
+
+<p>The stranger stood just inside the door with his hat off, looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you come in and show it to me?" he asked, rather hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"The church? oh, certainly, if you like, but there is nothing to see in
+it." She came in, closing the door behind her, and stood beside him. It
+did not strike her as unusual or interesting, or as anything, in fact,
+but the most common-place and unexciting proceeding, that she should do
+the honours of the church to this middle-aged stranger.</p>
+
+<p>They stood side by side in the centre of the small nave with all the
+ugly, high, red-cushioned pews around them. Vera looked up and down the
+familiar place as though she and not he were seeing it for the first
+time; from the row of whitewashed pillars to the staring white windows;
+from the hatchment on the plastered walls to the disfiguring gallery
+along the west end.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very hideous," she said, almost apologetically, "especially the
+chancel; Mr. Daintree wants to have it restored, but I suppose that can't
+be done at all now."</p>
+
+<p>"Why can't it be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, because nothing can be done unless the chancel is pulled down; that
+belongs to the lay rector, and he has refused to restore it."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir John Kynaston is the lay rector."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" Vera looked a little startled; "do you know him?"</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman passed his hand over his chin.</p>
+
+<p>"Slightly," he answered, not looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity he cannot be brought to see how necessary it is, for he
+certainly ought to do it," continued Vera. "You see I cannot help being
+interested in it because Mr. Daintree is such a good man, and has worked
+so hard to get up money to begin the rest of the church. He had quite
+counted upon the chancel being done, and now he is so much disappointed;
+but, I beg your pardon, this cannot interest you."</p>
+
+<p>"But it interests me very much. Why does not somebody put it in this
+light to Sir John; he would not surely refuse?"</p>
+
+<p>"My brother-in-law, Mr. Daintree, I mean, did ask him last night, and he
+would not promise to do anything."</p>
+
+<p>The stranger suddenly left her side and walked up the church by himself
+into the chancel. He went straight up to the east end and made a minute
+examination apparently of the wall; after that, he came slowly down
+again, looking carefully into every corner and cranny from the
+whitewashed ceiling down to the damp and uneven stone paving at his feet;
+Vera thought him a very odd person, and wondered what he was thinking
+about.</p>
+
+<p>He came back to her and stood before her looking at her for a minute. And
+then he made this most remarkable speech:</p>
+
+<p>"If <i>you</i> were to ask Sir John Kynaston this he would restore the
+chancel!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>For half-a-second Vera stared at him in blank amazement. Then she turned
+haughtily round, and flushed hotly with angry indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing more to see in the church," she said, shortly, and
+walked straight out of it.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger had followed her; when they reached the churchyard he said
+to her, quite humbly,</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon; Miss Nevill; how unlucky I am to have made you angry,
+to begin with."</p>
+
+<p>Vera looked at him in astonishment. How did he know her name; who was he?
+He was looking at her with such a penitent and distressed expression,
+that for the first time she noticed what a kind face it was. Then, before
+she could answer him, she saw her brother-in-law over the paling of the
+vicarage garden, coming towards them.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger saw him, too, and lifted his hat to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye," he said, rather hastily; "I did not mean to offend you; don't
+be angry about it;" and, before she could say a word, he turned quickly
+down the churchyard through the lych-gate into the road, and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera," said Eustace Daintree, coming leisurely up to her through the
+garden gate, "how on earth do you come to be talking to Sir John; has he
+been saying anything to you about the chancel?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Who</i> was it? <i>who</i> did you say?" cried Vera, aghast.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Sir John Kynaston, to be sure. Did you not know it was he?"</p>
+
+<p>She was thunderstruck. "Are you quite sure?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course! I saw him only last night, you know. I wonder why he
+went off in such a hurry when he saw me?"</p>
+
+<p>Vera was walking silently down the garden towards the house by his side.
+The thought in her mind was, "If that was Sir John Kynaston, who then is
+the photograph I found in the writing-table drawer?"</p>
+
+<p>"What did he say to you, Vera? How came you to be talking to him?"
+pursued her brother-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>"I only let him into the church. I did not know who he was. I told him
+the chancel ought to be restored&mdash;by himself."</p>
+
+<p>Eustace Daintree looked dismayed.</p>
+
+<p>"How very unfortunate. It will, perhaps, make him still more decided to
+do nothing."</p>
+
+<p>Vera smiled a little to herself. "I hope not, Eustace," was all she said.
+But although she said no word of it to him, she knew at her heart that
+his chancel would be restored for him.</p>
+
+<p>Late that night Vera sat alone by her fireside, and thought over her
+morning's adventure; and once again she said to herself, with a little
+regretful sigh, "Whose, then, was the photograph?" But she put the
+thought away from her.</p>
+
+<p>After all, she said to herself, it made no difference. He was still Sir
+John Kynaston of Kynaston Hall, and just as well worth a woman's while to
+marry. She had made some mistake, that was all; and the real Sir John was
+not the least romantic or interesting to look at, but Kynaston Hall
+belonged to him all the same.</p>
+
+<p>They were not very exalted or very much to be admired, these dreams of
+Vera's girlhood. But neither were they quite so coarse and unlovely as
+would have been those of a purely mercenary woman. She was free from the
+vulgarity of desiring the man's money and his name from any desire to
+raise herself above her relations, or to feed her own vanity and ambition
+at their expense. It was only that, marriage being a necessity for her,
+to marry anything but a rich man would have been, with her tastes and the
+habits to which she had been brought up, the sheerest and rankest folly.
+She thought she could make a good wife to any man whose life she would
+like to share&mdash;that is to say, a life of ease and affluence. She knew she
+would make a very bad wife to a poor man. Therefore she determined upon
+so carving out her own fortunes that she should not make a failure of
+herself. It was worldly wisdom of the purest and simplest character.</p>
+
+<p>She was as much determined as ever upon winning Kynaston's owner if he
+was to be won. Only she wished, with a little sigh, that he had happened
+to be the man in the photograph. She hardly knew why she wished it&mdash;but
+the wish was there.</p>
+
+<p>She sat bending over her fire, with all her soft, dark hair loose about
+her face and flowing down her back, and her eyes fixed dreamily upon the
+flames. Her past life came back to her, her old life in the whirl and
+turmoil of pleasure which had suited her so well. She compared it, a
+little drearily, with the present; with the humdrum routine of the
+vicarage; with the parish talk about the old women and the schools; and
+the small tittle-tattle about the schoolmaster and the choir, going on
+around her all day; with old Mrs. Daintree's sharp tongue and her
+sister's meek rejoinders. She was very tired of it. It did not amuse her.
+She was not exactly discontented with her lot. Eustace and her sister
+were very kind to her, and she loved them dearly; but she did not live
+their life&mdash;she was with them, but not of them. As for herself, for her
+interests and her delights, they stagnated amongst them all. How long was
+it to last?</p>
+
+<p>And Kynaston, by contrast, appeared very fair, with its smooth lawns and
+its terrace walks, and its great desolate rooms, that she would so well
+understand how to fill with life and brightness; but Kynaston's master
+counted for very little to her. She knew the power of her own beauty so
+well. Experience had taught her that Vera Nevill had but to smile and to
+win; it had been so easy to her to be loved and wooed.</p>
+
+<p>"Only," she said to herself, as she stood up before her fire, and
+stretched up her arms so that her long hair fell back like a cloud around
+her, "only he is a different sort of man to what I had pictured him. It
+will, perhaps, not be such an easy matter to win a man like that."</p>
+
+<p>She went to bed and dreamt&mdash;not of Sir John Kynaston&mdash;but of the man
+whose pictured face once seen had haunted her ever since.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>"LITTLE PITCHERS."</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Once at least in a man's life, if only for a brief space, he reverences<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">the saint in the woman he desires. He may love and pursue again and again, <br /></span>
+<span class="i0">but she who has power to hold him back, who can make him tremble instead <br /></span>
+<span class="i0">of woo, who can make him silent when he feels eloquent, and restrained when <br /></span>
+<span class="i0">most impassioned, has won from him what never again can be given.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>It was an easier matter to win him than Vera thought.</p>
+
+<p>A week later Sir John Kynaston sat alone by his library fire, after
+breakfast, and owned to himself that he had fallen hopelessly and
+helplessly in love with Vera Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>This was all the more remarkable because Sir John was not a very young
+man, and that he was, moreover, not of a nature to do things rashly or
+impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>He was, on the contrary, of a slow and hesitating disposition. He was in
+the habit of weighing his words and his actions before he spoke or acted,
+his mind was tardy to take in new thoughts and new ideas, and he was
+cautious and almost sluggish in taking any steps in a strange and
+unaccustomed direction.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, in this matter of Vera, he had succumbed to his fate with
+all the uncalculating blindness of a boy in his teens.</p>
+
+<p>Vera was like no other woman he had ever seen; she was as far removed
+above common young-ladyhood as Raphael's Madonnas are beyond and above
+Greuze's simpering maidens; there could be no other like her&mdash;she was
+a queen, a goddess among women.</p>
+
+<p>From the very first moment that he had caught sight of her on the terrace
+outside his house her absolute mastery over him had begun. Her rare
+beauty, her quiet smile, her slow, indolent movements, the very tones of
+her rich, low voice, all impressed him in a strange and wonderful manner.
+She seemed to him to be the incarnation of everything that was pure and
+elevated in womanhood. To have imagined that such a one as she could have
+thought of his wealth or his position would have been the rankest
+blasphemy in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He raised her up on a pedestal of his own creating, and then he fell down
+before her and adored her.</p>
+
+<p>John Kynaston had but little knowledge of women. Shy and retiring in
+manner&mdash;somewhat suspicious and distrustful also&mdash;he had kept out of
+their way through life. Once, in very early manhood, he had been
+deceived; he had become engaged to a girl whom he afterwards discovered
+to have accepted him only for his money and his name, whilst her heart
+really belonged to another and a poorer man. He had shaken himself free
+of her, with horror and disgust, and had sworn to himself that he would
+never be so betrayed again. Since then he had been suspicious&mdash;and not
+without just cause&mdash;of the young ladies who had smiled upon him, and of
+their mothers, who had pressed him with gracious invitations to their
+houses. He was a rich man, but he did not mean to be loved for his
+wealth; he said to himself that, sooner than be so, he would die
+unmarried and leave to Maurice the task of keeping up the old name and
+the old family.</p>
+
+<p>But he had seen Vera; and all at once all the old barriers of pride and
+reserve were broken down! Here was the one woman on earth who realized
+his dreams, the one woman whom he would wait and toil for, even as Jacob
+waited and toiled for Rachel!</p>
+
+<p>He had come down to Kynaston to hunt; but hitherto hunting had been very
+little in his thoughts. He had been down to the vicarage once or twice,
+he had met her once in the lanes, and he had longed for a glimpse of her
+daily; as yet he had done nothing else. He opened his letters on this
+particular morning slowly and abstractedly, tossing them into the fire,
+one after the other, as he read them, and not paying very much attention
+to their contents.</p>
+
+<p>There was one, however, from his brother, "I wish you would ask me down
+to Kynaston for a week or two, old fellow," wrote Maurice. "I know you
+would mount me&mdash;now I have got rid of all my horses to please you&mdash;and
+I should like a glimpse of the old country. Write and tell me if I shall
+come down on Monday."</p>
+
+<p>This letter Sir John did pay attention to. He rose hastily, as though not
+a moment was to be lost, and answered it:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Maurice,&mdash;I can't possibly have you down here yet. My own plans are
+very uncertain, and if you are going to take your leave after Christmas,
+you had far better not go away from your work now. If I am still here in
+January, I shall be delighted if you will come down, and will mount you
+as much as you like."</p>
+
+<p>He was happier when he had written and directed this letter.</p>
+
+<p>"I must be alone just now," he murmured. "I could not bear Maurice's
+chatter&mdash;it would jar upon me."</p>
+
+<p>Then he put on his hat and strolled out. He looked in at the stables one
+minute, and called the head groom to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Wright, did not Mr. Beavan say, when I bought that new bay mare of him,
+that she had carried a lady to hounds?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir John; Miss Beavan rode her last season."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, she is a good rider. Well, I wish you would put a side-saddle and a
+skirt on her, and exercise her this morning. I might want to&mdash;to lend her
+to a lady; but she must be perfectly quiet. You can take her out every
+day this week."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John went on his way, leaving the worthy Wright a prey to speculation
+as to who the mysterious lady might be for whom the bay mare was to be
+exercised.</p>
+
+<p>His master, meanwhile, bent his steps almost instinctively to the
+vicarage.</p>
+
+<p>Vera was undergoing a periodical persecution concerning Mr. Gisburne
+at the hands of old Mrs. Daintree. She was standing up by the table
+arranging some scarlet berries and some long trails of ivy which the
+children had brought to her in a vase. Tommy and Minnie stood by watching
+her intently; Mrs. Daintree sat at a little distance, her lap full of
+undarned socks, and rated her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not as if you were a girl who could earn her living in case of
+need. There is not one single thing you can do."</p>
+
+<p>"Aunt Vera can make nosegays of berries boofully, grandma," interpolates
+Tommy, earnestly; "can't she, Minnie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she do," assented the smaller child, with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't speaking to you, Tom; little boys should be&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Heard and not seen," puts in Tommy, rapidly; "you always say that,
+grandma."</p>
+
+<p>Vera laughs softly. Mrs. Daintree goes on with her lecture.</p>
+
+<p>"Many girls in your position are very accomplished; can teach the piano,
+and history, and the elements of Latin; but it seems to me you have been
+brought up in idleness."</p>
+
+<p>"Idleness is not to be despised in its way," answers Vera, composedly.
+"Another bit of ivy, Tommy. What shall I do, Mrs. Daintree?" she
+continues, whilst her deft fingers wind the trailing greenery round and
+round the glass stem of the vase. "Shall I go down to the village school
+and sit at the feet of Mr. Dee? I have no doubt he could teach me a great
+many things I know nothing about."</p>
+
+<p>"That is nonsense; of course I don't mean that you can educate yourself
+to any purpose now; it is too late for that; but you need not, at all
+events, turn up your nose at the blessings that Providence sets before
+you; and I must say, that for a young woman deliberately to choose to
+remain a burden upon her friends, betokens an amount of servility and
+a lack of the spirit of independence which I should not have supposed
+possible even in you!"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want me to do?" said Vera, without a sign of impatience.
+"Shall I walk over to Tripton this afternoon, and make a low curtsey to
+Mr. Gisburne, and say to him very politely, 'Here is an idle and
+penniless young woman who would be very pleased to stop here and marry
+you!' Would that be the way to do it, Mrs. Daintree?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, <i>no</i>!" imperatively from Tommy, who was listening with rapidly
+crimsoning cheeks; "you shall <i>not</i> go and stop at Tripton, and tell Mr.
+Gisburne you will marry him!"</p>
+
+<p>Vera laughed. "No, Tommy, I don't think I will; not, that is to say, if
+you are a good boy. I think I can do something better than that with
+myself!" she added, softly, as if to herself. Mrs. Daintree caught the
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"And <i>what</i> better, pray? What better chance are you ever likely to have?
+Let me tell you, bachelors who want penniless wives don't grow on the
+blackberry bushes down here! If you were not so selfish and so conceited,
+you would see where your duty to my son, who is supporting you, lay. You
+would see that to be married to an honest, upright man like Albert
+Gisburne is a chance that most girls would catch at only too thankfully."</p>
+
+<p>The old lady had raised her voice; she spoke loud and angrily; she was
+rapidly working herself into a passion. Tommy, accustomed to family rows,
+stood on the hearthrug, looking excitedly from his grandmother to his
+aunt. He was a precocious child; he did not quite understand, and yet he
+understood partly. He knew that his grandmother was scolding Vera, and
+telling her she was to go away and marry Mr. Gisburne. That Vera should
+go away! That, in itself, was sufficiently awful. Tommy adored Vera with
+all the intensity of his childish soul; that she should go away from him
+to Mr. Gisburne seemed to him the most terrible visitation that could
+possibly happen. His little heart swelled within him; the tears were very
+near his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>At this very minute the door softly opened, and Sir John Kynaston, whose
+ring had been unheard in the commotion, was ushered in.</p>
+
+<p>Tommy thought he saw a deliverer, specially sent in by Providence for the
+occasion. He made one spring at him and caught him round the legs, after
+the manner of enthusiastic small boys.</p>
+
+<p>"Please&mdash;please&mdash;don't let grandmamma send aunt Vera away to Tripton
+to marry Mr. Gisburne! He has red hair, and I hate him; and aunt Vera
+doesn't want to go, she wants to stop at home and do something better!"</p>
+
+<p>A moment of utter confusion on all sides; then Vera, crimson to the roots
+of her hair, stepped forward and held out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Little pitchers have long ears!" she said, laughing: "and Tommy is a
+very silly little boy."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but, aunt Vera, you said&mdash;you said," cried the child. What further
+revelations he might have made were fortunately not destined to be known.
+His aunt placed her hand unceremoniously over his small, eager mouth, and
+hustled both children in some haste out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Sir John, looking the picture of distress and embarrassment,
+had shaken hands with the old lady, and inquired if he could speak with
+her son.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Daintree is in his study; I will take you to him," she said, rising,
+and led him away out of the room. She looked at him sharply as she showed
+him into the study; and it did come across her mind, "I wonder what you
+come so often for." Still, no thought of Vera entered into her head. Sir
+John was the great man of the place, the squire, the potentate in the
+hollow of whose hand lay Sutton-in-the-Wold and all its inhabitants, and
+Vera was a nobody in the old lady's eyes,&mdash;a waif, whose presence was of
+no account at all. Sir John was no more likely to notice her than any of
+the village girls; except, indeed, that he would speak politely to her
+because she was Eustace's sister-in-law. Still, it did come across her
+mind to wonder what he came so often for.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later the two gentlemen were seen going across the vicarage
+garden towards the church.</p>
+
+<p>They remained there a very long time, more than half an hour. When they
+came back Marion had finished her housekeeping and was in the room busy
+cutting out unbleached calico into poor men's shirts, on the grand piano,
+an instrument which she maintained had been specially and originally
+called into existence for no other purpose. Mrs. Daintree still sat in
+her chimney corner. Vera was at the writing-table with her back to the
+room, writing a letter.</p>
+
+<p>The vicar came in with his face all aglow with excitement and delight;
+his wife looked up at him quickly, she saw that something unusual and of
+a pleasant character had happened.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Marion, we must both thank our good friend, Sir John. I am happy
+to tell you that he has consented to restore the chancel."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Sir John, how can we ever thank you enough!" cried Marion, coming
+forward breathlessly and pressing his hands in eager gratitude. Sir John
+looked as if he didn't want to be thanked, but he glanced towards the
+writing-table. Vera's back was turned; she made no sign of having heard.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I had given up all hopes of it altogether," continued the
+vicar. "You gave such an unqualified refusal when I spoke to you about
+it before, I never dreamt that you would be induced to change your mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Some one&mdash;I mean&mdash;I thought it over&mdash;and&mdash;and it was presented to my
+notice&mdash;in another light," stammered Sir John, somewhat confusedly.</p>
+
+<p>"And it is most kind, most generous of you to allow it to be done in my
+own way, according to the plans I had wished to follow."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I am quite sure you will understand it much better than I am likely
+to do. Besides, I have no time to attend to it; it will suit me better to
+leave it entirely in your hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you not like to see the plans Mr. Woodley drew for us last year?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not now, I think, thank you; I must be going; another time, Mr.
+Daintree; I can't wait just now."</p>
+
+<p>He was standing irresolute in the middle of the room. He looked again
+wistfully at Vera's back. Was it possible that she was not going to give
+him one word, one look, when surely she must know by whose influence he
+had been induced to consent to rebuild the chancel!</p>
+
+<p>Almost in despair he moved to the door, and just as he reached it, when
+his hand was already on the handle, she looked up. Her eyes, all softened
+with pleasure and gratitude, nay, almost with tenderness, met his. He
+stopped suddenly short.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill, might I ask you to walk with me as far as the clerk's
+cottage? I&mdash;I forget which it is!"</p>
+
+<p>It was the lamest and most blundering excuse. Any six-year-old child in
+the village could have pointed out the cottage to him. Mrs. Daintree
+looked up in astonishment. Vera blushed rosy red; Eustace, man-like, saw
+nothing, and began eagerly,</p>
+
+<p>"I am walking that way myself; we can go together&mdash;&mdash;" Suddenly his coat
+tails were violently pulled from behind. "Quite impossible, Eustace; I
+want you at home for the next hour," says Marion, quietly standing by his
+side, with a look of utter innocence upon her face. The vicar, almost
+throttled by the violence of the assault upon his garments, perceived
+that, in some mysterious manner, he had said something he ought not to
+have said. He deemed it wisest to subside into silence.</p>
+
+<p>Vera rose from the writing-table. "I will go and put my hat on," she
+said, quietly, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Three minutes later she and Sir John went out of the front door together.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that is the oddest fellow I ever came across in my life," said
+Eustace, fairly puzzled as soon as he was gone. "It is my belief,"
+tapping his forehead significantly, "that he is a little touched <i>here</i>.
+I don't believe he quite knows what he is talking about. Why, the other
+night he would have nothing to say to the chancel, wouldn't even listen
+to me, cut me so short about it I really couldn't venture to pursue the
+subject; and here he comes, ten days later, all of his own accord, and
+proposes to do it exactly as it ought to be done, in the best and most
+expensive way&mdash;purbeck columns round the lancet windows, and all, Marion,
+just what I wanted; gives me absolute <i>carte blanche</i> about it. I only
+hope he won't take a fresh fancy into his head and change his mind
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps he found he would make himself unpopular if he did not do it,"
+suggested his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Marion held her tongue, and snipped away at her unbleached calico.</p>
+
+<p>"And then, again, about old Hoggs' cottage," pursued Mr. Daintree. "What
+on earth could make him forget where it was? He might as well forget the
+way to his own house. I really do think he must be a little gone in the
+upper storey, poor fellow! Marion, what have you to say about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have to say that if you stand chattering here all the morning, we
+shall never get anything done. I want to speak to you immediately,
+Eustace, in the other room."</p>
+
+<p>She hurried her husband out into the study, and carefully closed the door
+upon them.</p>
+
+<p>What then was the Rev. Eustace's amazement to behold his wife suddenly
+execute a series of capers round the room, which would not have disgraced
+a <i>coryph&eacute;e</i> at a Christmas pantomime, but were hardly in keeping with
+the demure and highly respectable bearing of the wife of the vicar of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Daintree began to think that everybody was going mad this morning.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Marion, what on earth is the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you dear, stupid, blunder-headed old donkey!" exclaimed his wife,
+finishing her <i>pas seul</i> in front of him, and hugging him vehemently as a
+finale to the entertainment. "Do you mean to say that you don't see it?"</p>
+
+<p>"See it? See what?" repeated the unfortunate clergyman, in mortal
+bewilderment, staring at her hard.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you dear, stupid old goose! why, it's as plain as daylight. Can't
+you guess?"</p>
+
+<p>Eustace shook his head dolefully.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Sir John Kynaston has fallen in love with Vera!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Marion!</i> impossible!" in an awe-struck whisper. "What can make you
+imagine such a thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, everything&mdash;the chancel, of course. She must have spoken to him
+about it; it is to be done for her; did you not see him look at her? And
+then, asking her to go down the village with him; he knows where Hoggs'
+cottage is as well as you do, only he couldn't think of anything better."</p>
+
+<p>Eustace literally gasped with the magnitude of the revelation.</p>
+
+<p>"Great Heavens! and I offered to go with him instead of her."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you great blundering baby!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my dear, are you sure&mdash;are you quite sure? Remember his position and
+Vera's."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and isn't Vera good enough, and beautiful enough, for any
+position?" answered her sister, proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes; that is true; God bless her!" he said, fervently. "Marion,
+what a clever woman you are to find it out."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I am clever, sir. But, Eustace, it is only beginning, you
+know; so we must just let things take their course, and not seem to
+notice anything. And, mind, not a word to your mother."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Vera and Sir John Kynaston were walking down the village street
+together. The man awkward and ill at ease, the woman calm and composed,
+and thoroughly mistress of the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very good of you about the chancel," said Vera, softly, breaking
+the embarrassment of the silence between them.</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>knew</i> I should do it," he said, looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled. "I thought perhaps you would."</p>
+
+<p>"You know <i>why</i> I am going to do it&mdash;for whose sake, do you not?" he
+pursued, still keeping his eyes upon her downcast face.</p>
+
+<p>"Because it is the right thing to do, I hope; and for the sake of doing
+good," she answered, sedately; and Sir John felt immediately reproved and
+rebuked, as though by the voice of an angelic being.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he said, presently, "is it true that they want you to
+marry&mdash;that parson&mdash;Gisburne, of Tripton? Forgive me for asking."</p>
+
+<p>Vera coloured a little and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"What dreadful things little boys are!" was all she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, but I want to know. Are you&mdash;are you <i>engaged</i> to him?" with a
+sudden painful eagerness of manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Most decidedly I am not," she answered, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John breathed again.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what you will think of me; you will, perhaps, say I am very
+impertinent. I know I have no right to question you."</p>
+
+<p>"I only think you are very kind to take an interest in me," she answered,
+gently, looking at him with that wonderful look in her shadowy eyes that
+came into them unconsciously when she felt her softest and her best.</p>
+
+<p>They had passed through the village by this time into the quiet lane
+beyond; needless to say that no thought of Hoggs, the clerk, or his
+cottage, had come into either of their heads by the way.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John stopped short, and Vera of necessity stopped too.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought&mdash;it seemed to me by what I overheard," he said, hesitatingly,
+"that they were tormenting you&mdash;persecuting you, perhaps&mdash;into a marriage
+you do not wish for."</p>
+
+<p>"They have wished me to marry Mr. Gisburne," Vera admitted, in a low
+voice, rustling the fallen brown leaves with her foot, her eyes fixed on
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"But you won't let them over-persuade you; you won't be induced to listen
+to them, will you? Promise me you won't?" he asked, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>Vera looked up frankly into his face and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I give you my word of honour I will not marry Mr. Gisburne," she
+answered; and then she added, laughingly, "You had no business to make me
+betray that poor man's secrets."</p>
+
+<p>And then Sir John laughed too, and, changing the subject, asked her if
+she would like to ride a little bay mare he had that he thought would
+carry her. Vera said she would think of it, with the air of a young queen
+accepting a favour from a humble subject; and Sir John thanked her as
+heartily as though she had promised him some great thing.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, suppose we go and find Hoggs' cottage," she said, smiling. And they
+turned back towards the village.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A SOIR&Eacute;E AT WALPOLE LODGE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">When the lute is broken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sweet notes are remembered not;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the lips have spoken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loved accents are soon forgot.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As music and splendour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Survive not the lamp and the lute,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The heart's echoes render<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No song when the spirit is mute.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Shelley</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>About three miles from Hyde Park Corner, somewhere among the cross-roads
+between Mortlake and Kew, there stands a rambling, old-fashioned house,
+within about four acres of garden, surrounded by a very high, red-brick
+wall. It is one of those houses of which there used to be scores within
+the immediate neighbourhood of London&mdash;of which there still are dozens,
+although, alas! they are yearly disappearing to make room for gay rows of
+pert, upstart villas, whose tawdry flashiness ill replaces the sedate
+respectability of their last-century predecessors. But, uncoveted by the
+contractor's lawless eye, untouched by the builder's desecrating hand,
+Walpole Lodge stands on, as it did a hundred years ago, hidden behind
+the shelter of its venerable walls, and half smothered under masses of
+wisteria and Virginia creeper. On the wall, in summer time, grow
+countless soft green mosses, and brown, waving grasses. Thick masses of
+yellow stonecrop and tufts of snapdragon crown its summit, whilst the
+topmost branches of the long row of lime-trees within come nodding
+sweet-scented greetings to the passers-by along the dusty high road
+below.</p>
+
+<p>But in the winter the wall is flowerless and the branches of the
+lime-trees are bare, and within, in the garden, there are only the
+holly-trees and the yew-hedge of the shrubbery walks, and the empty brown
+flower-beds set in the faded grass. But winter and summer alike, old Lady
+Kynaston holds her weekly receptions, and thither flock all the wit, and
+the talent, and the fashion of London. In the summer they are garden
+parties, in the winter they become evening receptions. How she manages it
+no one can quite tell; but so it is, that her rooms are always crowded,
+that no one is ever bored at her house, that people are always keen to
+come to her, and that there are hundreds who would think it an effort to
+go to other people's parties across the street who think it no trouble at
+all to drive nearly to Richmond, to hers. She has the rare talent of
+making society a charm in itself. No one who is not clever, or beautiful,
+or distinguished in some way above his or her fellows ever gains a
+footing in her drawing-rooms. Every one of any note whatever is sure to
+be found there. There are savants and diplomatists, poets and painters,
+foreign ambassadors, and men of science. The fashionable beauty is sure
+to be met there side by side with the latest type of strong-minded woman;
+the German composer, with the wild hair, whose music is to regenerate
+the future, may be seen chatting to a cabinet minister; the most rising
+barrister of the day is lingering by the side of a prima-donna, or
+discoursing to an Eastern traveller. Old Lady Kynaston herself has
+charming manners, and possesses the rare tact of making every one feel
+at home and happy in her house.</p>
+
+<p>It was not done in a day&mdash;this gathering about her of so brilliant and
+delightful a society. She had lived many years at Walpole Lodge, ever
+since her widowhood, and was now quite an old lady. In her early life she
+had written several charming books&mdash;chiefly biographies of distinguished
+men whom she had known, and even now she occasionally put pen again to
+paper, and sent some delightful social essay or some pleasantly written
+critique to one or other of the Reviews of the day.</p>
+
+<p>Her married life had been neither very long nor very happy. She had never
+learnt to love her husband's country home. At his death she had turned
+her back thankfully upon Kynaston, and had never seen it again. Of her
+two sons, she stood in some awe of the elder, whose cold and unresponsive
+character resembled her dead husband's, whilst she adored Maurice, who
+was warm-hearted and affectionate in manner, like herself. There were ten
+years between them, for she had been married twelve years; and at her
+secret heart Lady Kynaston hoped and believed that John would remain
+unmarried, so that the estates and the money might in time become
+Maurice's.</p>
+
+<p>It is the second Thursday in December, and Lady Kynaston is "at home" to
+the world. Her drawing-rooms&mdash;there are three of them, not large, but
+low, comfortable rooms, opening one out of the other&mdash;are filled, as
+usual, with a mixed and brilliant crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Across the square hall is the dining-room, where a cold supper, not very
+sumptuous or very <i>recherch&eacute;</i>, but still sufficient of its kind for the
+occasion, is laid out; and beyond that is Lady Kynaston's boudoir, where
+there is a piano, and which is used on these occasions as a music-room,
+so that those who are musical may retire there, and neither interfere,
+nor be interfered with, by the rest of the company. Some one is singing
+in the music-room now&mdash;singing well, you may be sure, or he would not be
+at Walpole Lodge&mdash;but the strains of the song can hardly be heard at all
+across dining-room and hall, in the larger of the three rooms, where most
+of the guests are congregated.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston, a small, slight woman in soft gray satin and old lace,
+moves about graciously and gracefully still, despite her seventy years,
+among her guests&mdash;stopping now at one group, now at another, talking
+politics to one, science to a second, whispering a few discreet words
+about the latest scandal to this great lady, murmuring words of approval
+upon her clever book or her charming poem to another. Her smiles are
+equally dispensed, no one is passed over, and she has the rare talent of
+making every single individual in the crowded room feel himself to be the
+one particular person whom Lady Kynaston is especially rejoiced to see.
+She has tact, and she has sympathy&mdash;two invaluable gifts in a woman.</p>
+
+<p>Conspicuous among the crowd of well-dressed and handsome women is Helen
+Romer. She sits on an ottoman at the further end of the room, where she
+holds a little court of her own, dispensing her smiles and pleasant words
+among the little knot of men who linger admiringly by her side.</p>
+
+<p>She is in black, with masses of gold embroidery about her, and she
+carries a large black and gold feather fan in her hands, which she
+moves rapidly, almost restlessly, up and down; her eyes wander often
+to the doorway, and every now and then she raises her hand with a short,
+impatient action to her blonde head, as though she were half weary of
+the talk about her.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, Lady Kynaston, moving slowly among her guests, comes near her,
+and, leaning for a moment on the back of the ottoman, presses her hand as
+she passes.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Romer is a favourite of hers; she is pretty, and she is piquant in
+manner and conversation; two very good things, which she thinks highly of
+in any young woman. Besides that, she knows that Helen loves her younger
+son; and, although she hardly understands how things are between them,
+nor how far Maurice himself is implicated, she believes that Helen will
+eventually inherit her grandfather's money, and, liking her personally,
+she has seen no harm in encouraging her too plainly displayed affection.
+Moreover, the love they both bear to him has been a link between them.
+They talk of him together almost as a mother and a daughter might do;
+they have the same anxieties over his health, the same vexations over
+his debts, the same rejoicings when his brother comes forward with his
+much-needed help. Lady Kynaston does not want her darling to marry yet,
+but when the time shall come for him to take unto himself a wife, she
+will raise no objection to pretty Helen Romer, should he bring her to
+her, as a daughter-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>As the old lady stoops over her, Helen's upturned wistful eyes say as
+plainly as words can say it&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Is he coming to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice will be here presently, I hope," says his mother, answering the
+look in her eyes; "he was to come up by the six o'clock train; he will
+dine at his club and come on here later." Helen's face became radiant,
+and Lady Kynaston passed on.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice Kynaston's regiment was quartered at Northampton; he came up to
+town often for the day or for the night, as he could get leave; but his
+movements were never quite to be depended upon.</p>
+
+<p>Half-an-hour or so more of feverish impatience. Helen watches the gay
+crowd about her with a feeling of sick weariness. Two members of
+Parliament are talking of Russian aggression and Turkish misrule close to
+her; they turn to her presently and include her in the conversation; Mrs.
+Romer gives her opinion shrewdly and sensibly. An elderly duchess is
+describing some episode of Royalty's last ball; there is a general laugh,
+in which Helen joins heartily; a young attach&eacute; bends over her and
+whispers some admiring little speech in her ear, and she blushes and
+smiles just as if she liked it above all things; while all the time her
+eyes hardly stray for one second from the open doorway through which
+Maurice will come, and her heart is saying to itself, over and over
+again,</p>
+
+<p>"Will he come, will he come?"</p>
+
+<p>He comes at last. Long before the servant, who opens the door to him, has
+taken his coat and hat from him, Helen catches sight of his handsome head
+and his broad shoulders through an opening in the crowd. In another
+minute he is in the room standing irresolute in the doorway, looking
+round as if to see who is and who is not there to-night.</p>
+
+<p>He is, after all, only a very ordinary type of a good-looking soldierly
+young Englishman, just such a one as may be seen any day in our parks or
+our drawing-rooms. He has clearly-cut and rather <i>prononc&eacute;</i> features, a
+strong-built, well made figure, a long moustache, close-shaven cheeks,
+and eyes that are rather deep-set, and are, when you are near enough to
+see them well, of a deep blue-gray. In all that Maurice Kynaston is in no
+way different from scores of other good-looking young men whom we may
+have met. But there is just something that makes his face a remarkable
+one: it is a strong-looking face&mdash;a face that looks as if he had a will
+of his own and knew how to stick to it; a face that looks, too, as if he
+could do and dare much for truth and honour's sake. It is almost stern
+when he is silent; it can soften into the tenderness of a woman when he
+speaks.</p>
+
+<p>Look at him now as he catches sight of his mother, and steps forward for
+a minute to press her loving hands. All the hardness and all the strength
+are gone out of his face now; he only looks down at her with eyes full of
+love and gentleness&mdash;for life as yet holds nothing dearer or better for
+him than that little white-haired old woman. Only for a minute, and then
+he leaves go of her hands, and passes on down the room, speaking to the
+guests whom he knows.</p>
+
+<p>"He does not see me," says Helen, bitterly, to herself; "he will go on
+into the next room, and never know that I am here."</p>
+
+<p>But he had seen her perfectly. Next to the woman he most wishes to see in
+a room, the one whom a man first catches sight of is the woman he would
+sooner were not there. He had seen Helen the very instant he came in, but
+he had noticed thankfully that some one was talking to her, and he said
+to himself that there was no occasion for him to hurry to her side; it
+was not as if they were openly engaged; there could be no necessity for
+him to rush into slavery at once; he would speak to her, of course,
+by-and-by; and whenever he came to her he well knew that he would be
+equally welcomed: he was so sure of her. Nothing on earth or under Heaven
+is so fatal to a man's love as that. There was no longer any uncertainty;
+there was none of the keenness of pursuit dear to the old hunting
+instinct inherent in man; there was not even the charm of variety in her
+moods. She was always the same to him; always she pouted a little at
+first, and looked ill-tempered, and reproached him; and always she came
+round again at his very first kind word, and poured out her heart in a
+torrent of worship at his feet. Maurice knew it all by heart, the sulks
+and the cross words, and then the passionate denials, and the wild
+protestations of her undying love. He was sorry for her, too, in his way;
+he was too tender-hearted, too chivalrous, to be anything but kind to
+her; but though he was sorry, he could not love her; and, oh! how
+insufferably weary of her he was!</p>
+
+<p>Presently he did come up to her, and took the seat by her side just
+vacated by the attach&eacute;. The little serio-comedy instantly repeated
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>A little pout and a little toss of the head.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been as long coming to speak to me as you possibly could be."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think it would look well if I had come rushing up to you the
+instant I came in?"</p>
+
+<p>"You need not, at all events, have stood talking for ten minutes to that
+great black-eyed Lady Anderleigh. Of course, if you like her better than
+me, you can go back to her."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I can, if I choose, you silly little woman; but seeing that
+I am by you, and not by her, I suppose it is a proof that I prefer your
+society, is it not?"</p>
+
+<p>Very polite, but not strictly true, Captain Maurice! At his heart he
+preferred talking to Lady Anderleigh, or to any other woman in the room.
+The admission, however, was quite enough for Helen.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Maurice," she whispered, "forgive me; I am a jealous, bad-tempered
+wretch, but," lower still, "it is only because I love you so much."</p>
+
+<p>And had there been no one in the room, Maurice knew perfectly that at
+this juncture Mrs. Romer would have cast her arms around his neck&mdash;as
+usual.</p>
+
+<p>To his unspeakable relief, a man&mdash;a clever lawyer, whose attention was a
+flattering thing to any woman&mdash;came up to Helen at this moment, and took
+a vacant chair beside her. Maurice thankfully slipped away, leaving his
+inamorata in a state of rage and disgust with that talented and elderly
+lawyer, such as no words can describe.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Kynaston took the favourable opportunity of escaping across the
+hall, where he spent the remainder of the evening, dividing his attention
+between the music and supper rooms, and Helen saw him no more that night.</p>
+
+<p>She saw, however, some one she had not reckoned upon seeing. Glancing
+carelessly across to the end of the room, she perceived, talking to Lady
+Kynaston, a little French gentleman, with a smooth black head, a neat,
+pointed, little black beard, and the red ribbon of the L&eacute;gion d'Honneur
+in his button-hole.</p>
+
+<p>What there was in the sight of so harmless and inoffensive a personage to
+upset her it may be difficult to say; but the fact is that, when Mrs.
+Romer perceived this polite little Frenchman talking to her hostess, she
+turned suddenly so sick and white, that a lady sitting near her asked her
+if she was going to faint.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel it a little hot," she murmured; "I think I will go into the next
+room." She rose and attempted to escape&mdash;whether from the heat or the
+observation of the little Frenchman was best known to herself.</p>
+
+<p>Her maneuver, however, was not destined to succeed. Before she could
+work her way half-way through the crush to the door, the man whom she was
+bent upon avoiding turned round and saw her. A look of glad recognition
+flashed into his face, and he instantly left Lady Kynaston's side, and
+came across the room to speak to her.</p>
+
+<p>"This is an unlooked-for pleasure, madame."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly never expected to meet you here, Monsieur D'Arblet,"
+faltered Helen, turning red and white alternately.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not come and have a little conversation with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was just going away."</p>
+
+<p>"So soon! Oh, bien! then I will take you to your carriage." He held out
+his arm, and Helen was perforce obliged to take it.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little delay in the hall, whilst Helen waited for her, or
+rather for her grandfather's carriage, during which she stood with her
+hand upon her unwelcome friend's arm. Whilst they were waiting he
+whispered something eagerly in her ear.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; it is impossible!" reiterated Helen, with much apparent
+distress.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur D'Arblet whispered something more.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, if you insist upon it!" she said, faintly, and then got into
+her carriage and was driven away.</p>
+
+<p>Before, however, she had left Walpole Lodge five minutes, she called out
+to the servants to stop the carriage. The footman descended from the box
+and came round to the window.</p>
+
+<p>They had drawn up by the side of a long wall quite beyond the crowd of
+carriages that was waiting at Lady Kynaston's house.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to wait here a few minutes, for&mdash;for a gentleman I am going to
+drive back to town," she said to the servant, confusedly. She was ashamed
+to give such an order to him.</p>
+
+<p>She was frightened too, and trembled with nervousness lest any one should
+see her waiting here.</p>
+
+<p>It was a cold, damp night, and Helen shivered, and drew her fur cloak
+closer about her in the darkness. Presently there came footsteps along
+the pathway, and a man came through the fog up to the door. It was opened
+for him in silence, and he got in, and the carriage drove off again.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet had a mean, cunning-looking countenance;
+strictly speaking, indeed, he was rather handsome, his features being
+decidedly well-shaped, but the evil and vindictive expression of his
+face made it an unpleasant one to look upon. As he took his seat in the
+brougham by Helen's side she shrank instinctively away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"So, ma mie!" he said, peering down into her face with odious
+familiarity, "here I find you again after all this time, beautiful as
+ever! It is charming to be with you again, once more."</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur D'Arblet, pray understand that nothing but absolute necessity
+would have induced me to drive you home to-night," said Helen, who was
+trembling violently.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not polite, ma belle&mdash;there is a charming <i>franchise</i> about you
+Englishwomen, however, which gives a piquancy to your conversation."</p>
+
+<p>"You know very well why it is that I am obliged to speak to you alone,"
+she interrupted, colouring hotly under his bold looks of admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Le souvenir du beau pass&eacute;!</i>" murmured the Frenchman, laughing softly.
+"Is that it, ma belle H&eacute;l&egrave;ne?"</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur," she cried, almost in tears, "pray listen to me; for pity's
+sake tell me what you have done with my letters&mdash;have you destroyed
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Destroyed them! What, those dear letters that are so precious to my
+heart? Ah, madame, could you believe it of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have kept them?" she murmured, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mais si, certainement, that I have kept them, every one&mdash;every single
+one of them," he repeated, looking at her meaningly, with a cold glitter
+in his black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Not that&mdash;<i>that</i> one?" pleaded Helen, piteously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;that one too&mdash;that charming and delightful letter in which you so
+generously offered to throw yourself upon my protection&mdash;do you remember
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, only too well!" she murmured, hiding her face in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" he continued, with a sort of relish in torturing her, which
+resembled the feline cruelty of a wild beast playing with its prey. "Ah!
+it was a delightful letter, that; what a pity it was that I was out of
+Paris that night, and never received it till, alas! it was too late to
+rush to your side. You remember how it was, do you not? Your husband was
+lying ill at your hotel; you were very tired of him&mdash;ce pauvre mari!
+Well, you had been tired of him for some time, had you not? And he was
+not what you ladies call 'nice;' he did drink, and he did swear, and I
+had been often to see you when he was out, and had taken you to the
+theatre and the bal d'Op&eacute;ra&mdash;do you remember?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, for Heaven's sake spare me these horrible reminiscences!" cried
+Helen, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>He went on pitilessly, as though he had not heard her, "And you were good
+enough to write me several letters&mdash;there were one, two, three, four of
+them," counting them off upon his fingers; "and then came the fifth&mdash;that
+one you wrote when he was ill. Was it not a sad pity that I had gone out
+of Paris for the day, and never received it till you and your husband had
+left for England? But think you that I will part with it ever? It is my
+consolation, my tr&eacute;sor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur D'Arblet, if you have one spark of honour or of gentleman-like
+feeling, you will give me those mad, foolish letters again. I entreat you
+to do so. You know that I was beside myself when I wrote them, I was so
+unhappy&mdash;do you not see that they compromise me fatally; that it is my
+good name, my reputation, which are at stake?" In her agony she had half
+sunk at his feet on the floor of the carriage, clasping her hands
+entreatingly together.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur D'Arblet raised her with <i>empressement</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, madame, do not thus humiliate yourself at my feet. Why should you be
+afraid? Are not your good name and your reputation safe in my hands?"</p>
+
+<p>Helen burst into bitter tears.</p>
+
+<p>"How cruel, how wicked you are!" she cried; "no Englishman would treat a
+lady in this way."</p>
+
+<p>"Your Englishmen are fools, ma ch&egrave;re&mdash;and I&mdash;I am French!" he replied,
+shrugging his shoulders expressively.</p>
+
+<p>"But what object, what possible cause can you have for keeping those
+wretched letters?"</p>
+
+<p>He bent his face down close to hers.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I tell you, belle H&eacute;l&egrave;ne? It is this: You are beautiful and you
+have talent; I like you. Some day, perhaps, when the grandpapa dies, you
+will have money&mdash;then Lucien D'Arblet will come to you, madame, with
+that precious little packet in his hands, and he will say, 'You will
+marry me, ma ch&egrave;re, or I will make public these letters.' Do you see?
+Till then, amusez vous, ma belle; enjoy your life and your liberty as
+much as you desire; I will not object to anything you do. Only you will
+not venture to marry&mdash;because I have these letters?"</p>
+
+<p>"You would prevent my marrying?" said Helen, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mais, certainement that I should. Do you suppose any man would care to
+be your husband after he had read that last letter&mdash;the fifth, you know?"</p>
+
+<p>No answer, save the choking sobs of his companion.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur D'Arblet waited a few minutes, watching her; then, as she did
+not raise her head from the cushions of the carriage, where she had
+buried it, the Frenchman pulled the check-string of the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," he said, "I will wish you good-night, for we are close to your
+house. We have had our little talk, have we not?"</p>
+
+<p>The brougham, stopped, and the footman opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, madame, and many thanks for your kindness," said D'Arblet,
+raising his hat politely.</p>
+
+<p>In another minute he was gone, and Helen, hoping that the darkness had
+concealed the traces of her agitation from the servant's prying eyes, was
+driven on, more dead than alive, to her grandfather's house.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>EVENING REVERIES.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For nothing on earth is sadder<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than the dream that cheated the grasp,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The flower that turned to the adder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fruit that changed to the asp,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the dayspring in darkness closes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As the sunset fades from the hills,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With the fragrance of perished roses,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the music of parched-up rills.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">A. L. Gordon</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It had been the darkest chapter of her life, that fatal month in Paris,
+when she had foolishly and recklessly placed herself in the power of a
+man so unscrupulous and so devoid of principle as Lucien D'Arblet.</p>
+
+<p>It had begun in all innocence&mdash;on her part, at least. She had been very
+miserable; she had discovered to the full how wild a mistake her marriage
+had been. She had felt herself to be fatally separated from Maurice, the
+man she loved, for ever; and Monsieur D'Arblet had been kind to her; he
+had pitied her for being tied to a husband who drank and who gambled, and
+Helen had allowed herself to be pitied. D'Arblet had charming manners,
+and an accurate knowledge of the weakness of the fair sex; he knew when
+to flatter and when to cajole her, when to be tenderly sympathetic to her
+sorrows, and when to divert her thoughts to brighter and pleasanter
+topics than her own miseries. He succeeded in fascinating her completely.
+Whilst her husband was occupied with his own disreputable friends, Helen,
+sooner than remain alone in their hotel night after night, was persuaded
+to accept Monsieur D'Arblet's escort to theatres and operas, and other
+public places, where her constant presence with him very soon compromised
+her amongst the few friends who knew her in Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Then came scenes with her husband; frantic letters of misery to this
+French vicomte, whom she imagined to be so devotedly attached to her,
+and, finally, one ever-to-be-repented letter, in which she offered to
+leave her husband for ever and to come to him.</p>
+
+<p>True, this letter did not reach its destination till too late, and Helen
+was mercifully saved from the fate which, in her wicked despair, she was
+ready to rush upon. Twenty-four hours after her return to England she saw
+the horrible abyss upon which she had stood, and thanked God from the
+bottom of her heart that she had been rescued, in spite of herself, from
+so dreadful a deed. But the letter had been written, and was in Lucien
+D'Arblet's possession. Later on she learnt, by a chance conversation, the
+true character of the man, and shuddered when she remembered how nearly
+she had wrecked her whole life for him. And when her husband's death had
+placed her once more in the security and affluence of her grandfather's
+house, with fresh hopes and fresh chances before her, she had but one
+wish with regard to that Parisian episode of her life,&mdash;to forget it as
+though it had never been.</p>
+
+<p>She hoped, and, as time went on, she felt sure, that she would never see
+Monsieur D'Arblet again. New hopes and new excitements occupied her
+thoughts. The man to whom in her youth she had given her heart once more
+came across her life; she was thrown very much into his society; she
+learnt to love him more devotedly than ever, and when at last she had
+succeeded in establishing the sort of engagement which existed between
+them, she had assured him, and also assured herself, that no other man
+had ever, for one instant, filled her fancy. That stormy chapter of her
+married life was forgotten; she resolutely wiped it out of her memory, as
+if it had never existed.</p>
+
+<p>And now, after all this time&mdash;it was five years ago&mdash;she had met him
+again&mdash;this Frenchman, who had once compromised her name, and who now had
+possession of her letters.</p>
+
+<p>There was a cruel irony of fate in the fact that she should be destined
+to meet him again at Lady Kynaston's, the very house of all others where
+she would least have wished to see him.</p>
+
+<p>There was, however, had she thought of it, nothing at all extraordinary
+in her having done so. No house in all London society was so open to
+foreigners as Walpole Lodge, and Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet was no
+unknown upstart; he bore a good old name; he was clever, had taken an
+active part in diplomatic life, and was a very well-known individual in
+Parisian society. He had been brought to Lady Kynaston's by a member of
+the French Embassy, who was a frequenter of her soir&eacute;es.</p>
+
+<p>Neither, however, was meeting with Mrs. Romer entirely accidental on
+Monsieur D'Arblet's part. He had never forgotten the pretty Englishwoman
+who had so foolishly and recklessly placed herself in his power.</p>
+
+<p>It is true he had lost sight of her, and other intrigues and other
+pursuits had filled his leisure hours; but when he came to England he had
+thought of her again, and had made a few careless inquiries after her. It
+was not difficult to identify her; the Mrs. Romer who was now a widow,
+who lived with her rich grandfather, who was very old, who would probably
+soon die and leave her all his wealth, was evidently the same Mrs. Romer
+whom he had known. The friend who gave him the information spoke of her
+as lovely and <i>spirituelle</i>, and as a woman who would be worth marrying
+some day. "She is often at Lady Kynaston's receptions," he had added.</p>
+
+<p>"Mon cher, take me to your Lady Kynaston's soir&eacute;es," had been Lucien
+D'Arblet's lazy rejoinder as they finished their evening smoke together.
+"I would like to meet my friend, la belle veuve, again, and I will see if
+she has forgotten me."</p>
+
+<p>Bitter, very bitter, were Mrs. Romer's remorseful meditations that night
+when she reached her grandfather's house at Prince's Gate. Every detail
+of her acquaintance with Lucien D'Arblet came back to her with a horrible
+and painful distinctness. Over and over again she cursed her own folly,
+and bewailed the hardness of the fate which placed her once more in the
+hands of this man.</p>
+
+<p>Would he indeed keep his cruel threats to her? Would he bring forward
+those letters to spoil her life once more&mdash;to prevent her from marrying
+Maurice should she ever have the chance of doing so?</p>
+
+<p>Stooping alone over her fire, with all the brightness, and all the
+freshness gone out of her, with an old and almost haggard look in the
+face that was so lately beaming with smiles and dimples, Helen Romer
+asked herself shudderingly these bitter questions over and over again.</p>
+
+<p>Had she been sure of Maurice's love, she would have been almost tempted
+to have confessed her fault, and to have thrown herself upon his mercy;
+but she knew that he did not love her well enough to forgive her. Too
+well she knew with what disgust and contempt Maurice would be likely to
+regard her past conduct; such a confession would, she knew, only induce
+him to shake himself clear of her for ever. Indeed, had he loved her, it
+is doubtful whether Maurice would have been able to condone so grave a
+fault in the past history of a woman; his own standard of honour stood
+too high to allow him to pass over lightly any disgraceful or
+dishonourable conduct in those with whom he had to do. But, loving her
+not, she would have been utterly without excuse in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She knew it well enough. No, her only chance was in silence, and in vague
+hopes that time might rescue her out of her difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, whilst Helen Romer sat up late into the early morning,
+thinking bitterly over her past sins and her future dangers, Maurice
+Kynaston and his mother also kept watch together at Walpole Lodge after
+all the guests had gone away, and the old house was left alone again to
+the mother and son.</p>
+
+<p>"Something troubles you, little mother," said Maurice, as he stretched
+himself upon the rug by her bedroom fire, and laid his head down
+caressingly upon her knees.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston passed her hand fondly over the short dark hair. "How well
+you know my face, Maurice! Yes, something has worried me all day&mdash;it is a
+letter from your brother."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice looked up laughingly. "What, is old John in trouble? That would
+be something new. Has he taken a leaf out of my book, mother, and dropped
+his money at Newmarket, too?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you naughty boy? John has got more sense. No!" with a sigh&mdash;"I wish
+it were only money; I fear it is a worse trouble than that."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, you alarm me," cried Maurice, looking up in mock dismay;
+"why, whatever has he been and gone and done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Maurice, it is nothing to laugh at&mdash;it is some woman&mdash;a girl he has
+met down at Kynaston; some nobody&mdash;a clergyman's daughter, or sister, or
+something&mdash;whom he says he is going to marry!" Lady Kynaston looked the
+picture of distress and dismay.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice laughed softly. "Well, well, mother; there is nothing very
+dreadful after all&mdash;I am sure I wish him joy."</p>
+
+<p>"My boy," she said, below her breath, "I had so hoped, so trusted he
+would never marry&mdash;it seemed so unlikely&mdash;he seemed so completely happy
+in his bachelor's life; and I had hoped that you&mdash;that you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, mother dear, I know," he said, quickly, and twisted himself
+round till he got her hand between his, kissing it as he spoke; "but I&mdash;I
+never thought of that&mdash;dear old John, he has been the best of brothers to
+me; and, mother dear, I know it is all your love to me; but you and I,
+dear, we will not grudge him his happiness, will we?"</p>
+
+<p>He knew so well her weakness&mdash;how that she had loved him at the expense
+of the other son, who was not so dear to her; he loved her for it, and
+yet he did not at his heart think it right.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston wiped a few tears away. "You are always right, my boy,
+always, and I am a foolish old woman. But oh, Maurice, that is only half
+the trouble! Who is this woman whom he has chosen? Some country girl,
+ignorant of the ways of the world, unformed and awkward&mdash;not fitted to be
+his wife!"</p>
+
+<p>"Does he say so?" laughed Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, of course not. Stay, where is his letter? Oh, there, on the
+dressing-table; give it me, my dear. No, this is what he says: 'Miss
+Nevill seems to me in every way to fulfil my ideal of a good and perfect
+woman, and, if she will consent to marry me, I intend to make her my
+wife.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, a good and perfect woman is a <i>rara avis</i>, at all events mother."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear! but all men say that of a girl when they are in love&mdash;it
+amounts to very little."</p>
+
+<p>"You see, he has evidently not proposed to her yet; perhaps she will
+refuse him."</p>
+
+<p>"Refuse Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall! A poor clergyman's daughter!
+My dear Maurice, I gave you credit for more knowledge of the world.
+Besides, John is a fine-looking man. Oh, no, she is not in the least
+likely to refuse him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then all we have got to do is to make the best of her," said Maurice,
+composedly.</p>
+
+<p>"That is easily said for you, who need see very little of her. But
+John's wife is a person who will be of great importance to my
+happiness. Dear me! and to think he might have had Lady Mary Hendrie
+for the asking: a charming creature, well born, highly educated and
+accomplished&mdash;everything that a man could wish for. And there were the De
+Vallery girls&mdash;either of them would have married him, and been a suitable
+wife for him; and he must needs go and throw himself away on a little
+country chit, who could have been equally happy, and much more suitably
+mated, with her father's curate. Maurice, my dear," with a sudden change
+of voice, "I wish you would go down and cut him out; if you made love to
+her ever so little you could turn her head, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice burst out laughing. "Oh, you wicked, immoral little mother! Did I
+ever hear such an iniquitous proposition! Do you want <i>me</i> to marry her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" laughed his mother; "but you might make her think you meant to,
+and then, perhaps, she would refuse John."</p>
+
+<p>"I have not Kynaston Hall at my back, remember, after which you have
+given her the credit of angling. Besides, mother dear, to speak plainly,
+I honestly do not think my taste in women is in the least likely to be
+the same as John's. No, I think I will keep out of the way whilst the
+love-making is going on. I will go down and have a look at the young
+woman by-and-by when it is all settled, and let you know what I think of
+her. I dare say a good, honest country lass will suit John far better
+than a beautiful woman of the world, who would be sure to be miserable
+with him. Don't fret, little mother; make the best of her if you can."</p>
+
+<p>He rose and stretched himself up to his full height before the fire. Lady
+Kynaston looked up at him admiringly. Oh, she thought, if the money and
+the name could only have been his! How well he would have made use of it;
+how proud she would have been of him&mdash;her handsome boy, whom all men
+liked, and all women would gladly love.</p>
+
+<p>"A good son makes a good husband," she said aloud, following her own
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"And John has been a good son, mother," said Maurice, cordially.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, in his way, perhaps; but I was thinking of you, my boy, not
+of him, and how lucky will be the woman who is your wife, Maurice&mdash;will
+it be&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Maurice stooped quickly, and laid his hand playfully over her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, mother dear&mdash;never ask me&mdash;for I don't know it myself."
+And then he kissed her, and wished her good-night, and left her.</p>
+
+<p>She sat long over her fire, dreaming, by herself, thinking a little,
+perhaps, of the elder son, and the bride he was going to bring her, whom
+she should have to welcome whether she liked her or no, but thinking more
+of the younger, whose inner life she had studied, and who was so entirely
+dear and precious to her. It was very little to her that he had been
+extravagant and thoughtless, that he had lost money in betting and
+racing&mdash;these were minor faults&mdash;and she and John between them had always
+managed to meet his difficulties; they had not been, in truth, very
+tremendous. But for that, he had never caused her one day's anxiety,
+never given her one instant's pain. "God grant he may get a wife who
+deserves him," was the mother's prayer that night. "I doubt if Helen
+be worthy of him; but if he loves her, as I believe he must do, no word
+of mine shall stand between him and his happiness."</p>
+
+<p>And then she went to bed, and dreamed, as mothers dream of the child they
+love best.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MEMBER FOR MEADOWSHIRE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Honour and shame from no condition rise;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Act well your part, there all the honour lies.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Pope</span>, "Essay on Man."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>About five miles from Kynaston Hall, as the crow flies, across the
+fields, stood, as the house-agents would have described it, "a large
+and commodious modern mansion, standing in about eighty acres of
+well-timbered park land."</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that any description that could be given of Shadonake would
+so well answer to the reality as the above familiar form of words.</p>
+
+<p>The house was undoubtedly large, very large, and it was also modern, very
+modern. It was a handsome stone structure, with a colonnade of white
+pillars along the entrance side, and with a multiplicity of large
+plate-glass windows stretching away in interminable vistas in every
+direction. A broad gravel sweep led up to the front door; to the right
+were the stables, large and handsome too, with a clock-tower and a belfry
+over the gateway; and to the left were the gardens and the shrubberies.</p>
+
+<p>There had been an old house once at Shadonake, old and picturesque and
+uncomfortable; but when the property had been purchased by the present
+owner&mdash;Mr. Andrew Miller&mdash;after he had been returned as Conservative
+member for the county, the old house was swept away, and a modern
+mansion, more suited to the wants and requirements of his family, arose
+in its place.</p>
+
+<p>The park was flat, but well wooded. The old trees, of course, remained
+intact; but the gardens of the first house, being rambling and
+old-fashioned, had been done away with, to make room for others on a
+larger and more imposing scale; and vineries and pineries, orchid-houses,
+and hot-houses of every description arose rapidly all over the site of
+the old bowling-green and the wilderness, half kitchen garden, half
+rosary, that had served to content the former owners of Shadonake, now
+all lying dead and buried in the chancel of the village church.</p>
+
+<p>The only feature of the old mansion which had been left untouched was
+rather a remarkable one. It was a large lake or pond, lying south of the
+gardens, and about a quarter of a mile from the house. It lay in a sort
+of dip in the ground, and was surrounded on all four sides&mdash;for it was
+exactly square&mdash;by very steep high banks, which had been cut into by
+steep stone steps, now gray, and broken, and moss-grown, which led down
+straight into the water. This pool was called Shadonake Bath. How long
+the steps had existed no one knew; probably for several hundred years,
+for there was a ghost story connected with them. Somebody was supposed,
+before the memory of any one living, to have been drowned there, and to
+haunt the steps at certain times of the year.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain that but for the fact of a mania for boating, and punting,
+and skating indulged in by several of his younger sons, Mr. Miller, in
+his energy for sweeping away all things old, and setting up all things
+new, would not have spared the Bath any more than he had spared the
+bowling-green. He had gone so far, indeed, as to have a plan submitted to
+him for draining it, and turning it into a strawberry garden, and for
+doing away with the picturesque old stone steps altogether in order to
+encase the banks in red brick, suitable to the cultivation of peaches and
+nectarines; but Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys, had thought about
+their punts and their canoes, and had pleaded piteously for the Bath; so
+the Bath was allowed to remain untouched, greatly to the relief of many
+of the neighbours, who were proud of its traditions, and who, in the
+general destruction that had been going on at Shadonake, had trembled for
+its safety.</p>
+
+<p>Where Mr. Miller had originally come from nobody exactly knew. It was
+generally supposed that he had migrated early in life from northern and
+manufacturing districts, where his father had amassed a large fortune.
+In spite, however, of his wealth, it is doubtful whether he would ever
+have achieved the difficult task of being returned for so exclusive and
+aristocratic a county as Meadowshire had he not made a most prudent and
+politic marriage. He had married one of the Miss Esterworths, of
+Lutterton.</p>
+
+<p>Now, everybody who has the slightest knowledge of Meadowshire and its
+internal politics will see at once that Andrew Miller could not have done
+better for himself. The Esterworths are the very oldest and best of the
+old county families; there can be no sort of doubt whatever as to their
+position and standing. Therefore, when Andrew Miller married Caroline
+Esterworth, there was at once an end of all hesitation as to how he was
+to be treated amongst them. Meadowshire might wonder at Miss Caroline's
+taste, but it kept its wonder to itself, and held out the right hand of
+fellowship to Andrew Miller then and ever after.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that there were five Miss Esterworths, all grown up, and all
+unmarried, at the time when Andrew came a-wooing to Lutterton Castle;
+they were none of them remarkable for beauty, and Caroline, who was the
+eldest of the five, less so than the others. Moreover, there were many
+sons at Lutterton, and the daughters' portions were but small. Altogether
+the love-making had been easy and prosperous, for Caroline, who was a
+sensible young woman, had readily recognized the superior advantages
+of marrying an excellent man of no birth or breeding, with twenty
+thousand a year, to remaining Miss Esterworth to her dying day, in
+dignified but impecunious spinsterhood. Time had proved the wisdom of her
+choice. For some years the Millers had rented a small but pretty little
+house within two miles of Lutterton, where, of course, everybody visited
+them, and got used to Andrew's squat, burly figure, and agreed to
+overlook his many little defects of speech and manner in consideration of
+his many excellent qualities&mdash;and his wealth&mdash;and where, in course of
+time, all their children, two daughters and six sons, were born.</p>
+
+<p>And then, a vacancy occurring opportunely, Mrs. Miller determined that
+her husband should stand in the Conservative interest for the county. She
+would have made a Liberal of him had she thought it would answer better.
+How she toiled and how she slaved, and how she kept her Andrew, who was
+not by any means ambitious of the position, up to the mark, it boots not
+here to tell. Suffice it to say, that the deed was accomplished, and that
+Andrew Miller became M.P. for North Meadowshire.</p>
+
+<p>Almost at the same time Shadonake fell into the market, and Mrs. Miller
+perceived that the time had now come for her husband's wealth to be
+recognized and appreciated; or, as he himself expressed it, in vernacular
+that was strictly to the point if inelegant in diction, the time was
+come for him "to cut a splash."</p>
+
+<p>She had been very clever, this daughter of the Esterworths. She had kept
+a tight rein over her husband all through the early years of their
+married life. She would have no ostentation, no vulgar display of wealth,
+no parading and flaunting of that twenty thousand per annum in their
+neighbours' faces. And she had done what she had intended; she had
+established her husband's position well in the county&mdash;she had made him
+to be accepted, not only by reason of his wealth, but also because he was
+her husband; she had roused no one's envy&mdash;she had never given cause for
+spite or jealousy&mdash;she had made him popular as well as herself. They had
+lived quietly and unobtrusively; they had, of course, had everything of
+the best; their horses and carriages were irreproachable, but they had
+not had more of them than their neighbours. They had entertained freely,
+and they had given their guests well-cooked dinners and expensive wines;
+but there had been nothing lavish in their entertainments, nothing that
+could make any of them go away and say to themselves, with angry
+discontent, that "those Millers" were purse-proud and vulgar in their
+wealth. When she had gone to her neighbours' houses Mrs. Miller had been
+handsomely but never extravagantly dressed; she had praised their cooks,
+and expressed herself envious of their flowers, and had bemoaned her own
+inability to vie with their peaches and their pineapples; she had never
+talked about her own possessions, nor had she ever paraded her own eight
+thousand pounds' worth of diamonds before the envious eyes of women who
+had none.</p>
+
+<p>In this way she had made herself popular&mdash;and in this way she had won the
+county seat for her husband.</p>
+
+<p>When, however, that great end and aim of her existence was accomplished,
+Caroline Miller felt that she might now fairly launch out a little. The
+time was come when she might reap the advantage of her long years of
+repression and patient waiting. Her daughters were growing up, her sons
+were all at school. For her children's sake, it was time that she should
+take the lead in the county which their father's fortune and new position
+entitled them to, and which no one now was likely to grudge them.
+Shadonake therefore was bought, and the house straightway pulled down,
+and built up again in a style, and with a magnificence, befitting Mr.
+Miller's wealth.</p>
+
+<p>Bricks and mortar were Andrew Miller's delight. He was never so happy as
+during the three years that Shadonake House was being built; every stone
+that was laid was a fresh interest to him; every inch of brick wall a
+keen and special delight. He had been disappointed not to have had the
+spoliation of Shadonake Bath; it had been a distinct mortification to him
+to have to forego the four brick walls which would have replaced its
+ancient steps; but then he had made it up to himself by altering the
+position of the front door three times before it was finally settled
+to his satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>But all this was over by this time, and when my story begins Shadonake
+new House, as it was sometimes called, was built, and furnished and
+inhabited in every corner of its lofty rooms, and all along the spacious
+length of its many wide corridors.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon&mdash;it is about a week later than that soir&eacute;e at Walpole
+Lodge, mentioned in a previous chapter&mdash;Mrs. Miller and her eldest
+daughter are sitting together in the large drawing-room at Shadonake. The
+room is furnished in that style of high artistic decoration that is now
+the fashion. There are rich Persian rugs over the polished oak floor; a
+high oak chimney-piece, with blue tiles inserted into it in every
+direction, and decorated with old Nankin china bowls and jars; a wide
+grate below, where logs of wood are blazing between brass bars;
+quantities of spindle-legged Chippendale furniture all over the room,
+and a profusion of rich gold embroidery and "textile fabrics" of all
+descriptions lighting up the carved oak "dado" and the sombre sage green
+of the walls. There are pictures, too, quite of the best, and china of
+every period and every style, upon every available bracket and shelf and
+corner where a cup or a plate can be made to stand. Four large windows on
+one side open on to the lawn; two, at right angles to them, lead into
+a large conservatory, where there is, even at this dead season of the
+year, a blaze of exotic blossoms that fill the room with their sweet rich
+odour.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller sits before a writing bureau of inlaid satin-wood of an
+ancient pattern. She has her pen in her hand, and is docketing her
+visiting list. Beatrice Miller sits on a low four-legged stool by her
+mother's side, with a large Japanese china bowl on her knees filled with
+cards, which she takes out one after the other, reading the names upon
+them aloud to her mother before tossing them into a basket, also of
+Japanese structure, which is on the floor in front of her.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice is Mrs. Miller's eldest daughter, and she is twenty. Guy is only
+eleven months older, and Edwin is a year younger&mdash;they are both at
+Oxford; next comes Geraldine, who is still in the school-room, but who is
+hoping to come out next Easter; then Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys;
+and lastly, Teddy and Ralph, who are at a famous preparatory school,
+whence they hope, in process of time, to be drafted on to Eton, following
+in the footsteps of their elder brothers.</p>
+
+<p>Of all this large family it is Beatrice, the eldest daughter, who causes
+her mother the most anxiety. Beatrice is like her mother&mdash;a plain but
+clever-looking girl, with the dark swart features and colouring of the
+Esterworths, who are not a handsome race. Added to which, she inherits
+her father's short and somewhat stumpy figure. Such a personal appearance
+in itself is enough to cause uneasiness to any mother who is anxious for
+her daughter's future; but when these advantages of looks are rendered
+still more peculiar by the fact that her hair had to be shaved off some
+years ago when she had scarlet fever, and that it has never grown again
+properly, but is worn short and loose about her face like a boy's, with
+its black tresses tumbling into her eyes every time she looks down&mdash;and
+when, added to this, Mrs. Miller also discovered to her mortification
+that Beatrice possessed a will of her own, and so decided a method of
+expressing her opinions and convictions, that she was not likely to be
+easily moulded to her own views, you will, perhaps, understand the extent
+of the difficulties with which she has to deal.</p>
+
+<p>For, of course, so clever and so managing a woman as Mrs. Miller has not
+allowed her daughter to grow up to the age of twenty without making the
+most careful and judiciously-laid schemes for her ultimate disposal. That
+Beatrice is to marry is a matter of course, and Mrs. Miller has well
+determined that the marriage is to be a good one, and that her daughter
+is to strengthen her father's position in Meadowshire by a union with one
+or other of its leading families. Now, when Mrs. Miller came to pass the
+marriageable men of Meadowshire under review, there was no such eligible
+bachelor amongst them all as Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall.</p>
+
+<p>It was on him, therefore, that her hopes with regard to Beatrice were
+fixed. Fortune hitherto had seemed to smile favourably upon her. Beatrice
+had had one season in town, during which she had met Sir John frequently,
+and he had, contrary to his usual custom, asked her to dance several
+times when he had met her at balls. Mrs. Miller said to herself that Sir
+John, not being a very young man, did not set much store upon mere
+personal beauty; that he probably valued mental qualities in a woman more
+highly than the transient glitter of beauty; and that Beatrice's good
+sense and sharp, shrewd conversation had evidently made a favourable
+impression upon him.</p>
+
+<p>She never was more mistaken in her life. True, Sir John did like Miss
+Miller, he found her unconventional and amusing; but his only object in
+distinguishing her by his attentions had been to pay a necessary
+compliment to the new M.P.'s daughter, a duty which he would have
+fulfilled equally had she been stupid as well as plain: moreover, as we
+have seen, few men were so intensely sensitive to beauty in a woman as
+was Sir John Kynaston. Mrs. Miller, however, was full of hopes concerning
+him. To do her justice, she was not exactly vulgarly ambitious for her
+daughter; she liked Sir John personally, and had a high respect for his
+character, and she considered that Beatrice's high spirit and self-willed
+disposition would be most desirably moderated and kept in check by a
+husband so much older than herself. Lady Kynaston, moreover, was one of
+her best and dearest friends, and was her beau-id&eacute;al of all that a clever
+and refined lady should be. The match, in every respect, would have been
+a very acceptable one to her. Whether or no Miss Beatrice shared her
+mother's views on her behalf remains to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The mother and daughter are settling together the preliminaries of a
+week's festivities which Mrs. Miller has decided shall be held at
+Shadonake this winter. The house is to be filled, and there are to be a
+series of dinner parties, culminating in a ball.</p>
+
+<p>"The Bayleys, the Westons, the Foresters, and two daughters, I suppose,"
+reads Mrs. Miller, aloud, from the list in her hand, "Any more for the
+second dinner-party, Beatrice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not going to ask the Daintrees, of Sutton, mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear me, another parson, Beatrice! I really don't think we can; I
+have got three already. They shall have a card for the ball."</p>
+
+<p>"You will ask that handsome girl who lives with them, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not the slightest occasion for doing so," replied her mother, shortly.
+Beatrice lifted her eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, she is the best-looking woman in all Meadowshire; we cannot leave
+her out."</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing about her, not even her name; she is some kind of poor
+relation, I believe&mdash;acts as the children's governess. We have too many
+women as it is. No, I certainly shall not ask her. Go on to the next,
+Beatrice."</p>
+
+<p>"But, mother, she is so very handsome! Surely you might include her."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, Beatrice, what a stupid girl you are! What is the good of
+asking handsome girls to cut you out in your own house? I should have
+thought you would have had the sense to see that for yourself," said Mrs.
+Miller, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you are horribly unjust, mamma," says Miss Beatrice,
+energetically; "and it is downright unkind to leave her out because
+she is handsome&mdash;as if I cared."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I ask her if I do not know her name?" said her mother,
+irritably, with just that amount of dread of her daughter's rising temper
+to make her anxious to conciliate her. "If you like to find out who she
+is and all about her&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will find out," said Beatrice, quietly; "give me the note, I will
+keep it back for the present."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, for goodness sake, go on, child, and don't waste any more time. Who
+are coming from town to stay in the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there will be Lady Kynaston, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. She won't come till the end of the week. I have heard from her; she
+will try and get down in time for the ball."</p>
+
+<p>"Then there will be the Macpherson girls and Helen Romer. And, as a
+matter of course, Captain Kynaston must be asked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. What a fool that woman is to advertise her feelings so openly that
+one is obliged to ask her attendant swain to follow her wherever she
+goes!"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, I think her remarkably clever; she gets what she wants,
+and the cleverest of us can do no more. It is a well-known fact to all
+Helen's acquaintances that not to ask Captain Kynaston to meet her would
+be deliberately to insult her&mdash;she expects it as her right."</p>
+
+<p>"All the same, it is in very bad taste and excessively underbred of her.
+However, I should ask Captain Kynaston in any case, for his mother's
+sake, and because I like him. He is a good shot, too, and the coverts
+must be shot that week. Who next?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Herbert Pryme."</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness me! Beatrice, what makes you think of <i>him</i>? We don't know
+anything about him&mdash;where he comes from or who are his belongings&mdash;he is
+only a nobody!"</p>
+
+<p>"He is a barrister, mamma!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course, I know that&mdash;but, then, there are barristers of all
+sorts. I am sure I do not know what made you fix upon him; you only met
+him two or three times in town."</p>
+
+<p>"I liked him," said Beatrice, carelessly; "he is a gentleman, and would
+be a pleasant man to have in the house."</p>
+
+<p>Her mother looked at her sharply. She was playing with the gold locket
+round her neck, twisting it backwards and forwards along its chain, her
+eyes fixed upon the heap of cards on her lap. There was not the faintest
+vestige of a blush upon her face.</p>
+
+<p>"However," she continued, "if you don't care about having him, strike his
+name out. Only it is a pity, because Sophy Macpherson is rather fond of
+him, I fancy."</p>
+
+<p>This was a lie; it was Miss Beatrice herself who was fond of him, but not
+even her mother, keen and quick-scented as she was, could have guessed it
+from her impassive face. Mrs. Miller was taken in completely.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," she said, "if Sophy Macpherson likes him, that alters the case. Oh,
+yes, I will ask him by all means&mdash;as you say, he is a gentleman and
+pleasant."</p>
+
+<p>"Look, mamma!" exclaimed Beatrice, suddenly; "there is uncle Tom riding
+up the drive."</p>
+
+<p>Now, Tom Esterworth was a very important personage; he was the present
+head of the Esterworth family, and, as such, the representative of its
+ancient honours and traditions. He was a bachelor, and reigned in
+solitary grandeur at Lutterton Castle, and kept the hounds as his
+fathers had done before him.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Tom was thought very much of at Shadonake, and his visits always
+caused a certain amount of agitation in his sister's mind. To her dying
+day she would be conscious that in Tom's eyes she had been guilty of a
+<i>m&eacute;salliance</i>. She never could get that idea out of her head; it made her
+nervous and ill at ease in his presence. She hustled all her notes and
+cards hurriedly together into her bureau.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Tom! Dear me, what can he have come to-day for! I thought the
+hounds were out. Ring the bell, Beatrice; he will like some tea. Where
+is your father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Papa is out superintending the building of the new pigsties," said
+Beatrice as she rang the bell. "I think uncle Tom has been hunting; he is
+in boots and breeches I see."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, I hope your father won't come in with his muddy feet and his
+hands covered with earth," said Mrs. Miller, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Tom came in, a tall, dark-faced, strong-limbed man of fifty&mdash;an
+ugly man, if you will, but a gentleman, and an Esterworth, every inch of
+him. He kissed his sister, and patted his niece on the cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Why weren't you out to-day, Pussy?"</p>
+
+<p>"You met so far off, uncle. I had no one to ride with to the meet. The
+boys will be back next week. Have you had a good run?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, we've done nothing but potter about all the morning; there isn't a
+scrap of scent."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Tom, will you give us a meet here when we have our house-warming?"</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! you haven't got any foxes at Shadonake," answered her uncle. He
+had drawn his chair to the fire, and was warming his hands over the
+blazing logs. Beatrice was rather a favourite with him. "I will see about
+it, Pussy," he added, kindly, seeing that she looked disappointed. Mrs.
+Miller was pouring him out a cup of tea.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I've got a piece of news for you women!" says Mr. Esterworth,
+stretching out his hand for his tea. "John Kynaston's going to be
+married!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller never knew how it was that the old Worcester tea-cup in her
+hand did not at this juncture fall flat on the ground into a thousand
+atoms at her brother's feet. It is certain that only a very strong
+exercise of self-control and presence of mind saved it from destruction.</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged to be married!" she said, with a gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"That is news indeed," cried Beatrice, heartily, "I am delighted."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be so foolish, Beatrice," said her mother, quite sharply. "How on
+earth can you be delighted when you don't even know who it is? Who is it,
+Tom?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that is the whole pith of the matter," said Mr. Esterworth, who was
+not above the weakness of liking to be the bearer of a piece of gossip.
+"I'll give you three guesses, and I'll bet you won't hit it."</p>
+
+<p>"One of the Courtenay girls?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Anna Vivian?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know," says Beatrice, nodding her head sagely; "it is that girl who
+lives with the Daintrees."</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, how silly you are!" cries her mother.</p>
+
+<p>Tom Esterworth turns round in his chair, and looks at his niece.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, you've hit it!" he exclaims. "What a clever pussy you are to be
+sure."</p>
+
+<p>And then the soul of the member's wife became filled with consternation
+and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I call it downright sly of John Kynaston!" she exclaims, angrily;
+"picking out a nobody like that behind all our backs, and keeping it so
+quiet, too; he ought to be ashamed of himself for such an unsuitable
+selection!"</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice laughed. "You know, uncle Tom, mamma wanted him to marry me."</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, you should not say such things," said her mother, colouring.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" whistled Mr. Esterworth. "So that was the little game, Caroline,
+was it? John Kynaston has better taste. He wouldn't have looked at an
+ugly little girl like our pussy here, would he, Puss? Miss Nevill is one
+of the finest women I ever saw in my life. She was at the meet to-day on
+one of his horses; and, by Jove! she made all the other women look plain
+by the side of her! Kynaston is a very lucky fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, mamma, there can be no doubt about sending Miss Nevill an
+invitation to our ball now," said Beatrice, laughingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She will have to be asked to stay in the house," said Mrs. Miller, with
+something akin to a groan. "I cannot leave her out, as Lady Kynaston is
+coming. Oh, dear! oh, dear! what fools men are, to be sure!"</p>
+
+<p>But Beatrice was wicked enough to laugh again over her mother's
+discomfiture.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>ENGAGED.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I wonder did you ever count<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The value of one human fate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or sum the infinite amount<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of one heart's treasures, and the weight<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Of one heart's venture.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">A. Procter</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>It was quite true what Mr. Thomas Esterworth had said, that Vera was
+engaged to Sir John Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>It had all come about so rapidly, and withal so quietly, that, when Vera
+came to think of it, it rather took her breath away. She had expected it,
+of course; indeed, she had even planned and tried for it; but, when it
+had actually come to her, she felt herself to be bewildered by the
+suddenness of it.</p>
+
+<p>In the end the climax of the love-making had been prosaic enough. Sir
+John had not felt himself equal to the task of a personal interview with
+the lady of his affections, with the accompanying risks of a personal
+rejection, which, in his modesty and humility with reference to her, he
+had believed to be quite on the cards. So he had written to her. The note
+had been taken up to the vicarage by the footman, and had been brought
+into the dining-room by the vicarial parlour-maid, just as the three
+ladies were finishing breakfast, and after the vicar himself had left the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"A note from Kynaston, please 'm," says rosy-cheeked Hannah, holding it
+forth before her, upon a small japanned tray, as an object of general
+family interest and excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"For your master, Hannah?" says old Mrs. Daintree. "Are they waiting for
+an answer? You will find him in his study."</p>
+
+<p>"No, ma'am, it's for Miss Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me!" with a suspicious glance across the table; "how very odd!"</p>
+
+<p>Vera takes up the note and opens it.</p>
+
+<p>"May I have the crest, auntie?" clamours Tommy before she had read three
+words of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it about the horse he has offered you to ride?" asks his mother.</p>
+
+<p>But Vera answers nothing; she gets up quietly, and leaves the room
+without a word.</p>
+
+<p>"Extraordinary!" gasps Mrs. Daintree; "Vera's manners are certainly most
+abrupt and unlady-like at times, Marion. I think you ought to point it
+out to her."</p>
+
+<p>Marion murmurs some unintelligible excuse and follows her sister&mdash;leaving
+the unfortunate Tommy a prey to his grandmother's tender mercies. So
+brilliant an opportunity is not, of course, to be thrown away. Tommy's
+fingers, having incontinently strayed in the direction of the
+sugar-basin, are summarily slapped for their indiscretion, and an
+admonition is straightway delivered to him in forcible language
+concerning the pains and penalties which threaten the ulterior destiny of
+naughty little boys in general and of such of them in particular who are
+specially addicted to the abstraction of lumps of sugar from the
+breakfast-table.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Marion has found her sister in the adjoining room standing up
+alone upon the hearthrug with Sir John Kynaston's letter in her hands.
+She is not reading it now, she is looking steadfastly into the fire. It
+has fulfilled&mdash;nay, more than fulfilled&mdash;her wishes. The triumph of her
+success is pleasant to her, and has brought a little more than their
+usual glow into her cheeks, and yet&mdash;Heaven knows what vague and
+intangible dreams and fancies have not somehow sunk down chill and cold
+within her during the last five minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Gratified ambition&mdash;flattered vanity&mdash;the joy of success&mdash;all this she
+feels to the full; but nothing more! There is not one single other
+sensation within her. Her pulses have not quickened, ever so little, as
+she read her lover's letter; her heart has not throbbed, even once, with
+a sweeter, purer delight&mdash;such as she has read and heard that other women
+have felt.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I have no heart," said Vera to herself; "it must be that I am
+cold by nature. I am happy; but&mdash;but&mdash;I wonder what it feels like&mdash;this
+<i>love</i>&mdash;that there is so much talked and written about?"</p>
+
+<p>And then Marion came in breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Vera, what is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Vera turns round to her, smiling serenely, and places the note in her
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>This is what Sir John Kynaston has written:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Dear Miss Nevill,&mdash;I do not think what I am about to say will be
+altogether unexpected by you. You must have surely guessed how sincere
+an affection I have learnt to feel for you. I know that I am unworthy
+of you, and I am conscious of how vast a disparity there is between
+my age and your own youth and beauty. But if my great love and devotion
+can in any way bridge over the gap that lies between us, believe me,
+that if you will consent to be my wife, my whole life shall be devoted
+to making you happy. If you can give me an answer to-day, I shall be
+very grateful, as suspense is hard to bear. But pray do not decide
+against me in haste, and without giving me every chance in your power.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours devotedly,</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">John Kynaston</span>."</p></div>
+
+<p>"Oh! Vera, my darling sister, I am so glad!" cries Marion, in tearful
+delight, throwing her arms up round the neck of the young sister, who is
+so much taller than she is; "I had guessed it, dearest; I saw he was in
+love with you; and oh, Vera, I shall have you always near me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that will be nice," assents Vera, quietly, and a trifle absently,
+stroking her sister's cheek, with her eyes still fixed on the fire; "and
+of course," rousing herself with an effort, "of course I am a very lucky
+woman."</p>
+
+<p>And then Mr. Daintree came in, and his wife rushed to him rapturously to
+impart the joyful news. There was a little pleasant confusion of broken
+words and explanations between the three, and then Marion whisked away,
+brimming over with triumphant delight to wave the flags of victory
+exultingly in her mother-in-law's face.</p>
+
+<p>Eustace Daintree and Vera were alone. He took her hands within his, and
+looked steadfastly in her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, are you sure of yourself, my dear, in this matter?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes met his for a moment, and then fell before his earnest gaze. She
+coloured a little.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure that I mean to accept Sir John's proposal," she said,
+with a little uneasy laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, do you love him?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes met his again; there was a vague trouble in them. The man had a
+power over her, the power of sheer goodness of soul. She could never be
+untrue to herself with Eustace Daintree; she was always at her very best
+with him, humble and gentle; and she could no more have told him a lie,
+or put him off with vague conventionalities, than she could have
+committed a deadly sin.</p>
+
+<p>What is it about some people that, in spite of ourselves, they thus force
+out of us the best part of our nature; that base and unworthy thoughts
+cannot live in us before them,&mdash;that they melt out of our hearts as the
+snow before the rays of the sun? Even though the effect may be transient,
+such is the power of their faith, and their truth, and their goodness,
+that it must needs call forth in us something of the same spirit as their
+own.</p>
+
+<p>Such was Eustace Daintree's influence over Vera. It was not because of
+his office, for no one was less susceptible than Vera&mdash;a Protestant
+brought up, with but vague ideas of her own faith, in a Catholic land&mdash;to
+any of those recognized associations with which a purely English-bred
+girl might have felt the character of the clergyman of the parish where
+she lived to be invested. It was nothing of that sort that made him great
+to her; it was, simply and solely, the goodness of the man that impressed
+her. His guilelessness, his simplicity of mind, his absolute uprightness
+of character, and, with it all, the absence in him of any assumption of
+authority, or of any superiority of character over those about him. His
+very humility made her humble with him, and exalted him into something
+saintly in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>When Eustace looked at her fixedly, with all his good soul in his earnest
+eyes, and said to her again, "Do you love him, Vera?" Vera could but
+answer him simply and frankly, almost against her will, as it were.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I do, Eustace; but then I do not quite know what love is.
+I do not think, however, that it can be what I feel."</p>
+
+<p>"My child, no union can be hallowed without love. Vera, you will not run
+into so great a danger?" he said anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I like him better than any one else, at all events. Better than Mr.
+Gisburne, for instance. And I think, I do really think, Eustace, it will
+be for my happiness."</p>
+
+<p>The vicar looked grave. "If Sir John Kynaston were a poor man, would you
+marry him?"</p>
+
+<p>And Vera answered bravely, though with a heightened colour&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No; but it is not only for the money, Eustace; indeed it is not.
+But&mdash;but&mdash;I should be miserable without it; and I must do something with
+my life."</p>
+
+<p>He drew her near to him, and kissed her forehead. He understood her. With
+that rare gift of sympathy&mdash;the highest, the most God-like of all human
+attributes&mdash;he felt at once what she meant. It was wonderful that this
+man, who was so unworldly, so unselfish, so pure of the stains of earth
+himself, should have seen at once her position from her own point of
+view; that was neither a very exalted one, nor was it very free from the
+dross of worldliness. But it was so. All at once he seemed to know by a
+subtle instinct what were the weaknesses, and the temptations, and the
+aims of this girl, who, with all her faults, was so dear to him. He
+understood her better, perhaps, than she understood herself. Her soul was
+untouched by passion; the story of her life was unwritten; there was no
+danger for her yet; and perchance it might be that the storms of life
+would pass her by unscathed, and that she might remain sheltered for ever
+in the safe haven which had opened so unexpectedly to receive her.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a peril in the course you have chosen," he said, gravely; "but
+your soul is pure, and you are safe. And I know, Vera, that you will
+always do your duty."</p>
+
+<p>And the tears were in her eyes as he left her.</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone she sat down to write her answer to Sir John Kynaston.
+She dipped her pen into the ink, and sat with it in her hand, thinking.
+Her brother-in-law's words had aroused a fresh train of thought within
+her. There seemed to be an amount of solemnity in what she was about to
+do that she had not considered before. It was true that she did not love
+him; but then, as she had told Eustace just now, she loved no one else;
+she did not rightly understand what love meant, indeed. And is a woman to
+wait on in patience for years until love comes to her? Would it ever
+come? Probably not, thought Vera; not to her, who thought herself to be
+cold, and not easily moved. There must be surely many women to whom this
+wonderful thing of love never comes. In all her experience of life there
+was nothing to contradict this. It was not as if she had been a girl who
+had never left her native village, never tasted of the pleasures of life,
+never known the sweet incense of flattery and devotion. Vera had known it
+all. Many men had courted her; one or two had loved her dearly, but she
+had not loved them. Amongst them all, indeed, there had been never one
+whom she had liked with such a sincere affection as she now felt for this
+man, who seemed to love her so much, and who wrote to her so diffidently,
+and yet so devotedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I love him as well as I am ever likely to love any one," said Vera, to
+herself. Yet still she leant her chin upon her hand and looked out of the
+window at the gray bare branches of the elm-trees across the damp green
+lawn, and still her letter was unwritten.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera!" cries Marion, coming in hurriedly and breaking in upon her
+reverie, "the footman from Kynaston is waiting all this time to know if
+there is any answer! Shall I send him away? Or have you made up your
+mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I have made up my mind. My note will be ready directly; he may
+as well take it. It will save the trouble of sending up to the Hall
+later." For Vera remembers that there is not a superfluity of servants
+at the vicarage, and that they all of them have plenty to do.</p>
+
+<p>And thus, a mere trifle&mdash;a feather, as it were, on the river of
+life&mdash;settled her destiny for her out of hand.</p>
+
+<p>She dipped her pen into the ink once more, and wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Dear Sir John,&mdash;You have done me a great honour in asking me to be
+your wife. I am fully sensible of your affection, and am very grateful
+for it. I fear you think too highly of me; but I will endeavour to
+prove myself worthy of your good opinion, and to make you as good a
+wife as you deserve.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours,</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Vera Nevill</span>."</p></div>
+
+<p>She was conscious herself of the excessive coldness of her note, but she
+could not help it. She could not, for the life of her, have made it
+warmer. Nothing, indeed, is so difficult as to write down feelings that
+do not exist; it is easier to simulate with our spoken words and our
+looks; but the pen that is urged beyond its natural inclination seems to
+cool into ice in our fingers. But, at all events, she had accepted him.</p>
+
+<p>It was a relief to her when the thing was done, and the note sent off
+beyond the possibility of recall.</p>
+
+<p>After that there had been no longer any leisure for her doubting
+thoughts. There was her sister's delighted excitement, Mrs. Daintree's
+oppressive astonishment, and even Eustace's calmer satisfaction in her
+bright prospects, to occupy and divert her thoughts. Then there came her
+lover himself, tender and grateful, and with so worshipful a respect in
+every word and action that the most sensitive woman could scarcely have
+been ruffled or alarmed by the prospects of so deferential a husband.</p>
+
+<p>In a few days Vera became reconciled to her new position, which was in
+truth a very pleasant one to her. There were the congratulations of
+friends and acquaintances to be responded to; the pleasant flutter of
+adulation that surrounded her once more; the little daily excitement
+of John Kynaston's visits&mdash;all this made her happy and perfectly
+satisfied with the wisdom of her decision.</p>
+
+<p>Only one thing vexed her.</p>
+
+<p>"What will your mother say, John?" she had asked the very first day she
+had been engaged to him.</p>
+
+<p>"It will not make much difference to me, dearest, whatever she may say."</p>
+
+<p>Nor in truth would it, for Sir John, as we have seen, had never been a
+devoted son, nor had he ever given his confidence to his mother; he had
+always gone his own way independently of her.</p>
+
+<p>"But it must needs make a difference to me," Vera had insisted. "You have
+written to her, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; I wrote and told her I was engaged to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And she has not written?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, there was a message for you&mdash;her love or something."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John evidently did not consider the subject of much importance. But
+Vera was hurt that Lady Kynaston had not written to her.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never enter any family where I am not welcome," she had said to
+her lover, proudly.</p>
+
+<p>And then Sir John had taken fright, for she was so precious to him that
+the fear of losing her was becoming almost as a nightmare to him, and,
+possibly, at the bottom of his heart he knew how feeble was his hold
+over her. He had written off to his mother that day a letter that was
+almost a command, and had told her to write to Vera.</p>
+
+<p>This letter was not likely to prepossess Lady Kynaston, who was a
+masterful little lady herself, in her daughter-in-law's favour; it did
+more harm than good. She had obeyed her son, it is true, because he was
+the head of the family, and because she stood in awe of him; but the
+letter, thus written under compulsion, was not kind&mdash;it was not even
+just.</p>
+
+<p>"Horrid girl!" had said Lady Kynaston, angrily, to herself, as she had
+sat down to her writing-table to fulfil her son's mandate. "It is not
+likely that I can be very loving to her&mdash;some wretched, second-rate girl,
+evidently&mdash;for not even Caroline Miller who, goodness knows, rakes up all
+the odds and ends of society&mdash;ever heard of her before!"</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be supposed that a letter undertaken under such auspices
+could be in any way conciliatory or pleasant in its tone. Such as it was,
+Vera put it straight into the fire directly she had read it; no one ever
+saw it but herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard from your mother," she said to Sir John.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? I am very glad. She wrote everything that was kind, no doubt."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say she meant to be kind," said Vera; which was not true, because
+she knew perfectly that there had been no kindness intended. But she
+pursued the subject no further.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will like Maurice," said Sir John, presently; "he is a
+good-hearted boy, though he has been sadly extravagant, and given me
+a good deal of trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad to know your brother," said Vera, quietly. "Is he coming
+to Kynaston?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, eventually; but you will meet him first at Shadonake when you go
+to stay there: they have asked a large party for that week, I hear, and
+Maurice will be there."</p>
+
+<p>Now, by this time Vera knew that the photograph she had once found in the
+old writing-table drawer at Kynaston was that of her lover's brother
+Maurice.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>A MEETING ON THE STAIRS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Since first I saw your face<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I resolved to honour and renown you;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If now I be disdained,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I wish my heart had never known you.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Sun whose beams most glorious are<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rejecteth no beholder,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And your sweet beauty past compare<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Made my poor eyes the bolder.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Thomas Ford</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>I have often wondered why, in the ordering of human destinies,
+some special Providence, some guardian spirit who is gifted with
+foreknowledge, is not mercifully told off to each of us so to order the
+trifles of our lives that they may combine to the working together of our
+weal, instead of conspiring, as they too often and too evidently do, for
+our woe.</p>
+
+<p>Look back upon your own life, and upon the lives of those whose story you
+have known the most intimately, and see what straws, what nonentities,
+what absurd trivialities have brought about the most important events of
+existence. Recollect how, and in what manner, those people whom it would
+have been well for you never to have known came across you. How those
+whose influence over you is for good were kept out of your way at the
+very crisis of your life. Think what a different life you would have led;
+I do not mean only happier, but how much better and purer, if some absurd
+trifle had not seemed to play into the hands, as it were, of your
+destiny, and to set you in a path whereof no one could at the time
+foresee the end.</p>
+
+<p>Some one had looked out their train in last month's Bradshaw, unwitting
+of the autumn alterations, and was kept from you till the next day. You
+took the left instead of the right side of the square on your way home,
+or you stood for a minute gossiping at your neighbour's door, and there
+came by some one who ultimately altered and embittered your whole life,
+and who, but for that accidental meeting, you would, probably, never have
+seen again; or some evil adviser was at hand, whilst one whose opinion
+you revered, and whose timely help would have saved you from taking that
+false step you ever after regretted, was kept to the house, by Heaven
+knows what ridiculous trifle&mdash;a cold in the head, or finger-ache&mdash;and
+did not see you to warn and to keep you back from your own folly until it
+was too late.</p>
+
+<p>People say these things are ordered for us. I do not know; it may be so,
+but sometimes it seems rather as if we were irresponsible puppets, tossed
+and buffeted about, blindly and helplessly, upon life's river, as
+fluttering dead leaves are danced wildly along the swift current of a
+Highland stream. Such a trifle might have saved us! yet there was no
+pitying hand put forth to avert that which, in our human blindness,
+appeared to us to be as unimportant as any other incident of our lives.</p>
+
+<p>Life is an unsolvable problem. Shall we ever, in some other world,
+I wonder, read its riddles aright?</p>
+
+<p>All these moral dissertations have been called forth because Vera Nevill
+went to stay for a week at Shadonake. If she had known&mdash;what we none of
+us know&mdash;the future, she doubtless would have stayed away. Fate&mdash;a
+beneficent fate, indeed&mdash;made, I am bound to confess, a valiant effort in
+her behalf. Little Minnie fell ill the day before her departure; and the
+symptoms were such that everybody in the house believed that she was
+sickening for scarlet fever. The doctor, however, having been hastily
+summoned, pronounced the disease to be an infantile complaint of a
+harmless and innocuous nature, which he dignified by the delusively
+poetical name of "Rosalia."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not infectious, Mr. Smee, I hope?" asked Marion, anxiously.
+"Nothing to prevent my sister going to stay at the Millers' to morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least infectious, Mrs. Daintree, and anybody in the house can
+go wherever they like, except the child herself, who must be kept in a
+warm room for two days, when she will probably be quite well again."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad, dear, there is nothing to put a stop to your visit; it would
+have been such a pity," said Marion, in her blindness, to her sister
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>So the fates had a game of pitch and toss with Vera's future, and settled
+it amongst them to their own satisfaction, probably, but not, it will be
+seen, for Vera's own good or ultimate happiness.</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon of the 3rd day of January, therefore, Eustace
+Daintree drove his sister-in-law over to Shadonake in the open
+basket pony-carriage, and deposited her and her box safely at the
+stone-colonnaded door of that most imposing mansion, which she entered
+exactly ten minutes before the dressing-bell rang, and was conducted
+almost immediately upstairs to her own room.</p>
+
+<p>Some twenty minutes later there are still two ladies sitting on in the
+small tea-room, where it is the fashion at Shadonake to linger between
+the hours of five and seven, who alone have not yet moved to obey the
+mandate of the dressing-bell.</p>
+
+<p>"What <i>is</i> the good of waiting?" says Beatrice, impatiently; "the train
+is often late, and, besides, he may not come till the nine o'clock
+train."</p>
+
+<p>"That is just what I want to wait for," answers Helen Romer. "I want
+just to hear if the carriage has come back, and then I shall know for
+certain."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know how frightfully punctual papa is, and how angry it makes
+him if anybody is late."</p>
+
+<p>"Just two minutes more, Beatrice; I can dress very quickly when once
+I set to work," pleads Helen.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice sits down again on the arm of the sofa, and resigns herself to
+her fate; but she looks rather annoyed and vexed about it.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Romer paces the room feverishly and impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you think of Miss Nevill?" asks Beatrice.</p>
+
+<p>"I could hardly see her in her hat and that thick veil; but she looked as
+if she were handsome."</p>
+
+<p>"She is <i>beautiful</i>!" says Beatrice, emphatically, "and uncle Tom
+says&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" interrupts Helen, hurriedly. "Is not that the sound of
+wheels?&mdash;Yes, it is the carriage."</p>
+
+<p>She flies to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, Helen," says Beatrice, anxiously; "don't open the door
+wide, don't let the servants think we have been waiting, it looks so
+bad&mdash;so&mdash;so unlady-like."</p>
+
+<p>But Helen Romer does not even hear her; she is listening intently to the
+approaching sounds, with the half-opened door in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>The tea-room door opens into a large inner hall, out of which leads the
+principal staircase; the outer or entrance-hall is beyond; and presently
+the stopping of the carriage, the opening and shutting of doors from the
+servants' departments, and all the usual bustle of an arrival are heard.</p>
+
+<p>The two girls stand close together listening, Beatrice hidden in the
+shadow of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"There are <i>two</i> voices!" cries Helen, in a disappointed tone; "he is not
+alone!"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it is Mr. Pryme&mdash;mamma said he might come by this train,"
+answers Beatrice, so quietly that no one could ever have guessed how her
+heart was beating.</p>
+
+<p>"Helen, <i>do</i> let us run upstairs; I really cannot stay. Let <i>me</i> go, at
+all events!" she adds, with a sudden agony of entreaty as the guests were
+heard advancing towards the door of the inner hall. And as Helen made not
+the slightest sign of moving, Beatrice slipped past her and ran lightly
+and swiftly across the hall upstairs, and disappeared along the landing
+above just as Captain Kynaston and Mr. Herbert Pryme appeared upon the
+scene below.</p>
+
+<p>No such scruples of modesty troubled Mrs. Romer. As the young men entered
+the inner hall preceded by the butler, who was taking them up to their
+rooms, and followed by two footmen who were bearing their portmanteaus,
+Helen stepped boldly forward out of the shelter of the tea-room, and held
+out her hand to Captain Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do? How late your train is."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice looked distinctly annoyed, but of course he shook hands with her.</p>
+
+<p>"How are you, Mrs. Romer? I did not expect you to be here till to-morrow.
+Yes, we are late," consulting his watch; "only twenty minutes to dress
+in&mdash;I must look sharp."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the stranger, Mr. Pryme, was following the butler upstairs.</p>
+
+<p>Helen lowered her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> speak to you a minute, Maurice; it is six weeks since we have
+met, and to meet in public would be too trying. Please dress as quickly
+as ever you can; I know you can dress quickly if you choose; and wait for
+me here at the bottom of the stairs&mdash;we might get just three minutes
+together before dinner."</p>
+
+<p>There were the footmen and the portmanteaus within six yards of them, and
+Mr. Pryme and the butler still within earshot. What was Maurice to do? He
+could not really listen to a whole succession of prayers, and entreaties,
+and piteous appeals. There was neither the time, nor was it the place,
+for either discussion or remonstrance. All he could do was to nod a hasty
+assent to her request.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I must make haste," he said, and ran quickly upstairs in the wake
+of the other guest.</p>
+
+<p>The staircase at Shadonake was very wide and very handsome, and
+thoroughly in keeping with the spacious character of the house. It
+consisted of one wide flight of shallow steps, with a richly-carved
+balustrade on either side of it, leading straight down from a large
+square landing above. Both landing and steps were carpeted with thick
+velvet-pile carpet, so that no jarring footfall was ever heard upon them.
+The hall into which the staircase led was paved in coloured mosaic tiles,
+and was half covered over with rich Persian rugs. A great many doors,
+nearly all the sitting-rooms of the house, in fact, opened into it,
+and the blank spaces of the wall were filled in with banks of large
+handsome plants, palms and giant ferns, and azaleas in full bloom, which
+were daily rearranged by the gardeners in every available corner.</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of the staircase, and with his back to it, leaning against
+the balustrade, stood Captain Kynaston, exactly four minutes before the
+dinner was announced.</p>
+
+<p>Most people were in the habit of calling Maurice a good-looking man, but
+if anybody had seen him now for the first time it is doubtful whether
+they would have endorsed that favourable opinion upon his personal
+appearance. A thoroughly ill-tempered expression of face seldom enhances
+any one's good looks, and if ever a man looked in a bad temper, Maurice
+Kynaston did so at the present moment.</p>
+
+<p>He stood with his hands in his trousers pockets, and his eyes fixed upon
+his own boots, and he looked as savage as it was well possible for a man
+to look.</p>
+
+<p>He was waiting here for Helen, because he had told her that he would do
+so, and when Captain Kynaston promised anything to a lady he always kept
+his word.</p>
+
+<p>But to say that he hated being there is but a mild term for the rage and
+disgust he experienced.</p>
+
+<p>To be waylaid and attacked thus, directly he had set foot in the house,
+with a stranger and three servants looking on so as to render him
+absolutely helpless; to be uncomfortably hurried over his toilet, and
+inveigled into a sort of rendezvous at the foot of a public staircase,
+where a number of people might at any minute enter from any one of the
+six or eight surrounding doors, was enough of itself to try his temper;
+but when he came to consider how Helen, in thus appropriating him and
+making him obey her caprices, was virtually breaking her side of the
+treaty between them; that she was exacting from him the full amount of
+servitude and devotion which an open engagement would demand, and yet she
+had agreed to deny any such engagement between them openly&mdash;it was, he
+felt, more than he could continue to bear with meekness.</p>
+
+<p>Meekness, indeed, was in no way Maurice Kynaston's distinguishing
+characteristic. He was masterful and imperious by nature; to be the slave
+of any woman was neither pleasant nor profitable to him. Honour, indeed,
+had bound him to Helen, and had he loved her she might have led him. Her
+position gave her a certain hold over him, and she knew how to appeal to
+his heart; but he loved her not, and to control his will and his spirit
+was beyond her power.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice said to himself that he would put a stop to this system of
+persecution once and for all&mdash;that this interview, which she herself had
+contrived, should be made the opportunity of a few forcible words, that
+should frighten her into submission.</p>
+
+<p>So he stood fretting, and fuming, and raging, waiting for her at the foot
+of the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>There was a soft rustle, as of a woman's dress, behind him. He turned
+sharply round.</p>
+
+<p>Halfway down the stairs came a woman whom he had never seen before.
+A black velvet dress, made high in the throat, with a wide collar of
+heavy lace upon her shoulders, hung clingingly about the outlines of her
+tall and perfect figure; her hands, with some lace ruffles falling about
+her wrists, were simply crossed before her. The light of a distant
+hanging-lamp shone down upon her, just catching one diamond star that
+glittered among the thick coils of her hair&mdash;she wore no other ornament.
+She came down the stairs slowly, almost lingeringly, with a certain
+grace in her movements, and without a shadow of embarrassment or
+self-consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice drew aside to let her pass him&mdash;looking at her&mdash;for how could he
+choose but look? But when she reached the bottom of the steps, she turned
+her face towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are Maurice&mdash;are you not?" she said, and put forth both her hands
+towards him.</p>
+
+<p>An utter bewilderment as to who she was made him speechless; his mind had
+been full of Helen and his own troubles; everything else had gone out of
+his head. She coloured a little, still holding out her hands to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Vera," she said, simply, and there was a little deprecating appeal
+in the words as though she would have added, "Be my friend."</p>
+
+<p>He took the hands&mdash;soft slender hands that trembled a very little in his
+grasp&mdash;within his own, and some nameless charm in their gentle touch
+brought a sudden flush into his face, but no appropriate words concerning
+his pleasure at meeting her, or his gratification at their future
+relations, fell from Maurice Kynaston's lips. He only held her thus by
+her hands, and looked at her&mdash;looked at her as if he could never look at
+her enough&mdash;from her head to her feet, and from her feet up again to her
+head, till a sudden wave of colour flooded her face at the earnestness
+of his scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera&mdash;<i>Vera Nevill</i>!" was all he said; and then below his breath, as
+though his absolute amazement were utterly irrepressible: "<i>By Jove!</i>"
+And Vera laughed softly at the thoroughly British character of the
+exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"How like an Englishman!" she said. "An Italian would have paid me fifty
+pretty compliments in half the time you have taken just to stare at me!"</p>
+
+<p>"What a charming <i>tableau vivant</i>!" exclaims a voice above them as Mrs.
+Romer comes down the staircase. "You really look like a scene in a play!
+Pray don't let me disturb you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am making friends with my sister-in-law that is to be, Mrs. Romer,"
+says Maurice, who has dropped Vera's hands with a guilty suddenness, and
+now endeavours to look completely at his ease&mdash;an effort in which he
+signally fails.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you? Dear me! I thought you and Miss Nevill were practising the
+pose of the 'Huguenots'!"</p>
+
+<p>Now the whole armoury of feminine weapons&mdash;impertinence, spite, and bad
+manners, born of jealousy&mdash;is utterly beneath the contempt of such a
+woman as Vera; but she is no untried, inexperienced country girl such as
+Mrs. Romer imagines her to be disconcerted or stricken dumb by such an
+attack. She knew instantly that she had been attacked, and in what
+manner, and she was perfectly capable of taking care of herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never seen that picture, the 'Huguenots,' Mrs. Romer," she
+said, quietly; "do you think there is a photograph or a print of it
+at Kynaston, Maurice? If so, you or John must show it to me."</p>
+
+<p>And how Mrs. Romer hated her then and there, from that very minute until
+her life's end, it would not be easy to set forth!</p>
+
+<p>The utter <i>insouciance</i>, the lady-like ignoring of Helen's impertinence,
+the quiet assumption of what she knew her own position in the Kynaston
+family to be, down to the sisterly "Maurice," whereby she addressed the
+man whom in public, at least, Mrs. Romer was forced to call by a more
+formal name&mdash;all proved to that astute little woman that Vera Nevill was
+no ordinary antagonist, no village maiden to be snubbed or patronised at
+her pleasure, but a woman of the world, who understood how to fight her
+own battles, and was likely, as she was forced to own to herself, to
+"give back as good as she got."</p>
+
+<p>Not another single word was spoken between them, for at that very minute
+a door was thrown open, and the whole of the party in the house came
+trooping forth in pairs from the drawing-room in a long procession on
+their way to the dining-room.</p>
+
+<p>First came Mr. Miller with old Mrs. Macpherson on his arm. Then Mr. Pryme
+and Miss Sophy Macpherson; her sister behind with Guy Miller; Beatrice,
+looking melancholy, with the curate in charge; and her mother last with
+Sir John, who had come over from Kynaston to dinner. Edwin Miller, the
+second son, by himself brought up the rear.</p>
+
+<p>There was some laughter at the expense of the three defaulters, who, of
+course, were supposed to have only just hurried downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha! just saved your soup, ladies!" cried Mr. Miller, laughingly. "Fall
+in, fall in, as best you can!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller came to the rescue, and, by a rapid stroke of generalship,
+marshalled them into their places.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nevill, of course, was a stranger; Helen had been on intimate terms
+with them all for years; Vera, besides, was standing close to Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"Please take in Miss Nevill, Captain Kynaston; and Edwin, my dear, give
+your arm to Mrs. Romer."</p>
+
+<p>Edwin, who was a pleasant-looking boy, with plenty to say for himself,
+hurried forward with alacrity; and Helen had to accept her fate with the
+best grace she could.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how did you get on with Vera, and how did you like her?" asked Sir
+John, coming round to his brother's side of the table when the ladies had
+left the room. He had noted with pleasure that Vera and Maurice had
+talked incessantly throughout the dinner.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow!" cried Maurice, heartily, "she is the handsomest woman I
+ever met in my life! I give you my word that, when she introduced herself
+to me coming downstairs, I was so surprised, she was so utterly different
+to what I and the mother have been imagining, that upon my life I
+couldn't speak a word&mdash;I could do nothing but stare at her!"</p>
+
+<p>"You like her, then?" said his brother, smiling, well pleased at his
+openly expressed admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you are a very lucky fellow, old man! Like her! of course I do;
+she's a downright good sort!"</p>
+
+<p>And if Sir John was slightly shocked at the irreverence of alluding to so
+perfect and pure a woman as his adored Vera by so familiar a phrase as "a
+good sort," he was, at all events, too pleased by Maurice's genuine
+approval of her to find any fault with his method of expressing it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN IDLE MORNING.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We loved, sir; used to meet;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How sad, and bad, and mad it was;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But then, how it was sweet!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Browning.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Leaning against a window-frame at the end of a long corridor on the
+second floor, and idly looking out over the view of the wide lawns and
+empty flower-beds which it commands, stands Mr. Herbert Pryme, on the
+second morning after his arrival at Shadonake House.</p>
+
+<p>It is after breakfast, and most of the gentlemen of the house have
+dispersed; that is to say, Mr. Miller has gone off to survey his new
+pigsties, and his sons and a Mr. Nethercliff, who arrived last night,
+have ridden to a meet some fifteen miles distant, which the ladies had
+voted to be too far off to attend.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pryme, however, is evidently not a keen sports-man; he has declined
+the offer of a mount which Guy Miller has hospitably pressed upon him,
+and he has also declined to avail himself of his host's offer of the
+services of the gamekeeper. Curiously enough, another guest at Shadonake,
+whose zeal for hunting has never yet been impeached, has followed his
+example.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth do they meet at Fretly for!" Maurice Kynaston had
+exclaimed last night to young Guy, as the morrow's plans had been
+discussed in the smoking-room; "it's the worst country I ever was in, all
+plough and woodlands, and never a fox to be found. Your uncle ought to
+know better than to go there. I certainly shan't take the trouble to get
+up early to go to that place."</p>
+
+<p>"Not go?" repeated Guy, aghast; "you don't mean to say you won't go,
+Kynaston?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I do mean, though."</p>
+
+<p>"What the deuce will you do with yourself all day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lie in bed," answered Maurice, between the puffs of his pipe; "we've
+had a precious hard day's shooting to-day, and I mean to take it easy
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>And Captain Kynaston was as good as his word. He did not appear in the
+breakfast-room the next morning until the men who were bound for Fretly
+had all ridden off and were well out of sight of the house. What he had
+stayed for he would have been somewhat puzzled to explain. He was not the
+kind of man who, as a rule, cared to dawdle about all day with women when
+there was any kind of sport to be had from hunting down to ratting; more
+especially was he disinclined for any such dawdling when Helen Romer was
+amongst the number of the ladies so left to be danced attendance upon.
+And yet he distinctly told himself that he meant to be devoted for this
+one day to the fair sex. All yesterday he had been crossed and put out;
+the men had been out shooting from breakfast till dinner; some of the
+ladies had joined them with the Irish-stew at lunch time; Helen had been
+amongst them, but not Miss Nevill. Maurice, in spite of the pheasants
+having been plentiful and the sport satisfactory, had been in a decidedly
+bad temper all the afternoon in consequence. In the evening the party at
+dinner had been enlarged by an influx of country neighbours; Vera had
+been hopelessly divided from him and absorbed by other people the whole
+evening; he had not exchanged a single word with her all day.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Kynaston was seized with an insatiable desire to improve his
+acquaintance with his sister-in-law to be. It was his duty, he told
+himself, to make friends with her; his brother would be hurt, he argued,
+and his mother would be annoyed if he neglected to pay a proper attention
+to the future Lady Kynaston. There could be no doubt that it was his
+duty; that it was also his pleasure did not strike him so forcibly as it
+should have done, considering the fact that a man is only very keen to
+create duties for himself when they are proportionately mingled with that
+which is pleasant and agreeable. The exigencies of his position, with
+regard to his elder brother's bride having been forcibly borne in upon
+him&mdash;combined possibly with the certain knowledge that the elder brother
+himself would be hunting all day&mdash;compelled him to stop at home and
+devote himself to Vera. Mr. Herbert Pryme, however, had no such excuse,
+real or imaginary, and yet he stands idly by the corridor window, idly,
+yet perfectly patiently&mdash;relieving the tedium of his position by the
+unexciting entertainment of softly whistling the popular airs from the
+"Cloches de Corneville" below his breath.</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Pryme is a good-looking young fellow of about six-and-twenty; he
+looks his profession all over, and is a good type of the average young
+barrister of the present day. He has fair hair, and small, close-cropped
+whiskers; his face is retrieved from boyishness by strongly-marked
+and rather heavy features; he studiously affects a solemn and imposing
+gravity of face and manner, and a severe and elderly style of dress,
+which he hopes may produce a favourable effect upon the non-legal minds
+of his somewhat imaginary clients.</p>
+
+<p>It is doubtful, however, whether Mr. Pryme has not found a shorter and
+pleasanter road to fortune than that slow and toilsome route along which
+the legal muse leads her patient votaries.</p>
+
+<p>Ten, fifteen, twenty minutes elapse, and still Mr. Pryme looks patiently
+out of the window, and still he whistles the Song of the Bells. The only
+sign of weariness he gives is to take out his watch, which, by the way,
+is suspended by a broad black ribbon, and lives, not in his waistcoat
+pocket, but in a "fob," and is further decorated by a very large and
+old-fashioned seal. Having consulted a time piece which for size and
+thickness might have belonged to his great-grandfather, he returns it to
+his fob, and resumes his whistling.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a door at the further end of the corridor softly opens and
+shuts, and Mr. Pryme looks up quickly.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice Miller, looking about her a little guiltily, comes swiftly
+towards him along the passage.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma kept me such ages!" she says, breathlessly; "I thought I should
+never get away."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, so long as you are here," he answers, holding her by
+both hands. "My darling, I must have a kiss; I hungered for one all
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>He looks into her face eagerly and lovingly. To most people Beatrice is a
+plain girl, but to this man she is beautiful; his own love for her has
+invested her with a charm and a fascination that no one else has seen in
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! divine passion, that can thus glorify its object. It is like a dash
+of sunshine over a winter landscape, which transforms it into the
+loveliness of spring; or the magic brush of the painter, which can turn a
+ploughed field and a barren common into the golden glories of a Cuyp or a
+Turner.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was with Herbert Pryme. He looked at Beatrice with the blinding
+glamour of his own love in his eyes, and she was beautiful to him. Truth
+to say, Beatrice was a woman whom to love once was to love always. There
+was so much that was charming and loveable in her character, so great a
+freshness of mind and soul about her, that, although from lack of beauty
+she had hitherto failed to attract love, having once secured it, she
+possessed that rare and valuable faculty of being able to retain it,
+which many women, even those who are the most beautiful, are incapable
+of.</p>
+
+<p>"It is just as I imagined about Mr. Nethercliff," says Beatrice,
+laughing; "he has been asked here for my benefit. Mamma has just been
+telling me about him; he is Lord Garford's nephew and his heir. Lord
+Garford's place, you know, is quite the other side of the county; he is
+poor, so I suppose I might do for him," with a little grimace. "At all
+events, I am to sit next to him at dinner to-night, and make myself
+civil. You see, I am to be offered to all the county magnates in
+succession."</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Pryme still holds her hands, and looks down with grave vexation
+into her face.</p>
+
+<p>"And how do you suppose I shall feel whilst Mr. Nethercliff is making
+love to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You may make your mind quite easy; it is impossible that there should be
+another man foolish enough in all England to want to make love to such an
+'ugly duckling' as I am!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be silly, child, and don't fish for compliments," he answers,
+fondly, stroking her short dark hair, which he thinks so characteristic
+of herself.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice looks up happily at him. A woman is always at her very best when
+she is alone with the man she loves. Unconsciously, all the charms she
+possesses are displayed in her glistening eyes, and in the colour which
+comes and goes in her contented face. There is no philtre which beauty
+can use, there is neither cosmetic nor rouge that can give that tender,
+lovely glow with which successful love transforms even a plain face into
+radiance and fascination.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish, Beatrice, you would let me speak to your father," continued
+Herbert; "I cannot bear to be here under false pretences. Why will you
+not let me deal fairly and openly with your parents?"</p>
+
+<p>"And be sent about your business by the evening train. No, thank you!
+My dear boy, speaking to papa would be as much use as speaking to the
+butler; they would both of them refer you instantly to mamma; and with
+an equally lamentable result. Please leave things to me. When mamma has
+offered me ineffectually to every marriageable man in Meadowshire, she
+will get quite sick of it, and, I dare say, I shall be allowed to do as
+I like then without any more fuss."</p>
+
+<p>"And how long is this process to last?"</p>
+
+<p>"About a year; by which time Geraldine will be nearly eighteen, and ready
+to step into my shoes. Mamma will be glad enough to be rid of me then,
+and to try her hand upon her instead. Geraldine is meek and tractable,
+and will be quite willing to do as she is told."</p>
+
+<p>"And, meanwhile, what am I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"You! You are to make love to Sophy Macpherson. Do you not know that she
+is the excuse for your having been asked here at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like it, Beatrice," repeats her lover, gravely&mdash;not, however,
+alluding to the duties relating to Miss Macpherson, which she had been
+urging upon him. "Upon my life, I don't." He looks away moodily out of
+the window. "I hate doing things on the sly. And, besides, I am a poor
+man, and your parents are rich. I could not afford to support a wife at
+present on my own income."</p>
+
+<p>"All the more reason that we should wait," she interrupts, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but I ought not to have spoken to you; I'd no business to steal
+your heart."</p>
+
+<p>"You did not steal it," she says, nestling up to his side. "I presented
+it to you, free, gratis."</p>
+
+<p>Where is the man who could resist such an appeal! Away went duty,
+prudence, and every other laudable consideration to the winds; and
+Herbert Pryme straightway became insanely and blissfully oblivious of his
+own poverty, of Mr. Miller's wealth, and of everything else upon earth
+and under the sun that was not entirely and idiotically delightful and
+ecstatic.</p>
+
+<p>"You will do as I tell you?" whispers Beatrice.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I will," answers her lover. And then there is a complete
+stagnation of the power of speech on both sides for the space of five
+minutes, during which the clock ticking steadily on at the far end of the
+corridor has things entirely its own way.</p>
+
+<p>"There is another couple who are happy," says Herbert Pryme, breaking the
+charmed silence at length, and indicating, by a sign, two people who are
+wandering slowly down the garden. Beatrice Miller, following the
+direction of his eyes, sees Maurice Kynaston and Vera.</p>
+
+<p>"Those two?" she exclaims. "Oh dear, no! They are not happy&mdash;not in our
+way. Miss Nevill is engaged to his brother, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Umph! if I were Sir John Kynaston, I would look after my brother then."</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert! what <i>can</i> you mean?" cries Beatrice, opening her eyes in
+astonishment. "Why, Captain Kynaston is supposed to be engaged to Mrs.
+Romer; at any rate, she is desperately in love with him."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, everybody knows that: but is he in love with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert, I am sure you must be mistaken!" persists Beatrice, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I am. Never mind, little woman," kissing her lightly; "I only
+said they looked happy. If you will take the trouble to remark them
+through the day, you will, perhaps, be struck by the same blissful aspect
+that I have noticed. If they are happy, it won't last long. Why should
+not one be glad to see other people enjoying themselves? Let them be
+happy whilst they can."</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Pryme was right. Maurice and Vera wandering side by side along
+the broad gravel walks in the wintry gardens were happy&mdash;without so much
+as venturing to wonder what it was that made them so.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not want to hunt to-day," Maurice is saying; "I thought I would
+stop at home and talk to you."</p>
+
+<p>"That was kind of you," answers Vera, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>If she had known him better, she would have been more sensible of the
+compliment implied. To give up a day's hunting for a woman's sake is what
+very few keen sports-men have been known to do; the attraction must be
+great indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"You will go out, of course, on Monday, the day the hounds meet here?
+I should like to see you on a horse."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall at all events put on a habit and get up on the mare John has
+given me. But I know very little of English hunting; I have only ridden
+in Italy. We used to go out in winter over the Campagna&mdash;that is very
+different to England."</p>
+
+<p>"You must look very well in a habit." He turned to look at her as he
+spoke. There was no reticence in his undisguised admiration of her.</p>
+
+<p>Vera laughed a little. "You shall look at me if you like when I have it
+on," she said, blushing faintly under his scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>"I am grateful to you for the permission; but I am bound to confess that
+I should look all the same had you forbidden me to do so."</p>
+
+<p>Vera was pleased. She felt glad that he admired her. Was it not quite
+right and most desirable that her husband's brother should appreciate her
+beauty and ratify his good taste?</p>
+
+<p>"When does your mother come?" she said, changing the subject quietly, but
+without effort.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the very night of the ball, I am afraid. Tuesday, is it not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you written to her about me? She does not like me, I fear."</p>
+
+<p>"No; I will not write. She shall see you and judge for herself. I am not
+the least afraid of her not liking you when she knows you; and you will
+love her."</p>
+
+<p>By this time they had wandered away from the house through the belt of
+shrubbery, and had emerged beyond upon the margin of the pool of water.</p>
+
+<p>Vera stood still, suddenly struck with the sight.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this Shadonake Bath?" she asked, below her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; have you never seen it before?" he answered, in some surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Never. I have not lived in Meadowshire long, you know, and the Millers
+were moving into the house and furnishing it all last summer. I have
+never been in the gardens till to-day. How strangely sad the place looks!
+Let us walk round it."</p>
+
+<p>They went round to the further side.</p>
+
+<p>The pool of water lay dark and silent within its stone steps; not a
+ripple disturbed its surface; not a dead leaf rested on its bosom. Only
+the motionless water looked up everlastingly at the gray winter skies
+above, and reflected them back blackly and gloomily upon its solemn face.</p>
+
+<p>Vera stood still and looked at it. Something in its aspect&mdash;she could not
+have told what&mdash;affected her powerfully. She went down two or three steps
+towards the water, and stooped over it intently.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice, watching her curiously, saw, to his surprise, that she trembled.
+She turned round to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Does it not look dark and deep? Is it very deep?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it is. There are all sorts of stories about it. Come up, Vera;
+why do you tremble so?"</p>
+
+<p>"How dreadful to be drowned here!" she said, below her breath, and she
+shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>He stretched out his hand to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not say such horrid things! Give me your hand&mdash;the steps are
+slippery. What has put drowning into your head? And&mdash;why, how pale you
+are; what has frightened you?"</p>
+
+<p>She took his hand and came back again to where he stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you believe in presentiments?" she said, slowly, with her eyes fixed
+still, as though by some fascination, upon the dark waters beneath them.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the very least," he answered, cheerily; "do not think of such
+things. John would be the first to scold you&mdash;and to scold me for
+bringing you here."</p>
+
+<p>He stood, holding her hand, looking at her kindly and compassionately;
+suddenly she looked at him, and as their eyes met once more, she trembled
+from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, you are frightened; tell me what it is!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know! I don't know!" she cried, with a sudden wail, like a
+person in pain; "only&mdash;oh! I wish I had not seen it for the first time
+with <i>you</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Before he could answer her, some one, <i>beckoning</i> to them from the
+further side of the pool, caused them both to turn suddenly round.</p>
+
+<p>It was not only Herbert Pryme who had seen them wander away down the
+garden from the house. Mrs. Romer, too, had been at another window and
+had noticed them. To run lightly upstairs, put on her hat and jacket, and
+to follow them, had been the work of but a very few minutes. Helen was
+not minded to allow Maurice to wander about all the morning with Vera.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going for a walk?" she called out to them across the water.
+"Wait for me; I am coming with you."</p>
+
+<p>Vera turned quickly to her companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true that you are engaged to her?" she asked him rapidly, in a low
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice hesitated. Morally speaking, he was engaged to her; but, then, it
+had been agreed between them that he was to deny any such engagement. He
+felt singularly disinclined to let Vera know what was the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"People say you are," she said, once more. "Will you tell me if it is
+true?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; there is no engagement between us," he answered, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad," she answered, earnestly. He coloured, but he had no
+time to ask her why she was glad&mdash;for Helen came up to them.</p>
+
+<p>"How interested you look in each other's conversation!" she said, looking
+suspiciously at them both. "May I not hear what you have been talking
+about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Anybody might hear," answered Vera, carelessly, "were it worth one's
+while to take the trouble of repeating it."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice said nothing. He was angry with Helen for having interrupted
+them, and angry with himself for having denied his semi-engagement. He
+stood looking away from them both, prodding his stick into the gravel
+walk.</p>
+
+<p>For half a minute they stood silently together.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go on," said Vera, and they began to walk.</p>
+
+<p>Once again in the days that were to come those three stood side by side
+upon the margin of Shadonake Bath.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MEET AT SHADONAKE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The desire of the moth for the star,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the night for the morrow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The devotion to something afar.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Shelley.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Macpherson had brought up her daughters with one fixed and
+predominant idea in her mind. Each of them was to excel in some one taste
+or accomplishment, by virtue of which they might be enabled to shine in
+society. They were taught to do one thing well. Thus, Sophy, the eldest,
+played the piano remarkably, whilst Jessie painted in water-colours with
+charming exactitude and neatness. They had both had first-rate masters,
+and no pains had been spared to make each of them proficient in the
+accomplishment that had been selected for her. But, as neither of these
+young ladies had any natural talent, the result was hardly so
+satisfactory as their fond mother could have desired. They did exactly
+what they had been taught to do with precision and conscientiousness; no
+less and no more; and the further result of their entire devotion to one
+kind of study was, that they could do nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Macpherson began to realize that her system of education had
+possibly left something to be desired on the Monday morning that Mr.
+Esterworth brought up his hounds to Shadonake House. It was provoking
+to see all the other ladies attired in their habits, whilst her own
+daughters had to come down to breakfast in their ordinary morning
+dresses, because they had never been taught to ride.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not going to ride?" she heard Guy Miller ask of Sophy, who was
+decidedly the best looking and the pleasantest of the sisters.</p>
+
+<p>"No, we have never ridden at all; mamma never thought we had the time for
+it," answers Sophy.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said Mrs. Macpherson, turning to her hostess, "that I shall
+pursue a different course with my younger girls. I feel sorry now that
+Sophy and Jessie do not ride. Music and painting are, of course, the most
+charming accomplishments that a woman can have; but still it is not at
+all times that they are useful."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you cannot be always painting and playing."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither can you be always riding," said Mrs. Macpherson, with some
+asperity, for there was a little natural jealousy between these ladies on
+the subject of their girls; "but still&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But still, you will acknowledge that I have done right in letting
+Beatrice hunt. You may be quite sure that there is no accomplishment
+which brings a girl so much into notice in the country. Look at her now."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Macpherson looked and saw Beatrice in her habit at the far end of
+the dining-room surrounded by a group of men in pink, and she also saw
+her own daughters sitting neglected by themselves on the other side of
+the room. She made no observation upon the contrast, for it would hardly
+have been polite to have done so; but she made a mental note of the fact
+that Mrs. Miller was a very clever woman, and that, if you want an ugly
+daughter to marry, you had better let her learn how to ride across
+country. And she furthermore decided that her third daughter, Alice, who
+was not blessed with the gift of beauty, should forthwith abandon the
+cultivation of a very feeble and uncertain vocal organ and be sent to the
+nearest riding-school the very instant she returned to her home.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice Miller rode very well indeed; it was the secret of her uncle's
+affection for her, and many a good day's sport had the two enjoyed side
+by side across the flat fields and the strong fences and wide ditches of
+their native country. Her brothers, Guy and Edwin, were fond of hunting
+too, but they rode clumsily and awkwardly, floundering across country in
+what their uncle called, contemptuously, a thoroughly "provincial style."
+But Beatrice had the true Esterworth seat and hand; she looked as if she
+were born to her saddle, and, in truth, she was never so happy as when
+she was in it. It was a proof of how great and real was her love to
+Herbert Pryme that she fully recognized that, in becoming his wife, she
+would have to live in London entirely and to give up her beloved hunting
+for his sake.</p>
+
+<p>A woman who rides, as did Beatrice, is sure to be popular on a hunting
+morning; and, with the consciousness of her lover's hands resting upon
+the back of her chair, with her favourite uncle by her side, and with
+several truly ardent admirers of her good riding about her, Miss Miller
+was evidently enjoying herself thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>The scene, indeed, was animated to the last degree. The long dining-room
+was filled with guests, the table was covered with good things, a repast,
+half breakfast, half luncheon, being laid out upon it. Everybody helped
+themselves, with much chattering and laughter, and there was a pleasant
+sense of haste and excitement, and a charming informality about the
+proceedings, which made the Shadonake Hunt breakfast, which Tom
+Esterworth had been prevailed upon by his niece's entreaties to allow,
+a thorough and decided success.</p>
+
+<p>Outside there were the hounds, drawn up in patient expectation on the
+grass beyond the gravel sweep, the bright coats and velvet caps of the
+men, and the gray horses&mdash;on which it was the Meadowshire tradition that
+they should be always mounted&mdash;standing out well against the dark
+background of the leafless woods behind. Then there were a goodly company
+who had not dismounted, and to whom glasses of sherry were being handed
+by the servants, and who also were chattering to each other, or to those
+on foot, whilst before the door, an object of interest to those within as
+to those without, Sir John Kynaston was putting Miss Nevill upon her
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>There was not a man present who did not express his admiration for her
+beauty and her grace; hardly a woman who did not instantly make some
+depreciatory remark. The latter fact spoke perhaps more convincingly for
+the undoubted success she had created than did the former.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice was standing by one of the dining-room windows, Mrs. Romer, as
+usual, by his side. He alone, perhaps, of all the men who saw her vault
+lightly into her saddle, made no audible remark, but perhaps his
+admiration was all too plainly written in his eyes, for it called
+forth a contemptuous remark from his companion&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"She is a great deal too tall to look well on a horse; those big women
+should never ride."</p>
+
+<p>"What! not with a figure so perfect as hers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that is the third time you have spoken about her figure to-day,"
+said Helen, irritably. "What on earth can you see in it?" for Mrs. Romer,
+who was slight almost to angularity, was, as all thin women are, openly
+indignant at the masculine foible for more flowing outlines, which was
+displayed with greater candour than discretion by her quasi-lover.</p>
+
+<p>"What do I see in it?" repeated Maurice, who was dimly conscious of her
+jealousy, and was injudicious enough to lose his temper slightly over its
+exhibition. "I see in it the beauty of a goddess, and the perfection of
+a woman!"</p>
+
+<p>"Really!" with a sarcastic laugh; "how wonderfully enthusiastic and
+poetical you become over Miss Nevill's charms; it is something quite new
+in you, Maurice. Your interest in this 'goddess-like' young lady strikes
+me as singularly warmly expressed; it is more lover-like than fraternal."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" he said, looking at her coldly and angrily. Helen had
+seen that look of hard contempt in his face before; she quailed a little
+before it, and was frightened at what she had said.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," she said, reddening, "I know it's all right; but it does
+really sound peculiar, your admiring her so much; and&mdash;and&mdash;it is hardly
+flattering to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see that it has anything to do with you," and he turned shortly
+away from her.</p>
+
+<p>She made a step or two after him. "You will ride with me, will you not,
+Maurice? You know I can't go very hard; you might give me a lead or two,
+and keep near me."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not ask me to make any promises," he said, politely, but
+coldly. "Guy Miller says there is a groom told off to look after you
+ladies. Of course, if I can be of any use to you, I shall be happy, but
+it is no use making rash engagements as to what one will do in a run."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, it's time we were off," cries out Tom Esterworth at the
+further end of the room, and his stalwart figure makes its way in the
+direction of the door.</p>
+
+<p>In a very few minutes the order "to horse" has gone forth, and the whole
+company have sallied forth and are busy mounting their horses in front of
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>Off goes the master, well in front, at a sharp trot, towards the woods on
+the further slope of the hill, and off go the hounds and the whips, and
+the riders, in a long and gay procession after him, down the wide avenue.</p>
+
+<p>"Promise me you will not stop out long, Vera," says Sir John to her as
+they go side by side down the drive. "You look white and tired as it is.
+Have you got a headache?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a little," confesses Vera, with a blush. "I did not sleep well."</p>
+
+<p>"This sitting up late night after night is not good for you," says her
+lover, anxiously; "and there is the ball to-morrow night."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and I want to look my best for your mother," she said, smiling. "I
+will take care of myself, John; I will go home early in time for lunch."</p>
+
+<p>"You are always so ready to do what I ask you. Oh, Vera, how good you
+are! how little I deserve such a treasure!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't," she answers, almost sharply, whilst an expression of pain
+contracts her brow for an instant. "Don't say such things to me, John;
+don't call me good."</p>
+
+<p>John Kynaston looks at her fondly. "I will not call you anything you
+don't wish," he says, gently, "but I am free to think it, Vera!"</p>
+
+<p>The first covert is successfully drawn without much delay. A fox is
+found, and breaks away across the open, and a short but sharp burst of
+fifteen or twenty minutes follows. The field is an unusually large one,
+and there are many out who are not in it at all. Beatrice, however, is
+well up, and so is Herbert Pryme, who is not likely to be far from her
+side. Close behind them follows Sir John Kynaston, and Mrs. Romer, who is
+well mounted upon one of Edwin Miller's horses, keeps well up with the
+rest.</p>
+
+<p>Vera never quite knew how it was that somehow or other she got thrown out
+of that short but exciting run. She was on the wrong side of the covert
+to begin with; several men were near her, but they were all strangers,
+and at the time "Gone away!" was shouted, there was no one to tell her
+which way to take. Two men took the left side of the copse, three others
+turned to the right. Vera followed the latter, and found that the hounds
+must have gone in the opposite direction, for when she got round the wood
+not a trace of them was to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know the country well, and she hardly knew which way to turn.
+It seemed to her, however, that by striking across a small field to the
+left of her she would cut off a corner, and eventually come up with the
+hounds again.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her mare short round, and put her at a big straggling hedge
+which she had no fears of her being unable to compass. There was,
+however, more of a drop on the further side than she had counted upon,
+and in some way, as the mare landed, floundering on the further side,
+something gave way, and she found that her stirrup-leather had broken.</p>
+
+<p>Vera pulled up and looked about her helplessly. She found herself in
+a small spinney of young birch-trees, filling up the extremity of a
+triangular field into which she had come. Not a sign of the hounds, or,
+indeed, of any living creature was to be seen in any direction. She did
+not feel inclined to go on&mdash;or even to go back home with her broken
+stirrup-leather. It occurred to her that she would get off and see what
+she could do towards patching it together herself.</p>
+
+<p>With some little difficulty, her mare being fidgety, and refusing to
+stand still, she managed to dismount; but in doing so her wrist caught
+against the pommel of her saddle, and was so severely wrenched backwards,
+as she sprang to the ground, that she turned quite sick with the pain.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to her that her wrist must be sprained; at all events, her
+right hand was, for the minute, perfectly powerless. The mare, perceiving
+that nothing further was expected of her, amused herself by cropping the
+short grass at her feet, whilst Vera stood by her side in dire perplexity
+as to what she was to do next. Just then she heard the welcome sound of a
+horse's hoofs in the adjoining field, and in another minute a hat and
+black coat, followed by a horse's head and forelegs appeared on the top
+of the fence, and a man dropped over into the spinney just ten yards in
+front of her.</p>
+
+<p>Vera took it to be her lover, for the brothers both hunted in black, and
+there was a certain family resemblance between their broad shoulders and
+the square set of their heads. She called out eagerly,</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, John! how glad I am to see you! I have come to grief!"</p>
+
+<p>"So I see; but I am not John. I hope, however, I may do as well. What is
+the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is you, Maurice? Oh, yes, you will do quite as well. I have broken my
+stirrup-leather, and I am afraid I have sprained my wrist."</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds bad&mdash;let me see."</p>
+
+<p>In an instant he had sprung from his horse to help her.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him as he came, pushing the tall brushwood away as
+he stepped through it. It struck her suddenly how like he was to the
+photograph she had found of him at Kynaston long ago, and what a
+well-made man he was, and how brave and handsome he looked in his
+hunting gear.</p>
+
+<p>"How have you managed to hurt your wrist? Let me see it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wrenched it somehow in jumping down; but I don't think that it can be
+sprained, for I find I can move it now a little; it is only bruised, but
+it hurts me horribly."</p>
+
+<p>She turned back her cuff and held out the injured hand to him. Maurice
+stooped over it. There was a moment's silence, the two horses stood
+waiting patiently by, the solitary fields lay bare and lifeless on every
+side of them, the little birch-trees rustled mysteriously overhead, the
+leaden sky, with its chill curtain of unbroken gray cloud, spread
+monotonously above them; there was no living thing in all the winter
+landscape besides to listen or to watch them.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Maurice Kynaston caught the hand that he held to his lips, and
+pressed half a dozen passionate kisses upon its outstretched palm.</p>
+
+<p>It was the work of half a minute, and in the next Maurice felt as if he
+should die of shame and remorse.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, forgive me!" he cried, brokenly. "I am a brute&mdash;I forgot
+myself&mdash;I must be mad, I think; for Heaven's sake tell me that I have not
+offended you past forgiveness, Vera!"</p>
+
+<p>His pulses were beating wildly, his face was flushed, the hands that
+still held hers shook with a nameless emotion; he looked imploringly into
+her face, as if to read his sentence in her eyes, but what he saw there
+arrested the torrent of repentance and regret that was upon his lips.</p>
+
+<p>Upon Vera's face there was no flush either of shame or anger. No storm
+of indignation, no passion of insulted feeling; only eyes wide open and
+terror-stricken, that met his with the unspeakable horror that one sees
+sometimes in those of a hunted animal. She was pale as death. Then
+suddenly the colour flushed hotly back into her face; she averted her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go home," she said, in a faint voice; "help me to get on to my
+horse, Maurice."</p>
+
+<p>There was neither resentment nor anger in her voice, only a great
+weariness.</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed her in silence. Possibly he felt that he had stood for one
+instant upon the verge of a precipice, and that miraculously her face had
+saved him, he knew not how, where words would only have dragged him down
+to unutterable ruin.</p>
+
+<p>What had it been that had thus saved him? What was the meaning of that
+terror that had been written in her lovely eyes? Since she was not angry,
+what had she feared?</p>
+
+<p>Maurice asked himself these questions vainly all the way home. Not a word
+was spoken between them; they rode in absolute silence side by side until
+they reached the house.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as he lifted her off her horse at the hall-door, he whispered,</p>
+
+<p>"Have you forgiven me?"</p>
+
+<p>"There was nothing to forgive," she answered, in a low, strained voice.
+She spoke wearily, as one who is suffering physical pain. But, as she
+spoke, the hand that he still held seemed almost, to his fancy, to linger
+for a second with a gentle fluttering pressure within his grasp.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nevill went into the house, having utterly forgotten that she had
+sprained her wrist; a fact which proves indisputably, I suppose, that the
+injury could not have been of a very serious nature.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>PEACOCK'S FEATHERS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">That practised falsehood under saintly show,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deep malice to conceal, couched with revenge.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Milton</span>, "Paradise Lost."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Old Lady Kynaston arrived at Shadonake in the worst possible temper. Her
+butler and factotum, who always made every arrangement for her when she
+was about to travel, had for once been unequal to cope with Bradshaw;
+he had looked out the wrong train, and had sent off his lady and her maid
+half-an-hour too late from Walpole Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>The consequence was that, instead of reaching Shadonake comfortably at
+half-past six in the afternoon, Lady Kynaston had to wait for the next
+train. She ate her dinner alone, in London, at the Midland Railway Hotel,
+and never reached her destination till half-past nine on the night of the
+ball.</p>
+
+<p>Before she had half completed her toilette the guests were beginning to
+arrive.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I must go down and receive these people, dear Lady
+Kynaston," said Mrs. Miller, who had remained in her guest's room full
+of regret and sympathy at the <i>contretemps</i> of her journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear me! yes, Caroline&mdash;pray go down. I shall be all the quicker for
+being left alone. Not <i>that</i> cap, West; the one with the Spanish point,
+of course. Dear me, how I do hate all this hurry and confusion!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am so afraid you will be tired," murmured Mrs. Miller, soothingly.
+"Would you like me to send Miss Nevill up to your room? It might be
+pleasanter for you than to meet her downstairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious, no!" exclaimed the elder lady, testily. "What on earth
+should I be in such a hurry for! I shall see quite as much of her as I
+want by-and-by, I have no doubt."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller retired, and the old lady was left undisturbed to finish
+her toilette, during which it may fairly be assumed that that dignified
+personage, Mrs. West, had a hard time of it.</p>
+
+<p>When she issued forth from her room, dressed, like a little fairy
+godmother, in point lace and diamonds, the dancing downstairs was in
+full swing.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston paused for a minute at the top of the broad staircase to
+look down upon the bright scene below. The hall was full of people. Girls
+in many-coloured dresses passed backwards and forwards from the ball-room
+to the refreshment-room, laughing and chatting to their partners; elderly
+people were congregated about the doorways gossiping and shaking hands
+with new-comers, or watching their daughters with pleased or anxious
+faces, according to the circumstances of their lot. Everybody was talking
+at once. There came up a pleasant confusion of sound&mdash;happy voices
+mingling with the measured strains of the dance-music. In a sheltered
+corner behind the staircase, Beatrice and Herbert Pryme had settled
+themselves down comfortably for a chat. Lady Kynaston saw them.</p>
+
+<p>"Caroline is a fool!" she muttered to herself. "All the balls in the
+world won't get that girl married as she wishes. She has set her heart
+upon that briefless barrister. I saw it as plain as daylight last season.
+As to entertaining all this <i>cohue</i> of aborigines, Caroline might spare
+her trouble and her money, as far as the girl is concerned."</p>
+
+<p>And then, coming slowly down the staircase, Lady Kynaston saw something
+which restored her to good temper at once.</p>
+
+<p>The something was her younger son. She had caught sight of him through an
+open doorway in the conservatory. His back was turned to her, and he was
+bending over a lady who was sitting down, and whose face was concealed
+behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston stood still with that sudden <i>serrement de coeur</i> which
+comes to us all when we see the creature we love best on earth. He did
+not see her, and she could not see his face, because it was turned away
+from her; but she knew, by his very attitude, the way he bent down over
+his companion, by the eager manner in which he was talking to her, and by
+the way in which he was evidently entirely engrossed and absorbed in what
+he was saying&mdash;that he was enjoying himself, and that he was happy.</p>
+
+<p>The mother's heart all went out towards him; the mother's eyes moistened
+as she looked.</p>
+
+<p>The couple in the conservatory were alone. A Chinese lantern, swung high
+up above, shed down a soft radiance upon them. Tall camellia bushes,
+covered with waxen blossoms and cool shiny leaves, were behind them;
+banks of long-fronded, feathery ferns framed them in like a picture.
+Maurice's handsome figure stood up tall and strong amongst the greenery;
+the dress of the woman he was with lay in soft diaphanous folds upon the
+ground beyond him. One white arm rested on her lap, one tiny foot peeped
+out from below the laces of her skirt. But Lady Kynaston could not see
+her face.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder who she is," she said to herself. "It is not Helen. She has
+peacock's feathers on her dress&mdash;bad luck, I believe! Dear boy, he looks
+thoroughly happy. I will not disturb him now."</p>
+
+<p>And she passed on through the hall into the large drawing-room, where the
+dancing was going on.</p>
+
+<p>The first person she caught sight of there was her eldest son. He was
+dancing a quadrille, and his partner was a short young lady in a
+strawberry-coloured tulle dress, covered with trails of spinach-green
+fern leaves. This young person had a round, chubby face, with bright
+apple-hued cheeks, a dark, bullet-shaped head, and round, bead-like eyes
+that glanced about her rapidly like those of a frightened dickey-bird.
+Her dress was cut very low, and the charms she exhibited were not
+captivating. Her arms were very red, and her shoulders were mottled: the
+latter is considered to be a healthy sign in a baby, but is hardly a
+beautiful characteristic in a grown woman.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>That</i> is my daughter-in-law," said Lady Kynaston to herself, and she
+almost groaned aloud. "She is <i>worse</i> even than I thought! Countrified
+and common to the last degree; there will be no licking that face or that
+figure into shape&mdash;they are hopeless! Elise and Worth combined could do
+nothing with her! John must be mad. No wonder she is good, poor thing,"
+added the naughty little old lady, cynically. "A woman with <i>that</i>
+appearance can never be tempted to be anything else!"</p>
+
+<p>The quadrille came to an end, and Sir John, after depositing his partner
+at the further side of the room, came up to his mother.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, how are you? I am so sorry about your journey; you must
+be dead beat. What a fool Bates was to make such a mistake." He was
+looking about the room as he spoke. "I must introduce you to Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, introduce me to her at once," said his mother, in a resigned and
+depressed tone of voice. She would like to have added, "And pray get it
+over as soon as you can." What she did say was only, "Bring her up to me
+now. The young lady you have just been dancing with, I suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>"What!" cried Sir John, and burst out laughing. "Good Heavens, mother!
+that was Miss Smiles, the daughter of the parson of Lutterton. You don't
+mean to say you thought a little ugly chit like <i>that</i> was my Vera!"</p>
+
+<p>His mother suddenly laid her hand upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is that lovely woman who has just come in with Maurice?" she
+exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Her son followed the direction of her eyes, and beheld Vera standing in
+the doorway that led from the conservatory by his brother's side.</p>
+
+<p>Without a word he passed his mother's hand through his arm and led her
+across the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, this is my mother," he said. And Lady Kynaston owned afterwards
+that she never felt so taken aback and so utterly struck dumb with
+astonishment in her life.</p>
+
+<p>Her two sons looked at her with amusement and some triumph. The little
+surprise had been so thoroughly carried out; the contrast of the truth to
+what they knew she had expected was too good a joke not to be enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Not much what you expected, little mother, is it?" said Maurice,
+laughingly. But to Vera, who knew nothing, it was no laughing matter.</p>
+
+<p>She put both her hands out tremblingly and hesitatingly&mdash;with a pretty
+pleading look of deprecating deference in her eyes&mdash;and the little old
+lady, who valued beauty and grace and talent so much that she could
+barely tolerate goodness itself without them, was melted at once.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," she said, "you are beautiful, and I am going to love you; but
+these naughty boys made me think you were something like little Miss
+Smiles."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, mother, it was your own diseased imagination," laughed Maurice;
+"but come, Vera, I am not going to be cheated of this waltz&mdash;if John does
+not want you to dance with him, that is to say."</p>
+
+<p>John nodded pleasantly to them, and the two whirled away together into
+the midst of the throng of dancers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, she is a very beautiful creature, and I have been a silly,
+prejudiced old woman."</p>
+
+<p>"And you forgive her for being poor, and for living in a vicarage instead
+of a castle?"</p>
+
+<p>"She would be a queen if she were a beggar and lived in a mud hovel!"
+answered his mother, heartily, and Sir John was satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston's eyes were following the couple as they danced: for all
+her admiration and her enthusiasm, there was a little anxiety in their
+gaze. She had not forgotten the little picture she had caught a glimpse
+of in the conservatory, nor had her woman's eyes failed to notice that
+Vera's dress was trimmed with peacock's feathers.</p>
+
+<p>Where was Helen? Lady Kynaston said to herself; and why was Maurice
+devoting himself to his future sister-in-law instead of to her?</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Romer, you may be sure, had not been far off. Her sharp eyes had
+seen Vera and Maurice disappear together into the conservatory. She could
+have told to a second how long they had remained there; and again, when
+they came out, she had watched the little family scene that had taken
+place at the door. She had seen the look of delighted surprise on Lady
+Kynaston's face; she had noted how pleased and how proud of Vera the
+brothers had looked, and then how happily Maurice and Vera had gone off
+again together.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it mean?" Helen asked herself, bitterly. "Is Sir John a fool
+or blind that he does not see what is going on under his nose? She has
+got him, and his money, and his place; what does she want with Maurice
+too? Why can't she let him alone&mdash;she is taking him from me."</p>
+
+<p>She watched them eagerly and feverishly. They stood still for a moment
+near her; she could not hear what they said, but she could see the look
+in Maurice's eyes as he bent towards his partner.</p>
+
+<p>Can a woman who has known what love is ever be mistaken about that?</p>
+
+<p>Vera, all wondering and puzzled, might be but dimly conscious of the
+meaning in the eyes that met hers; her own drooped, half troubled, half
+confused, before them. But to Helen, who knew what love's signals were,
+there was no mystery whatever in the passion in his down-bent glance.</p>
+
+<p>"He loves her!" she said to herself, whilst a sharp pang, almost of
+physical pain, shot through her heart. "She shall never get him!&mdash;never!
+never! Not though one of us die for it! They are false, both of them. I
+swear they shall never be happy together!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why are you not dancing, Mrs. Romer?" said a voice at her elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"I will dance with you, Sir John, if you will ask me," answers Helen,
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John responds, as in duty bound, by passing his arm around her waist.</p>
+
+<p>"When are you going to be married, Sir John?" she asks him, when the
+first pause in the dance gives her the opportunity of speech.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John looks rather confused. "Well, to tell you the truth, I have
+not spoken to Vera yet. I have not liked to hurry her&mdash;I thought,
+perhaps&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you speak to her? A woman never thinks any better of a man
+for being diffident in such matters."</p>
+
+<p>"You think not? But you see Vera is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Vera is very much like all other women, I suppose; and you are not
+versed in the ways of the sex."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John demurred in his own mind as to the first part of her speech.
+Vera was certainly not like other women; but then he acknowledged the
+truth of Mrs. Romer's last remark thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I dare say I don't know much about women's ways," he admitted; "and
+you think&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I think that Vera would be glad enough to be married as soon as she can.
+An engagement is a trying ordeal. One is glad enough to get settled down.
+What is the use of waiting when once everything is arranged?"</p>
+
+<p>Sir John flushed a little. The prospect of a speedy marriage was pleasant
+to him. It was what he had been secretly longing for&mdash;only that, in his
+slow way, he had not yet been able to suggest it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really think she would like it?" he asked, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she would; any woman would."</p>
+
+<p>"And how long do you think the preparations would take?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a month or three weeks is ample time to get clothes in."</p>
+
+<p>His pulses beat hotly at the bare possibility of such a thing. To possess
+his Vera in so short a time seemed something too great and too wonderful
+to be true.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not lose any more time," continued Helen, following up the impression
+she saw she had made upon him. "Speak to her this evening; get her to fix
+your wedding-day within the month; believe me, a man gets no advantage by
+putting things off too long; and there are dangers, too, in your case."</p>
+
+<p>"Dangers! How do you mean?" he said, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing particular&mdash;only she is very handsome, and she is young, and
+not accustomed, I dare say, to admiration. Other men may admire her as
+well as you."</p>
+
+<p>"If they did, it could do her no harm," he answered, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, of course not; but you can't keep other men from looking at
+her. When once she is your wife you will have her more completely to
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John made no particular answer to this; but when he had done dancing
+with Mrs. Romer, he led her back to her seat and thanked her gravely and
+courteously for her suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>"You have done me a great service, Mrs. Romer, and I am infinitely
+obliged to you," he said, and then went his way to find Vera.</p>
+
+<p>He was not jealous; but there was a certain uneasiness in his mind. It
+might be, indeed, true that others would admire and love Vera; others
+more worthy of her, more equally mated with her youth and loveliness; and
+he, he said to himself in his humility with regard to her, he had so
+little to offer her&mdash;nothing but his love. He knew himself to be grave
+and quiet; there was nothing about him to enchain her to him. He lacked
+brilliancy in manner and conversation; he was dull; he was, perhaps,
+even prosy. He knew it very well himself; but suppose Vera should find it
+out, and find that she had made a mistake! The bare thought of it was
+enough to make him shudder.</p>
+
+<p>No; Mrs. Romer was a clever, well-intentioned little woman. She had meant
+to give him a hint in all kindness, and he would not be slow to take it.
+What she had meant to say was, "Take her yourself quickly, or some one
+else will take her from you."</p>
+
+<p>And Sir John said to himself that he would so take her, and that as
+quickly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>Standing talking to her younger son, later on that evening, Lady Kynaston
+said to him, suddenly,</p>
+
+<p>"Why does Vera wear peacock's feathers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should she not?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are bad luck."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice laughed. "I never knew you to be superstitious before, mother."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so really; but from choice I would avoid anything that bears an
+unlucky interpretation. I saw her with you in the conservatory as I came
+downstairs."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice turned suddenly red. "Did you?" he asked, a little anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I did not know it was her, of course. I did not see her face, only
+her dress, and I noticed that it was trimmed with peacock's feathers;
+that was what made me recognize her afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>"That was bad luck, at all events," said Maurice, almost involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" asked Lady Kynaston, looking up at him sharply. But Maurice would
+not tell her why.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston asked no more questions; but she pondered, and she watched.
+Captain Kynaston did not dance again with Vera that night, and he did
+dance several times with Mrs. Romer; it did not escape her notice,
+however, that he seemed absent and abstracted, and that his face bore its
+hardest and sternest aspect throughout the remainder of the evening.</p>
+
+<p>So the ball at Shadonake came to an end, as balls do, with the first
+gleams of daylight; and nothing was left of all the gay crowd who had so
+lately filled the brilliant rooms but several sleepy people creeping up
+slowly to bed, and a great <i>chiffonade</i> of tattered laces, and flowers,
+and coloured scraps littered all over the polished floor of the
+ball-room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>HER WEDDING DRESS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Those obstinate questionings<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Of sense and outward things,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Fallings from us, vanishings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Blank misgivings&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">High instincts before which our moral nature<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Wordsworth.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>"Vera, are you not coming to look at it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Presently."</p>
+
+<p>"It is all laid out on your bed, and you ought to try it on; it might
+want alterations."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there is plenty of time!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is downright affectation!" says old Mrs. Daintree, angrily, to her
+daughter-in-law, as she and Marion leave the room together; "no girl can
+really be indifferent to a wedding dress covered with yards of lovely
+Brussels lace flounces; she ought to be ashamed of herself for her
+ingratitude to Lady Kynaston for such a present; she must really want
+to see it, only she likes playing the fine lady beforehand!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think it is that," says Marion, gently; "I don't believe Vera is
+well."</p>
+
+<p>"Fiddlesticks!" snorts her mother-in-law. "A woman who is going to marry
+ten thousand a year within ten days is bound to be well."</p>
+
+<p>Vera sits alone; she leans her head against the window, her hands lie
+idle in her lap, her eyes mechanically follow the rough, gray clouds that
+rack across the winter sky. In little more than a week she will be Vera
+Nevill no longer; she will have gained all that she desired and tried
+for&mdash;wealth, position, Kynaston&mdash;and Sir John! She should be well
+content, seeing that it has been her own doing all along. No one has
+forced or persuaded her into this engagement, no one has urged her on to
+a course contrary to her own inclination, or her own judgment. It has
+been her own act throughout. And yet, as she sits alone in the twilight,
+and counts over on her fingers the few short days that intervene between
+to-day and her bridal morning, hot miserable tears rise to her eyes,
+and fall slowly down, one by one, upon her clasped hands. She does not
+ask herself why she weeps; possibly she dares not. Only her thoughts
+somehow&mdash;by that strange connection of ideas which links something in
+our present to some other thing in our past, and which apparently is in
+no way dependent upon it&mdash;go back instinctively, as it were, to her dead
+sister, the Princess Marinari.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my poor darling Theodora!" she murmurs, half aloud; "if you had
+lived, you would have taken care of your Vera; if you had not died, I
+should never have come here, nor ever have known&mdash;any of them."</p>
+
+<p>And then she hears Marion's voice calling to her from the top of the
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera! Vera! do come up and see it before it gets quite dark."</p>
+
+<p>She rises hastily and dashes away her tears.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter with me to-day!" she says to herself, impatiently.
+"Have I not everything in the world I wish for? I am happy&mdash;of course
+I am happy. I am coming, Marion, instantly."</p>
+
+<p>Upstairs her wedding dress, a soft cloud of rich silk and fleecy lace,
+relieved with knots of flowers, dark-leaved myrtle, and waxen orange
+blossoms, lies spread out upon her bed. Marion stands contemplating it,
+wrapt in ecstatic admiration; old Mrs. Daintree has gone away.</p>
+
+<p>"It is perfectly lovely! I am so glad you had silk instead of satin;
+nothing could show off Lady Kynaston's lace so well: is it not beautiful?
+you ought to try it on. Why, Vera! what is the matter? I believe you have
+been crying."</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinking of Theodora," she murmurs.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! poor dear Theodora!" assents Marion, with a compassionate sigh; "how
+she would have liked to have known of your marriage; how pleased she
+would have been."</p>
+
+<p>Vera looks at her sister. "Marion," she says, in a low earnest voice;
+"if&mdash;if I should break it off, what would you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Break it off!" cries her sister, horror-struck. "Good heavens, Vera!
+what can you mean? Have you gone suddenly mad? What is the matter with
+you? Break off a match like this at the last minute? You must be
+demented!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course," with a sudden change of manner; "of course I did not
+mean it, it only came into my head for a minute; of course, as you say,
+it is a splendid match for me. What should I want to break it off for?
+What should I gain? what, indeed?" She spoke feverishly and excitedly,
+laughing a little harshly as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Marion looked at her anxiously. "I hope to goodness you will never say
+such horrid things to anybody else; it sounds dreadful, Vera, as if
+Eustace and I were forcing you into it; as if you did not want to marry
+Sir John yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I want to marry him!" interrupted Vera, with unreasonable
+sharpness.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, pray don't make a fool of yourself, my dear, by talking about
+breaking it off."</p>
+
+<p>"It was only a joke. Break it off! how could I? The best match in the
+county, as you say. I am not going to make a fool of myself; don't be
+afraid, Marion. It would be so inconvenient, too; the trousseau all
+bought, the breakfast ordered, the guests invited; even the wedding dress
+here, all finished and ready to put on, and ten thousand a year waiting
+for me! Oh, no, I am not going to be such an utter fool!"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed; but her laughter was almost more sad than her tears, and her
+sister left her, saddened and puzzled by her manner.</p>
+
+<p>It was now nearly two months since the ball at Shadonake; and, soon after
+that eventful visit, Vera had begun to be employed in preparing for her
+wedding-day, which had been fixed for the 27th of February; for Sir John
+had taken Mrs. Romer's hint, and had pressed an early marriage upon her.
+Vera had made no objection; what objection, indeed, could she have found
+to make? She had acquiesced readily in her lover's suggestions, and had
+set to work to prepare herself for her marriage.</p>
+
+<p>All this time Captain Kynaston had not been in Meadowshire at all; he had
+declined his brother's hospitality, and had gone to spend his leave
+amongst other friends in Somersetshire, where he had started a couple of
+hunters, and wrote word to Sir John that the sport was of such a very
+superior nature that he was unable to tear himself away.</p>
+
+<p>Within a fortnight, however, of Sir John's wedding, Maurice did yield at
+last to his brother's pressing request, and came up from Somersetshire to
+Kynaston. Last Sunday he had suddenly appeared in the Kynaston pew in
+Sutton Church by Sir John's side, and had shaken hands with Vera and her
+relations on coming out of church, and had walked across the vicarage
+garden by the side of Mrs. Daintree, Vera having gone on in front with
+Tommy and Minnie. And it was from that moment that Vera had as suddenly
+discovered that she was utterly and thoroughly wretched, and that she
+dreaded her wedding-day with a strange and unaccountable terror.</p>
+
+<p>She told herself that she was out of health, that the excitement and
+bustle of the necessary preparations had over-tried her, that her nerves
+were upset, her spirits depressed by reason of the solemnity a woman
+naturally feels at the approach of so important a change in her life.
+She assured herself aloud, day after day, that she was perfectly happy
+and content, that she was the very luckiest and most fortunate of women,
+and that she would sooner be Sir John's wife than the wife of any one
+else in the world. And she told it to herself so often and so
+emphatically, that there were whole hours, and even whole days together,
+when she believed in these self-assurances implicitly and thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>All this time she saw next to nothing of Maurice Kynaston; the weather
+was mild and open, and he went out hunting every day. Sir John, on the
+other hand, was much with her; a constant necessity for his presence
+seemed to possess her. She was never thoroughly content but when he was
+with her; ever restless and ill at ease in his absence.</p>
+
+<p>No one could be more thoroughly convinced than Vera of the entire wisdom
+of the marriage she was about to make. It was, she felt persuaded, the
+best and the happiest thing she could have done with her life. Wealth,
+position, affection, were all laid at her feet; and her husband,
+moreover, would be a man whose goodness and whose devotion to her could
+never fail to command her respect. What more could a woman who, like
+herself, was fully alive to the importance of the good things of this
+world desire? Surely nothing more. Vera, when she was left alone with
+the glories of her wedding garment, took herself to task for her foolish
+words to her sister.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a fool!" she said to herself, half angrily, as she bundled all the
+white silk and the rich lace unceremoniously away into an empty drawer of
+her wardrobe. "I am a fool to say such things even to Marion. It looks,
+as she says, as if I were being forced into a rich marriage by my
+friends. I am very fond of John; I shall make him a most exemplary wife,
+and I shall look remarkably well in the family diamonds, and that is all
+that can possibly be required of me."</p>
+
+<p>Having thus settled things comfortably in her own mind, she went
+downstairs again, and was in such good spirits, and so radiant with
+smiles for the rest of the evening, that Mr. Daintree remarked to his
+wife, when they had retired into their conjugal chamber, that he had
+never seen Vera look so well or so happy.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear child," he said, "it is a great comfort to me to see it, for just
+at first I feared that she had been influenced by the money and the
+position, and that her heart was not in it; but now she has evidently
+become much attached to Sir John, and is perfectly happy; and he is a
+most excellent man, and in every way worthy of her. Did I tell you,
+Marion, that he told me the chancel should be begun immediately after the
+wedding? It is a pity it could not have been done before; but we shall
+just get it finished by Easter."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of that. We must fill the church with flowers for the 27th,
+and then its appalling ugliness will not be too visible. Of course, the
+building could hardly have been begun in the middle of winter."</p>
+
+<p>But if Mrs. Eustace Daintree differed at all from her husband upon the
+subject of her sister's serene and perfect happiness, she, like a wise
+woman, kept her doubts to herself, and spoke no word of them to destroy
+the worthy vicar's peace of mind upon the subject.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Sir John came down from the Hall to the vicarage with
+a cloud upon his brow, and requested Vera to grant him a few minutes'
+private conversation. Vera put on her sable cloak and hat, and went out
+with him into the garden.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am exceedingly vexed with my brother," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"What has Maurice done?"</p>
+
+<p>"He tells me this morning that he will not stop for the wedding, nor be
+my best man. He talks of going away to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Vera glanced at him. He looked excessively annoyed; his face, usually so
+kind and placid, was ruffled and angry; he flicked the grass impatiently
+with his stick.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been talking to him for an hour, and cannot get him to change his
+mind, or even to tell me why he will not stay; in fact, he has no good
+reason for going. He <i>must</i> stay."</p>
+
+<p>"Does it matter very much?" she asked, gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it matters. My mother is not able to be present; it would not
+be prudent after her late attack of bronchitis. My only brother surely
+might make a point of being at my wedding."</p>
+
+<p>"But if he has other engagements&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He has no other engagement!" he interrupted, angrily; "He cannot find
+any but the most paltry excuses. It is behaving with great unkindness to
+myself, but that is a small matter. What I do mind and will not submit to
+is, that it is a deliberate insult to you."</p>
+
+<p>"An insult to me! Oh! John, how can that be?" she said, in some surprise;
+and then, suddenly, she flushed hotly. She knew what he meant. There had
+been plenty of people to say that Sir John Kynaston was marrying beneath
+himself&mdash;a nobody who was unworthy of him: these murmurs had reached
+Vera's ears, but she had not heeded them since Lady Kynaston had been on
+her side. She saw, however, that Sir John feared that the absence of his
+mother and his brother at his wedding might be misconstrued into a sign
+that they also disapproved of his bride.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think Maurice would wish to slight me," she said, gently.</p>
+
+<p>"No; but, then, he must not behave as though he did. I assure you, Vera,
+if he perseveres in his determination, I shall be most deeply hurt. I
+have always endeavoured to be a kind brother to him, and, if he cannot do
+this small thing to please me, I shall consider him most ungrateful."</p>
+
+<p>"That I am sure he is not," she answered, earnestly; "little as I know
+him, I can assure you that he never loses an occasion of saying how much
+he feels your goodness and generosity to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he must prove it. Look here, Vera, will you go up to the Hall now
+and talk to him? He is not hunting to-day; you will find him in the
+library."</p>
+
+<p>"I?" she cried, looking half frightened; "what can I do? You had much
+better ask him yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I have asked him over and over again, till I am sick of asking! If you
+were to put it as a personal request from yourself, I am sure he would
+see how important to us both it is that he should be present at our
+wedding."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray don't ask me to do such a thing; I really cannot," she said,
+hastily.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John looked at her in some surprise; there was an amount of distress
+in her face that struck him as inadequate to the small thing he had asked
+of her.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Vera! have you grown shy? Surely you will not mind doing so small a
+thing to please me? You need not stay long, and you have your hat on all
+ready. I have to speak to your brother-in-law about the chancel; I have a
+letter from the architect this morning; and everything must be settled
+about it before we go. If you will go up and speak to Maurice now, I will
+join you&mdash;say in twenty minutes from now," consulting his watch, "at the
+lodge gates. You will go, won't you, dear, just to please me?"</p>
+
+<p>She did not know how to refuse; she had no excuse to give, no reason that
+she could put into words why she should shrink with such a dreadful
+terror from this interview with his brother which he was forcing upon
+her. She told him that she would go, and Sir John, leaving her, went into
+the house well satisfied to do his business with the vicar.</p>
+
+<p>And Vera went slowly up the lane alone towards the Hall. She did not know
+what she was going to say to Maurice; she hardly knew, indeed, what it
+was she had been commissioned to ask of him; nor in what words her
+request was to be made. She thought no longer of her wedding-day, nor of
+the lover who had just parted with her. Only before her eyes there came
+again the little wintry copse of birch-trees; the horses standing by, the
+bare fields stretching around, and back into her heart there flashed the
+memory of those quick, hot kisses pressed upon her outstretched hand; the
+one short&mdash;and alas! all too perilous&mdash;glimpse that had been revealed to
+her of the inner life and soul of the man whose lightest touch she had
+learnt that day to fear as she feared no other living thing.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3>VERA'S MESSAGE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Alas! how easily things go wrong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A word too much, or a sigh too long;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And there comes a mist and a driving rain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And life is never the same again.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The library at Kynaston was the room which Sir John had used as his only
+sitting-room since he had come down to stay in his own house. When his
+wedding with Miss Nevill had been definitely fixed, there had come down
+from town a whole army of decorators and painters and upholsterers, who
+had set to work to renovate and adorn the rest of the house for the
+advent of the bride, who was so soon to be brought home to it.</p>
+
+<p>They had altered things in various ways, they had improved a few, and
+they had spoiled a good many more; they had, at all events, introduced a
+wholesome and thorough system of cleansing and cleaning throughout the
+house, that had been very welcome to the soul of Mrs. Eccles; but into
+the library they had not penetrated. The old bookshelves remained
+untouched; the old books, in their musty brown calf bindings, were
+undesecrated by profaning hands. All sorts of quaint chairs and bureaus,
+gathered together out of every other room in the house, had congregated
+here. The space over the mantelpiece was adorned by a splendid portrait
+by Vandyke, flanked irreverently on either side by a series of old
+sporting prints, representing the whole beginning, continuation, and
+end of a steeple-chase course, and which, it is melancholy to state, were
+far more highly appreciated by Sir John than the beautiful and valuable
+picture which they surrounded. Below these, and on the mantelpiece
+itself, were gathered together a heterogeneous collection of pipes,
+spurs, horse-shoes, bits, and other implements, which the superintending
+hands of any lady would have straightway relegated to the stables.</p>
+
+<p>In this library Sir John and his brother fed, smoked, wrote and read,
+and lived, in fact, entirely in full and disorderly enjoyment of their
+bachelorhood and its privileges. The room, consequently, was in a
+condition of untidiness and confusion, which was the despair of Mrs.
+Eccles and the delight of the two men themselves, who had even forbidden
+the entrance of any housemaid into it upon pain of instant dismissal.
+Mrs. Eccles submitted herself with resignation to the inevitable, and
+comforted herself with the reflection that the time of unchecked
+masculine dominion was well-nigh over, and that the days were very near
+at hand when "Miss Vera" was coming to alter all this.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well, it won't last long, poor gentleman!" the worthy lady said to
+herself, in allusion to Sir John's uninvaded sanctum; "let him enjoy his
+pigstye while he can. When his wife comes she will soon have the place
+swept clean out for him."</p>
+
+<p>So the papers, and the books, and the pipes, and the tobacco-tins were
+left heaped up all over the tables and chairs, and the fox-terriers sat
+in high places on the sofa cushions; and the brothers smoked their pipes
+after their meals, emptied their ashes on to the tables, threw their
+empty soda-water bottles into a corner of the room, wore their slippers
+at all hours, and lapsed, in fact, into all those delightful methods of
+living at ease practised by the vicious nature inherent in man when he is
+unchecked by female influence; whilst Mrs. Eccles groaned in silence, but
+possessed her soul in patience by reason of that change which she knew to
+be coming over the internal economy of Kynaston Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Maurice Kynaston reclines at ease in the most comfortable arm-chair in
+the room, his feet reposing upon a second chair; his pipe is in his
+mouth, and his hands in his trouser pockets; he wears a loose, gray
+shooting-jacket, and Sir John's favourite terrier, Vic, has curled
+herself into a little round white ball upon his outstretched legs.
+Maurice has just been reading his morning's correspondence, and a letter
+from Helen, announcing that her grandfather is ill and confined to his
+room by bronchitis, is still in his hand. He looks gloomily and
+abstractedly into the red logs of the wood fire. The door opens.</p>
+
+<p>"Any orders for the stable, Captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"None to-day, Mrs. Eccles."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not going out hunting?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am going to take a rest. By the way, Mrs. Eccles, I shall be
+leaving to-morrow, so you can see about packing my things."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me! sir, I hope we shall see you again, at the wedding."</p>
+
+<p>"Very unlikely; I don't like weddings, Mrs. Eccles; the only one I ever
+mean to dance at is yours. When you get married, you let me know."</p>
+
+<p>"Law! sir, how you do go on!" said the old lady, laughing; not
+ill-pleased at the imputation. "Dear me," she went on, looking round the
+room uneasily, "did I ever see such a mess in all my born days. Now Sir
+John is out, sir, I suppose you couldn't let me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Certainly not</i>&mdash;if you mean bring in a broom and a dust-pan! Just let
+me catch you at it, that's all!"</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper shook her head with a resigned sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well! it can't last long; when Miss Vera comes she'll turn the whole
+place inside-out, and all them nasty pipes, and dogs and things will be
+cleared away."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think so?" suddenly sitting upright in his chair. "Wait a bit,
+Mrs. Eccles; don't go yet. Do you think Miss Vera will have things her
+own way with my brother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! sir, what do you ask me for?" she answered, with discreet
+evasiveness. "Surely you must know more about Miss Vera than I can tell
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Eccles went away, and Maurice got up and leant against the
+mantelpiece looking down gloomingly, into the fire. Vic, dislodged from
+his knee, sat up beside him, resting her little white paws on the edge of
+the fender, warming her nose.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fool I am!" said Maurice, aloud to himself. "I can't even hear
+her name mentioned by a servant without wanting to talk about her. Yes,
+it's clear he loves her&mdash;but does she love him? Will she be happy? Yes,
+of course, she will get her own way. Will that be enough for her? Ah!"
+turning suddenly round and taking half-a-dozen steps across the room. "It
+is high time I went. I am a coward and a traitor to linger on here; I
+will go. Why did I say to-morrow&mdash;why have I not settled to go this very
+day? If I were not so weak and so irresolute, I should be gone by this
+time. I ought never, knowing what I do know of myself&mdash;I ought never to
+have come back at all." He went back to the fire and sat down again,
+lifting the little dog back on to his knee. "I shall get over it, I
+suppose," he murmured. "Men don't die of this sort of thing; she will
+marry, and she will think me unkind because I shall never come near her;
+but even if she knew the truth, it would never make any difference to
+her; and by-and-by I too, I suppose, shall marry." The soliloquy died
+away into silence. Maurice stroked the dog and looked at the fire
+dreamily and somewhat drearily.</p>
+
+<p>Some one tapped at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in! What is it, Mrs. Eccles?" he cried, rousing himself.</p>
+
+<p>The door softly opened and there entered, not Mrs. Eccles, but Vera
+Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Kynaston sprang hastily to his feet. "Oh, Vera! I beg your
+pardon&mdash;how do you do? I suppose you have come for John? You must have
+missed him; he started for the vicarage half-an-hour ago."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have seen him. I have come to see you, Maurice, if you don't
+mind." She spoke rather timidly, not looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am delighted, of course," he answered, a little constrainedly.</p>
+
+<p>Vera stood up on the hearth divesting herself of her long fur cloak; she
+flung it over the back of a chair, and then took off her hat and gloves.
+Maurice was strangely unlike himself this morning, for he never offered
+to help her in these operations, he only stood leaning against the corner
+of the mantelpiece opposite her, looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>Vera stooped down and stroked the little fox-terrier; when she had done
+so, she raised her head and met his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Did she see, ere he hastily averted them, all the hunger and all the
+longing that filled them as he watched her? He, in his turn, stooped and
+replenished the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"John sent me to talk to you, Maurice," began Vera, hurriedly, like one
+repeating a lesson; "he tells me you will not be with us on the 27th; is
+that so?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, but I am obliged to go away," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"John is dreadfully hurt, Maurice. I hope you will alter your mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it John for whom you are speaking, or for yourself?" he asked,
+looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>"For both of us. Of course it will be a great disappointment if you are
+not there. You are his only brother, and he will feel it deeply."</p>
+
+<p>"And you; will you feel it?" he persisted. She coloured a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I shall be very sorry," she answered, nervously. "I should not like
+John to be vexed on his wedding-day; he has been a kind brother to you,
+Maurice, and it seems hard that you cannot do this little thing to show
+your sense of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me, I show my gratitude to my brother just as well in staying
+away as in remaining," he answered, earnestly. "Do not urge me any
+further, Vera; I would do anything in the world to please John, but
+I cannot be present at your wedding."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence; the fire flickered up merrily between them;
+a red-hot cinder fell out noisily from the grate; the clock ticked
+steadily on the chimney-piece; the little terrier sniffed at the edge
+of Vera's dress.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there came into her heart a wild desire <i>to know</i>, to eat for
+once of that forbidden fruit of the tree of Eden, whence the flaming
+swords in vain beckoned her back; to eat, and afterwards, perchance, to
+perish of the poisonous food.</p>
+
+<p>A wild conflict of thought thronged into her soul. Prudence, wisdom, her
+very heart itself counselled her to be still and to go. But something
+stronger than all else was within her too; and something that was new and
+strange, and perilously sweet to her; a something that won the day.</p>
+
+<p>She turned to him, stretching out her hands; the warm glow of the fire
+lit up her lovely face and her eloquent pleading eyes, and flickered over
+the graceful and beautiful figure, whose perfect outlines haunted his
+fancy for ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, for my sake, because I ask you!" she cried, with a sudden passion;
+"or else tell me why you must go."</p>
+
+<p>There came no answering flash into his eyes, only he lowered them beneath
+hers; he sat down suddenly, as though he was weary, on the chair whence
+he had risen at her entrance, so that she stood before him, looking down
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a certain repression in his face which made him look stern and
+cold, as one who struggles with a mortal temptation. He stooped over the
+little dog, and became seemingly engrossed in stroking it.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot stop," he said, in a cold, measured voice; "it is an
+impossibility. But, since you ask me, I will tell you why. It can make no
+possible difference to you to know; it may, indeed, excite your interest
+or your pity for a few moments whilst you listen to me; but when it is
+over and you go away you will forget it again. I do not ask you to
+remember it or me; it is, in fact, all I ask, that you should forget.
+This is what it is. Your wedding-day is very near; it is bringing you
+happiness and love. I can rejoice in your happiness. I am not so selfish
+as to lament it; but you will not wish me to be there to see it when I
+tell you that I have been fool enough to dare to love you myself. It is
+the folly of a madman, is it not? since I have never had the slightest
+hope or entertained the faintest wish to alter the conditions of your
+life; nor have I even asked myself what effect such a confession as this
+that you have wrung from me can have upon you. Whether it excites your
+pity or your contempt, or even your amusement, it cannot in any case make
+any difference to me. My folly, at all events, cannot hurt you or my
+brother; it can hurt no one but myself: it cannot even signify to you.
+It is only for my own sake that I am going, because one cannot bear more
+than a certain amount, can one? I thought I might have been strong
+enough, but I find that it would be too much; that is all. You will not
+ask me to stay any more, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>Not once had he looked at her; not by a single sign or token had he
+betrayed the slightest emotion or agitation. His voice had been steady
+and unbroken; he spoke in a low and somewhat monotonous manner; it was
+as though he had been relating something that in no way concerned
+himself&mdash;some story that was of some other, and that other of no great
+interest either to him who told it or to her who listened to the tale.
+Any one suddenly coming into the room would have guessed him to be
+entirely engrossed in the contemplation of the little dog between his
+hands; that he was relating the story of his own heart would not have
+been imagined for an instant.</p>
+
+<p>When he had done speaking there was an absolute silence in the room. What
+he had spoken seemed to admit of no answer of any sort or kind from his
+listener. He had asked for nothing; he had pleaded neither for her
+sympathy nor her forgiveness, far less for any definite expression of the
+effect of his words upon her. He had not, seemingly, cared to know how
+they affected her. He had simply told his own story&mdash;that was all; it
+concerned no one but himself. She might pity him, she might even be
+amused at him, as he had said: anyhow, it made no difference to him;
+he had chosen to present a picture of his inner life to her as a
+doctor might have described some complicated disease to a chance
+acquaintance&mdash;it was a physiological study, if she cared to look upon it
+as such; if not, it did not matter. There was no possible answer that she
+could make to him; no form of words by which she could even acknowledge
+that she had heard him speak.</p>
+
+<p>She stood perfectly silent for the space of some two or three seconds;
+she scarcely breathed, her very heart seemed to have ceased to beat; it
+was as if she had been turned to stone. She knew not what she felt; it
+was neither pain, nor joy, nor regret; it was only a sort of dull apathy
+that oppressed her very being.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she put forth her hands, almost mechanically, and reached her
+cloak and hat from the chair behind her.</p>
+
+<p>The soft rustle of her dress upon the carpet struck his ear; he looked up
+with a start, like one waking out of a painful dream.</p>
+
+<p>"You are going!" he said, in his usual voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I am going."</p>
+
+<p>He stood up, facing her.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing more to be said, is there?" He said it not as though he
+asked her a question, but as one asserting a fact.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, I suppose," she answered, rather wearily, not looking at him as
+she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not see you again, as I leave to-morrow morning by the early
+train. You will, at least, wish me good-bye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, Maurice."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, Vera; God bless you."</p>
+
+<p>She opened the door softly and went out. She went slowly away down the
+avenue, wrapping her cloak closely around her; the wind blew cold and
+chill, and she shivered a little as she walked. Presently she struck
+aside along a narrow pathway through the grass that led her homewards by
+a shorter cut. She had forgotten that Sir John was to wait for her at the
+lodge-gates.</p>
+
+<p>She had forgotten his very existence. For she <i>knew</i>. She had eaten of
+the tree of knowledge, and the scales had fallen for ever from her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She knew that Maurice loved her&mdash;and, alas! for her&mdash;she knew also that
+she loved him. And between them a great gulf was fixed; deep, and wide,
+and impassable as the waters of Lethe.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the calm, unconscious lethargy of her maidenhood's untroubled
+dreams the soul of Vera had awakened at length to the realization of the
+strong, passionate woman's heart that was within her.</p>
+
+<p>She loved! It had come to her at last; this thing that she had scorned
+and disbelieved in, and yet that, possibly, she had secretly longed for.
+She had deemed herself too cold, too wise, too much set upon the good
+things of earth, to be touched by that scorching fire; but now she was no
+colder than any other love-sick maiden, no wiser than every other foolish
+woman who had been ready to wreck her life for love in the world's
+history.</p>
+
+<p>Surely no girl ever learnt the secret of her own heart with such dire
+dismay as did Vera Nevill. There was neither joy nor gladness within her,
+only a great anger against herself and her fate, and even against him
+who, as he had said, had dared to love her. She had courted the avowal
+from his lips, and yet she resented the words she had wrung from him.
+But, more than all, she resented the treachery of the heart that was
+within her.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did I ever see him?" she cried aloud in her bitterness, striking her
+hands wildly against each other. "What evil fate brought us together?
+What fool's madness induced me to go near him to-day? I was happy enough;
+I had all I wanted; I was content with my fate&mdash;and now&mdash;now!" Her
+passionate words died away into a wail. In her haste and her abstraction
+her foot caught against a long, withered bramble trail that lay across
+her path; she half stumbled. It was sufficient to arrest her steps. She
+stood still, and leant against the smooth, whitened trunk of a beech
+tree. Her hands locked themselves tightly together; her face, white and
+miserable, lifted itself despairingly towards the pitiless winter sky
+above her.</p>
+
+<p>"How am I to live out my life?" she asked herself, in her anguish.</p>
+
+<p>It had not entered into her head that she could alter it. It did not
+occur to her to imagine that she could give up anything to which she now
+stood pledged. To be John Kynaston's wife, and to love his brother, that
+was what struck upon her with horror; no other possible contingency had
+as yet suggested itself to her.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, as she moved slowly onwards, still absorbed in her new-found
+misfortune, a fresh train of thought came into her mind. She thought no
+longer about herself, but about him.</p>
+
+<p>"How cruel I was to leave him like that," she said to herself,
+reproachfully; "without a word, or so much as a look, of
+consolation&mdash;for, if I suffer, has not he suffered too!"</p>
+
+<p>She forgot that he had asked her for nothing; she only knew that, little
+enough as she had to give him, she had withheld that little from him.</p>
+
+<p>"What must he think of me?" she repeated to herself, in dismay. "How
+heartless and how cold I must be in his eyes to have parted from him thus
+without one single kind word. I might, at least, have told him that I was
+grateful for the love I cannot take. I wonder," she continued, half aloud
+to herself, "I wonder what it is like to be loved by Maurice&mdash;&mdash;" She
+paused again, this time leaning against the wicket-gate that led out of
+the park into the high road.</p>
+
+<p>A little smile played for one instant about her lips, a soft, far-away
+look lingered in her dreaming eyes for just a moment&mdash;just the space of
+time it might take you to count twenty; she let her fancy carry her
+away&mdash;<i>where</i>?</p>
+
+<p>Ah, sweet and perilous reverie! too dear and too dangerous to be safely
+indulged in. Vera roused herself with a start, passing her hand across
+her brow as though to brush away the thoughts that would fain have
+lingered there.</p>
+
+<p>"Impossible!" she said aloud to herself, moving on again rapidly. "I must
+be a fool to stand here dreaming&mdash;I, whose fate is irrevocably fixed; and
+I would sooner die than alter it. The best match in the county, it is
+called. Well, so it is; and nothing less would satisfy me. But&mdash;but&mdash;I
+think I will see him once again, and wish him good-bye more kindly."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>"POOR WISDOM."</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">No; vain, alas! the endeavour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From bonds so sweet to sever,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Poor Wisdom's chance against a glance<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is now as weak as ever!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Thos. Moore.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The station at Sutton stood perched up above the village on a high
+embankment, upon which the railway crossed the valley from the hills that
+lay to the north to those that lay to the south of it. Up at the station
+it was always draughty and generally cold. To-day, this very early
+morning, about ten minutes before the first up train is due, it is not
+only cold and draughty, but it is also wet and foggy. A damp, white mist
+fills the valley below, and curls up the bare hill sides above; it hangs
+chillingly about the narrow, open shed on the up side of the station,
+covering the wooden bench within it with thick beads of moisture, so that
+no man dare safely sit down on it, and clinging coldly and penetratingly
+to the garments of a tall young lady in a long ulster and a thick veil,
+who is slowly walking up and down the platform.</p>
+
+<p>The solitary porter on duty eyes her inquiringly. "Going by the up train,
+Miss?" he says, touching his hat respectfully as he passes her.</p>
+
+<p>"No," says Vera, blushing hotly under the thick shelter of her veil, and
+then adds with that readiness of explanation to which persons who have a
+guilty conscience are prone, "I am only waiting to see somebody off." An
+uncalled-for piece of information which has only the effect of setting
+the bucolic mind of the local porter agog with curiosity and wonderment.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the few passengers for the early train begin to arrive; a
+couple of farmers going into the market town, a village girl in a smart
+bonnet, an old woman in a dirty red shawl, carrying a bundle; that is
+all. Maurice is very late. Vera remembers that he always puts off
+starting to catch a train till the very last minute. She stands waiting
+for him at the further end of the platform, as far away as she can from
+the knot of rustic passengers, with a beating heart and a fever of
+impatience within her.</p>
+
+<p>The train is signalled, and at that very minute the dog-cart from
+Kynaston drives up at last! Even then he has to get his ticket, and to
+convey himself and his portmanteau across from the other side of the
+line. Their good-bye will be short indeed!</p>
+
+<p>The train steams up, and Maurice hurries forward followed by the porter
+bearing his rugs and sticks; he does not even see her, standing a little
+back, as she does, so as not to attract more attention than need be. But
+when all his things are put into the carriage, and the porter has been
+duly tipped and has departed, Captain Kynaston hears a soft voice behind
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have come to wish you good-bye again." He turns, flushing at the sound
+of the sweet familiar voice, and sees Vera in her long ulster, and her
+face hidden behind her veil, by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens, Vera! <i>you</i>&mdash;out on such a morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not let you go away without&mdash;without&mdash;one kind word," she
+begins, stammering painfully, her voice shaking so, as she speaks, that
+he cannot fail to divine her agitation, even though he cannot see the
+lovely troubled face that has been so carefully screened from his gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"This is too good of you," he begins. That very minute a brougham dashes
+rapidly up to the station.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the Shadonake carriage!" cried Vera, casting a terrified glance
+behind her. "Who can it be? they will see me."</p>
+
+<p>"Jump into the train," he answers, hurriedly, and, without a thought
+beyond an instinct of self-preservation for the moment, she obeys him.
+Maurice follows her quickly, closing the carriage door behind him.
+"Nobody can have seen you," he says. "I daresay it is only some visitors
+going away; they could not have noticed you. Oh! Vera," turning with
+sudden earnestness to her; "how am I ever to thank you for this great
+kindness to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing; only a five minutes' walk before breakfast. It is no
+trouble to me; and I did not want you to think me unfeeling, or unkind
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Before she could speak another word the carriage door was violently
+slammed to, and the guard's sharp shrill whistle heralded the departure
+of the train. With a cry, Vera sprang towards the door; before she could
+reach it, Maurice, who had perceived instantly what had happened, had let
+down the window and was shouting to the porter. It was too late. The
+train was off.</p>
+
+<p>Vera sank back hopelessly upon the seat; and Maurice, according to the
+manners and customs of infuriated Britons, gave utterance to a very
+laconic word of bad import below his breath.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't have had this happen for ten thousand pounds!" he said, after
+a minute, looking at her in blank despair.</p>
+
+<p>Vera was taking off her veil mechanically; when he could see her face, he
+perceived that she was very white.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," she said, with a faint smile; "there is no real harm done.
+It is unfortunate, that is all. The train stops at Tripton. I can get out
+there and walk home."</p>
+
+<p>"Five miles! and it is I who have got you into this scrape! What a
+confounded fool I was to make you get into the carriage! I ought to have
+remembered how late it was. How are you to walk all that way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray don't reproach yourself, Maurice; I shall not mind the walk a bit.
+I shall have to confess my escapade to Marion, and tell her why I am late
+for breakfast&mdash;that is all; as it is, I can, at all events, finish what I
+wanted to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>And then she was silent, looking away from him out of the further window.
+The train, gradually accelerating its pace, sped quickly on through the
+fog-blotted landscape. Hills, villages, church spires, all that made the
+country familiar, were hidden in the mist; only here and there, in the
+nearer hedge-rows, an occasional tree stood out bleak and black against
+the white veil beyond like a sentinel alone on a limitless plain.
+Absolute silence&mdash;only the train rushing on faster and faster through
+the white, wet world without.</p>
+
+<p>Then, at last, it was Maurice, not Vera, that spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I blame myself bitterly for this, Vera," he said in a low, pained voice.
+"Had it not been for my foolish, unthinking words to you yesterday, you
+would not have been tempted to do this rash act of kindness. I spoke to
+you in a way that I had no right to speak, believing that my words would
+make no impression upon you beyond the fact of showing you that it was
+impossible for me to stay for your wedding. I never dreamt that your
+kindly interest in me would lead you to waste another thought upon me.
+I did not know how good and pitying your nature is, nor give you credit
+for so much generosity."</p>
+
+<p>She turned round to him sharply and suddenly. "What are you saying?" she
+cried, with a harsh pain in her voice. "What words are you using to me?
+<i>Kindness, pity, generosity</i>!&mdash;have they any place here between you
+and me?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment in which neither of them spoke, only their eyes met,
+and the secret that was hidden in their souls lay suddenly revealed to
+each of them.</p>
+
+<p>In another instant Vera had sunk upon her knees before him.</p>
+
+<p>"While you live," she cried, passionately, lifting her beautiful dark
+eyes, that were filled with a new light and a new glory, to his&mdash;"while
+you live I will never be another man's wife!"</p>
+
+<p>And there was no other word spoken. Only a shower of close, hot kisses
+upon her lips, and two strong arms that drew her nearer and tighter to
+the beating heart against which she rested, for he was only human after
+all.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, swift and divine moment of joy, that comes but once in a man's life,
+when he holds the woman he loves for the first time to his heart! Once,
+and once only, he tastes of heaven and forgets life itself in the short
+and delirious draught. What envious deity shall grudge him those moments
+of rapture, all too sweet, and, alas! all too short!</p>
+
+<p>To Vera and Maurice, locked in each other's arms, time had no shore, and
+life was not. It might have been ten seconds, it might have been an
+eternity&mdash;they could not have told&mdash;no pang entered that serene haven
+where their souls were lapped in perfect happiness; no serpent entered
+into Eden; no harsh note struck upon their enchanted ears, nor jarring
+sight upon their sun-dazzled vision. Where in that moment was the duty
+and the honour that was a part of the man's very self? What to Vera was
+the rich marriage and the life of affluence, and all the glitter and
+tinsel which it had been her soul's desire to attain? She remembered it
+not; like a house of cards, it had fallen shattered to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>They loved, and they were together. There was neither duty, nor faith,
+nor this world's wisdom between them; nothing but that great joy which on
+earth has no equal, and which Heaven itself cannot exceed.</p>
+
+<p>But brief are the moments whilst joy, with bated breath and folded wings,
+pauses on his flight; too soon, alas! is the divine elixir dashed away
+from our lingering lips.</p>
+
+<p>Already, for Maurice and for Vera, it is over, and they have awakened to
+earth once more.</p>
+
+<p>It is the man who is the first to remember. "Good God, Vera!" he cries,
+pushing her back from him, "what terrible misfortune is this? Can it be
+true that you must suffer too, that you love me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" she answered, looking at him; happy still, but troubled too;
+for already for her also Paradise is over. "Is it so hard to believe? And
+yet many women must have loved you. But I&mdash;I have never loved before.
+Listen, Maurice: when I accepted your brother, I liked him, I thought I
+could be very happy with him; and&mdash;and&mdash;do not think ill of me&mdash;I wanted
+so much to be rich; it was so miserable being poor and dependent, and I
+knew life so well, and how hard the struggle is for those who are poor.
+I was so determined I would do well for myself; and he was good, and I
+liked him."</p>
+
+<p>At the mention of the brother, whom he had wronged, Maurice hid his face
+in his hands and groaned aloud.</p>
+
+<p>She laid her hand softly upon his knee; she had half raised herself upon
+the seat by his side, and her head, from which her hat had fallen,
+pillowed itself with a natural caressing action against his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>At the soft touch he shivered.</p>
+
+<p>"It was dreadful, was it not? But then, I am not perfect, and I liked the
+idea of being rich, and I had never loved&mdash;I did not even know what it
+meant. And then I met you&mdash;long ago your photograph had arrested my
+fancy; and do you remember that evening at Shadonake when I first saw
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Could he ever forget one single detail of that meeting?</p>
+
+<p>"You stood at the foot of the staircase, waiting, and I came down softly
+behind you. You did not see me till I was close to you, and then you
+turned, and you took my hands, and you looked and looked at me till my
+eyes could no longer meet yours. There came a vague trouble into my
+heart; I had never felt anything like it before. Maurice, from that
+instant I must have loved you."</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, Vera!" he cried out wildly, as though the gentle words
+gave him positive pain, "do not speak of it. Do you not see the abyss
+which lies between us&mdash;which must part us for ever?"</p>
+
+<p>"Loving you, I will never marry your brother!" she answered, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"And I will never rob my brother of his bride. Darling, darling, do not
+tempt me too far, or God knows what I may say and do! To reach you, love,
+would be to dip my hands in dishonour and basest treachery. Not even for
+you can I do this vile thing. Kiss me once more, sweet, and let me go out
+of your life for ever; believe me, it is better so; best for us both. In
+time you will forget, you will be happy. He will be good to you, and you
+will be glad that you were not tempted to betray him."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not know what you ask of me," she cried, lifting her face, all
+wet with tears, to his. "Leave me, if you will&mdash;go your way&mdash;forget
+me&mdash;it is all the same to me; henceforth there is no other man on earth
+to me but you. I will never swear vows at God's altar that I cannot keep,
+or commit the frightful sin of marrying one man whilst I know that I love
+another. Yes, yes; I know it is a horrible, dreadful misfortune. Have I
+sought it, or gone out of my way to find it? Have I not struggled to
+keep it away from me? striven to blind my eyes to it and to go on as I
+was, and never to acknowledge it to myself? Do I not love wealth above
+all things; do I not know that he is rich, and you poor? And yet I cannot
+help loving you!"</p>
+
+<p>He took her clasped, trembling hands within his own, and held them
+tightly. In that moment the woman was weak, and the man was her master.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen," he said. "Yes, you are right, I am poor; but that is not all.
+Vera, for Heaven's sake, reflect, and pause before you wreck your whole
+life. I cannot marry you&mdash;not only because I am poor, but also, alas!
+because I am bound to another woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Helen Romer!" she murmured, faintly; "and you love <i>her</i>?" A sick, cold
+misery rushed into her heart. She strove to withdraw her hands from his;
+but he only held them the tighter.</p>
+
+<p>"No; by the God above us, I love you, and only you," he answered her,
+almost roughly; "but I am bound to her. I cannot afford to marry her&mdash;we
+have neither of us any money; but I am bound all the same. Only one thing
+can set me free; if, in five years, we are, neither of us, better off
+than now, she has told me that I may go free. Under no other conditions
+can I ever marry any one else. That is my secret, Vera. At any moment she
+can claim me, and for five years I must wait for her."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will wait for you five years too," she cried, passionately. "Is
+my love less strong, less constant, than hers, do you think? Can I not
+wait patiently too?" She wound her arms about his neck, and drew his face
+down to hers.</p>
+
+<p>"Five years," she murmured; "it is but a small slice out of one's life
+after all; and when it is over, it seems such a little space to look back
+upon. Dearest, some day we shall remember how miserable, and yet how
+happy too, we have been this morning; and we shall smile, as we remember
+it all, out of the fulness of our content."</p>
+
+<p>How was he to gainsay so sweet a prophet? Already the train was
+slackening, and the moment when they must part drew near. The beautiful
+head lay upon his breast; the deep, shadowy eyes, which love for the
+first time had softened into the perfection of their own loveliness,
+mirrored themselves in his; the flower-shaped, trembling lips were close
+up to his. How could he resist their gentle pleading? There was no time
+for more words, for more struggles between love and duty.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it, then," he murmured, and caught her in one last, passionate
+embrace to his heart.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later a tall young lady, deeply veiled as when she had
+entered the train, got out of it and walked swiftly away from Tripton
+station down the hill towards the high road. So absorbed was she in her
+own reflections that she utterly failed to notice another figure, also
+female and also veiled, who, preceding her through the mist, went on
+swiftly before her down the road. Nor did she pay the slightest attention
+to the fact until a turn in the road brought her suddenly face to face
+with two persons who stood deep in conversation under the shelter of
+the tall, misty hedge-row.</p>
+
+<p>As Vera approached these two persons sprang apart with a guilty
+suddenness, and revealed to her astonished eyes&mdash;Beatrice Miller and Mr.
+Herbert Pryme.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN UNLUCKY LOVE-LETTER.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Heaven first taught letters for some wretch's aid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some banished lover, or some captive maid.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Pope</span>, "Eloisa and Abelard."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<p>To ascertain rightly how Mr. Pryme and Miss Miller came to be found in
+the parish of Tripton at nine o'clock in the morning, standing together
+under a wet hedge-row, it will be necessary to take a slight retrospect
+of what had taken place in the history of these two people since the time
+when the young barrister had spent that memorable week at Shadonake.</p>
+
+<p>The visit had come to an end uneventfully for either of them; but two
+days after his departure from the house Mr. Pryme had been guilty of a
+gross piece of indiscretion. He had forgotten to observe a golden rule
+which should be strongly impressed upon every man and woman. The maxim
+should be inculcated upon the young with at least as much earnestness as
+the Catechism or the Ten Commandments. In homely language, it runs
+something in this fashion: "Say what you like, but never commit yourself
+to paper."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pryme had observed the first portion of this maxim religiously, but
+he had failed to pay equal regard to the latter. He <i>had</i> committed
+himself to paper in the shape of a very bulky and very passionate
+love-letter, which was duly delivered by the morning postman and laid at
+the side of Miss Miller's plate upon the breakfast-table.</p>
+
+<p>Now, Miss Miller, as it happened on that particular morning, had a
+very heavy influenza cold, and had stayed in bed for breakfast. When,
+therefore, Mrs. Miller prepared to send a small tray up to her daughter's
+bedroom with her breakfast, she took up her letters also from the table
+to put upon it with her tea and toast. The very thick envelope of one
+of them first attracted her notice; then the masculine nature of the
+handwriting; and when, upon turning it over, she furthermore perceived a
+very large-sized monogram of the letters "H. P." upon the envelope, her
+mind underwent a sudden revolution as to the sending of her daughter's
+correspondence upstairs.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that will do," she said to the lady's maid, "you can take up
+the tray; I will bring Miss Miller's letters up to her myself after
+breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>After which, without more ado, she walked to the window and opened the
+letter. Some people might have had scruples as to such a strong measure.
+Mrs. Miller had none at all. Her children, she argued, were her own
+property and under her own care; as long as they lived under her roof,
+they had no right over anything that they possessed independently of
+their mother.</p>
+
+<p>Under ordinary circumstances she would not have opened a letter addressed
+to any of her children; but if there was anything of a suspicious nature
+in their correspondence, she certainly reserved to herself the perfect
+right of dealing with it as she thought fit.</p>
+
+<p>She opened the letter and read the first line; it ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My dearest darling Beatrice." She then turned to the end of it and read
+the last; it was this: "Your own most devoted and loving Herbert."</p>
+
+<p>That was quite enough for Mrs. Miller; she did not want to read any more
+of it. She slipped the letter into her pocket, and went back to the
+breakfast-table and poured out the tea and coffee for her husband and her
+sons.</p>
+
+<p>But when the family meal was over, it was with a very angry aspect that
+Mrs. Miller went upstairs and stood by her eldest daughter's bedside.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, here is a letter which has come for you this morning, of which
+I must ask you an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"You have read it, mamma!" flushing angrily, as she took it from her
+mother's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I have read the first line and the last. I certainly should not take the
+trouble to wade all through such contemptible trash!" Which was an
+unprovoked insult to poor Beatrice's feelings.</p>
+
+<p>She snatched the letter from her mother's hand, and crumpled it jealously
+under her pillow.</p>
+
+<p>"How can you call it trash, then, if you have not read it?"</p>
+
+<p>It was hard, certainly; to have her letter opened was bad enough, but to
+have it called names was worse still. The letter, which to Beatrice would
+be so full of sacred charm and delight&mdash;such a poem on love and its
+sweetness&mdash;was nothing more to her mother than "contemptible trash!"</p>
+
+<p>But where in the whole world has a love-letter been indited, however
+delightful and perfect it may be to the writer and the receiver of it,
+that is nothing but an object of ridicule or contempt to the whole world
+beside? Love is divine as Heaven itself to the two people who are
+concerned in its ever new delights; but to us lookers-on its murmurs are
+but fooleries, its sighs are ludicrous, and its written words absolute
+imbecilities; and never a memory of our own lost lives can make the
+spectacle of it in others anything but an irritating and idiotic
+exhibition.</p>
+
+<p>"I have read quite enough," continued Mrs. Miller, sternly, "to
+understand the nature of it. It is from Mr. Pryme, I imagine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, mamma."</p>
+
+<p>"And by what right, may I ask, does Mr. Pryme commence a letter to you in
+the warm terms of affection which I have had the pleasure of reading?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the right which I myself have given him," she answered, boldly.</p>
+
+<p>Regardless of her cold, she sat upright in her bed; a flush of defiance
+in her face, her short dark hair flung back from her brow in wild
+confusion. She understood at once that all had been discovered, and she
+was going to do battle for her lover.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me, Beatrice, that you have engaged yourself to this
+Mr. Pryme?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I have."</p>
+
+<p>"You know very well that your father and I will never consent to it."</p>
+
+<p>"Never is a long day, mamma."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't take up my words like that. I consider, Beatrice, that you have
+deceived me shamefully. You persuaded me to ask that young man to the
+house because you said that Sophy Macpherson was fond of him."</p>
+
+<p>"So she is."</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, how can you be so wicked and tell such lies in the face of
+that letter to yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never said he was fond of her," she answered, with just the vestige of
+a twinkle in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had known, I would never have asked him to come," continued her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I am sure you would not. But I did not tell you, mamma."</p>
+
+<p>"I have other views for you. You must write to this young man and tell
+him you will give him up."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly shall not do that."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not give my consent to your engagement."</p>
+
+<p>"I never imagined that you would, mamma, and that is why I did not ask
+for it."</p>
+
+<p>And then Mrs. Miller got very angry indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth do you intend to do, you ungrateful, disobedient,
+rebellious child?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean to marry Herbert some day because I love him," answered her
+daughter, coolly; "but I will not run away with him unless you force me
+to it; and I hope, by-and-by, when Geraldine is grown up and can take my
+place, that you will give us your consent and your blessing. I am quite
+willing to wait a reasonable time for the chance of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it likely that I shall give my consent to your marrying a young man
+picked up nobody knows where&mdash;out of the gutter, most likely? Who are his
+people, I should like to know?"</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay his father is as well connected as mine," answered Beatrice,
+who knew all about her mother's having married a <i>parvenu</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, I am ashamed of you, sneering at your own father!"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, mamma; I did not mean to sneer, but you say very
+trying things; and Mr. Pryme is a gentleman, and every bit as good as we
+are!"</p>
+
+<p>"And where is the money to be found for this precious marriage, I should
+like to know? Do you suppose Mr. Pryme can support you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh dear, no; but I know papa will not let me starve."</p>
+
+<p>And Mrs. Miller knew it too. However angry she might be, and however
+unsuitably Beatrice might choose to marry, Mr. Miller would never allow
+his daughter to be insufficiently provided for. Beatrice's marriage
+portion would be a small fortune to a poor young man.</p>
+
+<p>"It is your money he is after!" she said, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so, mamma; and of course of that I am the best judge."</p>
+
+<p>"He shall never set foot here again. I shall write to him myself and
+forbid him the house."</p>
+
+<p>"That, of course, you may do as you like about, mamma; I cannot prevent
+your doing so, but it will not make me give him up, because I shall never
+marry any one else."</p>
+
+<p>And there Mrs. Miller was, perforce, obliged to let the matter rest. She
+went her way angry and vexed beyond measure, and somewhat baffled too.
+How is a mother to deal with a daughter who is so determined and so
+defiant as was Beatrice Miller? There is no known method in civilized
+life of reducing a young lady of twenty to submission in matters of the
+heart. She could not whip her, or put her on bread and water, nor could
+she shut her up in a dark cupboard, as she might have done had she been
+ten years old.</p>
+
+<p>All she could do was to write a very indignant letter to Mr. Pryme,
+forbidding him ever to enter her doors, or address himself in any way to
+her daughter again. Having sent this to the post, she was at the end of
+her resources. She did, indeed, confide the situation with very strong
+and one-sided colouring to her husband; but Mr. Miller had not the strong
+instincts of caste which were inherent in his wife. She could not make
+him see what dreadful deed of iniquity Herbert Pryme and his daughter
+had perpetrated between them.</p>
+
+<p>"What's wrong with the young fellow?" he asked, looking up from the pile
+of parliamentary blue-books on the library table before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is wrong, Andrew; but he isn't a suitable husband for Beatrice."</p>
+
+<p>"Why? you asked him here, Caroline. I suppose, if he was good enough to
+stay in the house, he is no different to the boys, or anybody else who
+was here."</p>
+
+<p>"It is one thing to stay here, and quite another thing to want to marry
+your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if he's an honest man, and the girl loves him, I don't see the
+good of making a fuss about it; she had better do as she likes."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Andrew, the man hasn't a penny; he has made nothing at the bar
+yet." It was no use appealing to his exclusiveness, for he had none; it
+was a better move to make him look at the money-point of the question.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, he will get on some day, I daresay, and meanwhile I shall give
+Beatrice quite enough for them both when she marries."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't understand, Andrew."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my dear," very humbly, "perhaps I don't; but there, do as you think
+best, of course; I am sure I don't wish to interfere about the children;
+you always manage all these kind of things; and if you wouldn't mind, my
+dear, I am so very busy just now. You know there is to be this attack
+upon the Government as soon as the House meets, and I have the whole of
+the papers upon the Patagonian and Bolivian question to look up, and most
+fraudulent misstatements of the truth I believe them to be; although, as
+far as I've gone, I haven't been able to make it quite out yet, but I
+shall come to it&mdash;no doubt I shall come to it. I am going to speak upon
+this question, my dear, and I mean to tell the House that a grosser
+misrepresentation of facts was never yet promulgated from the Ministerial
+benches, nor flaunted in the faces of an all too leniently credulous
+Opposition; that will warm 'em up a bit, I flatter myself; those fellows
+in office will hang their heads in shame at the word Patagonia for weeks
+after."</p>
+
+<p>"But who cares about Patagonia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nobody much, I suppose. But there's bound to be an agitation against
+the Government, and that does as well as anything else. We can't afford
+to neglect a single chance of kicking them out. I have planned my speech
+pretty well right through; it will be very effective&mdash;withering, I
+fancy&mdash;but it's just these plaguy blue-books that won't quite tally with
+what I've got to say. I must go through them again though&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You had better have read the papers first, and settled your speech
+afterwards," suggested his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh dear, no! that wouldn't do at all; after all, you know, between you
+and me, the facts don't go for much; all we want is, to denounce them;
+any line of argument, if it is ingenious enough, will do; lay on the big
+words thickly&mdash;that's what your constituents like. Law bless you! <i>they</i>
+don't read the blue books; they'll take my word for granted if I say they
+are full of lies; it would be a comfort, however, if I could find a few.
+Of course, my dear, this is only between you and me."</p>
+
+<p>A man is not always heroic to the wife of his bosom. Mrs. Miller went
+her way and left him to his righteous struggle among the Patagonian
+blue-books. After all, she said to herself, it had been her duty to
+inform him of his daughter's conduct, but it was needless to discuss
+the question further with him. He was incapable of approaching it from
+her own point of view. It would be better for her now to go her own way
+independently of him. She had always been accustomed to manage things her
+own way. It was nothing new to her.</p>
+
+<p>Later in the day she attempted to wrest a promise from Beatrice that
+she would hold no further communication with the prohibited lover. But
+Beatrice would give no such promise.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it likely that I should promise such a thing?" she asked her mother,
+indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You would do so if you knew what your duty to your mother was."</p>
+
+<p>"I have other duties besides those to you, mamma; when one has promised
+to marry a man, one is surely bound to consider him a little. If I have
+the chance of meeting him, I shall certainly take it."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall take very good care that you have no such chances, Beatrice."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, mamma; you will, of course, do as you think best."</p>
+
+<p>It was in consequence of these and sundry subsequent stormy conversations
+that Mr. Herbert Pryme suddenly discovered that he had a very high regard
+and affection for Mr. Albert Gisburne, the vicar of Tripton, the same
+to whom once Vera's relations had wished to unite her.</p>
+
+<p>The connection between Mr. Gisburne and Herbert Pryme was a slender one;
+he had been at college with an elder brother of his, who had died in his
+(Herbert's) childhood. He did not indeed very clearly recollect what this
+elder brother had been like; but having suddenly called to mind that,
+during the course of his short visit to Shadonake, he had discovered the
+fact of the college friendship, of which, indeed, Mr. Gisburne had
+informed him, he now was unaccountably inflamed by a desire to cultivate
+the acquaintance of the valued companion of his deceased brother's youth.</p>
+
+<p>He opened negotiations by the gift of a barrel of oysters, sent down
+from Wilton's, with an appropriate and graceful accompanying note. Mr.
+Gisburne was surprised, but not naturally otherwise than pleased by the
+attention. Next came a box of cigars, which again were shortly followed
+by two brace of pheasants purporting to be of Herbert's own shooting, but
+which, as a matter of fact, he had purchased in Vigo Street.</p>
+
+<p>This munificent succession of gifts reaped at length the harvest for
+which they had been sown. In his third letter of grateful acknowledgment
+for his young friend's kind remembrance of him, Mr. Gisburne, with some
+diffidence, for Tripton Rectory was neither lively nor remarkably
+commodious, suggested how great the pleasure would be were his friend to
+run down to him for a couple of days or so; he had nothing, in truth, to
+offer him but a bachelor's quarters and a hearty welcome; there was next
+to no attraction beyond a pretty rural village and a choral daily
+service; but still, if he cared to come, Mr. Gisburne need not say how
+delighted he would be, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>It is not too much to say that the friend jumped at it. On the shortest
+possible notice he arrived, bag and baggage, professing himself charmed
+with the bachelor's quarters; and, burning with an insatiable desire to
+behold the rurality of the village, to listen to the beauty and the
+harmony of the daily choral performances, he took up his abode in the
+clergyman's establishment; and the very next morning he sent a rural
+villager over to Shadonake with a half-crown for himself and a note to be
+given to Miss Miller the very first time she walked or rode out alone.
+This note was duly delivered, and that same afternoon Beatrice met her
+lover by appointment in an empty lime-kiln up among the chalk hills. This
+romantic rendezvous was, however, discontinued shortly, owing to the fact
+of Mrs. Miller having become suspicious of her daughter's frequent and
+solitary walks, and insisting on sending out Geraldine and her governess
+with her.</p>
+
+<p>A few mornings later a golden chance presented itself. Mr. and Mrs.
+Miller went away for the night to dine and sleep at a distant country
+house. Beatrice had not been invited to go with them. She did not venture
+to ask her lover to the house he had been forbidden to enter, but she
+ordered the carriage for herself, caught the early train to Tripton, met
+Herbert, by appointment, outside the station, and stood talking to him in
+the fog by the wayside, where Vera suddenly burst upon their astonished
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for it but to take Vera into their confidence; and they
+were so much engrossed in their affairs that they entirely failed to
+notice how mechanically she answered, and how apathetically she appeared
+for the first few minutes to listen to their story. Presently, however,
+she roused herself into a semblance of interest. She promised not to
+betray the fact of the stolen interview, all the more readily because it
+did not strike either of them to inquire what she herself was doing in
+the Tripton road.</p>
+
+<p>In the end Vera walked on slowly by herself, and the Shadonake carriage,
+ordered to go along at a foot's pace from Sutton station towards Tripton,
+picked both girls up and conveyed them safely, each to their respective
+homes.</p>
+
+<p>"You will never tell of me, will you, Vera?" said Beatrice to her, for
+the twentieth time, ere they parted.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not; indeed, I would gladly help you if I could," she
+answered, heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"You will certainly be able to help us both very materially some day,"
+said Beatrice, who had visions of being asked to stay at Kynaston, to
+meet Herbert.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid not," answered Vera, with a sigh. Already there was regret
+in her mind for the good things of life which she had elected to
+relinquish. "Put me down at this corner, Beatrice; I don't want to drive
+up to the vicarage. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, Vera&mdash;and&mdash;and you won't mind my saying it&mdash;but I like you so
+much."</p>
+
+<p>Vera smiled, and, with a kiss, the girls parted; and Mrs. Daintree never
+heard after all the story of her sister's early visit to Tripton, for she
+returned so soon that she had not yet been missed. The vicar and his
+family had but just gathered round the breakfast-table, when, after
+having divested herself of her walking garments, she came in quietly and
+took her vacant place amongst them unnoticed and unquestioned.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>LADY KYNASTON'S PLANS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Swift as a shadow, short as any dream,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Brief as the lightning in the collied night.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And ere a man hath power to say, "Behold!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The jaws of darkness do devour it up:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So quick bright things come to confusion.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Midsummer Night's Dream."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Sir John Kynaston sat alone in his old-bachelor rooms in London. They
+were dark, dingy rooms, such as are to be found in countless numbers
+among the narrow streets that encompass St. James's Street. They were
+cheerless and comfortless, and, withal, high-rented, and possessed of
+no other known advantage than that of their undeniably central situation.
+They were not rooms that one would suppose any man would care to linger
+in in broad daylight; and yet Sir John remained in them now a days
+almost from morning till night.</p>
+
+<p>He sat for the most part as he is sitting now&mdash;in a shabby, leathern
+arm-chair, stooping a little forward, and doing nothing. Sometimes he
+wrote a few necessary letters, sometimes he made a feint of reading the
+paper; but oftenest he did nothing, only sat still, staring before him
+with a hopeless misery in his face.</p>
+
+<p>For in these days Sir John Kynaston was a very unhappy man. He had
+received a blow such as strikes at the very root and spring of a man's
+life&mdash;a blow which a younger man often battles through and is none the
+worse in the end for, but under which a man of his age is apt to be
+crushed and to succumb. Within a week of his wedding-day Vera Nevill
+had broken her engagement to him. It had been a nine days' wonder in
+Meadowshire&mdash;the county had rung with the news&mdash;everybody had marvelled
+and speculated, but no one had got any nearer to the truth than that Vera
+was supposed to have "mistaken her feelings." The women had cried shame
+upon her for such capriciousness, and had voted her a fool into the
+bargain for throwing over such a match; and if a male voice, somewhat
+less timid than the rest, had here and there uplifted itself in her
+defence and had ventured to hint that she might have had sufficient and
+praiseworthy motives for her conduct, a chorus of feminine indignation
+had smothered the kindly suggestion in a whole whirl-wind of abuse and
+reviling.</p>
+
+<p>As to Sir John, he blamed her not, and yet he knew no more about it than
+any of them; he, too, could only have told you that Vera had mistaken her
+feelings&mdash;he knew no more than that&mdash;for it was but half the truth that
+she had told him. But it had been more than enough to convince him that
+she was perfectly right. When, after telling him plainly that she found
+she did not love him enough, that there had been other and extraneous
+reasons that had blinded her to the fact at the time she had accepted
+him, but that she had found it out later on; when, after saying this she
+had asked him plainly whether he would wish to have a wife who valued his
+name, and his wealth, and his fine old house at least as much as he did
+himself, Sir John had been able to give her but one answer. No, he would
+not have a wife who loved him in such a fashion. And he had thought well
+of her for telling him the truth beforehand instead of leaving him to
+find it out for himself later. If there had been a little, a very little,
+falling of his idol from the high pillar upon which he had set her up, in
+that she should at any time have been guided by mercenary and worldly
+motives; there had been at the same time a very great amount of respect
+for her brave and straightforward confession of her error at a time when
+most women would have found themselves unequal to the task of drawing
+back from the false position into which they had drifted. No, he could
+not blame her in any way.</p>
+
+<p>But, all the same, it was hard to bear. He said to himself that he was
+a doomed and fated man; twice had love and joy and domestic peace been
+within his grasp, and twice they had been wrested from his arms; these
+things, it was plain, were not for him. He was too old, he told himself,
+ever to make a further effort. No, there was nothing before him now but
+to live out his loveless life alone, to sink into a peevish, selfish old
+bachelor, and to make a will in Maurice's favour, and get himself out of
+the world that wanted him not with as much expedition as might be.</p>
+
+<p>And he loved Vera still. She was still to him the most pure and perfect
+of women&mdash;good as she was beautiful. Her loveliness haunted him by day
+and by night, till the bitter thought of what might have been and the
+contrast of the miserable reality drove him half wild with longings
+which he did not know how to repress. He sat at home in his rooms and
+moped; there were more streaks of white in his hair than of old, and
+there were new lines of care upon his brow&mdash;he looked almost an old man
+now. He sat indoors and did nothing. It was April by this time, and the
+London season was beginning; invitations of all kinds poured in upon him,
+but he refused them all; he would go nowhere. Now and then his mother
+came to see him and attempted to cheer and to rouse him; she had even
+asked him to come down to Walpole Lodge, but he had declined her request
+almost ungraciously.</p>
+
+<p>He never had much in common with his mother, and he felt no desire now
+for her sympathy; besides, the first time she had come she had been
+angry, and had called Vera a jilt, and that had offended him bitterly; he
+had rebuked her sternly, and she had been too wise to repeat the offence;
+but he had not forgotten it. Maurice, indeed, he would have been glad to
+see, but Maurice did not come near him. His regiment had lately moved to
+Manchester, and either he could not or would not get leave; and yet he
+had been idle enough at one time, and glad to run up to town upon the
+smallest pretext. Now he never came. It added a little to his irritation,
+but scarcely to his misery. On this particular afternoon, as he sat as
+usual brooding over the past, there came the sudden clatter of carriage
+wheels over the flagged roadway of the little back street, followed by a
+sharp ring at his door. It was his mother, of course; no other woman came
+to see him; he heard the rustle of her soft silken skirts up the narrow
+staircase, and her pleasant little chatter to the fat old landlady who
+was ushering her up, and presently the door opened and she came in.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, John. Dear me, how hot and stuffy this room is," holding
+up her soft old face to her son.</p>
+
+<p>He just touched her cheek. "I am sorry you find it so&mdash;shall I open the
+window?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" sinking down in a chair, and throwing back her cloak; "how can you
+stand a fire in the room, it is quite mild and spring-like out. Have you
+not been out, John? it would do you good to get a little fresh air."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go round to the club presently, I daresay," he answered,
+abstractedly, sitting down in his arm-chair again; all the pleasant
+flutter that the bright old lady brought with her, the atmosphere of life
+and variety that surrounded her, only vexed and wearied him, and jarred
+upon his nerves. She was always telling him to go somewhere or to do
+something; why couldn't she let him alone? he thought, irritably.</p>
+
+<p>"To your club? No further than that? Why, you might as well stay at home.
+Really, my dear, it's a great pity you don't go about and see some of
+your old friends; you can't mean to shut yourself up like a dormouse for
+ever, I suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't the least idea what I mean to do," he answered, not
+graciously; she was his mother, and so he could not very well put her out
+at the door, but that was what he would have liked to do.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see," continued Lady Kynaston, with unwonted courage, "I don't
+at all see why you should let this unfortunate affair weigh on you for
+ever; there is really no reason why you should not console yourself and
+marry some nice girl; there is Lady Mary Hendrie and plenty more only too
+ready to have you if you will only take that trouble&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, I wish you would not talk to me like that," he said,
+interrupting suddenly the easy flow of her consoling suggestions, and
+there was a look of real pain upon his face that smote her somewhat.
+"Never speak to me of marrying again. I shall never marry any one." He
+looked away from her, stern and angry, stooping again over the red ashes
+in the grate; if he had only given her one plea for her pity&mdash;if he had
+only added, "I have suffered too much, I love her still"&mdash;all her
+mother's heart must have gone out to him who, though he was not her
+favourite, was her first born after all; but he did not want her pity,
+he only wanted her to go away.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a great pity," she answered, stiffly, "because of Kynaston."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never set foot at Kynaston again."</p>
+
+<p>Her colour rose a little&mdash;after all, she was a cunning little old lady.
+The little fox-terrier lay on the rug between them; she stooped down and
+patted it. "Good dog, good little Vic," she said, a little nervously;
+then, with a sudden courage, she looked up at her son again. "John, it
+is a sad thing that Kynaston must be left empty to go to rack and ruin;
+though I have never cared to live there myself, I have always hoped that
+you would. It would have grieved your poor father sadly to have thought
+that the old place was always to lie empty."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot help it," he answered, moodily, wishing more than ever that she
+would go.</p>
+
+<p>"John;" she fidgeted with her bonnet strings, and her voice trembled a
+little; "John, if you are quite sure you will never live there yourself,
+why should not Maurice have it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice! Has he told you to ask for it?" He sat bolt upright in
+his chair; he was attentive enough now; the idea that Maurice had
+commissioned his mother to ask for something he had not ventured to ask
+for himself was not pleasant to him. "Is it Maurice who has sent you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my dear John; certainly not; why, I haven't seen Maurice for
+weeks and weeks; he never comes to town now. But I'll tell you why the
+idea came to me. I called just now in Princes Gate; poor old Mr. Harlowe
+has had a stroke&mdash;it is certain he cannot live long now, after the severe
+attack he had of bronchitis, too, two months ago. I just saw Helen for a
+minute, she reported him to be unconscious. If he dies, he must surely
+leave Helen something; it may not be all, but it will be at least a
+competency; and I was thinking, John, that if you did not want Kynaston,
+and would let them live there, the marriage might come off at last; they
+have been attached to each other a long time, and to live rent free would
+be a great thing."</p>
+
+<p>"How are they to keep it up? Kynaston is an expensive place."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I thought, John, perhaps, if Maurice looks after the property, you
+might consider him as your agent, and allow him something, and that and
+her money&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, I understand; well, I will see; wait, at all events, till Mr.
+Harlowe is dead. I will think it over. No, I don't see any reason why
+they should not live there if they like;" he sighed, wearily, and his
+mother went away, feeling that she had reason to be satisfied with her
+morning's work.</p>
+
+<p>She was in such a hurry to install her darling there&mdash;to see him viceroy
+in the place where now it was certain he must eventually be king. Why
+should he be doomed to wait till Kynaston came to him in the course of
+nature; why should he not enter upon his kingdom at once, since Sir John,
+by his own confession, would never marry or live there himself?</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston was very far from wishing evil to her eldest son, but for
+years she had hoped that he would remain unmarried; for a short time she
+had been forced to lay her dreams aside, and she had striven to forget
+them and to throw herself with interest into her eldest son's engagement;
+but now that the marriage was broken off, all her old schemes and plans
+came back to her again. She was working and planning again for Maurice's
+happiness and aggrandisement. She wanted to see him in his father's
+house, "Kynaston of Kynaston," before she died, and to know that his
+future was safe. To see him married to Helen and living at Kynaston
+appeared to her to be the very best that she could desire for him. In
+time, of course, the title and the money would be his too; meanwhile,
+with old Mr. Harlowe's fortune, an ample allowance from his brother, and
+all the prestige of his old name and his old house, she should live to
+see him take his own rightful place among the magnates of his native
+county. That would be far better than to be a captain in a line regiment,
+barely able to live upon his income. That was all she coveted for him,
+and she said to herself that her ambition was not unreasonable, and that
+it would be hard indeed if it might not be gratified.</p>
+
+<p>As she drove homewards to Walpole Lodge she felt that her schemes were in
+a fair way for success. She was not going to let Maurice know of them too
+soon; by-and-by, when all was settled, she would tell him; she would keep
+it till then as a pleasant surprise.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, she had been unable to refrain from telling Helen Romer
+something of what was in her mind.</p>
+
+<p>"If John does not marry, he might perhaps make Maurice his agent and let
+him live at Kynaston," she had said to her a few days ago when they had
+been speaking of old Mr. Harlowe's illness.</p>
+
+<p>"How would Maurice like to leave the army?" Helen had asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If he marries, he must do so," his mother had replied, significantly;
+and Helen's heart had beat high with hope and triumph.</p>
+
+<p>Again to-day, on her way to her eldest son's rooms, she had stopped at
+Princes Gate and had alluded to it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am on my way to see Sir John; I shall sound him about his intentions
+with regard to Kynaston, but, of course, I must go to work cautiously;"
+and Helen had perfectly understood that she herself had entered into the
+old lady's scheme for her younger son's future.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting alone in the hushed house, where the doctors are coming and
+going in the darkened room above, Helen feels that at last the reward
+of all her long waiting may be at hand. Love and wealth at last seemed
+to beckon to her. Her grandfather dead; his fortune hers; and this offer
+of a home at Kynaston, which Maurice himself would be sure to like so
+much&mdash;everything good seemed coming to her at last.</p>
+
+<p>And there was something about the idea of living at Kynaston that
+gratified her particularly. Helen had not forgotten the week at
+Shadonake. Too surely had her woman's instinct told her that Maurice and
+Vera had been drawn to each other by a strong and mutual attraction. The
+wildest jealousy and hatred against Vera burnt fiercely in her lawless,
+untutored heart. She hated her, for she knew that Maurice loved her. To
+live thus under her very eyes as Maurice's wife, in the very house her
+rival herself had once been on the point of inhabiting, was a notion that
+commended itself to her with all the sweetness of gratified revenge, with
+all the charm of flaunting her success and triumph in the face of the
+other woman's failure which is dear to such a nature as Helen's.</p>
+
+<p>She alone, of all those who had heard of Vera's broken engagement, had
+divined its true cause. She loved Maurice&mdash;that was plain to Helen; that
+was why she had thrown over Sir John, and at her heart Helen despised her
+for it. A woman must be a fool indeed to wreck herself at the last moment
+for a merely sentimental reason. There was much, however, that was
+incomprehensible to Helen Romer in the situation of things, which she
+only half understood.</p>
+
+<p>If Maurice loved Vera, why was it that he was in Manchester whilst she
+was still in Meadowshire? that was what Helen could not understand. A
+sure instinct told her that Maurice must know better than any one why his
+brother's marriage had been broken off. But, if so, then why were he and
+Vera apart? It did not strike her that his honour to his brother and his
+promises to herself were what kept him away. Helen said to herself,
+scornfully, that they were both of them timid and cowardly, and did not
+half know how to play out life's game.</p>
+
+<p>"In her place, with her cards in my hand, I would have married him by
+this," she said to herself, as she sat alone in her grandfather's
+drawing-room, while her busy fingers ran swiftly through the meshes of
+her knitting, and the doctor and the hired nurse paced about the room
+overhead. "But she has not the pluck for it; his heart may be hers, but,
+for all that, I shall win him; and how bitterly she will repent that she
+ever interfered with him when she sees him daily there&mdash;my husband! And
+in time he will forget her and learn to love me; Maurice will never be
+false to a woman when once she is his wife; I am not afraid of that. How
+dared she meddle with him?&mdash;<i>my</i> Maurice!"</p>
+
+<p>The door softly opened, and one of the doctors stepped in on tip-toe.
+Helen rose and composed her face into a decorous expression of mournful
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"I am happy to tell you, Mrs. Romer," began the doctor. Helen's heart
+sank down chill and cold within her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he better?" she faltered, striving to conceal the dismay which she
+felt.</p>
+
+<p>"He has rallied. Consciousness has returned, and partial use of the
+limbs. We may be able to pull your grandfather through this time, I
+trust."</p>
+
+<p>Put off again! How wretched and how guilty she felt herself to be! It was
+almost a crime to wish for any one's death so much.</p>
+
+<p>She sank down again pale and spiritless upon her chair as the doctor left
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," she said to herself, presently; "it can't last for ever. It
+must be soon now, and I shall be Maurice's wife in the end."</p>
+
+<p>But all this time she had forgotten Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet, whom
+she had not seen again since the night she had driven him home from
+Walpole Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>He had left England, she knew. Helen privately hoped he had left this
+earth. Any way, he had not troubled her, and she had forgotten him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>WHAT SHE WAITED FOR.</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Go, forget me; why should sorrow<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O'er that brow a shadow fling?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Go, forget me, and to-morrow<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Brightly smile and sweetly sing.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Smile&mdash;though I shall not be near thee;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sing&mdash;though I shall never hear thee.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Chas. Wolfe.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>All this time what of Vera? Would any one of them at the vicarage ever
+forget that morning when she had come in after her walk with Sir John
+Kynaston, and had stood before them all and, pale as a ghost, had said to
+them,</p>
+
+<p>"I am not going to be married; I have broken it off."</p>
+
+<p>It had been a great blow to them, but neither the prayers of her weeping
+sister, nor the angry indignation of old Mrs. Daintree, nor even the
+gentle remonstrances of her brother-in-law could serve to alter her
+determination, nor would she enter into any explanation concerning her
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>It was not pleasant, of course, to be reviled and scolded, to be
+questioned and marvelled at, to be treated like a naughty child in
+disgrace; and then, whenever she went out, to feel herself tabooed by her
+acquaintances as a young woman who had behaved very disgracefully; or
+else to be stared at as a natural curiosity by persons whom she hardly
+knew.</p>
+
+<p>But she lived through all this bravely. There was a certain amount of
+unnatural excitement which kept up her courage and enabled her to face
+it. It was no more than what she had expected. The glow of her love and
+her impulse of self-sacrifice were still upon her; her nerves had been
+strung to the uttermost, and she felt strong in the knowledge of the
+justice and the right of her own conduct.</p>
+
+<p>But by-and-by all this died away. Sir John left the neighbourhood;
+people got tired of talking about her broken-off marriage; there was no
+longer any occasion for her to be brave and steadfast. Life began to
+resume for her its normal aspect, the aspect which it had worn in the old
+days before Sir John had ever come down to Kynaston, or ever found her
+day-dreaming in the churchyard upon Farmer Crupps' family sarcophagus.
+The tongue of the sour-tempered old lady, snapping and snarling at her
+with more than the bitterness of old, and the suppressed sighs and
+mournful demeanour of her sister, whose sympathy and companionship she
+had now completely forfeited, and who went about the house with a face
+of resigned woe and the censure of an ever implied rebuke in her voice
+and manner.</p>
+
+<p>Only the vicar took her part somewhat. "Let her alone," he said,
+sometimes, to his wife and mother; "she must have had a better reason
+than we any of us know of; the girl is suffering quite enough&mdash;leave her
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>And she was suffering. The life that she had doomed herself to was almost
+unbearable to her. The everlasting round of parish work and parish talk,
+the poor people and the coal-clubs&mdash;it was what she had come back to. She
+had been lifted for a short time out of it all, and a new life, congenial
+to her tastes and to her nature, had opened out before her; and yet with
+her own hands she had shut the door upon this brighter prospect, and had
+left herself out in the darkness, to go back to that life of dull
+monotony which she hated.</p>
+
+<p>And what had she gained by it? What single advantage had she reaped
+out of her sacrificed life? Was Maurice any nearer to her&mdash;was he not
+hopelessly divided from her&mdash;helplessly out of her reach? She knew
+nothing of him, no word concerning him reached her ears: a great blank
+was before her. When she went over the past again and again in her mind,
+she could not well see what good thing could ever come to her from what
+she had done. There were moments indeed when the whole story of her
+broken engagement seemed to her like the wild delusion of madness. She
+had had no intention of acknowledging her love to Maurice when she had
+gone up to the station to see him off; she had only meant to see him
+once more, to hold his hand for one instant, to speak a few kind words;
+to wish him God speed. She asked herself now what had possessed her that
+she had not been able to preserve the self-control of affectionate
+friendship when the unfortunate accident of her being taken on in the
+train with him had left her entirely alone in his society. She did not
+go the length of regretting what she had done for his sake; but she did
+acknowledge to herself that she had been led away by the magnetism of his
+presence and by the strange and unexpected chance which had thus left her
+alone with him into saying and doing things which in a calmer moment she
+would not have been betrayed into.</p>
+
+<p>For a few kisses&mdash;for the joy of telling him that his love was
+returned&mdash;for a short moment of delirious and transient happiness, and
+alas! for nothing more&mdash;she had thrown away her life!</p>
+
+<p>She had behaved hardly and cruelly to a good man who loved her, and whose
+heart she had half broken, and she had lost a great many very excellent
+and satisfactory things.</p>
+
+<p>And Maurice was no nearer to her. With his own lips he had told her
+that he could not marry her. There had been mention, indeed, of that
+problematical term of five years, in which he had bound himself to await
+Mrs. Romer's pleasure&mdash;but, even had Mrs. Romer not existed, it was plain
+that Maurice was the last man in the world to take advantage of a woman's
+weakness in order to supplant his brother in her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively Vera felt that Maurice must be no less miserable than
+herself; that his regret for what had happened between them must be as
+great as her own, and his remorse far greater. They were, indeed, neither
+of them blameless in the matter; for, if it was Maurice who had first
+spoken of his love to his brother's promised wife, it was Vera who had
+made that irrevocable step along the road of her destiny from which no
+going back was now possible.</p>
+
+<p>It was a time of utter misery to her. If she sat indoors there was
+the persecution of Mrs. Daintree's ill-natured remarks, and Marion's
+depression of spirits and half-uttered regrets; and there was also the
+scaffolding rising round the chancel walls to be seen from the windows,
+and the sound of the sawing of the masonry in the churchyard, as a
+perpetual, reproachful reminder of the friend whose kindness and
+affection she had so ill requited. If she went out, she could not go up
+the lane without passing the gates of Kynaston, or towards the village
+without catching sight of the venerable old house among its terraced
+gardens, which, so lately, she had thought would be her home. Sometimes
+she met her old friend, Mrs. Eccles, in her wanderings, but she did not
+venture to speak to her; the cold disapproval in the housekeeper's
+passing salutation made her shrink, like a guilty creature, in her
+presence; and she would hurry by with scarcely an answering sign, with
+downcast eyes and heightened colour.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow, it came to pass in these days that Vera drifted into a degree
+of intimacy with Beatrice Miller that would, possibly, never have come
+about had the circumstances of her life been different. Ever since her
+accidental meeting with the lovers outside Tripton station Vera had,
+perforce, become a confidant of their hopes and fears; and Beatrice was
+glad enough to have found a friend to whom she could talk about her
+lover, for where is the woman who can completely hold her tongue
+concerning her own secrets?</p>
+
+<p>Against all the long category of female virtues, as advantageously
+displayed in contradistinction to masculine vices, there is still this
+one peculiarity which, of itself, marks out the woman as the inferior
+animal.</p>
+
+<p>A man, to be worthy of the name, holds his tongue and keeps the
+secret of his heart to himself, enjoying it and delighting in it the
+more, possibly, for his reticence. A woman may occasionally&mdash;very
+occasionally&mdash;be silent respecting her neighbour, but concerning herself
+she is bound to have at least one confidant to whom she will rashly tell
+the long story of her loves and her sorrows; and not a consideration
+either of prudence or of worldly wisdom will suffice to restrain her too
+ready tongue.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice Miller was a clever girl, with a fair knowledge of the world;
+yet she was in no way dismayed that Vera should have discovered her
+secret; on the contrary, she was overjoyed that she had now found some
+one to talk to about it.</p>
+
+<p>Vera became her friend, but Beatrice was not Vera's friend&mdash;the
+confidences were not mutual. Over and over again Beatrice was on the
+point of questioning her concerning the story that had been on every
+one's lips for a time; of asking her what, indeed, was the truth about
+her broken engagement; but always the proud, still face restrained her
+curiosity, and the words died away unspoken upon her lips.</p>
+
+<p>Vera's story, indeed, was not one that could be easily revealed. There
+was too much of bitter regret, too great an element of burning shame at
+her heart, for its secrets to be laid bare to a stranger's eye.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Beatrice's society amused and distracted her mind, and kept
+her from brooding over her own troubles. She was glad enough to go over
+to Shadonake; even to sit alone with Beatrice and her mother was better
+than the eternal monotony of the vicarage, where she felt like a prisoner
+waiting for his sentence.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, she was waiting. Waiting for some sign from the man she loved.
+Sooner or later, whether it was for good or for evil, she knew it must
+come to her; some token that he remembered her existence; some indication
+as to what he would have her do with the life that she had laid at his
+feet. For, after all, when a woman loves a man, she virtually makes him
+the ruler of her destiny; she leaves the responsibility of her fate in
+his hands. For the nonce, Maurice Kynaston held the skein of Vera's life
+in his grasp; it was for him to do what he pleased with it. Some day,
+doubtless, he would tell her what she had to do: meanwhile, she waited.</p>
+
+<p>What else, indeed, can a woman do but wait? To sit still with folded
+hands and bated breath, to possess her soul in patience as best she may,
+to still the wild beatings of her all too eager spirit&mdash;that is what a
+woman has to do, and does often enough. God help her, all too badly.</p>
+
+<p>It is so easy when one is old, and the pulses are sluggish, and the hot
+passions of youth are quelled, it is so easy then to learn that lesson
+of waiting; but when we are young, and our best days slipping away, and
+life's hopes all before us, and life's burdens well-nigh unbearable; then
+it is that it is hard, that waiting in itself becomes terrible&mdash;more
+terrible almost than the worst of our woes.</p>
+
+<p>So wearily, feverishly, impatiently enough, Vera waited.</p>
+
+<p>Winter died away into spring. The rough wind of March, worn out with its
+own boisterous passions, sobbed itself to rest like a tired child, and
+little green buds came cropping up sparsely and timidly out of the brown
+bosom of the earth; and, presently, all the glory of the golden crocuses
+unfolded itself in long golden lines in the vicarage garden; and there
+were twittering of birds and flutterings of soft breezes among the
+tree-tops, and a voice seemed to go forth over the face of the earth.
+The winter is over, and summer is nigh at hand.</p>
+
+<p>And then it came to her at last. An envelope by the side of her plate
+at breakfast; a few scrawled words in a handwriting she had never seen
+before, and yet identified with an unfailing instinct, ere even she broke
+the seal. One minute of wild hope, to be followed by a sick, chill
+numbness, and the story of her love and its longings shrank away into
+the despair of impossibility.</p>
+
+<p>How small a thing to make so great a misery! What a few words to make a
+wilderness of a human life!</p>
+
+<p><i>"Her grandfather is dead, and she has claimed me. Good-bye; forget me
+and forgive me."</i></p>
+
+<p>That was all; nothing more. No passionate regrets, no unavailing
+self-pity; nothing to tell her what it cost him to resign her; no word to
+comfort her for the hopelessness of his desertion; nothing but those two
+lines.</p>
+
+<p>There was a chattering going on at the table around her. Tommy was
+clamouring for bread and butter; the vicar was reading out the telegrams
+from the seat of war; Marion was complaining that the butter was not
+good; the maid-servant was bringing in the hot bacon and eggs&mdash;it all
+went on like a dream around her; presently, like a voice out of a fog,
+somebody spoke to her:</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, are you not feeling well? You look as if you were going to faint."</p>
+
+<p>And then she crunched the letter in her hand and recalled herself to
+life.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well, thanks," and busied herself with attending to the wants
+of the children.</p>
+
+<p>The vicar glanced up over his spectacles. "No bad news, I hope, my dear."</p>
+
+<p>Oh! why could they not let her alone? But somehow she sat through the
+breakfast, and answered all their questions, and bore herself bravely;
+and when it was over and she was free to go away by herself with her
+trouble, then by that time the worst of it was over.</p>
+
+<p>There are some people whom sorrow softens and touches, but Vera was not
+one of them. Her whole soul revolted and rebelled against her fate. She
+said to herself that for once she had let her heart guide her; she had
+cast aside the crust of worldliness and self-indulgence in which she had
+been brought up. She had listened to the softer whisperings of the better
+nature within her&mdash;she had been true to herself&mdash;and lo! what had come of
+it?</p>
+
+<p>But now she had learnt her lesson; there were to be no more dreams of
+pure and unsullied happiness for her,&mdash;no more cravings after what was
+good and true and lovely; henceforth she would go back to the teachings
+of her youth, to the experience which had told her that a handsome woman
+can always command her life as she pleases, and that wealth, which is a
+tangible reality, is better worth striving after than the vain shadow
+called love, which all talk about and so few make any practical
+sacrifices for. Well, she, Vera Nevill, had tried it, and had made her
+sacrifices; and what remained to her? Only the fixed determination to
+crush it down again within her as if it had never been, and to carve out
+her fortunes afresh. Only that she started again at a disadvantage&mdash;for
+now she knew to her cost that she possessed the fatal power of
+loving&mdash;the knowledge of good and evil, of which she had eaten
+the poisoned fruit.</p>
+
+<p>There were no tears in Vera's eyes as she wandered slowly up and down the
+garden paths between the straight yellow lines of the crocus heads.</p>
+
+<p>Her lover had forsaken her. Well, let him go. She told herself that, had
+he loved her truly, no power on earth would have been great enough to
+keep him from her. She said to herself scornfully&mdash;she, Vera Nevill, who
+was prepared to sell herself to the highest bidder&mdash;that it was Mrs.
+Romer's money that kept him from her. Well, let him go to her, then? but
+for herself life must begin afresh.</p>
+
+<p>And then she set to work to think about what she could do. To remain here
+at Sutton any longer was impossible. It was absolutely necessary that she
+should get away from it all, from the family upon whose hands she was
+nothing now but a beautiful, helpless burden, and still more from the
+haunting memories of Kynaston and all the unfortunate things that had
+happened to her here.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, out of the memories of her girlhood, she recollected the
+existence of a woman who had been her friend once in the old happy days,
+when she had lived with her sister Theodora. It was one of those passing
+friendships which come and go for a month or two in one's life.</p>
+
+<p>A pretty, spoilt girl, married four, perhaps five, years ago to a rich
+man, a banker; who had taken a fancy to Vera, and had pleased herself by
+decking her out in a quaint costume to figure at a carnival party; who
+had kissed her rapturously at parting, swearing eternal friendship,
+giving her her address in London, and making her promise never to be in
+England without going to see her. And then she had gone her way, and had
+never come back again the next winter, as she had promised to do; a
+letter or two had passed between them, and afterwards Vera had forgotten
+her. But somewhere upstairs she must have got her direction still.</p>
+
+<p>It was to this friend she would go; and, turning her back for a time
+at least upon Meadowshire and its memories, she would see whether, in
+the whirl of London life, she could not crush out the pain at her heart,
+and live down the fatal weakness that had led her astray from all the
+traditions of her youth, and from that cold and prudent wisdom which had
+stood her in good stead for so many years.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<h3>A MORNING WALK.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And e'en while fashion's brightest arts decoy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The heart, distrusting, asks if this be joy.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Goldsmith.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>A bright May morning, cold, it is true, and with a biting wind from the
+east&mdash;as indeed our English May mornings generally are&mdash;but sunny and
+cloudless as the heart can desire. On such a morning people do their best
+to pretend that it is summer. Crowds turn out into the park, and sit
+about recklessly on the iron chairs, or lounge idly by the railings; and
+the women-folk, with that fine disregard of what is, when it is
+antagonistic of what they wish it to be, don their white cottons and
+muslins, and put up their parasols against the sun's rays, and, shivering
+inwardly, poor things, openly brave the terrors of rheumatism and
+lumbago, and make up their minds that it <i>shall</i> be summer.</p>
+
+<p>The sunblinds are drawn all along the front windows of a house in Park
+Lane, and though the gay geraniums and calceolarias in the flower-boxes,
+which were planted only yesterday, look already nipped and shrivelled up
+with the cold, the house, nevertheless, presents from the exterior a
+bright and well-cared-for appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Within the drawing-room are two ladies. One, the mistress of the house,
+is seated at the writing-table with her back to the room, scribbling off
+invitations for dear life, cards for an afternoon "at-home," at the rate
+of six per minute; the other sits idle in a low basket-chair doing
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>There is no sound but the scratching of the quill pen as it flies over
+the paper, and the chirping of a bullfinch in a cage in the bow-window.</p>
+
+<p>"What time is it, Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"A quarter to twelve."</p>
+
+<p>"Almost time to dress; I've only ten more cards to fill up. What are you
+going to wear&mdash;white?"</p>
+
+<p>Vera shivers. "Look how the dust is flying&mdash;it must be dreadfully cold
+out&mdash;I should like to put on a fur jacket."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Do</i>," says the elder lady, energetically. "It will be original, and
+attract attention. Not that you could well be more stared at than you
+are."</p>
+
+<p>Vera smiles, and does not answer.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hazeldine goes on with her task.</p>
+
+<p>"There! that's done!" she cries, at last, getting up from the table, and
+piling her notes up in a heap on one side of it. "Now, I am at your
+orders."</p>
+
+<p>She comes forward into the room&mdash;a pretty, dark-eyed, oval-faced woman,
+with a figure in which her dressmaker has understood how to supplement
+all that nature has but imperfectly carried out. A woman with restless
+movements and an ever-ready tongue&mdash;a thorough daughter of the London
+world she lives in.</p>
+
+<p>Vera leans her head back in her chair, and looks at her. "Cissy," she
+says, "I must really go home, I have been with you a month to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"Go home! certainly not, my dear. Don't you know that I have sworn to
+find you a husband before the season is out? I must really get you
+married, Vera. I have half a mind," she adds, reflectively, as she
+smooths down her shining brown hair at the glass, and contemplates, not
+ill satisfied, her image there&mdash;"I have really half a mind to let you
+have the boy if I could manage to spare him."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think he would make a devoted husband?" asks Vera, with a lazy
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, don't be a fool. What is the use of devotion in a
+husband? All one wants is a good fellow, who will let one alone. After
+all, the boy might not answer. I am afraid, Vera," turning round suddenly
+upon her, "I am very much afraid that boy is in love with you; it's
+horrid of you to take him from me, because he is so useful, and I really
+can't well do without him. I am going to pay him out to-night though: he
+is to sit opposite you at dinner; he will only be able to gaze at you."</p>
+
+<p>"That is hard upon us both."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! don't waste your time upon him. I shall do better than that for
+you; he is an eldest son, it is true, but Sir Charles looks as young as
+his son, and is quite as likely to live as long. It is only married women
+who can afford the luxury of ineligibles. Go and dress, child."</p>
+
+<p>Half-an-hour later Mrs. Hazeldine and Miss Nevill are to be found upon
+two chairs on the broad and shady side of the Row, where a small crowd of
+men is already gathered around them.</p>
+
+<p>Vera, coming up a stranger, and self-invited to the house of her old
+acquaintance a few weeks ago, had already created a sensation in London.
+Her rare beauty, the strange charm of her quiet, listless manner, the
+shade of melancholy which had of late imperceptibly crept over her,
+aroused a keen admiration and interest in her, even in that city, which
+more than all others is satiated with its manifold types of beautiful
+women.</p>
+
+<p>There was a rush to get introduced to her; a <i>furore</i> to see her. As she
+went through a crowd people whispered her name and made way for her to
+pass, staring at her after a fashion which is totally modern and
+detestably ill-bred; and yet which, sad token of the <i>decadence</i> of
+things in these later days, is not beneath the dignity or the manners
+of persons whose breeding is supposed to be beyond dispute.</p>
+
+<p>Already the "new beauty" had been favourably contrasted with the
+well-known reigning favourites; and it was the loudly expressed opinion
+of more than one-half of the <i>jeunesse dor&eacute;e</i> of the day that not one of
+the others could "hold a candle to her, by Jove!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hazeldine was delighted. It was she to whom belonged the honour of
+bringing this new star into notice; the credit of launching her upon
+London society was her own. She found herself courted and flattered and
+made up to in a wholly new and delightful manner. The men besieged her
+for invitations to her house; the women pressed her to come to theirs. It
+was all for Miss Nevill's sake, of course, but, even so, it was very
+pleasant, and Mrs. Hazeldine dearly loved the importance of her position.</p>
+
+<p>It came to pass that, whereas she had been somewhat put out at the letter
+of her old Roman acquaintance, offering to come and stay with her, and
+had been disposed to resent the advent of her self-invited guest as an
+infliction, which a few needlessly gushing words in the past had brought
+upon herself, she had, in a very short time, discovered that she could
+not possibly exist without her darling Vera, and that she would not and
+could not let her go back again to her country vicarage.</p>
+
+<p>It was, possibly, what Vera had counted upon. It was pretty certain to
+have been either one thing or the other. Either her beauty would arouse
+Mrs. Hazeldine's jealousy, and she would be glad to be rid of her as
+quickly as possible, or else she would be proud of her, and wish to
+retain her as an attraction to her house. Fortunately for Vera, Cissy
+Hazeldine, worldly, frivolous, pleasure-loving as she was, was,
+nevertheless, utterly devoid of the mean and petty spitefulness which
+goes far to disfigure many a better woman's character. She was not
+jealous of Vera; on the contrary, she was as unfeignedly proud of her as
+though she had created her. Besides, as she said to herself, "Our style
+is so different, we are not likely to clash."</p>
+
+<p>When she found that in a month's time Vera's beauty had made her house
+the most popular one in London, and that people struggled for her
+invitation-cards and prayed to be introduced to her, Mrs. Hazeldine was
+at the zenith of her delight and self-importance. If only Vera herself
+had been a little more practicable!</p>
+
+<p>"I don't despair of getting you introduced to royalty before the season
+is out," she would say, triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to be introduced to royalty," Vera would answer
+indifferently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Vera, how can you be so disloyal? And it's quite wicked too; almost
+against Scripture. Honour the King, you know it says somewhere; of course
+that means the Prince of Wales too."</p>
+
+<p>"I can honour him very well without being introduced to him," said Vera,
+who, however, let me assure you, was filled with feelings of profound
+loyalty towards the reigning family.</p>
+
+<p>"But only think what a triumph it would be over those other horrid women
+who think themselves at the top of the tree!" Mrs. Hazeldine would urge,
+with a curious conglomeration of ideas, sacred and profane.</p>
+
+<p>But Vera was indifferent to the honour of becoming acquainted with his
+Royal Highness.</p>
+
+<p>Another of Mrs. Hazeldine's troubles was that she absolutely refused to
+be photographed.</p>
+
+<p>"Your portrait might be in every shop window if you chose!" Mrs.
+Hazeldine would exclaim, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I may be very depraved, Cissy," Vera would answer, indignantly, "but I
+have not yet sunk so low as to desire that every draper's assistant may
+have the privilege of buying my likeness for a shilling to stick up on
+his mantelshelf, with a tight-rope dancer on one side, and a burlesque
+actress on the other!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, it is done by every one; and women who are beautiful as you are
+ought not to mind being admired."</p>
+
+<p>"But I prefer being admired by my friends only, and by those of my own
+class. I have no ambition to expose myself, even in effigy, in a shop
+window for the edification of street boys and city clerks."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can't help your name having been in <i>Vanity Fair</i> this week!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, and I only wish I could get hold of the man who put it there!" cried
+Miss Nevill, viciously; and it is certain that unfortunate literary
+person would not have relished the interview.</p>
+
+<p>A "beauty" with such strange and unnatural views was, it must be
+confessed, as much of a trial as a triumph to an anxious chaperon.</p>
+
+<p>There was a certain amount of fashionable routine, the daily treadmill
+of pleasure, to which, however, Vera submitted readily enough, and even
+extracted a good deal of enjoyment out of it. There was the morning
+saunter into the Row, the afternoons spent at garden parties or
+"at-homes," the evenings filled up with dinner parties, to be followed
+almost invariably by balls lasting late into the night. All these things
+repeat themselves year after year: they are utter weariness to some of
+us, but to her they were still new, and Vera entered into the daily whirl
+of the London season with an amount of zest which was almost a surprise
+to herself.</p>
+
+<p>Just at first there had been a daily terror upon her, that of meeting Sir
+John Kynaston or his brother; but London is a large place, and you may go
+out to different houses for many nights running without ever coming
+across the friend or the foe whom you desire or dread most to encounter.</p>
+
+<p>After a little while, she forgot to glance hurriedly and fearfully around
+her every time she entered a ball-room, or to look up shudderingly each
+time the door was opened and a fresh guest announced at a dinner-party.
+She never met either of them, nor did the name of Kynaston ever strike
+upon her ear.</p>
+
+<p>She told herself that she had forgotten the two brothers, whose fate had
+seemed at one time so intimately bound up with her own&mdash;the one as well
+as the other. They were nothing more to her now&mdash;they had passed away out
+of her life. Henceforth she had entered upon a new course, in which her
+beauty and her mother wit were to exact their full value, but in which
+her heart was to count for nothing more. It was to be smothered up within
+her. That, together with all the best, and sweetest, and truest part of
+her, once awakened for a brief space by the magic touch of love, was now
+to be extinguished within her as though they had never been.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Vera enjoys herself.</p>
+
+<p>She looks happy enough now as she sits by her friend's side in the park,
+with a little knot of admirers about her; not taking very much trouble to
+talk to them, indeed, but smiling serenely from one to the other, letting
+herself be talked to and amused, with just a word here and there, to show
+them she is listening to what they say. It is, perhaps, the secret of her
+success that she is so thoroughly indifferent to it all. It matters so
+little to her whether they come or go; there is so little eagerness about
+her, so perfect an <i>insouciance</i> of manner. Other women lay themselves
+out to attract and to be admired; Vera only sits still, and waits with a
+certain queenliness of manner for the worship that is laid at her feet,
+and which she receives as her due.</p>
+
+<p>Behind her, with his hand on the back of her chair, stands a young fellow
+of about two or three and twenty; he does not speak to her much, nor join
+in the merry, empty chatter that is going on around her; but it is easy
+to see by the way he looks down at her, by the fashion in which he
+watches her slightest movement, that Vera exercises no ordinary influence
+over him.</p>
+
+<p>He is a tall, slight-figured boy, with very fair yellow hair and delicate
+features; his blue eyes are frank and pleasant, but his mouth is a trifle
+weak and vacillating, and the lips are too sensitively cut for strength
+of character, whilst his chest is too narrow for strength of body. He is
+carefully dressed, and wears a white, heavy-scented flower in his coat,
+a flower which, five minutes ago, he had ineffectually attempted to
+transfer to Miss Nevill's dress; but Vera had only gently pushed back his
+hand. "My dear boy, pray keep your gardenia; a flower in one's dress is
+such a nuisance, it is always tumbling out."</p>
+
+<p>Denis Wilde, "the boy," as Mrs. Hazeldine called him with a flush on his
+fair face, had put it back quietly in his button-hole, too well bred to
+show the pain he felt by flinging it, as he would have liked to do, over
+the railing, to be trampled under the feet of the horses.</p>
+
+<p>The little group kept its place for some time, the two well-dressed and
+good-looking women sitting down, the two or three idlers who stood in
+front of them gossiping about nothing at all&mdash;last night's ball, to-day's
+plans, a little bit of scandal about one passer-by, somebody's rumoured
+engagement, somebody else's reported elopement. Denis Wilde stood behind
+Vera's chair and listened to it all, the well-known familiar chatter
+of a knot of London idlers. There was nothing new or interesting or
+entertaining about it. Only a string of names, some of which were strange
+to him, but most of which were familiar; and always some little story,
+ill-natured or harmless as the case might be, about each name that was
+mentioned. And Vera listened, smiling, assenting, but only half
+attentive, with her eyes dreamily fixed upon the long procession of
+riders passing ever ceaselessly to and fro along the ride.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Denis Wilde felt a sudden movement of the chair beneath his
+hand. Vera had started violently.</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Sir John Kynaston," the man before her was saying to his
+companion. "What a time it is since he has shown himself; he looks as if
+he had had a bad illness."</p>
+
+<p>"Some woman jilted him, I've heard," answered the other man: "some girl
+down in the country. People say, Miss Nevill, he is going to die of that
+old-fashioned complaint, which you certainly will not believe in, a
+broken heart! Poor old boy, he looks as if he had been buried, and had
+come up again for a breath of air!"</p>
+
+<p>Vera followed the direction of their eyes. Sir John was walking slowly
+towards them; he was thin and careworn; he looked aged beyond all belief.
+He walked slowly, as though it were an effort to him, with his eyes upon
+the ground. He had not seen her yet; in another minute he would be within
+a couple of yards of her. It was next to impossible that he could avoid
+seeing her, the centre, as she was, of that noisy, chattering group.</p>
+
+<p>A sort of despair seized her. How was she to meet him&mdash;this man whom she
+had so cruelly treated? She could <i>not</i> meet him; she felt that it was an
+impossibility. Like an imprisoned bird that seeks to escape, she looked
+about instinctively from side to side. What possible excuse could she
+frame? In what direction could she fly to avoid the glance of reproach
+that would smite her to the heart.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Denis Wilde bent down over her.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill, there goes a <i>Dachshund</i>, exactly like the one you wanted;
+come quickly, and we shall catch him up. He ran away down here."</p>
+
+<p>She sprang up and turned after him; a path leading away from the crowded
+Row, towards the comparatively empty park at the back, opened out
+immediately behind her chair.</p>
+
+<p>Young Wilde strode rapidly along it before her, and Vera followed him
+blindly and thankfully.</p>
+
+<p>After a few minutes he stopped and turned round.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is&mdash;the dog&mdash;wasn't it a dog, you said? Where is it?" She was
+white and trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no dog," he answered, not looking at her. "I&mdash;I saw you wanted
+to get away for a minute. You will forgive me, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Vera looked at him with a sudden earnestness. The watchfulness which had
+seen her distress, the ready tact which had guessed at her desire to
+escape, and had so promptly suggested the manner of it, touched her
+suddenly. She put forth her hand gently and almost timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said, simply. "I did not imagine you were so clever&mdash;or
+so kind."</p>
+
+<p>The boy blushed deeply with pleasure. He did not know her trouble, but
+the keen eye of love had guessed at its existence. It had been easy for
+him who watched her every look, who knew every shade and every line of
+her face, to tell that she was in distress, to interpret her pallor and
+her trembling terror aright.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't want to go back?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, I cannot go back! Besides, I am tired; it is time to go home."</p>
+
+<p>"Stay here, then, and I will call Mrs. Hazeldine."</p>
+
+<p>He left her standing alone upon the grass, and went back to the crowded
+path. Presently he returned with her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Vera, what is the matter? The boy says you have such a headache!
+I am so sorry, and I wouldn't let any of those chattering fools come back
+to lunch. Why, you look quite pale, child! Will it be too much for you to
+have the boy, because we will send him away, too, if you like?"</p>
+
+<p>But Vera turned round and smiled upon the boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, let him come, certainly; but let us go home, all three of us at
+once, if you don't mind."</p>
+
+<p>The thoughtfulness that had kept her secret for her, even from the eyes
+of the woman who was supposed to be her intimate friend, surely deserved
+its reward.</p>
+
+<p>They walked home slowly together across the park, and, when Vera came
+down to luncheon, a white gardenia had somehow or other found its way to
+the bosom of her dress.</p>
+
+<p>That was Denis Wilde's reward.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>MAURICE'S INTERCESSION.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">B. Disraeli</span>, "Coningsby."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Two or three days later the east wind was still blowing, and the chilled
+sunshine still feebly shining down upon the nipped lilac and laburnum
+blossoms. The garden at Walpole Lodge was shorn of half its customary
+beauty, yet to Helen Romer, pacing slowly up and down its gravel walks,
+it had never possibly presented a fairer appearance. For Mrs. Romer had
+won her battle. All that she had waited for so long and striven for so
+hard was at length within her grasp. Her grandfather was dead, his money
+had been all left to her, her engagement to Captain Kynaston was an
+acknowledged fact, and she herself was staying as an honoured and welcome
+guest in her future mother-in-law's house. Everything in the present and
+the future seemed to smile upon her, and yet there were drawbacks&mdash;as are
+there not in most earthly delights?&mdash;to the full enjoyment of her
+happiness.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, there was that unreasonable and unaccountable codicil to
+her grandfather's will, of which no one had been able to discern either
+the sense or the meaning, and which stated that, should his beloved
+grand-daughter, Helen Romer, be still unmarried within two months of the
+date of his death, the whole of the previous bequests and legacies were
+to be revoked and cancelled, and, with the exception of five thousand
+pounds which she would retain, the whole bulk of his fortune was to
+devolve upon the Crown, for the special use of the pensioners of
+Greenwich and Chelsea Hospitals.</p>
+
+<p>Why such an extraordinary clause had been added to the old man's will it
+was difficult to say. Possibly he feared that his grand-daughter might be
+tempted to remain unmarried, in order that she might the more freely
+squander her newly-acquired fortune in selfish pleasures; possibly he
+desired to ensure her future by the speedy shelter and support of a
+husband's name and authority, or perhaps he only hoped at his heart that
+she would be unable to fulfil his condition; and, whilst his memory would
+be left free from blame towards his daughter's orphaned child, his money
+might go away from her by her own fault, and enrich the institutions of
+his country at the expense of the grand-daughter, whom he had always
+disliked.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may, it was sufficient to place Helen in a very awkward and
+uncomfortable position. She had not only to claim Maurice's promised
+troth to her, but she had also to urge on him an almost immediate
+marriage; the task was a thankless and most unpleasant one.</p>
+
+<p>Besides that, there was the existence of a certain little French vicomte
+which caused Mrs. Romer not a little anxiety. Now, if ever, was the time
+when she had reason to dread his re-appearance with those fatal letters
+with which he had once threatened to spoil her life should she ever
+attempt to marry again.</p>
+
+<p>But her grandfather had died and had left her his money, and her
+engagement and approaching marriage to another man was no secret, yet
+still Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet made no sign, and gave forth no token
+of his promised vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>Helen dared not flatter herself that he was dead, but she did hope,
+and hoped rightly, that he was not in England, and had not heard of
+the change in her fortunes. She had been afraid to make any inquiries
+concerning him; such a step might only excite suspicion, and defeat her
+own object of remaining hidden from him. If only she could be safely
+married before he heard of her again&mdash;all, she thought, might yet be well
+with her. Of what use, then, would be his vengeance? for she did not
+think it likely he could be so cruel as to wreak an idle and profitless
+revenge upon her after she herself and her fortune were beyond his power.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps, had she known that her enemy had been on a distant journey to
+Constantinople, from which he was now returning, and that every hour she
+lived brought him nearer and nearer to her, she would have been less easy
+in her mind concerning him. As it was, she consoled herself by thinking
+in how short a time her marriage would put her out of his power, and
+hoped, for the rest, that things would all turn out right for her.
+Nevertheless, strive how she would, she could not quite put away the
+dread of it out of her mind&mdash;it was an anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>And then there was Maurice himself. She had known, of course, for long,
+how slight was her hold upon her lover's heart, but never had he appeared
+so cold, so unloving, so full of apathetic indifference towards her as he
+had seemed to be during the few days since he had arrived at his mother's
+house. His every word and look, the very change in his voice when he
+turned from his mother to her, told her, as plainly as though he had
+spoken it, that she was forcing him into a marriage that was hateful and
+repulsive to him, and which duty alone made him submit to. However little
+pride a woman may retain, such a position must always bring a certain
+amount of bitterness with it.</p>
+
+<p>To Helen it was gall and wormwood, yet she was all the more determined
+upon keeping him. She said to herself that she had toiled, and waited,
+and striven for him for too long to relinquish him now that the victory
+was hers at length.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Helen, with all her good looks, and all her many attractions, she
+had been so unfortunate with this one man whom she loved! She had always
+gone the wrong way to work with him.</p>
+
+<p>Even now she could not let him alone; she was foolishly jealous and
+suspicious.</p>
+
+<p>He had come to her, all smarting and bleeding still with the sacrifice
+he had made of his heart to his duty. He had shut the woman he loved
+determinedly out of his thoughts, and had set his face resolutely to do
+his duty to the woman whom he seemed destined to marry. Even now a little
+softness, a little womanly gentleness and sympathy, and, above all, a
+wise forbearance from probing into his still open wounds, might have won
+a certain amount of gratitude and affection from him. But Helen was
+unequal to this. She only drove him wild with causeless and senseless
+jealousy, and goaded him almost to madness by endless suspicions and
+irritating cross-questioning.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to know what she expected more of him. He slept under
+the same roof with her, he dined at his mother's table, and spent the
+evenings religiously in her society. She could not well expect to keep
+him also at her side all day long; and yet his daily visits to town,
+amounting usually to between three and four hours of absence, were a
+constant source of annoyance and disquiet to her. Where did he go? What
+did he do with himself? Whom did he see in these diurnal expeditions into
+London? She wore herself into a fever with her perpetual effort to fathom
+these things.</p>
+
+<p>Even now she is fretting and fuming because he has promised to be home to
+luncheon, and he is twenty minutes late.</p>
+
+<p>She paces impatiently up and down the garden. Lady Kynaston opens the
+French window and calls to her from the house:</p>
+
+<p>"Come, my dear, lunch is on the table; are you not coming in?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had rather wait for Maurice, please; do sit down without me," she
+answers, with the irritation of a spoilt child. Lady Kynaston closes the
+window. "Oh, these lovers!" she groans to herself, somewhat impatiently,
+as she sits down alone to the well-furnished luncheon-table; but she
+bears it pretty composedly because Helen has her grandfather's money, and
+is to bring her son wealth as well as love, and Lady Kynaston is not at
+all above being glad of it. One can stand little faults of manner and
+temper from a daughter-in-law, who is an heiress, which one would be
+justly indignant at were she a pauper.</p>
+
+<p>A sound of wheels turning in at the lodge-gates&mdash;it is Maurice's hansom.</p>
+
+<p>Helen hurries forward to meet him in the hall; Captain Kynaston is
+handing a lady out of the hansom; Helen peers at her suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I am bringing you ladies a friend to lunch," says Maurice, gaily, and
+Mrs. Romer's face clears when she sees that it is Beatrice Miller.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Beatrice, it is you! I am delighted to see you! Go in to the
+dining-room, you will find Lady Kynaston. Maurice," drawing him back a
+minute, "how late you are again! What have you been doing?"</p>
+
+<p>"I waited whilst Miss Miller put her bonnet on."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, where did you meet her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I met her at her mother's, where I went to call. Have you any
+objection?" He looked at her almost defiantly as he answered her
+questions; it was intolerable to him that she should put him through
+such a catechism.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't have been there all the morning," she continued, suspiciously;
+unable or unwilling, perhaps, to notice his rising displeasure. "Where
+did you go first?"</p>
+
+<p>Maurice bit his lip, but controlled himself with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child," he said, lightly, "one can't sell out of the army, or
+prepare for the holy estate of matrimony, without a certain amount of
+business on one's hands. Suppose now we go in to lunch." She stepped
+aside and let him pass her into the dining-room.</p>
+
+<p>"He is shuffling again," she said to herself, angrily; "that was no
+answer to my question. Is it possible that he sees <i>her</i>? But no, what
+folly; if she is at Sutton, how can he get at her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Helen," cried out Beatrice to her from the table as she entered,
+"you and Lady Kynaston are positively out of the world this season. You
+know none of the gossip."</p>
+
+<p>"I go nowhere, of course, now; my grandfather's death is so recent. I
+have so many preparations to make just now; and dear Lady Kynaston is
+good enough to shut herself up on my account."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly; you are a couple of recluses," cried Beatrice. "Now, I daresay
+you will never guess who is the new beauty whom all the world is talking
+about; no other than our friend Vera Nevill. She is creating a perfect
+sensation!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" politely, but with frigid unconcern, from Lady Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I assure you there is a regular rage about her. Oh, how stupid I
+am! Perhaps I ought not to have mentioned her, Lady Kynaston, for of
+course she did not behave very well to Sir John, as we all know; but now
+that is all over, isn't it? and everybody is wild about her beauty."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear that Miss Nevill is prospering in any way," said her
+ladyship, stiffly. "I owe her no ill-will, poor girl."</p>
+
+<p>Helen Romer is looking at Maurice Kynaston; he has not said one single
+word, nor has he raised his eyes once from his plate; but a deep flush
+has overspread his handsome face at the sound of Vera's name.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>That</i> is where he goes," said Helen, to herself. "I knew it; he has
+seen her, and he loves her still."</p>
+
+<p>The conversation drifted on to other matters. Beatrice passed all the
+gossip and scandal of the town under review for Lady Kynaston's benefit;
+presently Maurice roused himself, and joined in the talk. But Mrs. Romer
+uttered not a word; she sat in her place with a thunder-cloud upon her
+brow until the luncheon was over; then, as they rose from the table, she
+called her lover to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to speak to you," she said, and detained him until the others had
+left the room.</p>
+
+<p>"You knew that Vera Nevill was in town, and you have seen her!" she burst
+forth impetuously.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had seen her, I do not know that it would signify, would it?" he
+answered, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not signify? when you knew that it was for <i>your</i> sake that she threw
+over John, because&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Be silent, Helen, you have no right to say that, and no authority for
+such a statement," he said, interrupting her hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose you can deceive me? Did not everybody see that she could
+not keep her eyes off you? What is the use of denying it? You have seen
+her probably; you have been with her to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"As it happens, I have <i>not</i> been with her either to-day or any day; nor
+did I know she was in town until Beatrice Miller told us so just now."</p>
+
+<p>"You have not seen her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you!" she answered, angrily. Now, no man likes to be
+given the lie direct even by a lady; and Maurice was a man who was
+scrupulously truthful, and proud of his veracity; he lost his temper
+fairly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never told you a lie yet," he began furiously; "and if you think
+so, it is time&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice! Maurice!" she cried, frantically, stopping the outspoken words
+upon his lips, and seeing in one minute that she had gone too far. "My
+darling, forgive me; I did not mean to say it. Yes, of course, I believe
+you; don't say anything unkind to me, for pity's sake. You know how much
+I love you; kiss me, darling. No, Maurice, I won't let you go till you
+kiss me, and say you forgive your foolish, jealous little Helen!"</p>
+
+<p>It was the old story over again; angry reproaches&mdash;bitter words&mdash;insults
+upon her side; to be succeeded, the minute he turned round upon her, by
+wild cries of regret and entreaties for forgiveness, and by the pleading
+of that love which he valued so little.</p>
+
+<p>She drove him wild with anger and indignation; but she never would let
+him go&mdash;no, never, however much he might strain against the chain by
+which she held him.</p>
+
+<p>The quarrel was patched up again; he stooped and kissed her. A man must
+kiss a lady when she asks him. How, indeed, is he to refuse to do so? A
+woman's kisses are the roses of life&mdash;altogether sweet, and lovely, and
+precious. No man can say he dislikes a rose, nor refuse so harmless and
+charming a gift when it is freely offered to him without absolute
+churlishness. Maurice could not well deny her the embrace for which her
+upturned lips had pleaded. He kissed her, indeed; but it will be easily
+understood that there was very little spontaneity of affection in that
+kiss.</p>
+
+<p>"Now let me go," he said, putting her from him gently but coldly; "I want
+to speak to my mother."</p>
+
+<p>The two younger ladies wandered out into the garden, whilst Maurice
+sought his mother's room.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, I have been to see John this morning. I am afraid he is really
+very ill," he said, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston shrugged her shoulders. "He is like a baby over that
+foolish affair," she said, impatiently. "He does not seem able to get
+over it; why does he shut himself up in his rooms? If he were to go out
+a little more&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He has been out; it is that that has made him ill. He went out a few
+mornings ago&mdash;the wind was very cold; he says it is that which gave him a
+chill. But, from what he says, I fancy he saw, or he thinks he saw, Miss
+Nevill."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston sat at her davenport with all the litter of her daily
+correspondence before her; her son stood up by the mantelpiece, leaning
+his back against it, and looked away out of window at the figures of
+Beatrice and his future wife sauntering up and down the garden walks. She
+could not well see his face as he spoke these last words.</p>
+
+<p>"Tiresome woman!" cried Lady Kynaston, angrily; "there is no end to the
+trouble she causes. John ought to be thankful he is well rid of her. Did
+you hear what Beatrice Miller said at lunch about her? I call it shocking
+bad taste, her coming up to town and flirting and flaunting about under
+poor John's nose&mdash;heartless coquette! Creating 'a sensation,' indeed!
+That is one of those horrible American expressions that are the fashion
+just now!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is no wonder she is admired," said Maurice, dreamily: "she is very
+beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to goodness she would keep out of John's way. Where did he see
+her?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was in the Row, I think, and, from what he said, he only fancied he
+saw her back, walking away. I told him, of course, it could not be her,
+because I thought she was down at Sutton; but, after what Beatrice told
+us at lunch, I make no doubt that it was her, and that John really did
+see her."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have thought that your brother would have had more spirit than
+to sit down and whine over a woman in that way," said her ladyship,
+sharply; "it is really contemptible."</p>
+
+<p>"But if he is ill in body as well as in mind, poor fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! fiddlesticks! I am quite sure, if Helen jilted you, you would bear
+it a great deal better&mdash;losing the money and all&mdash;than he does."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"That is very possible; but a man can't help his disposition, and John
+has been utterly shattered by it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I am sorry for him, of course; but I confess that I don't see that
+anybody can do anything for him."</p>
+
+<p>And then Maurice was silent for a minute. God only knew what passed
+through his soul at that minute&mdash;what agonies of self-renunciation, what
+martyrdom of all that makes life pleasant and dear to a man! It is
+certain his mother did not know it.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," he said, after a minute, and only a slight harshness in his
+voice marked the internal struggle that the words were to cost him&mdash;"I
+think, mother, <i>you</i> might do a great deal for him. Miss Nevill is in
+town. Could you not see her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see her! What on earth for?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you were to tell her how ill John is, how desperately he feels her
+treatment of him&mdash;how&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, stop, my dear! You cannot possibly suppose that I am going down
+upon my knees to entreat Miss Nevill to marry my son after she has thrown
+him over!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is no question of going on your knees, mother. A few words would
+suffice to show her the misery she is causing to John, and if those few
+words would restore his lost happiness&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell that anything I can say would influence her? I suppose
+she had good reasons for throwing him over. She cared for some one else,
+I suppose, or, at all events, she did not care for him."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite certain, on the contrary, that she had a very sincere
+affection for my brother; and, as to the some one else, I do not think
+that will prevent her returning to him. Oh, mother!" he cried, with a
+sudden passion, "the world is full of miserable misunderstandings and
+mistakes. For God's sake, let us try to put some of its blunders right!
+Do not let any poor, mean feelings of false pride stand in our way if we
+can make one single life happy!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him, wondering a little at his earnestness. It did not
+strike her at the minute that his interest in Vera was unusual, but only
+that his affection for his brother was stronger than she imagined it to
+be. "You know," she said, "I do not want things to come right in that
+way. I do not want John to marry. I want the old place to come to you and
+your children; and now that John has agreed to let you and Helen live
+there&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He waved his hand impatiently. "And you know, mother dear, that such
+desires are unlawful. John is the eldest, and I will never move a step to
+take his birthright from him. To stand in the way of his marriage for
+such a cause would be a crime. Is it not better that I should speak
+plainly to you, dear? As to my living at Kynaston, I think it highly
+unlikely that I should do so in any case, much as you and Helen seem to
+wish it. But that has nothing to do with John's affairs. Promise me,
+little mother, that you will try and set that right by seeing Miss
+Nevill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not suppose I should do any good," she answered, with visible
+reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind; you can but try."</p>
+
+<p>"You can't expect me to go and call upon her for such a purpose, nor
+speak to her, without John's authority."</p>
+
+<p>"You might ask her to come here, or go to some house where you will meet
+her naturally in public."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that would be best; perhaps she will be at Lady Cloverdale's ball
+next week."</p>
+
+<p>"It is easy, at all events, to ensure her an invitation to it; ask
+Beatrice Miller to get her one."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; that is easy enough. Oh, dear me, Maurice, you always manage to
+get your own way with me; but you have given me a dreadfully hard task
+this time."</p>
+
+<p>"As if a woman of your known tact and <i>savoir faire</i> was not capable of
+any hard and impossible task!" answered her son, smiling, as he bent and
+kissed her soft white face.</p>
+
+<p>The gentle flattery pleased her. The old lady sat smiling happily to
+herself, with her hands idle before her, for some minutes after he had
+left her.</p>
+
+<p>How dear he was to her, how good, how upright, how thoroughly generous
+too, and unselfish to think so much of his brother's troubles just now,
+in the midst of all his own happiness.</p>
+
+<p>She got up and went to the window, and watched him as he strolled across
+the garden to join the ladies, smiling and kissing her hand to him when
+he looked back and saw her.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear fellow, I hope he will be happy!" she said to herself, turning away
+with a half sigh. And then suddenly something brought back the ball at
+Shadonake to her recollection. There flashed back into her memory a
+certain scene in a cool, dimly-lit conservatory: two people whispering
+together under a high-swung Chinese lamp, and a background of dark-leaved
+shrubs behind them.</p>
+
+<p>She had been puzzled that night. There had been something going on that
+she had not quite understood. And now again that feeling of unsatisfied
+comprehension came back to her. For the first time it struck her
+painfully that the son whom she idolized so much&mdash;whose life and
+character had been her one study and her one delight ever since the day
+of his birth&mdash;was nevertheless a riddle to her. That the secret of his
+inner self was as much hidden from her&mdash;his mother&mdash;as though she had
+been the merest stranger; that the life she had striven so closely to
+entwine with her own was nothing after all but a separate existence, in
+the story of whose soul she herself had no part. He was a man struggling
+single-handed in all the heat and turmoil of the battle of life, and she,
+nothing but a poor, weak old woman, standing feebly aside, powerless to
+help or even to understand the creature to whom she had given birth.</p>
+
+<p>There fell a tear or two down upon her wrinkled little hands as she
+thought of it. She could not understand him; there was something in his
+life she could not fathom. Oh, what did it all mean?</p>
+
+<p>Alas, sooner or later, is not that what comes to every mother concerning
+the child she loves best?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>MR. PRYME'S VISITORS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For courage mounteth with occasion.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>, "King John."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Herbert Pryme stood by a much ink-stained and littered table in his
+chambers in the Temple, with his hands in his trousers pockets, whistling
+a slow and melancholy tune.</p>
+
+<p>It was Mr. Pryme's habit to whistle when he was dejected or perplexed;
+and the whistling generally partook of the mournful condition of his
+feelings. Indeed, everything that this young man did was of a ponderous
+and solemn nature; there was always the inner consciousness of the
+dignity of the Bar vested in his own person, to be discerned in his outer
+bearing. Even in the strictest seclusion of the, alas! seldom invaded
+privacy of his chambers Mr. Pryme never forgot that he was a
+barrister-at-law.</p>
+
+<p>But when this young gentleman was ill at ease within himself he was in
+the habit of whistling. He also was given to the thrusting of his hands
+into his pockets. The more unhappy he was, the more he whistled, and the
+deeper he stuffed in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Just now, to all appearances, he was very unhappy indeed.</p>
+
+<p>The air he had selected for his musical self-refreshment was the lively
+and slightly vulgar one of "Tommy make Room for your Uncle;" but let
+anybody just try to whistle that same vivacious tune to the time of the
+Dead March in "Saul," and with a lingering and plaintive emphasis upon
+each note, with "linked sweetness long drawn out," and then say whether
+the gloomiest of dirges would not be festive indeed in comparison.</p>
+
+<p>Thus did Herbert Pryme whistle it as he looked down upon the piles of
+legal documents heaped up together upon his table.</p>
+
+<p>All of them meant work, but none of them meant money. For Herbert was
+fain to accept the humble position of "devil" to a great legal light who
+occupied the floor below him, and who considered, and perhaps rightly,
+that he was doing the young man above him, who had been sent up from the
+country with a letter of introduction to him from a second cousin, a
+sufficient and inestimable benefit in allowing him to do his dirty work
+gratis.</p>
+
+<p>It was all very useful to him, doubtless, but it was not remunerative;
+and Herbert wanted money badly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if I could only reckon upon a couple of hundred a year," he sighed,
+half aloud to himself, "I might have a chance of winning her! It seems
+hard that heaps of these fellows can make hundreds a week by a short
+speech, or a few strokes of the pen, that cost them no labour and little
+forethought, whilst I, with all my hard work, can make nothing! What
+uphill work it is! Not that the Bar is not a fine profession; quite the
+finest there is," for not even to himself would Herbert Pryme decry the
+legal muse whom he worshipped; "but, I suppose, like every other
+profession, it is overstocked; there are too many struggling for the same
+prizes. The fact is, that England is over-populated. Now, if a law were
+to be passed compelling one-half of the adult males in this country to
+remain in a state of celibacy for the space of fifteen years&mdash;&mdash;" but
+here he stopped short in his soliloquy and smiled; for was not the one
+desire of his life at present to marry Beatrice Miller immediately? And
+how was the extra population to be stayed if every one of the doomed
+quota of marriageable males were of the same mind as himself?</p>
+
+<p>Presently Mr. Pryme sauntered idly to the window, and stood looking
+drearily out of it, still whistling, of course.</p>
+
+<p>The prospect was not a lively one. His chambers looked out upon a little
+square, stone-flagged court, with a melancholy-looking pump in the centre
+of it. There was an arched passage leading away to one side, down which a
+distant footstep echoed drearily now and then, and a side glimpse of the
+empty road at the other end, beyond the corner of the opposite houses.
+Now and then some member of the learned profession passed rapidly across
+the small open space with the pre-occupied air of a man who has not a
+minute to spare, or a clerk, bearing the official red bag, ran hastily
+along the passage; for the rest, the London sparrows had it pretty much
+to themselves. As things were, Mr. Pryme envied the sparrows, who were
+ready clothed by Providence, and had no rates and taxes to pay, as well
+as the clerks, who, at all events, had plenty to do and no time to
+soliloquize upon the hardness and hollowness of life. To have plenty of
+brains, and an indefinite amount of spare time to use them in; to desire
+ardently to hasten along the road towards fortune and happiness, and to
+be forced to sit idly by whilst others, duller-witted, perchance, and
+with less capacity for work, are amassing wealth under your very
+nose&mdash;when this is achieved by sheer luck, or good interest, or any other
+of those inadequate causes which get people on in life independent of
+talent and industry&mdash;that is what makes a radical of a man. This is what
+causes him to dream unwholesome dreams about equality and liberty, about
+a republic, where there shall be no more principalities and powers, where
+plutocracy, as well as aristocracy, shall be unregarded, and where every
+good man and true shall rise on his own merits, and on none other.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, happy and impossible Arcadia! You must wait for the millennium, my
+friend, before your aspirations shall come to pass. Wait till jealousy,
+and selfishness, and snobbism&mdash;that last and unconquerable dragon&mdash;shall
+be destroyed out of the British heart, then, and only then, when jobbery,
+and interest, and mammon-worship shall be abolished; then will men be
+honoured for what they are, and not for what they seem to be.</p>
+
+<p>Something of all this passed through our friend's jaundiced mind as he
+contemplated those homely and familiar little birds, born and bred and
+smoke-dried in all the turmoil of the City's heart, who ruffled their
+feathers and plumed their wings with contented chirpings upon the dusty
+flags of the little courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>Things were exceptionally bad with Herbert Pryme just now. His exchequer
+was low&mdash;had never been lower&mdash;and his sweetheart was far removed out of
+his reach. Beatrice had duly come up with her parents to the family
+mansion in Eaton Square for the London season, but although he had, it is
+true, the satisfaction, such as it was, of breathing the same air as she
+did, she was far more out of his reach in town than she had been in the
+country. As long as she was at Shadonake Mr. Pryme had always been able
+to run down to his excellent friend, the parson of Tripton, and once
+there, it had been easy to negotiate a surreptitious meeting with
+Beatrice. The fields and the lanes are everybody's property. If Tom and
+Maria are caught love-making at the stile out of the wood, and they both
+swear that the meeting was purely accidental, I don't see how any one is
+to prove that it was premeditated; nor can any parents, now that it is no
+longer the fashion to keep grown women under lock and key, prevent their
+daughters from going out in the country occasionally unattended, nor
+forbid strange young men from walking along the Queen's highway in the
+same direction.</p>
+
+<p>But remove your daughter to London, and the case is altered at once. To
+keep a girl who goes out a great deal in the whirl of London society out
+of the way of a man who goes out very little, who is not in the inner
+circle of town life, and is not in the same set as herself, is the
+easiest thing in the world.</p>
+
+<p>So Mrs. Miller found it. She kept Beatrice hard at work at the routine of
+dissipation. Not an hour of her time was unoccupied, not a minute of her
+day unaccounted for; and, of course, she was never alone&mdash;it is not yet
+the fashion for young girls to dance about London by themselves&mdash;her
+mother, as a matter of course, was always with her.</p>
+
+<p>As a natural sequence, the lovers had a hard time of it. Beatrice had
+been six weeks in London, and Herbert, beyond catching sight of her once
+or twice as she was driven past in her mother's carriage down Bond
+Street, or through the crowd in the Park, had never seen her at all.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller was congratulating herself upon the success of her tactics;
+she flattered herself that her daughter was completely getting over that
+unlucky fancy for the penniless and briefless barrister. Beatrice gave no
+sign; she appeared perfectly satisfied and contented, and seemed to be
+enjoying herself thoroughly, and to be troubled by no love-sick
+hankerings after her absent swain.</p>
+
+<p>"She has forgotten him," said Mrs. Miller, to herself.</p>
+
+<p>But the mother did not take into account that indomitable spirit and
+stubborn determination in her own character which had served to carry out
+successfully all the schemes of her life, and which she had probably
+transmitted to her child.</p>
+
+<p>In Beatrice's head, under its short thick thatch of dark rough hair, and
+in her sturdily-built little frame, there lurked the tenacity of a
+bulldog. Once she had taken an idea firmly into her mind, Beatrice Miller
+would never relinquish it until she had got her own way. Herbert, in
+the dingy solitude of his untempting chambers, might despair and look
+upon life and its aims as a hopeless enigma. Beatrice did not despair at
+all. She only bided her time.</p>
+
+<p>One day, if she waited for it patiently, the opportunity would come to
+her, and when it came she would not be slow to make use of it. It came to
+her in the shape of a morning visit from Captain Maurice Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>"Come down and see my mother," Maurice had said to her; "she has not seen
+you for a long while. I am just going back to Walpole Lodge to lunch."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to come very much. You have no objection, I suppose,
+mamma?"</p>
+
+<p>No; Mrs. Miller could have no possible objection. Lady Kynaston was
+amongst her oldest and most respected friends; under whose house could
+Beatrice be safer? And even Maurice, as an escort, engaged to be married
+so shortly as he was known to be, was perfectly unobjectionable.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice went, and, as we have seen, lunched at Walpole Lodge. She had
+told her mother not to expect her till late in the afternoon, as, in all
+probability, Lady Kynaston would drive her into town and would drop her
+in Eaton Square at the end of her drive. Mrs. Miller, to whose watchful
+maternal mind the Temple and Kew appeared to be in such totally different
+directions that they presented no connecting suggestions, agreed,
+unsuspiciously, not to expect her daughter back until after six o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>In this way Beatrice secured the whole afternoon to herself to do what
+she liked with it. She was not slow to make use of it. There was all
+the pluck of the Esterworths in her veins, together with all the
+determination and energy which had raised her father's family from
+a race of shopkeepers to take their place amongst gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Captain Kynaston joined the two ladies in the garden at
+Walpole Lodge after luncheon Beatrice requested him to order a hansom to
+be fetched for her.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you hurry away?" said Maurice, politely. "My mother will take
+you back to town in the carriage if you will wait."</p>
+
+<p>Helen was stooping over the flower-beds, gathering some violets. Beatrice
+stepped closer to Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say a word, there's a good fellow, but get me the
+hansom&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;please don't mention it at home."</p>
+
+<p>Then Maurice, who was no tyro in such matters, understood that it was
+expected of him that he should ask no questions, but do what he was told
+and hold his tongue.</p>
+
+<p>The sequence of which proceedings was, that a hansom cab drew up at the
+far corner of the little stone-flagged court in the Temple between four
+and five that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pryme was no longer by the window when it did so, so that he was
+totally unprepared for the visitor, whose trembling and twice-repeated
+tap at his door he answered somewhat impatiently&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, and be d&mdash;&mdash;d to you, and don't stand rapping at that door all
+day."</p>
+
+<p>The people, as a rule, who solicited admittance to his chambers were
+either the boy from the legal light below, who came to ask whether the
+papers were ready that had been sent up this morning, or else they were
+smiling and sleek-faced tradesmen who washed their hands insinuatingly
+whilst they requested that Mr. Pryme would be kind enough to settle that
+little outstanding account.</p>
+
+<p>Either of these visitors were equally unwelcome, which must be some
+excuse for the roughness of Mr. Pryme's language.</p>
+
+<p>The door was softly pushed ajar.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then&mdash;come in, can't you; who the deuce are you&mdash;<i>Beatrice</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Enter Miss Miller, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, fie, Herbert! what naughty words, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, is it possible that it is you! Where is your mother? Are you
+alone?" looking nervously round at the door, whilst he caught her
+outstretched hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am quite alone; don't be very shocked. I know I am a horrid, bold
+girl to come all by myself to a man's chambers; it's dreadful, isn't it!
+Oh, what would people say of it if they knew&mdash;why, even <i>you</i> look
+horrified! But oh, Herbert, I did want to see you so. I was determined to
+get at you somehow&mdash;and now I am here for a whole hour; I have managed it
+beautifully&mdash;no one will ever find out where I have been. Mamma thinks I
+am driving with Lady Kynaston!"</p>
+
+<p>And then she sat down and took off her veil, and told him all about it.</p>
+
+<p>She had got at her lover, and she felt perfectly happy and secure,
+sitting there with his arm round her waist and her hand in his. Not so
+Herbert. He was pleased, of course, to see her, and called her by a
+thousand fond names, and he admired her courage and her spirit for
+breaking through the conventional trammels of her life in order to come
+to him; but he was horribly nervous all the same. Supposing that boy were
+to come in from below, or the smiling tradesman, or, still worse, if the
+great Q.C. were to catch a glimpse of her as she went out, and recognize
+her from having met her in society, where would Miss Miller's reputation
+be then?</p>
+
+<p>"It is very imprudent of you&mdash;most rash and foolish," he kept on
+repeating; but he was glad to see her all the same, and kissed her
+between every other word.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, don't waste any more time spooning," says Beatrice, with decision,
+drawing herself a little farther from him on the hard leather sofa. "An
+hour soon goes, and I have plenty to say to you. Herbert," with great
+solemnity, "<i>I mean to elope with you!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert gives an irrepressible start.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Now!</i> this minute?" he exclaims, in some dismay, and reflects swiftly
+that, just now he possesses exactly three pounds seven and sixpence in
+ready money.</p>
+
+<p>"No; don't be a goose; not now, because I haven't any clothes." Herbert
+breathes more freely. "But some day, very soon, before the end of the
+season."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my pet, you are not of age," objects her lover; whilst sundry
+clauses in the laws concerning the marriages of minors without the
+consent of their parents pass hurriedly through his brain.</p>
+
+<p>"What do I care about my age?" says Beatrice, with the recklessness of an
+impetuous woman bent upon having her own way. "Of course, I don't wish to
+do anything disreputable, or to make a scandal, but mamma is driving me
+to it by never allowing me to see you, and forbidding you to come to the
+house, and by encouraging all sorts of men whom she wants me to marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! And these men, do they make love to you?" The instinct of the lover
+rises instantly superior to the instinct of legal prudence within him.
+"That is hard for me to bear."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Herbert, don't be a fool!" cries Beatrice, jumping up and making a
+grimace at herself in the dusty glass over his mantelpiece. "Do I look
+like a girl whom men would make love to? Am I not too positively hideous?
+Oh, you needn't shake your head and look indignant. Of course I am ugly,
+everybody but you thinks so. Of course it's not me, myself, but because
+papa is rich, and they think I shall have money. Oh, what a curse this
+money is!"</p>
+
+<p>"I think the want of it a far greater one," says Herbert, ruefully.</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate," continues Beatrice, "I am determined to put an end to this
+state of things; we must take the law into our own hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Am I to wait for you in a carriage and pair at the corner of Eaton
+Square in the middle of the night?" inquires Herbert, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"No; don't be foolish; people don't do things now-a-days in the way our
+grandmothers did. I shall go to morning service one day at some out
+of-the-way church, where you will meet me with a licence in your pocket;
+it will be the simplest thing in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"And afterwards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Afterwards I shall go home to lunch."</p>
+
+<p>"And what am I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you will come back here, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think that will be very amusing," objects the bridegroom elect,
+dubiously.</p>
+
+<p>"No; but then we shall be really married, and when we know that no one
+can part us, we shan't mind waiting; and then, some day, after about six
+months or so, I shall confess to papa, and there will be a terrible
+scene, ending in tears on my part, and in forgiveness on the part of my
+parents. Once the deed is done, you see, they will be forced to make the
+best of it; and, of course, they will not allow us to starve. I think it
+is a very ingenious plan. What do you think of it, Herbert? You don't
+look very much delighted at the idea."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think that I should play a very noble part in such a scheme as
+that. Dearly as I love you, Beatrice, I do not think I could consent to
+steal you away in such a pitiful and cowardly manner."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! you would have nothing to do with it; it is all my doing, of
+course. Hush! is not that somebody coming up the stairs?"</p>
+
+<p>They were silent for half a minute, listening to the sound of advancing
+steps upon the wooden staircase.</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing&mdash;only somebody to see the man above me. By Jove, though,
+it <i>is</i> for me!" as somebody suddenly stopped outside and knocked at the
+door. "Wait one minute, sir! Good heavens, Beatrice, what am I to do with
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert looked frightened out of his life. Beatrice, on the contrary,
+could hardly smother her laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"I must hide!" she said, in a choked whisper. "Oh, Herbert, it is like
+a scene out of a naughty French play! I shall die of laughter!"</p>
+
+<p>Without a moment's thought, she fled into the inner room, the door of
+which stood ajar, and which was none other than Mr. Pryme's bed-chamber!
+There was no time to think of any better expedient. Beatrice turned the
+key upon herself, and Herbert called out "Come in!" to the intruder.
+Neither of them had noticed that Beatrice's little white lace sunshade
+lay upon the table with her gloves and veil beside it.</p>
+
+<p>If Mr. Pryme had been alarmed at the bare fact of an unknown and possibly
+unimportant visitor, it may be left to the imagination to describe the
+state of his feelings when the door, upon being opened, disclosed the
+Member for North Meadowshire standing without!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A WHITE SUNSHADE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An unrelenting foe to love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And when we meet a mutual heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Come in between, and bid us part?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Pryme, how d'ye do?" said Mr. Miller, in his rough, hearty
+voice, holding out his hand. "I dare say you are surprised to see me
+here. I haven't met you since you were staying down with us at Christmas
+time. Well, and how goes the world with you, young man?"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert, who at first had thought nothing less than that Mr. Miller had
+tracked his daughter to his rooms, and that he was about to have the
+righteous wrath of an infuriated and exasperated parent to deal with, by
+this time began to perceive that, to whatever extraordinary cause his
+visit was owing, Beatrice, at all events, had nothing to do with it. He
+recovered himself sufficiently to murmur, in answer to his visitor's
+greeting, that the world went pretty well with him, and to request his
+guest to be seated.</p>
+
+<p>And then, as he pushed an arm-chair forward for him, his eye fell upon
+Beatrice's things upon the table, and his heart literally stood still
+within him. What was he to do? They lay so close to the father's elbow
+that, to move them without attracting attention was impossible, and to
+attract attention to them was to risk their being recognized.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Mr. Miller had put on his spectacles, and was drawing some
+voluminous papers out of his breast coat-pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I dare say, young man, you are wondering what brings me to see you?
+Well, the fact is, there is a little matter about which I am going to
+law. I'm going to bring an action for libel against a newspaper; it is
+that rascally paper the <i>Cat o' Nine Tails</i>. They had an infamous
+paragraph three weeks ago concerning my early life, which, let me tell
+you, sir, was highly respectable in every way, sir&mdash;in every way."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure of that, Mr. Miller."</p>
+
+<p>"I've brought the paragraph with me. Oh, here it is. Well, I've had a
+good deal of correspondence with the editor, and he refuses to publish an
+apology, and so I'm tired of the whole matter, and have placed it in the
+hands of my solicitors. I'm going to prosecute them, sir, and I don't
+care what it costs me to do it; and I'll expose the whole system of these
+trumped-up fabrications, that contain, as a rule, one grain of truth to a
+hundredweight of lies. Well, now, Mr. Pryme, I want a clever barrister to
+take up this case, and I have instructed Messrs. Grainge, my solicitors,
+to retain you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure, sir, you are very kind; I hardly know how to thank you,"
+faltered poor Herbert. Never in the whole course of his life had he felt
+so overcome with shame and confusion! Here was this man come to do him a
+really great and substantial benefit, whilst his own daughter was hidden
+away in a shameful fashion in the next room! Herbert would sooner that
+Mr. Miller had pointed a pistol at his head and threatened to shoot him.
+The deception that he was practising towards this kind-hearted and
+excellent gentleman struck him to the heart with a sense of guilty
+remorse.</p>
+
+<p>But what on earth was he to do? He could not reveal the truth to the
+unconscious father, nor open the door and disclose Beatrice hiding in his
+bedroom, without absolutely risking the reputation of the girl he loved.
+There was nothing for it but to go on with the serio-comedy as best he
+could, and to try and get Mr. Miller off the premises as speedily as
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>He made an effort to decline the proffered employment.</p>
+
+<p>"It is most kind, most generous of you to have thought of me, but I must
+tell you that there are many better men, even amongst the juniors, who
+would do your case more justice than I should."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I believe you have plenty of talent, Mr. Pryme. I've been making
+inquiries about you. You only want an opportunity, and I like giving a
+young fellow a chance. One must hold out a helping hand to the young ones
+now and then."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, sir, I would do my very best for you, but I really think you
+are risking your own case by giving it to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense&mdash;take it and do what you can for me; if you fail, I shall not
+blame you;" and here suddenly Mr. Miller's eyes rested upon the sunshade
+and the gloves upon the table half-a-yard behind his arm. Now, had it
+been Miss Miller's mother who, in the place of her father, had been
+seated in Herbert's wooden arm-chair, the secret of her proximity would
+have been revealed the very instant the maternal eyes had been set upon
+that sunshade and those gloves. Mrs. Miller could have sworn to that
+little white lace, ivory-handled toy, with its coquettish pink ribbon
+bows, had she seen it amongst a hundred others, nor would it have been
+easy to have deceived the mother's eyes in the matter of the gray <i>peau
+de su&egrave;de</i> gloves and the dainty little veil, such as her daughter was in
+the habit of wearing. But a father's perceptions in these matters are not
+accurate. Mr. Miller had not the remotest idea what his child's sunshade
+was like, nor, indeed, whether she had any sunshade at all. Nevertheless,
+as his eyes alighted upon these indications of a feminine presence which
+lay upon the young barrister's table, they remained fixed there with
+distinct disapproval. These obnoxious articles of female attire of course
+conveyed clearly to the elder man's perceptions, in a broad and general
+sense, the fatal word "woman," and woman in this case meant "vice."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Miller strove to re-direct his attention to his case and the papers
+in his hand. Herbert made a faint and ineffectual attempt to remove the
+offending objects from the table. Mr. Miller only looked back at them
+with an ever-increasing gloom upon his face, and Herbert's hand, morally
+paralyzed by the glance, sank powerlessly down by his side. He imagined,
+of course, that the father had recognized his daughter's property.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to continue the subject," said Mr. Miller, looking away with
+an effort, and turning over the papers he had brought with him; "there
+are several points in the case I should like to mention to you." He
+paused for a minute, apparently to collect his thoughts, and to
+Herbert's sensitive ears there was a sudden coldness and constraint
+in his voice and manner. "You will, of course, take instructions in
+the main from Grainge and Co.; but what I wished to point out to you
+was&mdash;ahem&mdash;&mdash;" here his voice unaccountably faltered, and his eyes, as
+though drawn by a magnet, returned once more with ominous displeasure to
+that little heap of feminine finery that lay between them. Mr. Miller
+flung down his papers, and turning round in his chair, rested both elbows
+upon the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Pryme," he said, with decision, "I think it is best that I should be
+frank with you!" He looked the young barrister full in the face.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, certainly, if you please, Mr. Miller," said Herbert, not
+quite knowing what he had to fear, and turning hot and cold alternately
+under his visitor's scrutinizing gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, let me tell you fairly that I came to seek you to-day with
+the friendliest motives."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure you did, and you are most kind to me, sir," murmured Herbert,
+playing nervously with an ivory paper-cutter that lay on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Miller waved his hand, as though to dispense with his grateful
+acknowledgments.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," he continued, "I had understood from Mrs. Miller that you
+were a suitor for my daughter's hand. Well, sir, Mrs. Miller, as you
+know, disapproves of your suit. My daughter will be well off, Mr. Pryme,
+and you, I understand, have no income at all. You have no other resource
+than a profession, at which, as yet, you have made nothing. There is some
+reason in Mrs. Miller's objection to you. Nor should I be willing to let
+my daughter marry an idle man who will live upon her money. Then, on the
+other hand, Mr. Pryme, I find that my girl is fond of you, and, if this
+is the case, I am unwilling to make her unhappy. I said to myself that I
+would give you an opening in this case of mine, and if you will work hard
+and make yourself known and respected in your profession, I should not
+object, in the course of time, to your being engaged to her, and I would
+endeavour to induce her mother to agree to it. I came here to-day, Mr.
+Pryme, to give you a fair chance of winning her."</p>
+
+<p>"You are too good, Mr. Miller," cried Herbert, with effusion, stretching
+forth his hand. "I do not know how to thank you enough, nor how to assure
+you of my grateful acceptance of your terms."</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Miller drew back from the young man's proffered hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, there is no occasion to thank me;" and again his eyes fell sternly
+upon that unlucky little heap of lace and ribbon. "I am sorry to tell you
+that, since I have come here, my friendly and pleasant intentions towards
+you have undergone a complete change."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Pryme; I came here prepared to treat you&mdash;well, I may as well
+confess it&mdash;as a son, under the belief that you were an upright and
+honourable man, and were sincerely and honestly attached to my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Miller, is it possible that you can doubt it?"</p>
+
+<p>The elder man pointed with contemptuous significance to the sunshade
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>"I find upon your table, young man, the evidences of the recent presence
+of some wretched woman in your rooms, and your confusion of manner shows
+me too plainly that you are not the kind of husband to which a man may
+safely entrust his daughter's happiness."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Miller, I assure you you are mistaken; it is not so."</p>
+
+<p>"Every man in this country has a right to justify himself when he is
+accused. If I am mistaken, Mr. Pryme, explain to me the meaning of
+<i>that</i>," and the heavy forefinger was again levelled at the offending
+objects before him.</p>
+
+<p>Not one single word could Herbert utter. In vain ingenious fabrications
+concerning imaginary sisters, maiden aunts, or aged lady clients rushed
+rapidly through his brain; the natural answer on Mr. Miller's part to all
+such inventions would have been, "Then, where is she?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Miller must know as well as he did himself that the lady, whoever she
+might be, must still be in his rooms, else why should her belongings be
+left on his table; and if in the rooms, then, as there was no other
+egress on the staircase than the one by which he had entered, clearly,
+she must be secreted in his bedroom. Mr. Miller was not a young man, and
+his perceptions in matters of intrigue and adventure might no longer be
+very acute, but it was plain to Herbert that he probably knew quite as
+well as he did himself that the owner of the gloves and sunshade was in
+the adjoining room.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any satisfactory explanation to give me?" asked Mr. Miller,
+once more, after a solemn silence, during which he glared in a stern and
+inquisitorial manner over his spectacles at the young man.</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing to say," was the answer, given in a low and dejected
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Miller sprang to his feet and hurriedly gathered up his papers.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, sir," he said, furiously, "I shall wish you good afternoon; and
+let me assure you, most emphatically, that you must relinquish all claim
+to my daughter's hand. I will never consent to her union with a man whose
+private life will not bear investigation; and should she disobey me in
+this matter, she shall never have one single shilling of my money."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. Mr. Miller was buttoning-up his coat with
+the air of a man who buttons up his heart within it at the same time. He
+regarded the young man fiercely, and yet there was a lingering
+wistfulness, too, in his gaze. He would have given a good deal to hear,
+from his lips, a satisfactory explanation of the circumstances which told
+so suspiciously against him. He liked the young barrister personally, and
+he was fond enough of his daughter to wish that she might be happy in her
+own way. He spoke one word more to the young man.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you nothing to say; Mr. Pryme?"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert shook his head, with his eyes gloomily downcast.</p>
+
+<p>"I can only tell you, sir, that you are mistaken in what you imagine. If
+you will not believe my word, I can say nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>"And what of <i>these</i>, Mr. Pryme&mdash;what of <i>these</i>?" pointing furiously
+downwards to Beatrice's property.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot explain it any further to you, Mr. Miller. I can only ask you
+to believe me."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, I do not believe you, sir&mdash;I do not believe you. Would any man in
+his senses believe that you haven't got a woman hidden in the next room?
+Do you suppose I'm a fool? I have the honour of wishing you good day,
+sir, and I am sorry I ever took the trouble of calling upon you. It is,
+of course, unnecessary for you to trouble yourself concerning my case, in
+these altered circumstances, Mr. Pryme; I beg to decline the benefit of
+your legal assistance. Good afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>The door closed upon him, and the sound of his retreating footsteps
+echoed noisily down the stairs. Herbert sank into a chair and covered his
+face with his hands. So lately hope and fortune seemed to have smiled
+upon him for one short, blissful moment, only to withdraw the sunshine
+of their faces again from him more completely, and to leave him more
+utterly in the dark than ever. Was ever man so unfortunate, and so
+unlucky?</p>
+
+<p>But for the <i>contretemps</i> concerning that wretched sunshade, he would now
+have been a hopeful, and almost a triumphant, lover. Now life was all
+altered for him!</p>
+
+<p>The door between the two rooms opened softly, and Beatrice, no longer
+brave, and defiant, and laughing as she had been when she went in, but
+white, and scared, and trembling, crept hesitatingly forth, and knelt
+down by her lover's side.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Herbert! what has happened? It was papa&mdash;I heard his voice; but I
+could not hear what you talked about, only I heard that he was angry at
+the last, when he went away. Oh! tell me, dearest, what has happened?"</p>
+
+<p>Herbert pointed bitterly to her belongings on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"What fatality made me overlook those wretched things?" he cried,
+miserably; "they have ruined us!"</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice uttered an exclamation of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa saw them&mdash;he recognized them!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not as <i>yours</i>, thank God!"</p>
+
+<p>"What then?"</p>
+
+<p>"He thinks me unworthy of you," answered the lover, in a low voice, and
+Beatrice understood. "He has forbidden me ever to think of you now; and
+he will leave you penniless if you disobey him; it is a terrible
+misfortune, my darling; but still, thank God that your good name is
+safe!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, at the expense of yours, Herbert!" cried the girl, frantically; "I
+see it all now, and, if I dared, I would confess to papa the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not think of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I dare not; but, Herbert, don't despair; I see now how wicked and how
+foolish I was to come here to-day, and what a terrible risk I have run,
+for if papa knew that it was I who was in the next room, he would never
+forgive me; we can do nothing now but wait until brighter and happier
+days; believe me, Herbert, if you will be true to me, I will be true to
+you, and I will wait for you till I am old and grey."</p>
+
+<p>He strained her passionately to his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never forget what you have done for me to-day, never!" said the
+girl, as she clung to his neck.</p>
+
+<p>And then she put on her gloves and veil, and took up the sunshade that
+had been the cause of such a direful ending to her escapade, and went her
+way. And after she was gone, Mr. Pryme, with his hands in his pockets,
+began once more to whistle, as though the events of the afternoon had
+never taken place.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>HER SON'S SECRET.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But love is such a mystery,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I cannot find it out,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For when I think I'm best resolved,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I then am most in doubt."<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Sir J. Suckling.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston sat alone in her little morning-room; as far as she knew,
+she was alone in the house; Mrs. Romer had driven into London, on the
+cares of her trousseau intent, and she believed that Maurice had gone
+with her; at all events, she had heard him state his intention of going,
+and the departing carriage had, some time since, driven away from the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>The morning-room looked on to the garden side of the house, and the
+windows were wide open; the east wind had departed, and summer had set in
+at last. Real summer, coming in with a rush when it did come, with warm
+whiffs of flower-scented wind, with flutterings of lime blossoms from the
+trees along the high brick wall, with brown bees and saffron butterflies
+hovering over the reviving flower-borders, and dragon-flies darting out
+of the shadows into the hot blinding sunshine. Summer at last; and oh,
+how welcome when it comes upon our rain-drenched and winter-pinched land.</p>
+
+<p>The gardener was bedding out the geraniums along the straight ribbon
+border. Lady Kynaston went out once to superintend his operations,
+holding up a newspaper in her hand to shield her head from the rays of
+the sun. But it was hot, and old McCloud, the Scotch gardener, was
+intelligent enough to be safely left to his own devices, so she did not
+stop out long.</p>
+
+<p>She came in again, and sat down in a low basket-chair by the window, and
+thought how wise she had been to settle herself down in the old house
+with its velvet lawns and its wide shadowy trees, instead of in the heat
+and turmoil of a London home.</p>
+
+<p>She looked a little anxious and worried to-day&mdash;she was not happy about
+her eldest son&mdash;somebody had told her last night that he was talking
+about going to Australia, and turning sheep farmer. Lady Kynaston was
+annoyed at the report; it did not strike her as seemly or right that the
+head of the Kynaston family should become a sheep farmer. Moreover, she
+knew very well that he only wanted to get himself away out of the country
+where no one would know of his story, or remind him of his trouble again.
+The man's heart was broken. He did not want to farm sheep, or to take to
+any other rational or healthful employment; he only wanted, like a sick
+animal, to creep away and hide his hurt. Little as Lady Kynaston had in
+common with her eldest son, she was sorry for him. She would have done
+what she could to help him had she known how. She had written to him only
+yesterday, begging him to come to her, but he had not replied to her
+letter.</p>
+
+<p>The Cloverdales' ball had come and gone, and Lady Kynaston had taken
+pains to ensure that an invitation might be sent to Mrs. Hazeldine and
+Miss Nevill. She had also put herself to some inconvenience in order to
+be present at it herself, but all to no purpose&mdash;Vera was not there.
+Perhaps she had had another engagement that evening.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady's promise to her youngest son was still unfulfilled. She
+half repented now that she had given him any such promise. What good was
+she to do by interceding between her son and Miss Nevill? and why was she
+to lay herself open to the chance of a rebuff from that young lady? It
+had been a senseless and quixotic idea on Maurice's part altogether.
+Young women do not take back a jilted lover because the man's mother
+advises them to do so; nor is a broken-off marriage likely to get itself
+re-settled in consequence of the interference of a third person.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady had taken out her fancy-work, a piece of crewel work such as
+is the fashion of the day. But she was not fond of work; the leaves of
+muddy-shaded greens grew but slowly under her fingers, and, truth to say,
+the occupation bored her. It was artistic, certainly, and it was
+fashionable; but Lady Kynaston would have been happier over a pair of
+cross-stitch slippers for her son, or a knitted woollen petticoat for the
+old woman at her lodge gate. All the same, she took out her crewels and
+put in a few stitches; but the afternoon was warm, there was a humming of
+insects in the summer air, a click-clicking from the gardener as he
+dropped one empty red flower-pot into the other along the edge of the
+ribbon border, a cawing of rooks from the elms over the wall, a very
+harmony of soft soothing sounds, just enough to lull worry to rest, not
+enough to scare drowsiness from one's brain.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees, it all became mixed up in a delicious confusion. The rooks,
+and the bees, and the gardener made one continuous murmur to her, like
+the swishing of summer waves upon a sandy shore, or the moaning of soft
+winds in the tree tops.</p>
+
+<p>Then the crewel work slipped off her lap, and Lady Kynaston slept.</p>
+
+<p>How long she was asleep she could not rightly have said: it might have
+been an hour, it might have been but twenty minutes; but suddenly she
+awoke with a start.</p>
+
+<p>The rustle of a woman's dress was beside her, and somebody spoke her
+name.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Kynaston! Oh, I am so sorry I have disturbed you; I did not see you
+were asleep."</p>
+
+<p>The old lady opened her eyes wide, and came back suddenly from dreamland.
+Vera Nevill stood before her.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, is it <i>you</i>? Good gracious! how did you get in? I never even heard
+the door open."</p>
+
+<p>"I came in by the front-door quite correctly," said Vera, smiling and
+reaching out her hand for a chair, "and was duly announced by the
+footman; but I had no idea you were asleep."</p>
+
+<p>"Only dozing. Sit down, my dear, sit down; I am glad to see you." And,
+somehow, all the awkwardness of the meeting between the two vanished. It
+was as though they had parted only yesterday on the most friendly terms.
+In Vera's absence, Lady Kynaston had thought hard things of her, and had
+spoken condemning words concerning her; but in her presence all this
+seemed to be altered.</p>
+
+<p>There was something so unspeakably refreshing and soothing about Vera;
+there was a certain quiet dignity in her movements, a calm serenity in
+her manner, which made it difficult to associate blame and displeasure
+with her. Faults she might have, but they could never be mean or ignoble
+ones; there was nothing base or contemptible about her. The pure, proud
+profile, the broad grave brow, the eyes that, if a trifle cold, were as
+true withal as the soul that looked out, sometimes earnestly, sometimes
+wistfully, from their shadowy depths; everything about her bade one judge
+her, not so much by her actions, which were sometimes incomprehensible,
+but by a certain standard that she herself created in the minds of
+all who knew her.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston had called her a jilt and a heartless coquette; she had
+made no secret of saying, right and left, how badly she had behaved: what
+shameful and discreditable deductions might be drawn from her conduct
+towards Sir John. Yet, the very instant she set eyes upon her, she felt
+sorry for the hard things she had said of her, and ashamed of herself
+that she should have spoken them.</p>
+
+<p>Vera drew forward a chair, and sat down near her. The dress she wore was
+white, of some clear and delicate material, softened with creamy lace; it
+had been one of kind-hearted Cissy Hazeldine's many presents to her.
+Looking at her, Lady Kynaston thought what a lovely vision of youth and
+beauty she made in the sombre quiet of the little room.</p>
+
+<p>"They tell me half the men in London have gone mad over you," were her
+first words following the train of her own thoughts, and she liked her
+visitor none the less, that world-loving little old woman, because she
+could not but acknowledge the reasonableness of the madness of which
+she accused her of being the object.</p>
+
+<p>"I care very little for the men in London, Lady Kynaston," answered Vera,
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, what <i>do</i> you care for?" asked her ladyship, with earnestness,
+and Vera understood that she was expected to state her business.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Kynaston, I have come to ask you about your son," she answered,
+simply.</p>
+
+<p>"About John?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, it is Sir John I mean," she said, quickly, a hot flush
+rising for one instant to her face, and dying away rapidly again, to
+leave her a trifle paler than before. "I know," she continued, with a
+little hesitation&mdash;"I know that I have no right to inquire&mdash;but I cannot
+forget all that is past&mdash;all his goodness and generosity to me. I shall
+never forget it; and oh, I hear such dreadful things of him, that he is
+ill&mdash;that he is talking of going to Australia. Oh, Lady Kynaston, is it
+all true?"</p>
+
+<p>She had clasped her hands together, and bent a little forward towards
+the old lady in her earnestness; she looked at her piteously, almost
+entreatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Does she love him after all?" thought Lady Kynaston, as she watched her;
+and the meaning of the whole story of her son's love seemed more
+unfathomable than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"John is neither well nor happy," she said, aloud. "I think, Vera, you
+must know the reason of it better than any of us."</p>
+
+<p>"It is my fault&mdash;my doing," cried the girl, with a ring of deep regret in
+her voice. "Yes," she added, looking away sadly out of the open window;
+"that is why I have come. Do you know that I saw him once? I don't think
+he saw me&mdash;it was in the Park one morning. He looked so aged, so
+saddened, I realized then what I had done&mdash;his face haunts me."</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, you could alter all that if you chose," said the old lady,
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden flush sprang to her face; she looked startled.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't suppose I came here to say <i>that</i>, Lady
+Kynaston?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my dear; but I have decided to say it to you. Vera, I entreat you to
+tell me the truth. What is it that stands between you and John?"</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, looking down upon her hands that lay crossed one over the
+other upon her knee.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you, Lady Kynaston," she answered, at length, in a low
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston sighed; she was a little disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>"And you cannot, marry him?"</p>
+
+<p>Vera shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it would not be right."</p>
+
+<p>The old lady bent forward and laid her hand upon her visitor's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me for asking you. Do you love some one else? is it that?"</p>
+
+<p>She bent her head silently.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any hopes of marrying the man you love?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, none&mdash;not the slightest," she said, hurriedly; "I shall never
+marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Vera, will you listen to an old woman's advice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear Lady Kynaston."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, if you cannot marry the man you love, put him out of your
+mind."</p>
+
+<p>"I must do that in any case," she said, wearily.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to me, my dear. Don't sacrifice your own life and the life of a
+man who is good and loves you dearly to a caprice of your heart. Hush!
+don't interrupt me; I dare say you don't think it a caprice; you think it
+is to last for ever. But there is no 'for ever' in these matters; the
+thing comes to us like an ordinary disease; some of us take it strongly,
+and it half kills us; some of us are only a very little ill; but we all
+get over it. There is a pain that goes right through one's heart: it is
+worse to bear than any physical suffering: but, thank God, that pain
+always wears itself out. My dear, I, who speak to you, have felt it, and
+I tell you that no man is worth it. You can cure yourself of it if you
+will; and the remedy is work and change of the conditions of your life.
+You don't think I look very much like a blighted being, do you? and yet I
+did not marry the man I loved. I could not; he was poor, and my parents
+would not allow it. I thought I should die, but you see I did not. I took
+up my life bravely, and I married a most estimable man; I lived an active
+and healthy life, so that by degrees it became a happy one. Now, Vera,
+why should you not do the same? Your people have a right to expect that
+you should marry; they cannot afford to support you for always. Because
+you are disappointed in one thing, why are you not to make the best you
+can of your life?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do mean to marry&mdash;in time," said Vera, brokenly, with tears in her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Then why not marry John?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a minute's silence. Was it possible that Lady Kynaston did not
+know? Vera asked herself. Was it possible that she could, in cold blood,
+advise her to marry one son whilst the other one loved her! That was what
+was so terrible to her mind. To marry was simple enough, but to marry Sir
+John Kynaston! She thought of what such an action might bring upon them
+all. The daily meetings, the struggles with temptation, the awful
+tampering with deadly sin. Could any one so constituted as she was walk
+deliberately and with open eyes into such a situation?</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do it," she said, wringing her hands together; "don't ask me;
+I cannot do it!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Kynaston got up, and went and stood by her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, I entreat you not to let any false pride stand in the way of
+this. Do not imagine that I ask you to do anything that would wound your
+vanity, or humble you in your own eyes. It would be so easy for me to
+arrange a meeting between you and John; it shall all come about simply
+and naturally. As soon as he sees you again, he will speak to you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not that, it is not that!" she murmured, distractedly; but Lady
+Kynaston went on as if she had not heard her.</p>
+
+<p>"You must know that I should not plead like this with you if I were not
+deeply concerned. For myself, I had sooner that John remained unmarried.
+I had sooner that Maurice's children came into Kynaston. It is wrong, I
+know, but it is the case, because Maurice is my favourite. But when we
+hear of John shutting himself up, of his refusing to see any of his
+friends, and of his talking of going to Australia, why, then we all feel
+that it is you only who can help us; that is why I have promised Maurice
+to plead with you."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"You promised Maurice! It is <i>Maurice</i> who wants me to marry his
+brother." She turned very pale.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly he does. You don't suppose Maurice likes to see his brother so
+unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>The darkened room, the spindle-legged furniture, Lady Kynaston's little
+figure, in her black dress and soft white tulle cap, the bright garden
+outside, the belt of trees beyond the lawn, all swam together before her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a long breath; then she rose slowly from her place, a little
+unsteadily, perhaps, and walked across the Persian rug to the empty
+fireplace. She stood there half a minute leaning with both hands upon the
+mantelshelf, her head bent forwards.</p>
+
+<p><i>Maurice wished it!</i> To him, then, there were no fears, and no dangers.
+He could look forward calmly to meeting her constantly as his brother's
+wife; it would be nothing to him, that temptation that she dreaded so
+much; nothing that an abyss which death itself could never bridge over
+would be between them to all eternity!</p>
+
+<p>And then the woman's pride, without which, God help us, so many of us
+would break our hearts and die, came to her aid.</p>
+
+<p>Very well, then, if he was strong, she would learn to be strong too;
+if the danger to him was so slight that he could contemplate it with
+calmness and with indifference, then she, too, would show him that it was
+nothing to her. Only, then, what a poor thing was this love of his! And
+surely the man she had loved so fatally was not Maurice Kynaston at all,
+but only some creature of her own imagination, whom she had invested with
+things that the man himself had not lost because he had never possessed
+them.</p>
+
+<p>If this was so, then why, indeed, listen to the voice of her heart when
+everything urged her to stifle it? Why not make Sir John Kynaston happy
+and herself prosperous and rich, as everybody round her seemed to
+consider it her duty to do?</p>
+
+<p>It passed rapidly through her mind what a fine place Kynaston was; how
+dear everything that wealth can bring had always been to her, what a wise
+and prudent match it was in every way for her, and what a good indulgent
+husband Sir John would be.</p>
+
+<p>Who in the wide world would blame her for going back to him? Would not
+everybody, on the contrary, praise her for reconsidering her folly, and
+for becoming Lady Kynaston, of Kynaston? The errors of the successful
+in this world's race are leniently treated; it is only when we are
+unfortunate and our lives become failures that our friends turn their
+backs upon our misdeeds in righteous condemnation.</p>
+
+<p>"So long as thou doest well unto thyself men will speak good of thee."</p>
+
+<p>Surely, surely, it was the best and the wisest thing she could do. And
+yet even at that moment Eustace Daintree's pale, earnest face came for
+one instant before her. What side in all this would he take&mdash;he of the
+pure heart, of the stainless life? If he knew all, what would he say?</p>
+
+<p>Pooh! he was a dreamer&mdash;an idealist, a man of impossible aims; his
+theories, indeed, were beautiful, but impracticable. Vera knew that he
+expected better things of her; but she had striven to be what he would
+have desired, and if she had failed, was it her fault? was it not rather
+the fault of the world and the generation in which her life had been
+cast?</p>
+
+<p>She had struggled, and she had failed; henceforth let her life be as fate
+should ordain for her.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it you wish me to say, Lady Kynaston?" she asked, turning
+suddenly towards Maurice's mother.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, I only want you to say that if John asks you again to be
+his wife, you will consent, or say only, if you like it better, that you
+will agree to meet him here. There shall be nothing unpleasant for you; I
+will write to him and settle everything."</p>
+
+<p>"If you write to him, I will come," she said, briefly, and then Lady
+Kynaston came up to her and kissed her, taking her hands within her own,
+and drawing her to her with motherly tenderness. "My dear, everybody will
+think well of you for this."</p>
+
+<p>And the words ran so nearly in the current of her own bitter thoughts
+that Vera laughed, shortly and disdainfully, a low laugh of scorn at the
+world, whose mandates she was prepared to obey, even though she despised
+herself for doing so.</p>
+
+<p>"You will be glad by-and-by that you were so sensible and so reasonable,"
+said Lady Kynaston.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;I dare say I shall be glad by-and-by; and now I am going, dear Lady
+Kynaston; I have a hansom waiting all this time, and Mrs. Hazeldine will
+be wondering what has become of me."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment they both heard the sound of a carriage driving up to the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be some visitors," said Lady Kynaston; "wait a minute, or you
+will meet them in the hall. Oh, stay, go through this door into the
+dining-room, and you can get through the dining-room window by the garden
+round to the front of the house; I dare say you would rather not meet
+anybody&mdash;you might know them."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you&mdash;yes, I should much prefer to get away quickly and quietly&mdash;I
+will go through the dining-room; do not come with me, I can easily find
+my way."</p>
+
+<p>She gathered up her gloves and her veil and opened the door which
+communicated between the morning-room and the dining-room. She heard the
+chatter of women's voices and the fluttering of women's garments in the
+hall; it seemed as though they were about to be ushered into the room she
+was leaving.</p>
+
+<p>She did not want to be seen; besides, she wanted to get away quickly and
+return to London. She closed the morning-room door behind her, and took a
+couple of steps across the dining-room towards the windows.</p>
+
+<p>Then she stopped suddenly short; Maurice sat before her at the table. He
+lifted his eyes and looked at her; he did not seem surprised to see her,
+but there was a whole world of grief and despair in his face. It was as
+though he had lived through half a lifetime since she had last seen him.</p>
+
+<p>Pride, anger, wounded affection, all died away within her&mdash;only the woman
+was left, the woman who loved him. Little by little she saw him only
+through the blinding mist of her own tears.</p>
+
+<p>Not one single word was spoken between them. What was there that they
+could say to each other? Then suddenly she turned away, and went swiftly
+back into the room she had just left, closing the door behind her.</p>
+
+<p>It was empty. Lady Kynaston was gone. Vera stooped over the
+writing-table, and, taking up a sheet of paper, she wrote in pencil:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do not write to Sir John&mdash;it is beyond my strength&mdash;forgive me and
+forget me. <span class="smcap">Vera.</span>" And then she went out through the other door,
+and got herself away from the place in her hansom.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty minutes later, when her bevy of chattering visitors had left her,
+Lady Kynaston came back into her morning-room and found the little pencil
+note left upon her writing-table. Wondering, perplexed and puzzled beyond
+measure, she turned it over and over in her fingers.</p>
+
+<p>What had happened? Why had Vera so suddenly altered her mind again? What
+had influenced her? Half by accident, half, perhaps, with an instinct of
+what was the truth, she softly opened the door of communication between
+the morning-room and the dining-room, opened it for one instant, and then
+drew back again, scared and shocked, closing it quickly and noiselessly.
+What she had seen in the room was this&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Maurice, half stretched across the table, his face downwards upon his
+arm, whilst those tearless, voiceless sobs, which are so terrible to
+witness in a man, sobs which are the gasps of a despairing heart, shook
+the strong broad shoulders and the down-bent head that was hidden from
+her sight.</p>
+
+<p>And then the mother knew at last the secret of her son's heart. It was
+Vera whom Maurice loved.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>ST. PAUL'S, KNIGHTSBRIDGE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Hide in thy bosom, poor unfortunate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That love which is thy torture and thy crime,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or cry aloud to those departed hosts<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of ghostly lovers! can they be more deaf<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To thy disaster than the living world?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who, with a careless smile, will note the pain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Caused by thy foolish, self-inflicted wound.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Violet Fane</span>, "Denzil Place."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Upon the steps of the Charing Cross Hotel stood, one morning in June, a
+little French gentleman buttoning his lavender gloves. He wore a glossy
+new hat, a frock-coat, and a flower in his button-hole; he had altogether
+a smart and jaunty appearance.</p>
+
+<p>He hailed a passing hansom and jumped into it, taking care as he did so
+to avoid brushing against the muddy wheel, lest he should tarnish the
+glories of his light-coloured trousers. Monsieur D'Arblet was more than
+usually particular about his appearance this morning. He said to himself,
+with a chuckle, as he was driven west-ward, that he was on his way to win
+a bride, and a rich bride, too. It behoved him to be careful of his outer
+man on such an occasion.</p>
+
+<p>He had heard of Mr. Harlowe's death and of his grand-daughter's good
+fortune when he was at Constantinople, for he had friends in London who
+kept him <i>au courant</i> with the gossip of society, and he had straightway
+made his preparations to return to England. He had not hurried himself,
+however, for what he had not heard of was that clause in the old man's
+will which made his grand-daughter's marriage within two months the <i>sine
+qu&acirc; non</i> of her inheriting his fortune. Such an idea as that had never
+come into Monsieur D'Arblet's head; he had no conception but that he
+should be in plenty of time.</p>
+
+<p>When he got to the house in Princes Gate he found it shut up. This,
+however, did not disconcert him, it was no more than he expected. After
+a considerable amount of ringing at both bells, there was a grating sound
+within as of the unfastening of bolts and chains, and an elderly woman,
+evidently fresh from her labours over the scouring of the kitchen grate,
+appeared at the door, opening it just a couple of inches, as though she
+dreaded the invasion of a gang of housebreakers.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you please tell me where Mrs. Romer is now living?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman grinned. "She has been living at Walpole Lodge, at Kew&mdash;Lady
+Kynaston's, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you;" and he was preparing to re-enter his hansom.</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't think you will see her to-day, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" turning half-round again.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Mrs. Romer's wedding-day."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>That elderly female, who had been at one time a housemaid in Mr.
+Harlowe's household, confided afterwards to her intimate friend, the
+kitchenmaid next door, that she was so frightened at the way that
+foreign-looking gentleman shouted at her, that she felt as if she should
+have dropped. "Indeed, my dear, I was forced to go down and get a drop of
+whisky the very instant he was gone, I felt so fluttered, like."</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur Le Vicomte turned round to her, with his foot midway between the
+pavement and the step of the hansom, and shouted at her again.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What</i> did you say it was, woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Mrs. Romer's wedding-day, to be sure, sir; and no such wonder after
+all, I should say; and a lovely morning for the wedding it be, too."</p>
+
+<p>Lucien D'Arblet put his hand vaguely up to his head, as though he had
+received a blow; she had escaped him, then, after all.</p>
+
+<p>"So soon after the old man's death," he murmured, half aloud; "who could
+have expected it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, and soon it is, as you say," replied the ancient
+ex-housemaid, who had caught the remark; "but people do say as how Mr.
+Harlowe, my late master, wished it so, and of course Mrs. Romer, she were
+quite ready, so to speak, for the Captain had been a-courting her for
+ever so long, as we who lived in the house could have told."</p>
+
+<p>The vicomte was fumbling at his breast-coat pocket, his face was as
+yellow as the rose in his button-hole.</p>
+
+<p>"Where was the wedding to be? At Kew?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; at Saint Paul's church, in Wilton Crescent. Mrs. Romer would
+have it so, because that's the place of worship she used to go to when
+she lived here. You'd be in time to see them married now, sir, if you was
+to look sharp; it was to be at half-past eleven, and it's not that yet;
+my niece and a young friend has just started a-foot to go there. I let
+her go, because she'd never seen a grand wedding. I'd like to have gone
+myself, but, in course, we couldn't both be out of the house&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman was listening no longer; he had sprung into his hansom.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive to Saint Paul's, Knightsbridge, as fast as your horse can go," he
+called out to the cabman. "I might even now be in time; it would be a
+<i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i>," he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>Round the door of Saint Paul's church a crowd had gathered, waiting to
+see the bridal party come out; there was a strip of red cloth across the
+pavement, and a great many carriages were standing down the street; big
+footmen were lounging about, chatting amicably together; a knot of
+decently-dressed women were pressing up as close to the porch as the
+official personage, with a red collar on his coat and gold lace on his
+hat, would allow them to go; and an indiscriminate collection of those
+chance passers-by who never seem to be in any hurry, or to have anything
+better to do than to stand and stare at any excitement, great or small,
+that they may meet on their road, were blocking up the pavement on either
+side of the red cloth carpeting.</p>
+
+<p>Two ladies came walking along from the direction of the Park.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a wedding going on; do let us go in and see it, Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cissy, I detest looking at people being married; it always makes
+me low-spirited."</p>
+
+<p>"And I love it. I always get such hints for dresses from a wedding. I'd
+go anywhere to see anybody married. I've been to the Jewish synagogue, to
+Spurgeon's tabernacle, and to the pro-cathedral, all in one week, before
+now just to see weddings."</p>
+
+<p>"There must be a sameness about the performances. Don't you get sick of
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never. I wonder whose wedding it is; there must be thirty carriages
+waiting. I'll ask one of these big footmen. Whose wedding is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Kynaston's, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I used to know him once; he is such a handsome fellow. Come along,
+Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"Cissy, I <i>cannot</i> come."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, Vera; don't be so foolish; make haste, or we shan't get in."</p>
+
+<p>Somebody just then dashed up in a hansom, and came hurrying up behind
+them. Somehow or other, what with Mrs. Hazeldine dragging her by the arm,
+and an excited-looking gentleman pushing his way through the crowd behind
+her, Vera got swept on into the church.</p>
+
+<p>"You are very late, ladies," whispered the pew-opener, who supposed them
+to belong to the wedding guests; "it is nearly over. You had better take
+these seats in this pew; you will see them come out well from here." And
+she evidently considered them to be all one party, for she ushered them
+all three into a pew; first, Mrs. Hazeldine, then Vera, and next to her
+the little foreign-looking gentleman who had bustled up so hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>It was an awful thing to have happened to Vera that she should have been
+thus entrapped by a mere accident into being present at Maurice's
+wedding; and yet, when she was once inside the church, she felt not
+altogether sorry for it.</p>
+
+<p>"I can at least see the last of him, and pray that he may be happy," she
+said to herself, as she sank on her knees in the shelter of the pew, and
+buried her face in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>The church was crowded, and yet the wedding itself was not a particularly
+attractive one, for, owing to the fact that the bride was a widow, there
+was, of course, no bevy of bridesmaids in attendance in diaphanous
+raiment. Instead of these, however, there was a great concourse of the
+best-dressed women in London, all standing in rows round the upper end of
+the nave; and there was a little old lady, in brown satin and point lace,
+who stood out conspicuously detached from the other groups, who bent her
+head solemnly over the great bouquet of exotics in her hands, and prayed
+within herself, with a passionate fervour such as no other soul present
+could pray, save only the pale, beautiful girl on her knees, far away
+down at the further end of the church. Surely, if God ever gave happiness
+to one of his creatures because another prayed for it, Maurice Kynaston,
+with the prayers of those two women being offered up for him, would have
+been a happy man.</p>
+
+<p>And the mother, by this time, knew that it was all a mistake&mdash;a mistake,
+alas, which she, in her blindness, had fostered.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder that she trembled as she prayed.</p>
+
+<p>The service, that portion of it which makes two people man and wife,
+was over; the clergyman was reading the final exhortation to the
+newly-married pair.</p>
+
+<p>They stood together close to the altar rails. The bride was in a pale
+lavender satin, covered with lace, which spread far away behind her
+across the tesselated pavement. The bridegroom stood by her side, erect
+and handsome, but pale and stern, and with a far-away look in his eyes
+that would have made any one fancy, had any one been near enough or
+attentive enough to remark it, that he was only an indifferent spectator
+of the scene, in no way interested in what was going on. He looked as if
+he were thinking of something else.</p>
+
+<p>He was thinking of something else. He was thinking of a railway carriage,
+of a train rushing onwards through a fog-blotted landscape, and of two
+arms, warm and soft, cast up round his neck, and a trembling, passionate
+voice, ever crying in his ears&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"While you live I will never marry another man."</p>
+
+<p>That was what the bridegroom was thinking about.</p>
+
+<p>As to the bride, she was debating to herself whether she should have the
+body of her wedding-dress cut V or square when she left it with her
+dressmaker to be altered into a dinner-dress.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the clergyman, who mumbled his words slightly, and whose
+glasses kept on tumbling off his nose, waded through the several duties
+of husbands towards their wives, and of wives towards their husbands, as
+expounded by Scripture, in a monotonous undertone, until, to the great
+relief of the weary guests, the ceremony at last came to an end.</p>
+
+<p>Then the best man, Sir John, who stood behind his brother, looking, if
+possible, more like a mute at a funeral even than the bridegroom himself,
+stepped forward out of the shadow. The new-married couple went into the
+vestry, followed by Sir John, his mother, and a select few, upon which
+the door was closed. All the rest of the company then began to chatter
+in audible whispers together; they fidgeted backwards and forwards,
+from one pew to the other. There were jokes, and smiles, and nods, and
+hand-shakings between the different members of the wedding party. All in
+a low and decorous undertone, of course, but still there was a distinct
+impression upon every one that all the religious part of the business
+being well got over, they were free to be jolly about it now, and to
+enjoy themselves as much as circumstances would admit of.</p>
+
+<p>All at once there was a sudden hush, everybody scuffled back into their
+places. The best man put his nose out of the vestry door, and the
+"Wedding March" struck up. Then came a procession of chorister boys down
+the church, each bearing a small bouquet of fern and white flowers. They
+ranged themselves on either side of the porch, and the bride and
+bridegroom came down the aisle alone.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Monsieur D'Arblet, leaning forward with the rest to see
+them pass, caught sight of the face of the girl who stood by his side.</p>
+
+<p>She was pale as death; a look as of the horror of despair was in her
+eyes, her teeth were set, her hands were clenched together as one who has
+to impose a terrible and dreadful task upon herself. Nobody in all that
+gaily-dressed chattering crowd noticed her, for were not all eyes fixed
+upon the bride, the queen of the day? Nobody save the man who stood by
+her side. Only he saw that fixed white look of despair, only he heard the
+long shuddering sigh that burst from her pale lips as the bridegroom
+went by. Monsieur D'Arblet said, to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"This woman loves Monsieur le Capitaine! <i>Bon!</i> Two are better than one;
+we will avenge ourselves together, my beautiful incognita."</p>
+
+<p>And then he looked sharply at her companion, and found that her face was
+familiar to him. Surely he had dined at that woman's house once. Oh, yes!
+to be sure, it was that insufferable little chatterbox, Mrs. Hazeldine.
+He remembered all about her now.</p>
+
+<p>There was a good deal of pushing and cramming at the doorway. By the time
+Vera could get out of the stifling heat of the crowded church most of the
+wedding party had driven off, and the rest were clamouring wildly for
+their carriages; she herself had got separated from her companion, and
+when she could rejoin her in the little gravelled yard outside, she found
+her shaking hands with effusion with the foreign-looking gentleman who
+had sat next her in the church, but whom, truth to say, she had hardly
+noticed.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me present to you my friend," said Cissy. "Miss Nevill, Monsieur
+D'Arblet&mdash;you will walk with us as far as the park, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be enchanted, Mrs. Hazeldine."</p>
+
+<p>"And wasn't it a pretty wedding," continued Mrs. Hazeldine, rapturously,
+as they all three walked away together down the shady side of the street;
+"so remarkably pretty considering that there were no bridesmaids; but
+Mrs. Romer is so graceful, and dresses so well. I don't visit her myself,
+you know; but of course I know her by sight. One knows everybody by sight
+in London; it's rather embarrassing sometimes, because one is tempted to
+bow to people one doesn't visit, or else one fancies one ought not to bow
+to somebody one does. I've made some dreadfully stupid mistakes myself
+sometimes. Did you notice the rose point on that old lady's brown satin,
+Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"That was Lady Kynaston."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, was it? By the way, of course, you must know some of the Kynastons,
+as they come from your part of the world. I wonder they didn't ask you to
+the wedding."</p>
+
+<p>Vera murmured something unintelligible. Monsieur D'Arblet looked at her
+sharply. He saw that she had in no way recovered her agitation yet, and
+that she could hardly bear her companion's brainless chatter over this
+wedding.</p>
+
+<p>"That has been no ordinary love affair," said this astute Frenchman to
+himself. "I must decidedly cultivate this young lady's acquaintance, for
+I mean to pay you out well yet, ma belle H&eacute;l&egrave;ne."</p>
+
+<p>"How fortunate it was we happened to be passing just as it was going on.
+I wouldn't have missed seeing that lovely lavender satin the bride wore
+for worlds; did you notice the cut of the jacket front, Vera; it was
+something new; she looked as happy as possible too. I daresay her first
+marriage was a <i>coup manqu&eacute;</i>; they generally are when women marry again."</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we take these three chairs in the shade," suggested Monsieur
+D'Arblet, cutting short, unceremoniously the string of her remarks, which
+apparently were no more soothing to himself than to Miss Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>They sat down, and for the space of half an hour Monsieur D'Arblet
+proceeded to make himself politely agreeable to Miss Nevill, and he
+succeeded so well in amusing her by his conversation, that by the time
+they all got up to go the natural bloom had returned to her cheeks, and
+she was talking to him quite easily and pleasantly, as though no
+catastrophe in her life had happened but an hour ago.</p>
+
+<p>"You will come back with us to lunch, Monsieur D'Arblet?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be delighted, madame."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will excuse me, Cissy, I am not going to lunch with you to-day,"
+said Vera.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear! where are you going, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have a visit to pay&mdash;an engagement, I mean&mdash;in&mdash;in Cadogan Place. I
+will be home very soon, in time for your drive, if you don't mind my
+leaving you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course, do as you like, dear."</p>
+
+<p>Lucien D'Arblet was annoyed at her defection, but, of course, having
+accepted Mrs. Hazeldine's invitation, there was nothing for it but to go
+on with her; so he swallowed his discomfiture as best he could, and
+proceeded to make himself agreeable to his hostess.</p>
+
+<p>As to Vera, she turned away and retraced her steps slowly towards St.
+Paul's Church. It was a foolish romantic fancy, she could not tell what
+impelled her to it, but she felt as though she must go back there once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>The church was not closed. She pushed open the swing-door and went in. It
+was all hushed and silent and empty. Where so lately the gay throng of
+well-dressed men and women had passed in and out, chattering, smiling,
+nodding&mdash;displaying their radiant toilettes one against the other, there
+were only now the dark, empty rows of pews, and the bent figure of one
+shabbily-dressed old woman gathering together the prayer-books and
+hymn-books that had been tumbled out of their places in the scuffle, and
+picking up morsels of torn finery that had dropped about along the nave.</p>
+
+<p>Vera passed by her and went up into the chancel. She stood where Maurice
+had stood by the altar rails. A soft, subdued light came streaming in
+through the coloured glass window; a bird was chirping high up somewhere
+among the oak rafters of the roof, the roar of the street without was
+muffled and deadened; the old woman slammed-to the door of a pew, the
+echo rang with a hollow sound through the empty building, and her
+departing footsteps shuffled away down the aisle into silence.</p>
+
+<p>Vera lifted her eyes; great tears welled down slowly, one by one, over
+her cheeks&mdash;burning, blistering tears, such as, thank God, one sheds but
+once or twice in a lifetime&mdash;that seem to rend our very hearts as they
+rise.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she sank down upon her knees and prayed&mdash;prayed for him, that
+he might be happy and forget her, but most of all for herself, that she
+might school her rebellious heart to patience, and her wild passion of
+misery into peace and submission.</p>
+
+<p>And by degrees the tempest within her was hushed. Then, ere she rose from
+her knees, something lying on the ground, within a yard of where she
+knelt, caught her eye. It was a little Russia-leather letter-case. She
+recognized it instantly; she had often seen Maurice take it out of his
+pocket.</p>
+
+<p>She caught at it hungrily and eagerly, as a miser clutches a
+treasure-trove, pressing it wildly to her bosom, and covering it with
+passionate kisses. Dear little shabby case, that had been so near his
+heart; that his hand, perchance, only on hour ago had touched. Could
+anything on earth be more priceless to her than this worn and faded
+object!</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to be quite empty. It had fallen evidently from his pocket
+during the service. If he ever missed it, there was nothing in it to
+lose; and now it was hers, hers by every right; she would never part with
+it, never. It was all she had of him; the one single thing he had touched
+which she possessed.</p>
+
+<p>She rose hurriedly. She was in haste now to be gone with her treasure,
+lest any one should wrest it from her. She carried it down the church
+with a guilty delight, kissing it more than once as she went. And then,
+as she opened the church door, some one ran up the steps outside, and she
+stood face to face with Sir John Kynaston.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RUSSIA-LEATHER CASE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Never again," so speaketh one forsaken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the blank desolate passion of despair:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Never again shall the bright dream I cherished<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Delude my heart, for bitter truth is there:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Angel Hope shall still my cruel pain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Never again, my heart&mdash;never again!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">A. Procter.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>"Vera!"</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Kynaston fell back a step or two and turned very white.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do?" said Vera, quietly, and put out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>They stood in the open air. There was a carriage passing, some idle
+cabmen on the stand with nothing to do but to stare at them, a gaping
+nursery-maid and her charges at the gate. Whatever people may feel on
+suddenly running against each other after a deadly quarrel, or a
+heart-rending separation, or after a long interval of heart-burnings and
+misunderstandings, there are always the externals of life to be observed.
+It is difficult to rush into the tragedy of one's existence at a gulp; it
+is safer to shake hands and say, "How do you do?"</p>
+
+<p>That is what Vera felt, and that was what these two people did. Sir John
+took her proffered hand, and responded to her stereotyped greeting. By
+the time he had done so he had recovered his presence of mind.</p>
+
+<p>"What an odd thing to meet you at the door of this church," he said,
+rather nervously. "Do you know that my brother was married here this
+morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I was in the church."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you? How glad I am I did not know it," almost involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little pause; then Vera asked him if he was going to Walpole
+Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>"Eventually; but I have come back here to look for something. My brother
+has lost a little Russia-leather case; he thinks he may have dropped it
+in the church; there were two ten-pound notes in it. I am going in to
+look for it. Why, what is that in your hand? I believe that is the very
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;just picked it up," stammered Vera. She began searching in the
+pockets of the case. "I did not think there was anything in it. Yes, here
+are the notes, quite safe."</p>
+
+<p>She took them out and gave them to him. He held out his hand mechanically
+for the case also.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you; you have saved me the trouble of looking for it. I will take
+it back to him at once."</p>
+
+<p>But she could not part with her treasure; it was all she had got of him.</p>
+
+<p>"The letter-case is very shabby," she said, crimsoning with a painful
+confusion. "I do not think he can want it at all; it is quite worn out."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John looked at her with a slight surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"It can be very little use to him. One likes sometimes to have a little
+remembrance of those&mdash;of people&mdash;one has known; he would not mind my
+keeping it, I think. Tell him&mdash;tell him I asked for it." The tears were
+very near her voice; she could scarcely keep them back out of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>John Kynaston dropped his hand, and Vera slipped the little case quickly
+into her pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind walking a little way with me, Vera?" he said, gently and
+very gravely.</p>
+
+<p>She drew down her veil, and went with him in silence. They had walked
+half-way down Wilton Crescent before he spoke to her again; then he
+turned towards her, and looked at her earnestly and sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you go back again into the church, Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wanted to think quietly a little," she murmured. There was another
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>"So <i>that</i> is what parted us!" he exclaimed, with a sudden bitterness, at
+length.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, startled and pale.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" she stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, child! I see it all now. How blind I have been. Ah, why did you not
+trust me, love? Why did you fear to tell me your secret? Do you not think
+that I, who would have laid down my life for you to make you happy, do
+you not suppose I would have striven to make your path smooth for you?"</p>
+
+<p>She could not answer him; the kind words, the tender voice, were too much
+for her. Her tears fell fast and silently.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he said, turning to her almost roughly, "tell me the truth.
+Has he ill-treated you, this brother of mine, who stole you from me, and
+then has left you desolate?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; do not say that; it was never his fault at all, only mine; and
+he was always bound to her. He has been everything that is good and loyal
+and true to you and to her; it has been only a miserable mistake, and now
+it is over. Yes, thank God, it is over; never speak of it again. He was
+never false to you; only I was false. But it is ended."</p>
+
+<p>They were walking round Belgrave Square by this time, not near the
+houses, but round the square garden in the middle. All recollection of
+his brother's marriage, of the wedding breakfast at Walpole Lodge, of the
+speech the best man would be expected to make, had gone clean out of his
+head; he thought of nothing but Vera and of the revelation concerning her
+that had just come to him. It was the quiet hour of the day; there were
+very few people about; everybody was indoors eating heavy luncheons,
+with sunblinds drawn down to keep out the heat. They were almost as much
+alone as in a country lane in Meadowshire.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do with yourself?" he said to her, presently.
+"What use are you going to make of your life?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," she answered, drearily; "I suppose I shall go back to
+Sutton. Perhaps I shall marry."</p>
+
+<p>"But not me?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him piteously.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen, child," he said, eagerly. "If I were to go away for a year, and
+then come back to you, how would it be? Oh, my darling! I love you so
+deeply that I could even be content to do with but half your heart, so
+that I could win your sweet self. I would exact nothing from you, love,
+no more than what you could give me freely. But I would love you so well,
+and make your life so sweet and pleasant to you, that in time, perhaps,
+you would forget the old sorrow, and learn to be happy, with a quiet kind
+of happiness, with me; I would ask for no more. Look, child, I have
+grieved sorely for you; I have sat down and wept, and mourned for you as
+though I had no strength or life left in me. But now I am ashamed of my
+weakness, for it is unworthy of <i>you</i>. I am going away abroad, across the
+world, I care not where, so long as I can be up and doing, and forget the
+pain at my heart. Vera, tell me that I may come back to you in a year.
+Think with what fresh life and courage I should go if I had but that hope
+before my eyes. In a year's time your pain will be less; you will have
+forgotten many things; you will be content, perhaps, to come to me,
+knowing that I will never reproach you with the past, nor expect more
+than you can give me in the future. Vera, let me come back and claim you
+in a year!"</p>
+
+<p>How strange it was that the chance of marrying this man was perpetually
+being presented to her. Never, perhaps, had the temptation been stronger
+to her than it was now. He had divined her secret; there would be no
+concealment between them; he would ask her for no love it was not in her
+power to give; he would be content with her as she was, and he would love
+her, and worship her, and surround her with everything that could make
+her life pleasant and easy for her. Could a man offer more? Oh! why could
+she not take him at his word, and give him the hope he craved for?</p>
+
+<p>Alas! for Vera; she had eaten too deeply of the knowledge of good and
+evil&mdash;that worldly wisdom in whose strength she had started in life's
+race, and in the possession of which she had once deemed herself so
+strong&mdash;so absolutely invulnerable to the things that pierce and wound
+weaker woman&mdash;this was gone from her. The baser part of her nature,
+wherewith she would so gladly have been content, was uppermost no longer;
+her heart had triumphed over her head, and, with a woman of strong
+character, this is generally only done at the expense of her happiness.</p>
+
+<p>To marry Sir John Kynaston, to be lapped in luxury, to receive all the
+good things of this world at his hands, and all the while to love his
+brother with a guilty love, this was no longer possible to Vera Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do it; do not ask me," she said, distractedly. "Your goodness
+to me half breaks my heart; but it cannot be."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not, child? In a year so much may be altered."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not alter."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but, even so, you might learn to be happy with me."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not that; you do not understand. I daresay I could be happy
+enough; that is not why I cannot marry you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I dare not</i>," she said, in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>He drew in his breath. "Ah!" he said, between his teeth, "is it so bad
+with you as that?"</p>
+
+<p>She bent her head in silent assent.</p>
+
+<p>"That is hard," he said, almost to himself, looking gloomily before him.
+Presently he spoke again. "Thank you, Vera," he said, rather brokenly.
+"You are a brave woman and a true one. Many would have taken my all,
+and given me back only deception and falseness. But you are incapable of
+that, and&mdash;and you fear your own strength; is that it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whilst he lives," she said, with a sudden burst of passion, "I can know
+no safety. Never to see his face again can be my only safeguard, and with
+you I could never be safe. Why, even to bear your name would be to scorch
+my heart every time I was addressed by it. Forgive me, John," turning to
+him with a sudden penitence, "I should not have pained you by saying
+these things; you who have been so infinitely good to me. Go your way
+across the world, and forget me. Ah! have I not been a curse to every one
+who bears the name of Kynaston?"</p>
+
+<p>He was silent from very pity. Vera was no longer to him the goddess of
+his imagination; the one pure and peerless woman, above all other women,
+such as he had once fancied her to be. But surely she was dearer to him
+now, in all her weakness and her suffering, than she had ever been on
+that lofty pedestal of perfection upon which he had once lifted her.</p>
+
+<p>He pitied her so much, and yet he could not help her; her malady was past
+remedy. And, as she had told him, it was no one's fault&mdash;it was only a
+miserable mistake. He had never had her heart&mdash;he saw it plainly now.
+Many little things in the past, which he had scarcely remembered at the
+time, came back to his memory&mdash;little details of that week at Shadonake,
+when Maurice had lived in the same house with her, whilst he had only
+gone over daily to see her. Always, in those days, Maurice had been by
+her side, and Vera had been dreamily happy, with that fixed look of
+content with which the presence of the man she loves best beautifies and
+poetises a woman's face. Sir John was not a very observant man; but now,
+after it was all over, these things came back to him. The night of the
+ball, Mrs. Romer's mysterious hints, and his own vague disquietude at her
+words; later on Maurice's reasonless refusal to be present at his
+wedding, and Vera's startled face of dismay when he had asked her to go
+and plead with him to stay for it.</p>
+
+<p>They had struggled against their hearts, it was clear, these poor lovers,
+whose lives were both tied up and bound before ever they had met each
+other. But nature had been too strong for them; and the woman, at least,
+had torn herself free from the chains that had become insupportable to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>They walked on silently, side by side, round the square. Some girls were
+playing at lawn-tennis within the garden. There was an occasional shout
+or a ringing laugh from their fresh young voices. A footman was walking
+along the pavement opposite, with two fat pugs and a white Spitz in the
+last stage of obesity in tow, which it was his melancholy duty to parade
+daily up and down for their mid-day airing. An occasional hansom dashing
+quickly by broke the stillness of the "empty" hour. Years and years
+afterwards every detail of the scene came back to his memory with the
+distinctness of a photograph when he passed once more through the square.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been no curse to me, Vera," he said, presently, breaking the
+silence. "Do not reproach yourself; it is I who was a madman to deem that
+I could win your love. Child, we are both sufferers; but time heals most
+things, and we must learn to wait and be patient. Will you ever marry,
+Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. Perhaps I may be obliged to. It might be better for me. I
+cannot say. Don't speak of it. Why, is there nothing else for a woman to
+do but to marry? John, it must be late. Ought you not to go back&mdash;to&mdash;to
+your mother's?"</p>
+
+<p>Insensibly, she resumed a lighter manner. On that other subject there was
+nothing left to be said. She had had her last chance of becoming John
+Kynaston's wife. After what she had said to him, she knew he would never
+ask her again. That chapter in her life was closed for ever.</p>
+
+<p>They parted, unromantically enough, in front of St. George's Hospital. He
+called a hansom for her, and stood holding her hand, one moment longer,
+possibly, than was strictly necessary, looking intently into her face as
+he did so.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you think of me sometimes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, surely."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, John. God bless you wherever you may go."</p>
+
+<p>She got into her hansom, and he told the cabman where to drive her; then
+he lifted his hat to her with grave politeness, and walked away in the
+opposite direction. It was a common-place enough parting, and yet these
+two never saw each other's faces again in this world.</p>
+
+<p>So it is with our lives. Some one or other who has been a part of our
+very existence for a space goes his way one day, and we see him no more.
+For a little while our hearts ache, and we shed tears in secret for him
+who is gone, but by-and-by we get to understand that he is part of our
+past, never, to be recalled, and after a while we get used to his
+absence; we think of him less and less, and the death of him, who was
+once bound up in our very lives, strikes us only with a mild surprise,
+hardly even tinged with a passing melancholy.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor old so-and-so, he is dead," we say. "What a time it is since we
+met," and then we go our way and think of him no more.</p>
+
+<p>But Vera knew that, in all human probability, she would never see him
+again, this man, who had once so nearly been her husband. It was another
+link of her past life severed. It saddened her, but she knew it was
+inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>The little letter-case, at all events, was safely hers; and for many a
+night Vera slept with it under her pillow.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>DINNER AT RANELAGH.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Here is the whole set, a character dead at every word.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Sheridan.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>It was the fag end of the London season; people were talking about
+Goodwood and the Ryde week, about grouse and about salmon-fishing.
+Members of Parliament went about, like martyrs at the stake, groaning
+over the interminable nature of every debate, and shaking their heads
+over the prospect of getting away. Women in society knew all their own
+and their neighbours' dresses by heart, and were dead sick of them all;
+and even the very gossip and scandal that is always afloat to keep up the
+spirits of the idlers and the chatterers had lost all the zest, all the
+charm of novelty that gave flavour and piquancy to every <i>canard</i> that
+was started two months ago.</p>
+
+<p>It was all stale, flat, and unprofitable.</p>
+
+<p>What was the use of constantly asserting, on the very best authority,
+that Lady So-and-so was on the eve of running away with that handsome
+young actor, whose eyes had taken the female population by storm, when
+Lady So-and-so persisted in walking about arm-in-arm with her husband day
+after day, with a child on either side of them, in the most provoking
+way, as though to prove the utter fallacy of the report, and her own
+incontestable domestic felicity? Or, what merit had a man any longer who
+had stated in May that the heiress <i>par excellence</i> of the season was
+about to sell herself and her gold to that debauched and drunken marquis,
+who had evidently not six months of life left in him in which to enjoy
+his bargain, when the heiress herself gave the lie to the <i>on dit</i> in
+July by talking calmly about going to Norway with her papa for a month's
+retirement and rest after the fatigues of the season?</p>
+
+<p>What a number of lies are there not propounded during the months of May
+and June by the inventive Londoner, and how many of them are there not
+proved to be so during the latter end of July!</p>
+
+<p>Heaven only knows how and where the voice of scandal is first raised. Is
+it at the five o'clock tea-tables? Or, is it in the smoking-rooms of the
+clubs that things are first spoken of, and the noxious breath of slander
+started upon its career? Or, are there evil-minded persons, both men and
+women, prowling about, like unclean animals, at the skirts of that
+society into whose inner recesses they would fain gain admittance,
+picking up greedily, here and there, in their eaves-dropping career,
+some scrap or morsel of truth out of which they weave a well-varnished
+tale wherewith to delight the ears of the vulgar and the coarse-minded?
+There are such men and such women; God forgive them for their wickedness!</p>
+
+<p>Do any of these scandal-mongers ever call to mind, I wonder, an ancient
+and, seemingly, a well-nigh forgotten injunction?</p>
+
+<p>"Thou shalt not bear false witness," said the same Voice who has also
+said, "Thou shalt do no murder."</p>
+
+<p>And which is the worst&mdash;to kill a man's body, or to slay a man's honour,
+or a woman's reputation?</p>
+
+<p>In truth, there seems to me to be but little difference between the two;
+and the man or the woman who will do the one might very possibly be
+guilty of the other&mdash;but for the hanging!</p>
+
+<p>We should all do a great many more wicked things than we do if there were
+no consequences.</p>
+
+<p>It is a very trite observation, which is, nevertheless, never spoken with
+more justice or more truth than at or about Hyde Park Corner between May
+and July, that the world we live in is a very wicked one.</p>
+
+<p>Well, the season, as I have said, was well-nigh over, and all the scandal
+had run dry, and the gossip, for the most part, been proved to be
+incorrect, and there was nobody in all London who excited so much
+irritation among the talkers as the new beauty, Vera Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>For Vera was Miss Nevill still, and there was every prospect of her
+remaining so. What on earth possessed the girl that she would not marry?
+Had not men dangled at her elbow all the season? Could she not have had
+such and such elder sons, or such and such wealthy commoner? What was she
+waiting for? A girl without a penny, who came nobody knew from where,
+ushered in under Mrs. Hazeldine's wings, with not a decent connection
+in the world to her name! What did she want&mdash;this girl who had only her
+beauty to depend upon? and everybody knows how fleeting <i>that</i> is!</p>
+
+<p>And then, presently, the women who were envious of her began to whisper
+amongst themselves. There was something against her; she was not what she
+seemed to be. The men flirted, of course&mdash;men will always flirt! but
+they were careful not to commit themselves! And even that mysterious word
+"adventuress," which has an ugly sound, but of which no one exactly knows
+the precise meaning, began to be bruited about.</p>
+
+<p>"There was an unpleasant story about her, somebody told me once," said
+one prettily-dressed nonentity to another, as they wandered slowly up and
+down the velvet lawns at Ranelagh. "She was mixed up in some way with the
+Kynaston family. Sir John was to have married her, and then something
+dreadful came out, and he threw her over."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I thought she jilted him."</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay it was one or the other; at all events, there was some fracas
+or other. I believe her mother was&mdash;hum, hum&mdash;you understand&mdash;she
+couldn't be swallowed by the Kynastons at any price; they must have been
+thankful to get out of it."</p>
+
+<p>"It looks very bad, her not marrying any one, with all the fuss there has
+been made over her."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; even Cissy Hazeldine told me, in confidence, yesterday, she could
+not try her again next season. It wouldn't do, you know; it would look
+too much as if she had some object of her own in getting her married.
+Cissy must find something else for another year. Of course, with a
+husband, she could sail her own course and make her own way; but a girl
+can't go on attracting attention with impunity&mdash;she gets herself talked
+about&mdash;it is only we married women can do as we like."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. Do you suppose <i>that</i> will come to anything?" casting a glance
+towards the further end of the lawn, where Vera Nevill sat in a low
+basket-chair, under the shadow of a spreading tulip-tree, whilst a slight
+boyish figure, stretched at her feet, alternately chewed blades of grass
+and looked up worshippingly into her face.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>That!</i>" following the direction of her companion's eyes. "Oh dear, no!
+Denis Wilde is too wideawake to be caught, though he is such a boy! They
+say she is crazy to get him; everybody else has slipped through her
+fingers, you see, and he would be better than nothing. Now we are in the
+last week in July, I daresay she is getting desperate; but young Wilde
+knows pretty well what he is about, I expect!"</p>
+
+<p>"He seems to admire her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I daresay; those large kind of women do get admired; men look
+upon them as fine animals. <i>I</i> should not care to be admired in that way,
+would you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed! it is disgusting," replied the other, who was fain to
+conceal the bony corners of her angular figure with a multiplicity of
+lace ruchings and puffings.</p>
+
+<p>"As to Miss Nevill, she is nothing else. A most material type; why, her
+waist must be twenty-two inches round!"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite that, dear," with sweetness, from the owner of a nineteen-inch
+article, which two maids struggled with daily in order to reduce it to
+the required measurement.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I never could&mdash;between you and me&mdash;see much to admire in her."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither could I, although, of course, it has been the fashion to rave
+over her."</p>
+
+<p>And, with that, these two amiable young women fell at it tooth and nail,
+and proceeded to cry down their victim's personal appearance in the most
+unmeasured and sweeping terms.</p>
+
+<p>After the taking away of a fellow-woman's character, comes as a natural
+sequence the condemnation of her face and figure, and it is doubtful
+which indictment is the most grave in eyes feminine. Meanwhile the
+object of all this animadversion sat tranquilly unconscious under her
+tulip-tree, whilst Denis Wilde, that astute young gentleman, whom they
+had declared to be too well aware of what he was about to be entrapped
+into matrimony, was engaged in proposing to her for the fourth time.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought we had settled this subject long ago, Mr. Wilde," says Vera,
+tranquilly unfolding her large, black, feather fan&mdash;for it is hot&mdash;and
+slowly folding it up again.</p>
+
+<p>"It will never be settled for me, Vera; never, so long as you are
+unmarried."</p>
+
+<p>"What a dreadful mistake life is!" sighs Vera, wearily, more to herself
+than to the boy at her feet. Was anybody ever happy in this world? she
+began to wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"I know very well," resumed Denis Wilde, "that I am not good enough for
+you; but, then, who is? My prospects, such as they are, are very distant,
+and your friends, I daresay, expect you to marry well."</p>
+
+<p>"How often must I tell you that that has nothing to do with it," cries
+Vera, impatiently. "If I loved a beggar, I should marry him."</p>
+
+<p>Young Wilde plucked at the grass again, and chewed a daisy up almost
+viciously. There was a supreme selfishness in the way she had of
+perpetually harping upon her lack of love for him.</p>
+
+<p>"There is always some fellow or other hanging about you," grumbles the
+young man, irritably; "you are an inveterate flirt!"</p>
+
+<p>"No woman is worthy of the name who is not!" retorts Vera, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>hate</i> a flirt," angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"This is very amusing when you know that your flirtation with Mrs.
+Hazeldine is a chronic disease of two years' standing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!&mdash;mere child's play on both sides, and you know it is! You are very
+different; you lead a fellow on till he doesn't know whether his very
+soul is his own, and then you turn round and snap your fingers in his
+face and send him to the devil."</p>
+
+<p>"What an awful accusation! Pray give me an instance of a victim to this
+shocking conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, there's that wretched little Frenchman whom you are playing the
+same game with that you have already done with me; he follows you like
+a shadow."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Monsieur D'Arblet!" laughed Vera, and then grew suddenly serious.
+"But do you know, Mr. Wilde, it is a very singular thing about that
+man&mdash;I can't think why he follows me about so."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Can't</i> you!" very grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"I assure you the man is in no more love with me than&mdash;than&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> am! I suppose you will say next."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh dear, no, you are utterly incorrigible and quite in earnest; but
+Monsieur D'Arblet is <i>pretending</i> to be in love with me."</p>
+
+<p>"He makes a very good pretence of it, at all events. Here he comes,
+confound him! If I had known Mrs. Hazeldine had asked <i>him</i>, I would
+never have come."</p>
+
+<p>At which Vera, who had heard these outbursts of indignant jealousy
+before, and knew how little poor Denis meant the terrible threats he
+uttered, only laughed with the pitiless amusement of a woman who knows
+her own power.</p>
+
+<p>Lucien D'Arblet came towards her smiling, and sank down into a vacant
+basket-chair by her side with the air of a man who knows himself to be
+welcome.</p>
+
+<p>He had been paying a great deal of attention latterly to the beautiful
+Miss Nevill; he had followed her about everywhere, and had made it patent
+in every public place where he had met her that she alone was the sole
+aim and object of his thoughts. And yet, with it all, Monsieur Le Vicomte
+was only playing a part, and not only that, but he was pretty certain
+that she knew it to be so. He gazed rapturously into her beautiful face,
+he lowered his voice tenderly in speaking to her, he pressed her hand
+when she gave it to him, and even on occasions he raised it furtively to
+his lips; but, with all this, he knew perfectly well that she was not one
+whit deceived by him. She no more believed him to be in love with her
+than he believed it of himself. She was clever and beautiful, and he
+admired and even liked her, but in the beginning of their acquaintance
+Monsieur D'Arblet had had no thought of making her the object of any
+sentimental attentions. He had been driven to it by a discovery that he
+had made concerning her character.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nevill had a good heart. She was no enraged, injured woman,
+thirsting for revenge upon the woman who had stolen her lover from
+her&mdash;such as he had desired to find in her; she was only a true-hearted
+and unhappy girl, who was not in any case likely to develop into the
+instrument of vengeance which he sought for.</p>
+
+<p>It was a disappointment to him, but he was not completely disheartened.
+It was through her that he desired to punish Helen for daring to brave
+him, and he swore to himself that he would do it still; only he must now
+set about it in a different way, so he began to make love to Miss Nevill.</p>
+
+<p>And Vera was shrewd enough to perceive that he was only playing a part.
+Nevertheless, there were times when she felt so completely puzzled by his
+persistent adoration, that she could hardly tell what to make of it. Was
+he trying to make some other woman jealous? It even came into her head,
+once or twice, to suspect that Cissy Hazeldine was the real object of his
+devotion, so utterly incomprehensible did his conduct appear to her.</p>
+
+<p>If she had been told that Lucien D'Arblet's real quest was not love, but
+revenge, she would have laughed. An Englishman does not spend his time
+nor his energies in plotting a desperate retaliation on a lady who has
+disregarded his threats and evaded his persecution; it is not in the
+nature of any Briton, however irascible, to do so; but a Frenchman is
+differently constituted. There is something delightfully refreshing to
+him in an atmosphere of plotting and intrigue. There is the same instinct
+of the chase in both nationalities, but it is more amusing to the
+Frenchman to hunt down his fellow-creatures than to pursue unhappy little
+beasts of the field; and he understands himself in the pursuit of the
+larger game infinitely better.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Monsieur D'Arblet had no intention of getting himself into
+trouble, nor of risking the just fury of an indignant British husband,
+who stood six feet in his stockings, nor did he desire, by any anonymous
+libel, to bring himself in any way under the arm of the law. All he meant
+to do was to dig his trench and to lay his mine, to place the fuse in
+Vera Nevill's hands&mdash;leave her to set fire to it&mdash;and then retire
+himself, covered with satisfaction at his cleverness, to his own side
+of the Channel.</p>
+
+<p>Who could possibly grudge him so harmless an entertainment?</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur D'Arblet, as he sat down by her side under the tulip-tree, began
+by paying Miss Nevill a prettily turned compliment upon her fresh white
+toilette; as he did so Vera smiled and bent her head; she had seen him
+before to-day.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine evening, Mr. Wilde," said the Frenchman, turning civilly, but with
+no evident <i>empressement</i>, towards the gentleman he addressed.</p>
+
+<p>Denis only answered by a sulky grunt.</p>
+
+<p>Then began that process between the two men which is known in polite
+society as the endeavour to sit each other out.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur D'Arblet discoursed upon the weather and the beauty of the
+gardens, with long and expressive pauses between each insignificant
+remark, and the air of a man who wishes to say, "I could talk about much
+more interesting things if that other fellow was out of the way."</p>
+
+<p>Denis Wilde simply reversed himself, that is to say, he lay on his
+back instead of his face, stared up at the sky, and chewed grass
+perseveringly. He had evidently no intention of being driven off the
+field.</p>
+
+<p>"I had something of great importance to say to you this evening,"
+murmured Monsieur D'Arblet, at length, looking fixedly at his enemy's
+upturned face.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, go ahead, don't mind me," says the young gentleman, amiably.
+"I'm never in the way, am I, Miss Nevill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, Mr. Wilde," answers Vera, sweetly. Like a true woman, she quite
+appreciates the fun of the situation, and thoroughly enjoys it; "pray
+tell me what you have to say, monsieur."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Ces choses-l&agrave; ne se disent qu'&agrave; deux!" murmurs he Frenchman, with a
+sentimental sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"It is no use your saying it in French," says Denis, with a chuckle,
+twisting himself round again upon his chest, "because I have the good
+fortune, D'Arblet, to understand your charming language like a native,
+absolutely like a native."</p>
+
+<p>"You have a useful proverb in English, which says, that two is company,
+and three is none," retorts D'Arblet, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm awfully sorry, old fellow; but I am so exceedingly comfortable, I
+really can't get up; if I could oblige you in any other way, I certainly
+would."</p>
+
+<p>"Come to dinner!" cries out Mrs. Hazeldine, coming towards them from the
+garden side of the lawn; "we are all here now."</p>
+
+<p>The two men sprang simultaneously to their feet. This is, of course, the
+moment that they have both been waiting for. Each offers an arm to Miss
+Nevill; Monsieur D'Arblet bends blandly and smilingly forward; Denis
+Wilde has a thunder-cloud upon his face, and holds out his arm as though
+he were ready to knock somebody down with it.</p>
+
+<p>"What am I to do?" cries Vera, laughing, and looking with feigned
+indecision from one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Make haste and decide, my dear," says Mrs. Hazeldine; "for whichever of
+you two gentlemen does <i>not</i> take in Miss Nevill must go and take that
+eldest Miss Frampton for me."</p>
+
+<p>The eldest Miss Frampton is thirty-five if she is a day; she is large and
+bony, much given to beads and bangles, and to talking about the military
+men she has known, and whom she usually calls by their surnames alone,
+like a man. She goes familiarly amongst her acquaintance by the name of
+the Dragoon.</p>
+
+<p>A cold shiver passes visibly down Mr. Wilde's back; unfortunately Miss
+Nevill perceives it, and makes up her mind instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not deprive you of so charming a companion," she says, smiling
+sweetly at him, and passes her arm through that of the French vicomte.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner, poor Denis Wilde curses Monsieur D'Arblet; Miss Frampton, and
+his own fate, indiscriminately and ineffectually. He is sitting exactly
+opposite to his divinity, but he cannot even enjoy the felicity of
+staring at her, for Miss Frampton will not let him alone. She chatters
+unceasingly and gushingly. At an early period of the repast the string of
+her amber-bead necklace suddenly gives way with a snap. The beads trickle
+slowly down, one by one; half a dozen of them drop with a cracking noise,
+like little marbles, upon the polished floor, where there is a general
+scramble of waiters and gentlemen under the table together after them;
+two fall into her own soup, three more on to Denis Wilde's table-napkin;
+as fast as the truants are picked up others are shed down in their wake
+from the four apparently inexhaustible rows that garnish her neck.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Frampton bears it all with serene and smiling good temper.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, I am really very sorry to give so much trouble. It doesn't
+signify in the least, Mr. Wilde&mdash;thanks, that is one more. Oh, there goes
+another into the sweet-breads; but I really don't mind if they are lost.
+Jameson, of the 17th, gave them to me. Do you know Jameson? cousin of
+Jameson, in the 9th; he brought them from Italy, or Turkey, or somewhere.
+I am sure I don't remember where amber comes from; do you, Mr. Wilde?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wilde, if he is vague as to where it comes from, is quite decided
+as to where he would desire it to go. At this moment he had crunched a
+tender tooth down upon one of these infernal beads, having helped himself
+to it unconsciously out of the sweetbread dish.</p>
+
+<p>Is he doomed to swallow amber beads for the remainder of the repast? he
+asks himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever meet Archdale, the man who was in the 16th?" continues Miss
+Frampton, glibly, unconscious of his agonies; "he exchanged afterwards
+into the 4th&mdash;he is such a nice fellow. I lunched every day at Ascot this
+year on the 16th's drag. The first day I met Lester&mdash;that's the major,
+you know&mdash;and Lester is <i>such</i> a pet! He told me to come every day to
+lunch, and bring any of my friends with me; so, of course, I did, and
+there wasn't a better lunch on the course; and, on the cup-day, Archdale
+came up and talked to me&mdash;he abused the champagne-cup, though; he said
+there was more soda-water than champagne in it&mdash;the more he drank of it
+the more dreadfully sober he got. However, I am invited to lunch with the
+4th at Goodwood. They are going to have a spread under the trees, so I
+shall be able to compare notes about the champagne-cup. I know two other
+men in the 4th; Hopkins and Lambert; do you know them?" and so on, until
+pretty well half the army list and all the luncheon-giving regiments in
+the service had been passed under review.</p>
+
+<p>And there, straight opposite to him, was Vera, laughing at his
+discomfiture, he was sure, but also listening to the flattering rubbish
+which that odious little Frenchman was pouring into her ears.</p>
+
+<p>Did ever young man sit through such a detestable and abominable repast?</p>
+
+<p>If Denis Wilde had been rash enough to nourish insane hopes with regard
+to moonlight wanderings in the pleasant garden after dinner, these hopes
+were destined to be blighted.</p>
+
+<p>They were a party of twelve; the waiting was bad, and the courses
+numerous; the dinner was a lengthy affair altogether. By the time it was
+over, and coffee had been discussed on the terrace outside the house, the
+carriages came round to the door, and the ladies of the party voted that
+it was time to go home.</p>
+
+<p>Soon everybody stood clothed in summer ulsters or white dust-cloaks,
+waiting in the hall. The coach started from the door with much noise
+and confusion, with a good deal of plunging from the leaders, and some
+jibbing from the wheelers, accompanied by a very feeble performance on
+that much-abused instrument, the horn, by an amateur who occupied a back
+seat; and after it had departed, a humble train of neat broughams and
+victorias came trooping up in its wake.</p>
+
+<p>"You will see," said nonentity number one, in her friend's ear; "you will
+see that Nevill girl will go back in some man's brougham&mdash;that is what
+she has been waiting for; otherwise, she would have perched herself up on
+the box-seat of the coach, in the most conspicuous place she could find."</p>
+
+<p>"What a disgraceful creature she must be!" is the indignantly virtuous
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>The "Nevill girl," however, disappointed the expectations of both these
+charitable ladies by quietly taking her place in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+brougham, by her friend's side, amid a shower of "Good-nights" from the
+remainder of the party.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said the nonentity, with a vicious gasp, "you may be sure she has
+some disreputable supper of men, and cigars, and brandies and sodas
+waiting for her up in town, or she would never go off so meekly as that
+in Mrs. Hazeldine's brougham. Still waters run deep, my dear!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is a horrid, disreputable girl, I am quite sure of that," is the
+answer. "I am very thankful, indeed, that I haven't the misfortune of
+knowing her."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>MRS. HAZELDINE'S "LONG ELIZA."</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Now will I show myself to have more of the serpent than the<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">dove; that is, more knave than fool.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Christopher Marlowe.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+
+<span class="i0">For every inch that is not fool is rogue.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Dryden.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The scene is Mrs. Hazeldine's drawing-room, in Park Lane, the hour is
+four o'clock in the afternoon, and the <i>dramatis person&aelig;</i> are Miss
+Nevill, very red in the face, standing in a corner, behind an oblong
+velvet table covered with china ornaments, and Monsieur Le Vicomte
+D'Arblet, also red in the face, gesticulating violently on the further
+side of it.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nevill, having retired behind the oblong table, purely from
+prudential motives of personal safety, is devoured with anxiety
+concerning the too imminent fate of her hostess' china. There is a little
+Lowestoft tea-service that was picked up only last week at Christie and
+Manson's, a turquoise blue crackle jar that is supposed to be priceless,
+and a pair of "Long Eliza" vases, which her hostess loves as much as she
+does her toy terrier, and far better than she loves her husband.</p>
+
+<p>What will become of her, Vera Nevill, if Mrs. Hazeldine comes in
+presently and finds these treasures lying in a thousand pieces upon the
+floor? And yet this is what she is looking forward to, as only too
+probable a catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>Vera feels much as must have felt the owner of the proverbial bull
+in the crockery shop&mdash;terror mingled with an overpowering sense of
+responsibility. All personal considerations are well-nigh merged in
+the realization of the danger which menaces her hostess' property.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur D'Arblet, I must implore you to calm yourself," she says,
+desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"And how, mademoiselle, I ask you, am I to be calm when you speak of
+shattering the hopes of my life?" cries the vicomte, who is dancing about
+frantically backwards and forwards, in a clear space of three square
+yards, between the different pieces of furniture by which he is
+surrounded, all equally fragile, and equally loaded with destructible
+objects.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Pray</i> be careful, Monsieur D'Arblet, your sleeve nearly caught then in
+the handle of that Chelsea basket," cries Vera, in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"And what to me are Chelsea baskets, or china, or trash of that kind,
+when you, cruel one, are determined to scorn me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if you would only come outside and have it out on the staircase,"
+murmurs Vera, piteously.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I will never leave this room, never, mademoiselle, until you give
+me hope; never will I cease to importune you until your heart relents
+towards the <i>miserable</i> who adores you!"</p>
+
+<p>Here Monsieur D'Arblet made an attempt to get at his charmer by coming
+round the end of the velvet table.</p>
+
+<p>Vera felt distracted. To allow him to execute his maneuver was to run
+the chance of being clasped in his arms; to struggle to get free was the
+almost certainty of upsetting the table.</p>
+
+<p>She cast a despairing glance across the room at the bell-handle, which
+was utterly beyond her reach. There was no hope in that direction.
+Apparently, moral persuasion was her only chance.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur D'Arblet, I <i>forbid</i> you to advance a step nearer to me!"</p>
+
+<p>He fell back with a profound sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle, I love you to distraction. I am unable to disobey your
+commands."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then, listen to me. I cannot understand this violent outburst
+of emotion. You have done me the honour to propose to marry me, and I
+have, with many thanks for your most flattering distinction, declined
+your offer. Surely, between a lady and a gentleman, there can be nothing
+further to say; it is not incumbent upon you to persecute me in this
+fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill, you have treated me with a terrible cruelty. You have
+encouraged my ardent passion for you until you did lift me up to Heaven."
+Here Monsieur D'Arblet stretched up both his arms with a suddenness which
+endangered the branches of the tall Dresden candelabra on the high
+mantelpiece behind him. "After which you do reject me and cast me down
+to hell!" and down came both hands heavily upon the velvet table between
+them. The blue crackle jar, the two "Long Eliza" vases, and all the
+Lowestoft cups and saucers, literally jumped upon their foundations.</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake!" cried Vera.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" in a tone of deep reproach, "do not plead with me, mademoiselle;
+you have broken my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"And you have nearly broken the china," murmured Vera.</p>
+
+<p>"What is this miserable china that you talk about in comparison with my
+happiness?" and the vicomte made as though he would tear his hair out
+with both hands.</p>
+
+<p>The comedy of the situation began to be too much for Vera's self-control;
+another ten minutes of it, and she felt that she should become
+hysterical; all the more so because she knew very well that the whole
+thing was nothing but a piece of acting; with what object, however, she
+was at a loss to imagine.</p>
+
+<p>"For goodness sake, do be reasonable, Monsieur D'Arblet; you know
+perfectly well that I never encouraged you, as you call it, for the very
+good reason that there has never been anything to encourage. We have been
+very good friends, but never anything more."</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle, you do me injustice."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, I give you credit for a great deal more common sense,
+as a rule, than you seem disposed to evince to-day. I am quite certain
+that you have never entertained any warmer feeling towards me than
+friendship."</p>
+
+<p>This was an injudicious statement. Monsieur D'Arblet felt that his
+reputation as a <i>galant homme</i> and an adorer of the fair sex was
+impugned; he instantly flew into the most violent passion, and jumped
+about amongst the gipsy tables and the <i>&eacute;tag&egrave;res</i>, and the dainty little
+spindle-legged cabinets more vehemently than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i>, not love you! Lucien D'Arblet profess a sentiment which he does not
+experience! <i>Ah! par exemple, Mademoiselle, c'est trop fort!</i> Next you
+will say that I am a <i>menteur</i>, a <i>fripon</i>, a <i>l&acirc;che</i>! You will tell me
+that I have no honour, and no sense of the generosity due to a woman;
+that I am a brute and an imbecile," and at every epithet he dashed his
+hands violently out in front of him, or thrust them wildly through his
+disordered locks. The whole room shook, every ornament on every table
+shivered with the strength of his agitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I will say any single thing you like," cried Vera, "if only you will
+keep still&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not insult me by denying my affection!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will deny nothing," said poor Vera, at her wits' ends. "If what I have
+said has pained you, I am sincerely sorry for it; but for Heaven's sake
+control yourself, and&mdash;and&mdash;<i>do</i> go away!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Monsieur D'Arblet stood still and looked at her fixedly and
+mournfully; his hands had dropped feebly by his side, there was an air
+of profound melancholy in his aspect; he regarded her with a searching
+intensity. He was asking himself whether his agitation and his despair
+had produced the very slightest effect upon her; and he came to the
+conclusion they had not.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Peste soit de cette femme!</i>" he said to himself. "She is the first I
+ever came across who refused to believe in vows of eternal love. As a
+rule, women never fail to give them credit, if they are spoken often
+enough and shouted out loud enough the more one despairs and declares
+that one is about to expire, the more the dear creatures are impressed,
+and the more firmly they are convinced of the power of their own charms.
+But this woman does not believe in me one little bit. Love, despair,
+rage&mdash;it is all the same to her&mdash;I might as well talk to the winds! She
+only wants to get rid of me before her friend comes in, and before I
+break her accursed china. Ah it is these miserable little pots and jugs
+that she is thinking about! Very well, then, it is by them that I will do
+what I want. A great genius can bend to small things as well as soar to
+large ones&mdash;Voyons done, ma belle, which of us will be the victor!"</p>
+
+<p>All this time he was gazing at her fixedly and dejectedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill," he said, gloomily, "I will accept your rejection;
+to-morrow I will say good-bye to this country for ever!"</p>
+
+<p>"We are all going away this week," said Vera, cheerfully: "this is the
+end of July. You will come back again next year, and enjoy your season as
+much as ever."</p>
+
+<p>"Never&mdash;never. Lucien D'Arblet will visit this country no more. The words
+that I am about to speak to you now&mdash;the request that I am about to make
+of you are like the words of a dying man; like the parting desire of one
+who expires. Mademoiselle, I have a request to make of you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," began Vera, politely, "if there is anything I can do
+for you&mdash;&mdash;" She breathed more freely now he talked about going away
+and dying; it would be much better that he should so go away, and so
+die, than remain interminably on the rampage in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+drawing-room. Vera had stood siege for close upon an hour. The moment of
+her deliverance was apparently drawing near; in the hour of victory she
+felt that she could afford to be generous; any little thing that he liked
+to ask of her she would be glad enough to do with a view to expediting
+his departure. Perhaps he wanted her photograph, or a lock of her hair;
+to either he would be perfectly welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"There is something I am forced to go away from England without having
+done; a solemn duty I have to leave unperformed. Miss Nevill, will you
+undertake to do it for me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Monsieur D'Arblet, you are very mysterious; it depends, of
+course, upon what this duty is&mdash;if it is very difficult, or very
+unpleasant."</p>
+
+<p>"It is neither difficult nor unpleasant. It is only to give a small
+parcel to a gentleman who is not now in England; to give it him yourself,
+with your own hands."</p>
+
+<p>"That does not sound difficult, certainly," said Vera, smiling; after
+all, she was glad he had not asked for a photograph, or a lock of hair;
+"but how am I to find this friend of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill, do you know a man called Kynaston? Captain Maurice
+Kynaston?" He was watching her keenly now.</p>
+
+<p>Vera turned suddenly very white: then controlling herself with an effort,
+she answered quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know him. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because that is the man I want you to give my parcel to." He drew
+something out of his breast coat-pocket, and handed it to her across the
+oblong table that was still between them. She took it in her hands, and
+turned it over doubtfully and uneasily. It was a small square parcel,
+done up in brown paper, fastened round with string, and sealed at both
+ends.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been a small book; it probably was. She had no reason to
+give why she should not do his commission for him, and yet she felt a
+strange and unaccountable reluctance to undertake it.</p>
+
+<p>"I had very much rather that you asked somebody else to do this for you,
+Monsieur D'Arblet," she said, handing the packet back to him. He did not
+attempt to take it from her.</p>
+
+<p>"It concerns the most sacred emotions of my heart, mademoiselle," he
+said, sensationally. "I could not entrust it to an indifferent person.
+You, who have plunged me into such an abyss of despair by your cruel
+rejection of my affection, cannot surely refuse to do so small a thing
+for me."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nevill was again looking at the small parcel in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Will it hurt or injure Captain Kynaston in any way?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Far from it; it will probably be of great service to him. Come, Miss
+Nevill, promise me that you will give it to him; any time will do before
+the end of the year, any time that you happen to see him, or to be near
+enough to visit him; I only want to be sure that it reaches him. All you
+have to do is to give it him into his hands when no one else is near.
+After all, it is a very small favour I ask you."</p>
+
+<p>"And it is precisely because it is so small, Monsieur D'Arblet," said
+Vera, decidedly, "that I cannot imagine why you should make such a point
+of a trifle like this; and as I don't like being mixed up in things I
+don't understand, I must, I think, decline to have anything to do with
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Allons donc!</i>" said the vicomte to himself. "I am reduced to the
+china."</p>
+
+<p>He took an excited turn up and down the room, then came back again to
+where she stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill!" he cried, with rising anger, "you seem determined to wound
+my feelings and to insult my self-respect. You reject my offers, you
+sneer at my professions of affection; and now you appear to me to throw
+sinister doubts upon the meaning of the small thing I have asked you to
+do for me." At each of these accusations he waved his arm up and down to
+emphasize his remarks; and now, as if unconsciously, his hand suddenly
+fell upon the neck of one of the "Long Eliza" vases on the table before
+him. He lifted it up in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake, Monsieur D'Arblet, take care&mdash;please put down that
+vase," cried Vera; suddenly returning to her former terrors.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the object in his hand as though it were utterly beneath
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>"Vase! what is a vase, I ask? Do you not suppose, before relinquishing
+what I ask of you, I would dash a hundred vases such as this into ten
+thousand fragments to the earth?" He raised his arm above his head as
+though on the point of carrying his threat into execution.</p>
+
+<p>Vera uttered a scream.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious! What on earth are you doing? It is Mrs. Hazeldine's
+favourite piece of china; she values it more than anything she has got.
+If you were to break it, she would go half out of her mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind this wretched vase. Answer me, Mademoiselle Nevill, will you
+give that parcel to Captain Kynaston?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not at all likely to meet him; I assure you nothing is so
+improbable. I know him very little. Ah! what are you doing?"</p>
+
+<p>The infuriated Frenchman was whirling the blue-and-white treasure madly
+round in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"You are, then, determined to humiliate and to insult me; and to prove to
+you how great is my just indignation, I will dash&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, no!" cried Vera, frantically; "for Heaven's sake, do not be so
+mad. Mrs. Hazeldine will never forgive me. Put it down, I entreat you.
+Yes, yes, I will promise anything you like. I am sure I have no wish to
+insult you."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, you will give that to him?" He paused with the vase still
+uplifted, looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>Vera felt convinced by this time that she had to do with a raving
+lunatic. After all, was it not better to do this small thing for him, and
+to get rid of him. She knew that, sooner or later, down at Sutton, or up
+in London, she and Maurice were likely to meet. It would not be much
+trouble to her to place the small parcel in his hands. Surely, to deliver
+herself from this man&mdash;to save Cissy's beloved china, and, perchance,
+her own throat&mdash;for what might he not take a fancy to next!&mdash;from the
+clutches of this madman, it would be easier to do what he wanted.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will give it to him. I promise you, if you will only put that
+vase down and go away."</p>
+
+<p>"You will promise me faithfully?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faithfully."</p>
+
+<p>"On your word of honour, and as you hope for salvation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes. There is no need for oaths; if I have promised, I will do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well." He placed the vase back upon the table and walked to the
+door. "Mademoiselle," he said, making her a low bow, "I am infinitely
+obliged to you;" and then, without another word, he opened the door and
+was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Three minutes later Mrs. Hazeldine came in. She was just back from
+her drive. She found Vera lying back exhausted and breathless in an
+arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, what have you done to Monsieur D'Arblet? I met him running out
+of the house like a madman, and laughing to himself like a little fiend.
+He nearly knocked me down. What has happened! Have you accepted him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have refused him," gasped Vera; "but, thank God, I have saved your
+'Long Eliza,' Cissy!"</p>
+
+<p>Early the following morning one of Mrs. Hazeldine's servants was
+despatched in a hansom with a small brown paper parcel and a note to the
+Charing Cross Hotel.</p>
+
+<p>During the night watches Miss Nevill had been seized with misgivings
+concerning the mysterious mission wherewith she had been charged.</p>
+
+<p>But the servant, the parcel, and the note all returned together just as
+they had been sent.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur D'Arblet has left town, Miss; he went by the tidal train last
+night on his way to the Continent, and has left no address."</p>
+
+<p>So Vera tore up her own note, and locked up the offending parcel in her
+dressing-case.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>A WEDDING TOUR.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thus Grief still treads upon the heels of Pleasure;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Married in haste, we may repent at leisure.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Congreve.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>We all know that weddings are as old as the world, but who is it
+that invented wedding tours? Owing to what delusion were they first
+instituted?</p>
+
+<p>For a wedding feast there is a reasonable cause, just as there is for
+a funeral luncheon, or a christening dinner. There has been in each
+instance a trying ordeal to be gone through in a public church. It is
+quite right that there should be eating and drinking, and a certain
+amount of jollification afterwards amongst the unoffending guests who
+have been dragged in as spectators on the occasion. But why on earth,
+when the day is over, cannot the unhappy couple be left alone to eat
+a Darby-and-Joan dinner together in the house in which they propose to
+live, and return peacefully on the morrow to the avocation of their
+daily lives? Why must they be sent off amid a shower of rice and
+shabby satin shoes into an enforced banishment from the society of their
+fellow-creatures, and so thrown upon each other that, in nine cases out
+of ten, for want of something better to do, they have learnt the way to
+quarrel, tooth and nail, before the week is out?</p>
+
+<p>I believe that a great many marriages that are as likely as not to turn
+out in the end very happily are utterly prevented from doing so by that
+pernicious and utterly childish custom of keeping up the season known as
+the honeymoon. "Honey," by the way, is very sweet, doubtless; but there
+is nothing on earth which sensible people get sooner tired of. Three days
+of an exclusively saccharine diet is about as much as any grown man or
+woman can be reasonably expected to stand; after that period there comes
+upon the jaded appetite unlawful longings after strong meats and
+anchovies, after turtle-soup and devilled bones, such as no sugar-fed
+couple has the poetic right to indulge in. Nevertheless, like a snake in
+the grass, the insidious desire will creep into the soul of one or other
+of the two. There will be, doubtless, a noble struggle to stifle the
+treacherous thought; a vigorous effort to bring back the wandering mind
+into the path of duty; a conscientious effort to go on enjoying honeycomb
+as though no flavour of richer viands had been wafted to the nostrils of
+the imagination. The sweet and poetical food will be lifted once more
+resolutely to the lips, but only to create a sickening satiety from which
+the nauseated victim finally revolts in desperation. Then come yearnings
+and weariness, loss of appetite, and consequent loss of temper; tears on
+the one side, an oath or two on the other, and the "happy couple" come
+home eventually very much wiser, as a rule, than they started, and
+certainly in a position to understand several unpleasant truths
+concerning each other of which they had not a suspicion before they went
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Now, if this is too often the melancholy finale to a wedding trip, even
+with regard to persons who start forth on it full of hopes of happiness,
+of faith in each other, and of fervent affection on both sides, how much
+worse is not the case when there are small hopes of happiness, no faith
+whatever on one side, and of affection none at all on the other?</p>
+
+<p>This was how it was with Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston on their six
+weeks' wedding trip abroad. They went to a great many places they had
+neither of them seen before. They stayed a week in Paris, where Helen
+bought more dresses and declared herself supremely happy; they visited
+the falls of the Rhine, which Maurice said deafened him; and ran
+through Switzerland, which they both voted detestably uncomfortable and
+dirty&mdash;the hotels, <i>bien entendu</i>, not the mountains. They stopped a
+night on the St. Gothard, which was too cold for them, and a week or two
+at the Italian lakes, which were too hot. They sauntered through the
+picture-galleries of Milan and Turin, at which places Maurice's yawns
+became prolonged and audible; and they floated through the canals of
+Venice in gondolas, which Helen asserted to be more ragged and full of
+fleas than any London four-wheeler. And then they turned homewards, and
+by the time they neared the shores of the Channel once more they had had
+so many quarrels that they had forgotten to count them, and they had both
+privately discovered that matrimony is an egregious and, alas! an
+irreparable mistake. Such a discovery was possibly inevitable; perhaps
+they would have come in time to the same conclusion had they remained at
+home, but they certainly found it out all the quicker for having gone
+abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Helen, perhaps, was the most to be pitied of the two. For Maurice there
+had been no illusions to dispel, no dreams to be dissipated, no castles
+built upon the sand to fall shattered into atoms; he had known very well
+what he had to expect; he did not love the wife he was marrying, and he
+did love somebody else. It had not, therefore, been a brilliant prospect
+of bliss. Nevertheless, he had certainly hoped, with that vague kind of
+hope in which Englishmen are prone to indulge, that things would "come
+right" in some fashion, and that he and Helen would manage "to get on"
+together. That they did not do so was an annoyance, but hardly a surprise
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>But to Helen there was a good deal of unexpected grief and mortification
+of soul. She, at all events, had loved him; it was her own strength of
+will, the fervour of her own lawless passion for him that had carried the
+day, and had, in the end, made her his wife. And she had said to herself
+that, once married to him, she would make him love her.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, in love there is no such thing as compulsion! The heart that loves,
+loves freely, spontaneously, unreasonably; and, where love is dead, there
+neither entreaties nor prayers, nor yet a whole ocean of tears can serve
+to re-awaken the frail blossom into life.</p>
+
+<p>But Helen had made sure that, once absolutely her own, once irrevocably
+separated from the girl whom instinct had taught her to regard as her
+rival, Maurice would return to the old allegiance, and learn to love her
+once more, as in days now long gone by.</p>
+
+<p>A very short experience served to convince her of the contrary. Maurice
+yawned too openly, was too evidently wearied and bored with her society,
+too utterly indifferent to her sayings and her doings, for her to delude
+herself long with the hope of regaining his affection. It was all the
+same to him whatever she did. If she showered caresses upon him, he
+submitted meekly, it is true, but with so evident a distaste to the
+operation that she learnt to discontinue the kisses he cared for so
+little; if she tried to amuse him with her conversation, he appeared to
+be thinking of other things; if she gave her opinion, he hardly seemed to
+listen to it. Only when they quarrelled did the slightest animation enter
+into their conjugal relations; and it was almost better to quarrel than
+to be at peace on such terms as these.</p>
+
+<p>And then Helen got angry with him; angry and sore, wounded in her heart,
+and hurt in her vanity. She said to herself that she had been ready to
+become the best and most devoted of wives; to study his wishes, to defer
+to his opinion, to surround him with loving attentions; but since he
+would not have it so, then so much the worse for him. She would be no
+model wife; no meek slave, subservient to his caprices. She would go her
+own way, and follow her own will, and make him do what she liked, whether
+it pleased him or not.</p>
+
+<p>Had Maurice cared to struggle with her for the mastery, things might have
+ended differently, but it did not seem worth his while to struggle; as
+long as she let him alone, and did not fret him with her incessant
+jealousies and suspicions, he was content to let her do as she liked.</p>
+
+<p>Even in that matter of living at Kynaston he learnt, in the end, to
+give way to her. Sir John, who had already started for Australia, had
+particularly requested him to occupy the house. Lady Kynaston did nothing
+but urge it in every letter. Helen herself was bent upon it. There was
+no good reason that he could bring forward against so reasonable and
+sensible a plan. The house was all ready, newly decorated, and newly
+furnished; they had nothing to do but to walk into it. It would save
+all trouble in looking out for a country home elsewhere, and would,
+doubtless, be an infinitely pleasanter abode for them than any other
+house could be. It was the natural and rational thing for them to do.
+Maurice knew of only one argument against it, and that one was in his own
+heart, and he could speak of it to no one.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, after all, what did it matter, what difference would it make? A
+little nearer, a little further, how could it alter things for either of
+them? How lessen the impassable gulf between her and him? It was in the
+natural course of things that he must meet her at times; there would be
+the stereotyped greeting, the averted glance, the cold shake of hands
+that could never hope to meet without a pang; these things were almost
+inevitable for them. A little oftener or a little seldomer, would it
+matter very much then?</p>
+
+<p>Maurice did not think it would; bound as he was to the woman whom he had
+made his wife&mdash;tied to her by every law of God and of man, of honour, and
+of manly feeling&mdash;that there should be any actual danger to be run by the
+near proximity of the woman he had loved, did not even enter into his
+head. If he had known how to do his duty towards Helen before he had
+married her, would he not tenfold know how to do so now? Possibly he
+over-rated his own strength; for, however high are our principles,
+however exalted is our sense of honour&mdash;after all, we are but mortals,
+and unspeakably weak at the very best.</p>
+
+<p>It did not in any case occur to him to look at the question from Vera's
+point of view. It is never easy for a man to put himself into a woman's
+place, or to enter into the extra sensitiveness of soul with which she is
+endowed.</p>
+
+<p>So it was that he agreed to go straight back to Kynaston, and to make the
+old house his permanent home according to his wife's wishes.</p>
+
+<p>It was whilst the newly-married couple were passing through Switzerland
+on their homeward journey that they suddenly came across Mr. Herbert
+Pryme, who had been performing a melancholy and solitary pilgrimage in
+the land of tourists.</p>
+
+<p>It was at the table d'h&ocirc;te at Vevay, upon coming down to that lengthy
+and untempting repast, chiefly composed of aged goats and stringy hens,
+which the inventive Swiss waiter exalts, with the effort of a soaring
+imagination, into "Chamois," and "Salmi de Poulet," that Captain and Mrs.
+Kynaston, who had scarcely recovered from a passage of arms in the
+seclusion of their bed-chamber, suddenly descried a familiar face amongst
+the long array of uncongenial people ranged down either side of the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>What the print of a hob-nailed boot must be to the lonely traveller
+across the desert, what the sight of a man from one's own club going down
+Pall Mall is in mid-September, or as a draught of Giesler's '68 to an
+epicure who has been about to perish on ginger-beer&mdash;so did Herbert
+Pryme's face shine upon Maurice Kynaston out of the arid waste of that
+Vevay <i>salle-&agrave;-manger</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In England he had been only an acquaintance&mdash;at Vevay he became his most
+intimate friend. The delight of having a man to speak to, and a man who
+knew others of his friends, was almost intoxicating. To think of getting
+one evening&mdash;nay, one hour of liberty from that ever-present chain of
+matrimonial intercourse which was galling him so sorely, was a bliss for
+which he could hardly find words to express his gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Herbert, who could not quite understand the reason of it, was almost
+overpowered by the warmth of Captain Kynaston's greeting. To have his
+place removed next to his own, and to grasp him heartily by both hands,
+wringing them with affectionate fervour, was the work of a few seconds.
+And then, who so lively, so full of anecdote and laughter, so interested
+in all that could be said to him, as Maurice Kynaston during that dinner?</p>
+
+<p>It made Helen angry to hear him. He could be agreeable enough, she
+thought, bitterly, to a chance acquaintance, picked up nobody knew where;
+he could find plenty of conversation for this almost unknown young man;
+it was only when they were alone together that he sat by glumly and
+silently, without a smile and without a word!</p>
+
+<p>She did not take it into account how surfeited the man was with his
+honeycomb. Herbert Pryme, individually, was nothing much to him; but he
+came as the sight of a distant sail is to a shipwrecked mariner. It is
+doubtful, indeed, whether, under the circumstances, Maurice would not
+have been equally delighted to have met his tailor or his bootmaker.
+After dinner was over the two men went out and smoked their cigars
+together. This was a fresh offence to Mrs. Kynaston; usually she enjoyed
+an evening stroll with her husband after dinner, but when he asked her to
+come out with him on this occasion, she refused, shortly and
+ungraciously.</p>
+
+<p>"No, thank you; if you and Mr. Pryme are going to smoke, I could not
+possibly come; you know that I hate smoke."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Herbert was about to protest that nothing would induce him to smoke;
+but Maurice passed his arm hurriedly through his.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, then, and have a cigar in the garden," he said, with
+scarcely concealed eagerness; he felt like a schoolboy let out of school.</p>
+
+<p>Helen went up to her bedroom, and sat sulkily by her open window, looking
+over the lake on to the mountains. Long after it was dark she could see
+the two red specks of their cigars wandering about like fire-flies in the
+garden, and could hear the crush of the rough gravel under their
+footsteps, and the low murmur of their voices as they talked.</p>
+
+<p>"You are coming into Meadowshire, are you not?" asked Maurice, ere they
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>Herbert shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not to the Millers?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am afraid I shall never be asked to Shadonake again," answered the
+younger man, gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I thought you and Beatrice&mdash;forgive me&mdash;but is it not the case?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her parents have stopped all that, Kynaston."</p>
+
+<p>"But I am sure Beatrice herself will never let it stop; I know her too
+well," said Maurice, cheerily.</p>
+
+<p>"There are laws in connection with minors," began Mr. Pryme, solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>"Fiddlesticks!" was Maurice's rejoinder. "There are no laws to prevent
+young women falling in love, or the world would not be in such a
+confounded muddle as it frequently is. Don't be downhearted, Pryme; you
+stick to her, and it will all come right; and look here, if they won't
+ask you to Shadonake, I ask you to Kynaston; drop me a line, and come
+whenever you like&mdash;as soon as you get home."</p>
+
+<p>"You are exceedingly kind; I shall be only too delighted."</p>
+
+<p>"When will you be home?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can be home at any time&mdash;there is nothing to keep me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, come as soon as you like, the sooner the better. And now
+I must say good-night and good-bye too, I fear, for we are off early
+to-morrow. I shall be glad enough to be home; I'm dead sick of the
+travelling. Good-night, old fellow; it has been a real pleasure to meet
+you."</p>
+
+<p>And, positively, this was the only evening out of his whole wedding-trip
+that Maurice had thoroughly enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth kept you out so late with that solemn young prig?" says
+his wife to him as he opens her door.</p>
+
+<p>"I find him a very pleasant companion, and I have asked him to come to
+Kynaston," answers Maurice, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Umph!" grunts Helen, and inwardly determines that his visit shall be a
+short one.</p>
+
+<p>Four days later they were in England again.</p>
+
+<p>It was only when the train had actually stopped at Sutton, and he was
+handing his wife into her own carriage under the arch of greenery across
+the road, and amid the ringing cheers of the rustics, who had gathered
+to see them arrive, that Maurice began to realise how powerfully that
+home-coming was to be tinged in his own mind with thoughts of her who was
+once so nearly going as a bride to the same house where now he was taking
+Helen.</p>
+
+<p>All along the lane, as they drove under the arches of flags and flowers
+that had been put up from the station to the park gates, and as they
+responded to the hearty welcome from the village-folk who lined the road,
+Maurice was asking himself, with a painful anxiety, whether <i>she</i> was at
+Sutton now; whether her eyes had rested upon these rustic decorations,
+whether her steps had passed along under these mottoes of welcome and of
+happiness. And then, as they neared the church, the clang of the bells
+burst forth loudly and jarringly.</p>
+
+<p>Was <i>she</i>, perchance, there in the house, kneeling alone, white and
+stricken by her bedside, whilst those joy-bells rang out their deafening
+clamour from the church hard by?</p>
+
+<p>For the life of him, Maurice could not help casting a glance at the
+vicarage as they drove swiftly by it.</p>
+
+<p>The windows were wide open, but no one looked out of them, the muslin
+blinds fluttered in the wind, the Gloire de Dijon roses nodded upon the
+wall, the Virginia creeper hung in crimson festoons over the porch; but
+there was not a living creature to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>He had caught no glimpse of the woman that was ever in his heart; and it
+was a great pity that he had looked for her, because his wife, whose
+sharp eyes nothing ever escaped, had seen him look.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
+
+<h3>"IF I COULD DIE!"</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Why cannot I forgo, forget<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That ever I loved thee, that ever we met?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There is not a single link or sign<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To bind thy life in this world with mine.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">M. W. Praed.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>But it was not until Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston had been at home
+for more than a fortnight that Vera came back to her brother-in-law's
+house.</p>
+
+<p>She had kept away, poor girl, as long as she could. She had put off the
+evil hour of her return as long as possible. The Hazeldines had gone to
+Scotland, and Vera had, in desperation, accepted an invitation to stay
+with some acquaintances whom she neither knew very well nor liked
+overmuch. It had kept her from Sutton a little longer. But the visit had
+come to an end at last, and what was she to do? She had no other visits
+to prolong her absence, and her sister wrote to her perpetually, urging
+her to return. Her home was at Sutton; she had no other place to go to.
+She had told Sir John that in absence from his brother lay her only hope
+of safety. But where was she to seek that safety? Where find security,
+when he; reckless, or, perchance, heedless of her danger, had come to
+plant himself at her very doors? They should have been far as the poles
+asunder, and a malevolent fate had willed that the same parish should
+contain them.</p>
+
+<p>For whatever Maurice did, Vera in no way underrated the danger. Too well
+she knew her own heart; too surely she estimated the strength of a
+passion which, repressed and thwarted, and half-smothered, as it had been
+within her, yet burnt but the fiercer and the wilder. For that is the way
+with love: if it may not flourish and thrive openly and bravely before
+the eyes of the world, it will eat into the very heart and life, till all
+that is fair and sweet in the garden of the soul is choked and blighted
+and overgrown, till the main-spring of life becomes poisoned, and all
+things that are happy, withered and dried up.</p>
+
+<p>In Vera's love for Maurice there had been nothing of joy, and all of
+pain. There had never been for her that sweet illusion of dawning
+affection&mdash;that intangible sense of delight in the consciousness of an
+unspoken sympathy that is the very essence of a happy love. She had no
+memories that were serene and untroubled&mdash;no days of calm and delicious
+happiness to recall. His first conscious look had been a terror to her;
+his words of hopeless love had given her a shock that had been almost
+physical; and his few passionate kisses had burnt into her very soul till
+they had seemed to have been printed upon her lips in fire. Vera's love
+had brought her no good thing that she could count. But it had done one
+thing for her: if it had cursed her life, it had purified her soul.</p>
+
+<p>The Vera who had come back to Sutton Vicarage in August was no longer the
+same woman who had stood months ago on the terrace at Kynaston among the
+falling autumn leaves, and who had told herself that it was money
+alone that was worth living for.</p>
+
+<p>She came back to everything that was full of pain, and to much in which
+there was absolute fear.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes after she had entered the vicarage drawing-room her tortures
+began.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not asked after the bride and bridegroom," says old Mrs.
+Daintree, as she sits in her corner, darning everlastingly at those brown
+worsted socks of her son's. Vera thinks she must have been sitting there
+darning incessantly, day and night, ever since she had been away. "We are
+all full of it down here. Such a pretty welcome home they had&mdash;arches
+across the road, and processions with flags, and a band inside the
+lodge-gates. You should have been here to have seen it. Everybody is
+making much of Mrs. Kynaston; she is a very pretty woman, I must say,
+and called here three days ago in the most beautiful Paris gown."</p>
+
+<p>"She seemed very sorry not to see you," says Marion, "and quite disposed
+to be friendly. I do hope you and she will get on, Vera, in spite of the
+awkwardness of her being in your place, as it were."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" rather sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Only, of course, dear, that it will be rather painful to you just at
+first to see anybody else the mistress at Kynaston, where you yourself
+might have been&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you had not been a fool," interpolated the old lady, bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I shall mind that much," says Vera, quietly. "Where is
+Eustace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he will be in presently; he has gone up to the Hall about the
+chancel. The men have made all kinds of mistakes about the tesselated
+pavement; the wrong pattern was sent down from town, and we have had so
+much trouble about it, and there has been nobody to appeal to to set
+things right. Captain Kynaston is all very well, and now he is back, I
+hope we may get things into a little order; but I am sorry to say he
+takes very little interest in the church or the parish; he is not half
+so good a squire as poor dear Sir John." And there was a whole volume of
+unspoken reproach in the sigh with which Marion wound up her remarks.</p>
+
+<p>"Decidedly," said Vera, to herself, as she went slowly upstairs to her
+own little room; "decidedly I must get away from all this. I shall have
+to marry." She leant out of her open window in a frame-work of roses
+and jessamine, and looked out over the lime-trees towards the Hall.
+Now that the trees were in full leaf, she could catch no glimpse of its
+red-stacked chimneys and its terraced gardens; but, by-and-by, when the
+leaves were down and the trees were bare, she knew she should see it.
+Every morning when she got up the sun would be shining full upon it;
+every night when she went to bed she would see the twinkling lights of
+the many windows gleaming through the darkness; she would be in her
+room alone, and <i>he</i> would be out there, happy with his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not be able to bear it," said Vera, slowly, speaking aloud to
+herself. "I had better marry, and go away; there is nothing else to be
+done. Poor Denis! He is worthy of a better woman; but I think he will be
+good to me."</p>
+
+<p>For it had come to this now, that when Vera thought about marrying, it
+was upon Denis Wilde that she also pondered.</p>
+
+<p>To be at Sutton, and not to come face to face with Maurice, was of course
+an impossibility. Carefully as Vera confined herself to the house and
+garden for the next three days, she could not avoid going to church when
+Sunday came. And at church were Captain and Mrs. Kynaston. During the
+service she only saw his back, erect and broad-shouldered, in the seat in
+front of her, for the pews had been cleared away, and open sittings had
+been substituted all through the church. Maurice looked neither to the
+right nor to the left; he stood, or sat, or knelt, and scarcely turned
+his head an inch, but Helen's butterfly bonnet was twisted in every
+direction throughout the service. It is certain that she very soon knew
+who it was who had come into the vicarage seat behind her.</p>
+
+<p>When Vera came out of church, having purposely lingered as long as she
+could inside, until the rest of the congregation had all gone out, she
+found the bride and bridegroom waiting for her in the churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>Helen stood with her hand twined with easy familiarity round her
+husband's arm; possibly she had studied the attitude with a view to
+impressing Vera with the perfection of her conjugal happiness. She turned
+quite delightedly to greet her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, here you are at last, Miss Nevill. We have been waiting for you,
+have we not, Maurice dear? We both felt how pleased we should be to see
+you. I am very glad you have come back; it will make it much more
+pleasant for me at Kynaston; you will come up to see me, won't you?
+I should like you to see my boudoir, it is lovely!"</p>
+
+<p>"You forget that Miss Nevill has seen it all long ago," said Maurice,
+gravely; their hands had just met, but he had not looked at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, to be sure; how stupid I am! Of course, I remember now, it was
+all done up for <i>you</i> by poor dear old John. Doesn't it seem funny that
+I should be going to live in the house? Ah, how d'ye do, Mr. Daintree?"
+as Eustace came out of the vestry door; "here we are, chattering to your
+sister. What a delightful sermon, dear Mr. Daintree, and what a treat to
+be in a Christian church&mdash;I mean a Protestant church&mdash;again after those
+dreadful Sundays on the Continent."</p>
+
+<p>Vera had turned to Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any news of Sir John yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; we cannot expect to hear of his arrival till next month. I dare say
+you will like to hear about him. I will let you know as soon as he
+writes."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you; I should like to know about him very much."</p>
+
+<p>Helen, in the middle of Eustace's polite acknowledgment of her compliment
+to his sermon, was casting furtive glances at her husband; even the two
+or three grave words he had exchanged with Vera were sufficient to make
+her uneasy. She desired to torture Vera with envy and with jealousy; she
+had forgotten to take into account how very easily her own suspicious
+jealousy could be aroused. She interrupted the vicar in the very middle
+of his speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, really, we must run away. Come, Maurice, darling, we shall be late
+for lunch; you and Miss Nevill must finish your confidences another day.
+You will come up soon, won't you? Any day at five I am in&mdash;good-bye."
+She shook hands with them, and hurried her husband away.</p>
+
+<p>"What an odd thing it is that you and that girl never can meet without
+having all sorts of private things to say to each other," she said,
+angrily, as soon as they were out of earshot.</p>
+
+<p>"Private things! what can you possibly mean, Helen? Miss Nevill was
+asking me if I had heard of John's arrival."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder she has the face to mention John's name!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"After her disgraceful conduct to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you know very little about Miss Nevill's conduct, Helen."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I dare say not. And <i>you</i> have always known a great deal more about
+it than anybody else. That I have always understood, Maurice."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice looked very black, but he was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad I told her about the boudoir," continued Helen,
+spitefully. "How mortified she must feel to think that it has all slipped
+through her fingers and into mine. I do hope she will come up to the
+house. I shall show her all over it; she will wish she had not been
+such a fool!"</p>
+
+<p>Maurice was looking at his wife with a singular expression.</p>
+
+<p>"I begin to think you have a very bad heart, Helen," he said, with
+a contempt in his voice that was very near akin to disgust.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, a little startled, and put her hand back, caressingly,
+under his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't look at me like that, Maurice; I don't want to vex you. You
+know very well how much I love you&mdash;and&mdash;and"&mdash;looking up with a little
+smile into his face that was meant as a peace offering&mdash;"I suppose I am
+jealous!"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose you wait to be jealous until I give you cause to be so,"
+answered her husband, gravely and coldly, but not altogether unkindly,
+for he meant to do his duty to her, God helping him, as far as he knew
+how.</p>
+
+<p>But all the way home he walked silently by her side, and wondered whether
+the sacrifice he had made of his love to his duty had been, indeed, worth
+it.</p>
+
+<p>It had been hard for him, this first meeting with Vera. He had felt it
+more than he had believed possible. Instinctively he had realized what
+she must have suffered; and that her sufferings were utterly beyond his
+power to console. It began to come into his mind that, meaning to deal
+rightly by Helen, he had dealt cruelly and badly by Vera. He had
+sacrificed the woman he loved to the woman he did not love.</p>
+
+<p>Had it, indeed, been such a right and praiseworthy action on his part?
+Maurice lost himself in speculation as to what would have happened had he
+broken his faith to Helen, and allowed himself to follow the dictates of
+his heart rather than those of his conscience.</p>
+
+<p>That was what Vera had done for his sake; but what he had been unable to
+do for hers.</p>
+
+<p>There was a certain hardness about the man, a rigid sense of honour that
+was almost a fault; for, if it be a virtue to cleave to truth and good
+faith above everything, to swear to one's neighbour and disappoint him
+not&mdash;even though it be to one's own hindrance&mdash;it is certainly not a fine
+or noble thing to mistake tenderness for a weakness only fit to be
+crushed out of the soul with firm hands and an iron determination.</p>
+
+<p>Guilty once of one irreparable action of weakness, Maurice had set
+himself determinedly ever after to undo the evil that he had done.</p>
+
+<p>To be true to his brother, to keep his faith with Helen, these had been
+the only objects he had steadily kept in view: he had succeeded in his
+efforts, but had scarcely realized that, in doing so, he had not only
+wrecked his own life, but also that of the woman whom he had so
+infinitely wronged.</p>
+
+<p>But when he saw her once again&mdash;when he held for an instant the cold hand
+within his own&mdash;when he marked, with a pang, the dark circles round the
+averted eyes that spoke so mutely and touchingly of sleepless vigils and
+of many tears&mdash;when he noted how the lovely sensitive lips trembled a
+little as she spoke her few common-place words to him&mdash;then Maurice began
+to understand what he had done to her; and, for the first time, something
+that was almost remorse, with regard to his own conduct towards her, came
+into his soul.</p>
+
+<p>Such meditations were not, however, safe or profitable to indulge in for
+long. Maurice recalled his wandering thoughts with an effort, and with
+something of repentance for having given them place, turned his attention
+resolutely to his wife's chatter during the remainder of the walk home.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Vera and the vicar are walking back, side by side, to the
+vicarage.</p>
+
+<p>"Something," says Eustace, with solemn displeasure, "something must
+really be done, and that soon, about Ishmael Spriggs; that man will drive
+me into my grave before my time! Anything more fearfully and awfully out
+of tune than the Te Deum I never heard in the whole course of my life. I
+can hear his voice shouting and bellowing above the whole of the rest of
+the choir; he leads all the others wrong. It is not a bit of use to tell
+me that he is the best behaved man in the parish; it is not a matter of
+conduct, as I told Mr. Dale; it is a matter of voice, and if the man
+can't be taught to sing in tune, out of the choir he shall go; it's a
+positive scandal to the Service. Marion says we shall turn him into an
+enemy if we don't let him sing, and that he will go to the dissenting
+chapel, and never come to church any more. Well, I can't help that; I
+must give him up to the dissenters. As to keeping him in the choir, it is
+out of the question after that Te Deum. I shall never forget it. It will
+give me a nightmare to-night, I am convinced. Wasn't it dreadful, Vera?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, very likely, Eustace," answered Vera, at random. She has not heard
+one single word he has said.</p>
+
+<p>Eustace Daintree looks round at her sharply. He sees that she is very
+white, and that there are tears upon her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Vera!" he cries, standing still, you have not listened to a word
+I have been saying. "What is the matter, child? Why are you crying?"</p>
+
+<p>They are in the vicarage garden now; among the beds of scarlet geraniums,
+and the tall hollyhocks, and the glaring red gladioli; a whole bank of
+greenery, rhododendrons and lauristinas, conceals them from the windows
+of the house; a garden bench sheltered beneath a nook of the laurel
+bushes is close by.</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden gesture of utter misery Vera sinks down upon it, and bursts
+into a passion of tears.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child; my poor Vera! What is it? What has happened? What can be
+the reason of this?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Daintree is infinitely distressed and puzzled; he bends over her,
+taking her hand between his own. There is something in this wild outburst
+of grief, from one habitually so calm and self-contained as Vera, that is
+an absolute shock to him. He had learnt to love her very dearly; he had
+thought he had understood all the workings of her candid maiden soul; he
+had fancied that the story of her broken engagement was no secret to him,
+that it was but the struggle of a conscientious nature after what was
+true and honest. It had seemed to him that there had been no mystery in
+her conduct, for he could appreciate all her motives. And surely, as she
+had done right, she must be now at peace. He had told himself that the
+pure instincts of a naturally stainless soul had triumphed in Vera over
+the carelessness and worldliness of her early training; and lo, here was
+the passionate weeping of a tempest-tossed woman, whose agony he could
+not fathom, and whose sorrows he knew not how to divine.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, will you not tell me?" he asked her, in his distress. "Will you
+not make a friend of me? My dear, forget that I am a clergyman; remember
+only that I am your brother, and that I shall know how to feel for
+you&mdash;for you, my dear sister."</p>
+
+<p>But she could not tell him. There are some troubles that must be kept for
+ever buried within our own souls; to speak of some things is only to make
+them worse. Only she choked back her sobs, and lifted her face, white
+and tear-stained; there was a look of hunted despair in her eyes, that
+bewildered, and even half-terrified him.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she said, with a sort of anger, "tell me, you that are a
+clergyman&mdash;Do you think God has made us only to torment us? You have got
+a daughter, Eustace; pray God, night and morning, that she may have a
+hard heart, and that she may never have one gleam of womanly tenderness
+within her; for only so are women happy!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer her wild words. Instinctively he felt that common-place
+speeches of rebuke or of consolation would be trivial and out of place
+before the great anguish of her heart. The man's soul was above the
+narrow limits of his training; he felt, dimly, that here was something
+with which it were best not to intermeddle, some trouble for which he
+could offer no consolation.</p>
+
+<p>She rose and stood before him, holding his hands and gazing earnestly at
+his anxious face.</p>
+
+<p>"It has come to this with me," she said, below her voice, "that there are
+times when there is but one good thing in all the world that I know any
+longer how to desire. God has so ordered my life that there is no road
+open for me that does not lead to sin or to misery. Surely, if He were
+merciful, He would take back the valueless gift."</p>
+
+<p>"Vera! what do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean," she exclaimed, wearily, "that if I could die, I should be at
+peace."</p>
+
+<p>She had walked slowly on; her voice, that had trembled at first with a
+passionate wildness, had sunk into the spiritless apathy of despair; her
+head was bent, her hands clasped before her; her dress trailed with a
+soft rustle across the grass, sweeping over a whole wilderness of white
+daisies, that bent their heads beneath its folds as she walked. A gleam
+of sunshine fell upon her hair, and a bird sang loud and shrill in the
+lime trees overhead.</p>
+
+<p>Often and often, in the after days, Eustace Daintree thought of her thus,
+and remembered with a pang the sole sad gift that she had craved at
+Heaven's hands. Often and often the scene came back to him; the sunny
+garden, the scarlet geraniums flaring in the borders, the smooth green
+lawn, speckled with shadows from the trees, the wide open windows of his
+pleasant vicarage beyond, and the beautiful figure of the girl at his
+side, with her bent head, and her low broken voice&mdash;the girl who, at
+twenty-three, sighed to be rid of the life that had become too hard for
+her; that precious gift of life which, too often, at three-score years
+and ten, is but hardly resigned!</p>
+
+<p>"If I could die, I should be at peace," she had said. And she was only
+twenty-three!</p>
+
+<p>Eustace Daintree never forgot it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN EVENTFUL DRIVE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ill blows the wind that profits nobody.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span>, "Henry IV."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>I imagine that the most fretting and wearing of all the pains and
+penalties which it is the lot of humanity to undergo in this troublesome
+and naughty world are those which, by our own folly, our own
+shortsightedness, and our own imprudence, we have brought upon ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>There is a degree of irritation in such troubles which adds a whole
+armoury of small knife-cuts to intensify the agony of the evil from which
+we suffer. It is more dreadful to be moaning over our own mistakes than
+over the inscrutable perversity of an unpropitious fate.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody once has said that most men grieve over the smallest mistake
+more bitterly than over the greatest sin. This is decidedly a perversion
+of the moral nature; nevertheless, there is a good deal of truth in it.</p>
+
+<p>"If only I had not been such a fool! If I could only have foreseen such
+and such results?"</p>
+
+<p>These are more generally the burden of our bitterest self-reproaches.</p>
+
+<p>And this was what Miss Miller was perpetually repeating to herself during
+the months of August and September. Beatrice, in these days, was a
+thoroughly miserable young woman. She was more utterly separated than
+ever from her lover, and that entirely by her own fault. That foolish
+escapade of hers to the Temple had been fatal to her; her father, who
+had been inclined to become her lover's friend, had now peremptorily
+forbidden her ever to mention his name again, and her own lips were
+sealed as to the unlucky incident in which she had played so prominent
+a part.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice knew that, in going alone and on the sly to her lover's
+chambers, she had undoubtedly compromised her own good name. To confess
+to her own folly and imprudence was almost beyond her power, and to clear
+her lover's name at the expense of her own was what she felt he himself
+would scarcely thank her for.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Miller had, of course, said something of what he had discovered at
+Mr. Pryme's chambers to the wife of his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"The young man is not fit for her," he had said; "his private life will
+not bear investigation. You must tell Beatrice to put him out of her
+head."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller had, of course, been virtuously indignant over Mr. Pryme's
+offences, but she had also been triumphantly elated over her own
+sagacity.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not tell you he was not a proper husband for her? Another time,
+Andrew, you will, I hope, allow that I am the best judge in these
+matters."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, you are always right," was the meekly conjugal reply, and then
+Mrs. Miller went her way and talked to Beatrice for half-an-hour over the
+sinful lives which are frequently led by young men of no family residing
+in the Temple, and the shame and disgrace which must necessarily accrue
+to any well-brought-up young woman who, in an ill-advised moment, shall
+allow her affections to rove towards such unsanctified Pariahs of
+society.</p>
+
+<p>And Beatrice, listening to her blushingly, knew what she meant, and yet
+had no words wherewith to clear her lover's character from the defamatory
+evidence furnished against him by her own sunshade and gloves.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father has seen with his own eyes, my dear, that which makes it
+impossible for us ever to consent to your marrying that young man."</p>
+
+<p>How was Beatrice to say to her mother, "It was I&mdash;your daughter&mdash;who was
+there, shut up in Mr. Pryme's bedroom." She could not speak the words.</p>
+
+<p>The sunshine twinkled in Shadonake's many windows, and flooded its
+velvet lawns. Below, the Bath slumbered darkly in the shadow of its
+ancient steps and its encircling belt of fir-trees; and beyond the
+flower-gardens, half-an-acre of pineries, and vineries, and
+orchard-houses glittered in a dazzling parterre of glass-roofs and white
+paint. Something new&mdash;it was an orchard-house&mdash;was being built. There was
+always something new, and Mr. Miller was superintending the building of
+it. He stood over the workmen who were laying the foundation, watching
+every brick that was laid down with delighted and absorbed interest. He
+held a trowel himself, and had tucked up his shirt cuffs in order to lend
+a helping hand in the operations. There was nothing that Andrew Miller
+loved so well. Fate and his Caroline had made him a member of Parliament,
+and had placed him in the position of a gentleman, but nature had
+undoubtedly intended him for a bricklayer.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice came out of the drawing-room windows across the lawn to him. She
+was in her habit, and stood tapping her little boot with her riding whip
+for some minutes by her father's side.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to see uncle Tom, papa," she said; "have you any message?"</p>
+
+<p>"Going to Lutterton? Ah, that's right; the ride will do you good, my
+dear. No; I have no message."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice went back into the house; her little bay mare stood at the door.
+She met her mother in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to see uncle Tom," she said, to her also.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller always encouraged her children in their attentions to her
+brother. He was rich, and he was a bachelor; he must have saved a good
+deal one way or another. Who could tell how it would be left? And then
+Beatrice was undoubtedly his favourite. She nodded pleasantly to her
+daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell uncle Tom to come over to lunch on Sunday, and, of course, he must
+come here early for Guy's birthday next week," for there were to be great
+doings on Guy's birthday. "Ride slowly, Beatrice, or you will get so
+hot."</p>
+
+<p>Lutterton Castle was a good six miles off. The house stood well, and even
+imposingly, on a high wooded knoll that overlooked the undulating park,
+and the open valley at its feet. It was a great rambling building with a
+central tower and four smaller ones at each corner. When Mr. Esterworth
+was at home, which was almost always, it was his vanity to keep a red
+flag flying from the centre tower as though he had been royalty. All the
+reception-rooms and more than half the bedrooms were permanently
+shuttered up, and there was a portly and very dignified housekeeper,
+who rattled her keys at her ch&acirc;telaine, and went through all the unused
+apartments daily, followed by a meek phalanx of housemaids, to see that
+all the rooms were well-aired and well kept in order, so that at any
+minute they might be fit for occupation. Five or six times during the
+hunting season the large rooms were all thrown open, and there was a hunt
+breakfast held in the principal dining-hall; but, with that exception,
+Mr. Esterworth rarely entertained at all.</p>
+
+<p>He occupied three rooms opening out of each other in the small western
+tower. They consisted of a bedroom, a dressing-room, and a small and
+rather inconvenient study, where the huntsman, whips, and other official
+personages connected with the hunt were received at all hours of the day
+and night. The room was consequently pervaded by a faint odour of stables
+and tobacco; there were usually three or four dogs upon the hearthrug,
+and it was a rare thing to find Mr. Esterworth in it unaccompanied by
+some personage in breeches and gaiters, wearing a blue spotted neckcloth
+and a horseshoe pin.</p>
+
+<p>Such an individual was receiving an audience at the moment of Miss
+Miller's arrival, and shuffled awkwardly and hurriedly out of the room by
+one door as she entered it by another.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, William," calls the M.F.H. after his departing satellite.
+"Look in again to-night. I shall have her fired, I think, and throw her
+up till December. Hallo! Pussy, how are you?"</p>
+
+<p>All the four dogs rose from the hearthrug and wagged their tails solemnly
+in respectful greeting to her. Beatrice had a pat and a word for each,
+and a kiss for her uncle, before she sat down on the chair he pulled
+forward for her.</p>
+
+<p>"What brings you, Pussy? What are you riding?"</p>
+
+<p>"Kitty; they have taken her round to the stable. I thought I'd have lunch
+with you, uncle Tom."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; you won't get anything but a mutton-chop."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't ask for anything better."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice felt that her heart was beating. She had taken a desperate
+resolution during her six miles' solitary ride; she had determined to
+take her uncle into her confidence. He had always been indulgent and kind
+to her; perhaps he would not view her sin in so heinous a light as her
+mother would; and who knows? perhaps he would help her.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Tom, I'm in dreadful trouble, and I want to tell you about it,"
+she began, trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm very sorry, Pussy; what is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did a shocking, dreadful thing when I was in London. I went to a young
+man's rooms, and got shut up in his bedroom."</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce you did!" says Tom Esterworth, opening his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," continues Beatrice, desperately, and crimson with shame and
+confusion; "and the worse of it is, that I left my sunshade in the
+sitting-room; and papa came in, and, of course, he did not know it was
+mine, and&mdash;and&mdash;he thinks&mdash;he thinks&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the best joke I ever heard in my life!" cries Mr. Esterworth,
+laying his head back in the chair and laughing aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Tom!" Beatrice could hardly believe her ears.</p>
+
+<p>"Good lord, what a situation for a comedy!" cries her uncle, between the
+outbursts of his mirth. "Upon my word, Pussy, you are a good plucked one;
+there isn't much Miller blood in your veins. You are an Esterworth all
+over."</p>
+
+<p>"But, uncle, indeed, it's no laughing matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't see much to cry at if your father did not find you out;
+the young man is never likely to talk."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but uncle Tom; papa and mamma think so badly of him, and I can't
+tell them that I was there; and they will never let me marry him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! so you are in love, Pussy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, uncle."</p>
+
+<p>Tom Esterworth smote his hand against his corduroy thigh.</p>
+
+<p>"What a mistake!" he exclaimed; "a girl who can go across country as you
+do&mdash;what on earth do you want to be married for? Is it Mr. Pryme, Pussy?"</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"And he can't go a yard," said her uncle, sorrowfully and reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I think he goes very well, uncle; his seat is capital; it is only
+his hands that are a bit heavy; but then he has had very little
+practice."</p>
+
+<p>"Tut&mdash;tut, don't talk to me, child; he is no horseman. He may be a good
+young man in his way, but what can have made you take a fancy to a fellow
+who can't ride is a mystery to me! Now tell me the whole story, Pussy."</p>
+
+<p>And then Beatrice made a clean breast of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I will see if I can help you," said her uncle, seriously, when she had
+finished her story; "but I can't think how you can have set your heart
+upon a fellow who can't ride!"</p>
+
+<p>This was evidently a far more fatal error in Tom Esterworth's eyes than
+the other matter of her being shut up in Mr. Pryme's rooms. Beatrice
+began to think she had not done anything so very terrible after all.</p>
+
+<p>"I must turn it over in my mind. Now come and eat your mutton-chop,
+Pussy, and when we have finished our lunch, you shall come out with me
+in the dog-cart. I am going to put Clochette into harness for the first
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Will she go quietly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like a lamb, I should say. You won't be nervous?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear, no! I am never nervous; I shall enjoy the fun."</p>
+
+<p>The mutton-chop over, Clochette and the dog-cart came round to the door.
+She was a raking, bright chestnut mare, with a coat like satin. Even as
+she stood at the door she chafed somewhat at her new position between
+the shafts. This, however, was no more than might have been expected. Mr.
+Esterworth declining the company of the groom, helped his niece up and
+took the reins.</p>
+
+<p>"We will go round by Tripton and back by the common," he said, "and talk
+this matter well over, Pussy; we shall enjoy ourselves much better with
+nobody in the back seat. A man sits there with his arms crossed and his
+face like a blank sheet of paper, but one never knows how much they hear,
+and their ears are always cocked, like a terrier's on the scent of a
+rat."</p>
+
+<p>Clochette went off from the door with a bound, but soon settled down into
+a good swinging trot. She kept turning her head nervously from side to
+side, and there was evidently a little uncertainty in her mind as to
+whether she should keep to the drive, or deviate on to the grass by the
+side of it; but, upon the whole, she behaved fairly well, and turned out
+of the lodge gates into the high road with perfect docility and good
+breeding.</p>
+
+<p>There was a whole avalanche of dogs in attendance. A collie, rushing on
+tumultuously in front; a "plum-pudding" dog between the wheels; a couple
+of fox-terriers snapping joyfully at each other in the rear; and there
+was also an ill-conditioned animal&mdash;half lurcher, half terrier&mdash;who
+killed cats, and murdered fowls, and worried sheep, and flew at the
+heels of unwary strangers; and was given, in short, to every sort of
+canine iniquity, and who possessed but one redeeming feature in his
+character&mdash;that of blind adoration to his master.</p>
+
+<p>This animal, who followed uncle Tom whithersoever he went, came skurrying
+out of the stables as the dog-cart drove off, and joined in the general
+scamper.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the dogs may have been too much for Clochette's nerves, or
+perhaps the effort of behaving well as far as the park gates with those
+horrible wheels rattling behind her was as much as any hunter born and
+bred could be expected to do, or perhaps uncle Tom was too free with that
+whip with which he caressed her shining flanks; but be that as it may, no
+sooner was Clochette's head well turned along the straight high-road with
+its high-tangled hedge-rows on either side than she began to show symptoms
+of behaving very badly indeed. She bucked and pranced, and stood on her
+hind legs; she whipped suddenly round, pirouetted upon her own axis with
+the dexterity of a circus performer, and demonstrated very plainly that,
+if she only dared, she would like to take to her heels in the reverse
+direction to that which her driver desired her to go.</p>
+
+<p>All this was, however, equally delightful and exciting both to Tom
+Esterworth and his niece. There was no apprehension in Beatrice's mind,
+for her uncle drove as well as he rode, and she felt perfectly secure in
+the strong, supple hands that guided Clochette's erratic movements.</p>
+
+<p>"There is not a kick in her," uncle Tom had said, as they started, and he
+repeated the observation now; and kicking being out of the category of
+Clochette's iniquities, there was nothing else to fear.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner, however, had the words left his lips than a turn of the road
+brought them within sight of a great volume of black smoke rushing slowly
+but surely towards them; whilst a horrible roaring and howling, as of an
+antediluvian monster in its wrath, filled the silence of the summer
+afternoon with a hideous and unholy confusion.</p>
+
+<p>Talk about there being no wild animals in our peaceful land! What
+could have been the Megatherium and the Ichthyosaurus, and all the
+fire-spitting dragons of antiquity compared to the traction engines of
+the nineteenth century?</p>
+
+<p>"It's a steam plough!" ejaculated Beatrice, below her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"D&mdash;&mdash;n!" cried her uncle, not at all below <i>his</i> breath.</p>
+
+<p>As to Clochette, she stood for an instant stock still, with her ears
+pricked and her head well up, facing the horrors of her situation; next
+she gave an angry snort as though to say, "No! <i>this</i> is too much!" Then
+she turned short round and began a series of peculiar bounds and plunges,
+accompanied by an ominous uplifting of her hind quarters, which had
+plainly but one object in view&mdash;the correct conjugation of the verb
+active "to kick."</p>
+
+<p>There was a crunching of woodwork, a cracking as of iron hoofs against
+the splash-board. Beatrice instinctively put up her hands before her
+face, but she did not utter a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think you could get down, Pussy, and go to her head?"</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I hold the reins, uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you couldn't hold her; she'll be over the hedge if I let go of her.
+Get down if you can."</p>
+
+<p>It was not easy. Beatrice was in her habit, and to jump from the
+vacillating height of a dog-cart to the earth is no easy matter even to
+a man unencumbered with petticoats.</p>
+
+<p>"Try and get over the back," said her uncle, who was in momentary terror
+lest the mare's heels should be dashed into her face. And Beatrice, with
+that finest trait of a woman's courage in danger, which consists in doing
+exactly what she is told, began to scramble over the back of her seat.</p>
+
+<p>The situation was critical in the extreme; the traction engine came on
+apace, the man with the red flag having paused at a public-house round
+the corner, was only now running back into his place. Uncle Tom shouted
+vainly to him; his voice was drowned in the deafening roar of the
+advancing monster.</p>
+
+<p>But already help was at hand, unheard and unperceived by either uncle or
+niece; a horseman had come rapidly trotting up the road behind them. To
+spring from his horse, who was apparently accustomed to traction engines,
+and stood quietly by, to rush to the plunging, struggling mare, and to
+seize her by the head was the work of a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Mr. Esterworth," shouted the new comer. "I can hold her if
+you can get down; we can lead her into the field; there is a gate ten
+yards back."</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Tom threw the reins to his niece and slipped to the ground; between
+them the two men contrived to quiet the terrified Clochette, and to lead
+her towards the gate.</p>
+
+<p>In another three minutes they were all safely within the shelter of the
+hedge. The traction engine passed, snorting forth fire and smoke, on its
+devastating way; and Clochette stood by, panting, trembling, and covered
+with foam. Beatrice, safely on the ground, was examining ruefully the
+amount of damage done to the dog-cart, and Mr. Esterworth was shaking
+hands with his deliverer.</p>
+
+<p>It was Herbert Pryme.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the last time I ever take a lady out, driving without a
+man-servant behind me," quoth the M.F.H. "What we should have done
+without your timely assistance, sir, I really cannot say; in another
+minute she would have kicked the trap into a thousand bits. You have
+saved my niece's life, Mr. Pryme."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, I did very little," said Herbert, modestly, glancing at Beatrice
+who was trembling and rather pale; but, perhaps, that was only from her
+recent fright. She had not spoken to him, only she had given him one
+bewildered glance, and then had looked hastily away.</p>
+
+<p>"You have saved her life," repeated Mr. Esterworth, with decision. "I
+hope you do not mean to contradict my words, sir? You have saved
+Beatrice's life, sir, and it's the most providential thing in this world
+for you, as Clochette very nearly kicked her to pieces under your nose.
+I shall tell Mr. and Mrs. Miller that they are indebted to you for their
+daughter's life. Young people, I am going to lead this brute of a mare
+home, and, if you like to walk on together to Lutterton in front of me,
+why you may."</p>
+
+<p>That was how Herbert Pryme came to be once more re-instated in the good
+graces of his lady love's father and mother.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Esterworth contrived to give them so terrifying an account of
+the danger in which Beatrice had been placed, and so graphic and
+highly-coloured a description of Herbert Pryme's pluck and sagacity in
+rushing to her rescue, that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had no other course left
+than to shake hands gratefully with the man to whom, as uncle Tom said,
+they literally owed her life.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not have saved her without him," said uncle Tom, drawing
+slightly upon his imagination; "in another minute she must have been
+kicked to pieces, or dashed violently to the earth among the broken
+fragments of the cart, and"&mdash;with a happy after-thought&mdash;"the steam
+plough would have crushed its way over her mangled body."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Tom, I never can trust her to you again!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my dear; but I think you must trust her to Mr. Pryme; that young man
+deserves to be rewarded."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear Tom, there are things against his character. I assure you,
+Andrew himself saw&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! pooh!" interrupted Mr. Esterworth. "Young men who sow their wild
+oats early are all the better husbands for it afterwards. I will give him
+a talking to if you like, but you and your husband must let Pussy have
+her own way; it is the least you can do after his conduct; and don't
+worry about his being poor, Caroline; I have nothing better to do with my
+money, and I shall take care that Pussy is none the worse off for my
+death. She is worth all the rest of your children put together&mdash;an
+Esterworth, every inch of her!"</p>
+
+<p>That, it is to be imagined, was the clenching argument in Mrs. Miller's
+mind. Uncle Tom's money was not to be despised, and, by reason of his
+money, uncle Tom's wishes were bound to carry some weight with them.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pryme, who had been staying for a few days at Kynaston, where,
+however, the cordial welcome given to him by its master was, in a great
+measure, neutralised by the coldness and incivility of its mistress,
+removed himself and his portmanteau, by uncle Tom's invitation, to
+Lutterton, and his engagement to Miss Miller became a recognised fact.</p>
+
+<p>"All the same, it is a very bad match for her," said Mrs. Miller, in
+confidence, to her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"And I should very much like to know who that sunshade belonged to,"
+added the M.P. for Meadowshire, severely.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, my dear, we shall have to overlook that part of the business,
+for, as Tom will leave them his money, why&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, I quite understand; we must hope the young man has had a good
+lesson. Let bygones be bygones, certainly," and Mr. Miller took a pinch
+of snuff reflectively, and wondered what Tom Esterworth would "cut up
+for."</p>
+
+<p>"But I am <i>determined</i>," said Mrs. Miller, ere she closed the discussion,
+"I am determined that I will do better for Geraldine."</p>
+
+<p>After all, the mother had a second string to her bow, so the edict went
+forth that Beatrice was to be allowed to be happy in her own way, and the
+shadow of that fatal sunshade was no longer to be suffered to blacken the
+moral horizon of her father's soul.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY THE VICARAGE GATE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Before our lives divide for ever,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While time is with us and hands are free,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(Time swift to fasten, and swift to sever<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hand from hand....)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I will say no word that a man might say<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whose whole life's love goes down in a day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For this could never have been. And never<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(Though the gods and the years relent) shall be.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Swinburne.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The peacocks had it all to themselves on the terrace walk at Kynaston.
+They strutted up and down, craning and bridling their bright-hued necks
+with a proud consciousness of absolute proprietorship in the place, and
+their long tails trailed across the gravel behind them with the soft
+rustle of a woman's garments. Now and then their sad, shrill cries echoed
+weirdly through the deserted gardens.</p>
+
+<p>There was no one to see them&mdash;the gardeners had all gone home&mdash;and no one
+was moving from the house. Only one small boy, with a rough head and a
+red face, stood below the stone balustrade, half-hidden among the
+hollyhocks and the roses, looking wistfully up at the windows of the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>"What am I to do with it?" said Tommy Daintree, half-aloud to himself,
+and looked sorely perplexed and bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>Tommy had a commission to fulfil, a commission from Vera. He carried a
+little note in his hands, and he had promised Vera faithfully that he
+would wait near the house till he saw Captain Kynaston come in from his
+day's shooting, and give him the note into his own hands.</p>
+
+<p>"You quite understand, Tommy; no one else."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, auntie, I quite understand."</p>
+
+<p>And Tommy had been waiting there an hour, but still there was no sign of
+Captain Kynaston's return; he was getting very tired and very hungry by
+this time, for he had had no tea. He had heard the dressing-bell ring
+long ago in the house&mdash;it must be close upon their dinner hour. Tommy
+could not guess that, by an unaccustomed chance, the master of the house
+had gone in by the back-door to-day, and that he had been in some time.</p>
+
+<p>Presently some one pushed aside the long muslin curtains, and came
+stepping out of the long French window on to the terrace. It was Helen.</p>
+
+<p>She was dressed for dinner; she wore a pale blue dress, cut open at the
+neck, a string of pearls and a jewelled locket hung at her throat; she
+turned round, half laughing, to some one who was following her.</p>
+
+<p>"You will see all the county magnates at Shadonake to-morrow. You will
+have quite enough of them, I promise you; they are neither lively nor
+entertaining."</p>
+
+<p>A young man, also in evening dress, had followed her out on to the
+terrace; it was Denis Wilde; he had arrived from town by the afternoon
+train. Why he should have thrown over several very good invitations to
+country houses in Norfolk and Suffolk, where there were large and
+cheerful parties gathered together, and partridge shooting to make a man
+dream of, in order to come down to the poor sport of Kynaston and the
+insipid society of a newly married couple, with whom he was not on very
+intimate terms, is a problem which Mr. Wilde alone could have
+satisfactorily solved. Being here, he was naturally disposed to make
+himself extremely agreeable to his hostess.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't think how anxious I am to inspect the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of Meadowshire!"
+he said, laughing. "My life is an incomplete thing without a sight of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"You will witness the last token of mental aberration in a
+decently-brought up young woman in the person of Beatrice Miller. You
+know her. Well, she has actually engaged herself to a barrister whom
+nobody knows anything about, and who&mdash;<i>bien entendu</i>&mdash;has no briefs&mdash;they
+never have any. He was staying here for a couple of days; a slow, heavy
+young man, who quoted Blackstone. Maurice took a fancy to him abroad;
+however, he was clever enough to save Beatrice's life by stopping a
+run-away horse. Some people say the accident was the invention of the
+lovers' own imaginations; however, the parents believed in it, and it
+turned the scales in his favour; but he has taken himself off, I am
+thankful to say, and is staying at Lutterton with her uncle. Beatrice
+might have married well, but girls are such fools. Hallo, Topsy, what are
+you barking at?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kynaston's pug had come tearing out of the house with a whole chorus
+of noisy yappings. The peacocks, deeply wounded in their tenderest
+feelings, instantly took wing, and went sailing away majestically over
+the crimson and gold parterre of flowers below.</p>
+
+<p>"What can possess her to bark at the peacocks?" said Helen. "Be quiet,
+Topsy."</p>
+
+<p>But Topsy refused to be tranquillized.</p>
+
+<p>"She is barking at something below the terrace; perhaps there is a cat
+there," said Denis.</p>
+
+<p>"If so, it would be Dutch courage, indeed," answered Helen, laughing.
+They went to the edge of the stone parapet and looked over; there stood
+Tommy Daintree below them, among the hollyhocks.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, little boy, who are you, and what do you want? Why, are you not Mr.
+Daintree's little boy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what are you waiting for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I want to give a note to Captain Kynaston," said Tommy, crimson with
+confusion. "Is he ever coming in?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is in now; give me the note."</p>
+
+<p>"I was to give it to himself, to nobody else."</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aunt Vera."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" There was a whole volume of meaning in the simple exclamation.
+Mrs. Kynaston held out her hand. "You can give it to me, I am Captain
+Kynaston's wife, you know. Give it to me, Tommy. Your name is Tommy,
+isn't it? Yes, I thought so. Mr. Wilde, will you be so kind as to fetch
+Tommy a peach off the dinner-table? Give the note to me, my dear, and you
+can tell your aunt that it shall be given to Captain Kynaston directly."</p>
+
+<p>When Denis returned from his mission to the dining-room he only found
+Tommy waiting for his peach upon the terrace steps. Mrs. Kynaston had
+gone back into the house.</p>
+
+<p>Tommy went off devouring his prey with, it must be confessed, rather a
+guilty conscience over it. Somehow or other, he felt that he had failed
+in the trust his aunt had placed in him; but then, Mrs. Kynaston had been
+very kind and very peremptory; she had almost taken the letter out of his
+hand, and she had smiled and looked quite like a fairy princess out of
+one of Minnie's story-books in her pretty blue silk dress and shining
+locket&mdash;and then, peaches were so very nice!</p>
+
+<p>What happened to Denis Wilde after the small boy's departure was this. He
+sauntered back to the drawing-room windows and looked in; no one was
+there. He then wandered further down the terrace till he came opposite
+the window of the boudoir&mdash;Mrs. Kynaston's own boudoir&mdash;which Sir John's
+loving hands had once lined with blue and silver for his Vera. Here he
+caught sight of Mrs. Kynaston's fair head and slender figure. Her back
+was turned to him; he was on the point of calling out to her, when
+suddenly the words upon his lips were arrested by something which he saw
+her doing. Instead of speaking, he simply stood still and stared at her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kynaston, unconscious of observation, held the note which Tommy had
+just given her over the steam of a small jug of hot water, which she had
+hastily ordered her maid to bring to her. In less than a minute the
+envelope unfastened of itself. Helen then deliberately took out the note
+and read it.</p>
+
+<p>What she read was this:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Dear Captain Kynaston,&mdash;I have something that I have promised to give
+to you when you are alone. Would you mind coming round to the vicarage
+after dinner to-night, at nine o'clock? You will find me at the
+gate.&mdash;Sincerely yours,</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Vera Nevill.</span>"</p></div>
+
+<p>Then Helen lit a candle, and fastened the letter up again with
+sealing-wax.</p>
+
+<p>And Denis Wilde crept away from the window on tip-toe with a sense of
+shocked horror upon him such as he never remembered having experienced in
+his life before.</p>
+
+<p>All at once his pretty, pleasant hostess, with whom he had been glad
+enough to banter, and with whom even he had been ready to enter upon a
+mild and innocent flirtation, became horrible and hateful to him; and
+there came into his mind, like an inspiration, the knowledge of her
+enmity to Vera; for it was Vera's note that she had opened and read. Then
+his instincts were straightway all awake with the acuteness of a danger,
+to something&mdash;he knew not what&mdash;that threatened the woman he loved.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God, I am here," he said to himself. "That woman is her foe, and
+she will be dangerous to her. I would not have come to her house had I
+known it; but now I am here, I will stay, for it is certain that she will
+need a friend."</p>
+
+<p>At dinner-time the note lay by Maurice's side on the table. Whilst the
+soup was being helped he took it up and opened it. He little knew how
+narrowly both his wife and his guest watched him as he read it.</p>
+
+<p>But his face was inscrutable. Only he talked a little more, and seemed,
+perhaps, in better spirits than usual; but that is what a stranger could
+not have noticed, although it is possible that Helen may have done so.</p>
+
+<p>"By the vicarage gate," she had said, and it was there that he found her.
+Behind her lay the dark and silent garden, beyond it the house, with its
+wide-open drawing-room windows, and the stream of yellow light from the
+lamp within, lying in a golden streak across the lawn. She leant over the
+gate; an archway of greenery, dark in the night's dim light, was above
+her head, and clusters of pale, creamy roses hung down about her on every
+side.</p>
+
+<p>It was that sort of owl's light that has no distinctness in it, and yet
+is far removed from darkness. Vera's perfect figure, clad in some white,
+clinging garment that fell about her in thick, heavy folds, stood out
+with a statue-like clearness against the dark shrubs behind her. She
+seemed like some shadowy queen of the night. Out of the dimness, the
+clear oval of her perfect face shone pale as the waning moon far away
+behind the church tower, whilst the dusky veil of her dark hair lost
+itself vaguely in the shadows, and melted away into the background.
+A poet might have hymned her thus, but no painter could have painted her.</p>
+
+<p>And it was thus that he found her. For the first time for many weary
+weeks and months he was alone with her; for the first time he could speak
+to her freely and from his heart. He knew not what it was that had made
+her send for him, or why it was that he had come. He did not remember her
+note, or that she had said that she had something for him. All he knew
+was, that she had sent for him, and that he was with her.</p>
+
+<p>There was the gate between them, but her white soft hands were clasped
+loosely together over the top of it. He took them feverishly between his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>"I am late&mdash;you have waited for me, dear? Oh, Vera, how glad I am to be
+with you!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a dangerous tenderness in his voice that frightened her. She
+tried to draw away her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I had something for you, or I should not have sent&mdash;please, Captain
+Kynaston&mdash;Maurice&mdash;please let my hands go."</p>
+
+<p>He was alone under the star-flecked heavens with the woman he loved,
+there was all the witchery of the pale moonlight about her, all the
+sweet perfumes of the summer night to intensify the fascination of her
+presence. There was a nameless glamour in the luminous dimness&mdash;a subtle
+seduction to the senses in the silence and the solitude; a bird chirruped
+once among the tangled roses overhead, and a soft, sighing breeze
+fluttered for one instant amid its long, trailing branches. And then,
+God knows how it came to pass, or what madness possessed the man;
+but suddenly there was no longer any faith, or honour, or truth for
+him&mdash;nothing on the face of the whole earth but Vera.</p>
+
+<p>He caught her passionately in his arms, and showered upon her lips the
+maddest, wildest kisses that man ever gave to woman.</p>
+
+<p>For one instant she lay still upon his heart; all the fury of her misery
+was at rest&mdash;all the storm of her sorrow was at peace&mdash;for one instant of
+time she tasted of life's sublimest joy ere the waters of blackness and
+despair closed in once more over her soul. For one instant only&mdash;then she
+remembered, and withdrew herself shudderingly from his grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, have pity upon me, Maurice!" she wailed. It was the cry
+of a broken heart that appealed to his manhood and his honour more surely
+and more directly than a torrent of reproach or a storm of indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me," he murmured, humbly; "I am a brute to you. I had forgotten
+myself. I ought to have spared you, sweet. See, I have let you go; I will
+not touch you again; but it was hard to see you alone, to be near you,
+and yet to remember how we are parted. Vera, I have ruined your life; it
+is wonderful that you do not hate me."</p>
+
+<p>"A true woman never hates the man who has been hard on her," she
+answered, smiling sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is any comfort to you to know it, I too am wretched; now it is too
+late: I know that my life is spoilt also."</p>
+
+<p>"No; why should that comfort me?" she said, wearily. She leant half back
+against the gate&mdash;if he could have seen her well in the uncertain light,
+he would have been shocked at the worn and haggard face of his beautiful
+Vera.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry that I asked you to come&mdash;it was not wise, was it, Maurice?
+How long must you stop at Kynaston? Can you not go away? We are neither
+of us strong enough to bear this&mdash;I, I cannot go&mdash;but you, <i>must</i> you be
+always here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Before God," he answered, earnestly, "I swear to you that I will go away
+if it is in my power to go."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you." Then, with an effort, she roused herself to speak to him:
+"But that is not what I wanted to say; let me tell you why I sent for
+you. I made a promise, a wretched, stupid thing, to a tiresome little man
+I met in London&mdash;a Monsieur D'Arblet, a Frenchman; do you know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"D'Arblet! I never heard the name in my life that I know of."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, that seems odd, for I have a little parcel from him to you, and,
+strangely enough, he made me promise on my word of honour to give it to
+you when no one was near. I did not know how to keep my promise, for,
+though we may sometimes meet in public, we are not often likely to meet
+alone. I have it here; let me give it to you and have done with the
+thing; it has been on my mind."</p>
+
+<p>She drew a small packet from her pocket, and was about to give it to him,
+when suddenly his ear caught the sound of an approaching footstep; he
+looked nervously round, then he put forth his hand quickly and stopped
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, give me nothing now!" he said, in a low, hurried voice. "To-morrow
+we shall meet at Shadonake; if you will go near the Bath some time
+during the day after lunch is over, I will join you there, and you can
+give it to me; it can be of no possible importance; go in now quickly;
+good-night. It is my wife."</p>
+
+<p>She turned and fled swiftly back to the house through the darkness, and
+Maurice was left face to face with Helen.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>DENIS WILDE'S LOVE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A mighty pain to love it is,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And 'tis a pain that love to miss;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, of all pains, the greatest pain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is to love, but love in vain.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Cowley.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>He had not been mistaken. It was Helen who had crept out after him in the
+darkness, and whose slight figure, in her pale blue dress, stood close by
+him in an angle of the road.</p>
+
+<p>How long she had stood there and what she had heard he did not know. He
+expected a torrent of abuse and a storm of reproaches from her, but she
+refrained from either. She passed her arm within his, and walked beside
+him for several minutes in silence. Maurice, who felt rather guilty, was
+weak enough to say, hesitatingly,</p>
+
+<p>"The night was so fine, I strolled out to smoke&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Qui s'excuse s'accuse</i>," quoted Helen; "only you are not smoking,
+Maurice!"</p>
+
+<p>"My cigar has gone out; I&mdash;I met Miss Nevill at the gate of the
+vicarage."</p>
+
+<p>"So I saw," rather significantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I stopped to have a little talk to her. There is no harm, I suppose, in
+that!" he added, irritably.</p>
+
+<p>Helen laughed shortly and harshly.</p>
+
+<p>"Harm! oh dear, no; whoever said there was? By the way, is not this freak
+of yours of going out into the roads to smoke, as you say, alone, rather
+a slight on your guest? Here is Mr. Wilde; how very amusing! we all seem
+to be drawn out towards the vicarage to-night."</p>
+
+<p>Denis Wilde, in fact, had followed in the wake of his hostess, and they
+met him now by the lodge gates.</p>
+
+<p>"How very strange!" called out Helen to him, in her scornful, bantering
+voice; "how strange that we should all have gone out for solitary
+rambles, and all meet in the same place; and there was Miss Nevill out
+in the vicarage garden, also on a solitary ramble."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Miss Nevill there? I think I will go on and call upon her," said
+Denis.</p>
+
+<p>"You too, Mr. Wilde!" cried Helen. "Have you fallen a victim to the
+beauty? We heard enough of her in town; she turned all the men's heads;
+even married men are not safe from her snares, and yet it is singular
+that none of her admirers care to marry her; there are some women whom
+all men make love to, but whom none care to make wives of!"</p>
+
+<p>And Maurice was a coward, and spoke no word in her defence; he did not
+dare; but young Denis Wilde drew himself up proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Kynaston," he said, sternly, "I must ask you not to speak
+slightingly of Miss Nevill."</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious, why not? I suppose we are all free to use our tongues and
+our eyes in this world! Why should you become the woman's champion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," answered Denis, gravely, "I hope to make her my wife."</p>
+
+<p>Maurice was man enough to hold out his hand to him in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of it," he said, rather hoarsely; "make her happy, Denis, if
+you can."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks. I shall go on to see her now."</p>
+
+<p>Helen murmured an unintelligible apology, and Denis Wilde passed onwards
+towards the vicarage.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken her good name into his keeping, he had shielded her from
+that other woman's slandering tongue; but he had done so in his despair.
+He had spoken no lie in saying that he hoped to make her his wife; but it
+was no doubt a fact that Helen and her husband would now believe him to
+be engaged to her. Would Vera be induced to verify his words, and to
+place herself and her life beneath the shelter of his love, or would she
+only be angry with him for venturing to presume upon his hopes? Denis
+could not tell.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later he stood alone with her in the vicarage dining-room;
+he had sent in his card with a pencilled line upon it to ask for a few
+minutes' conversation with her.</p>
+
+<p>Vera had desired that her visitor might be shown into the dining-room.
+Old Mrs. Daintree had been amazed and scandalized, and even Marion had
+opened her eyes at so unusual a proceeding; but the vicar was out by a
+sick bedside in the village, and no one else ever controlled Vera's
+actions.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, she herself looked somewhat surprised at so late a visit
+from him. And then, somehow or other, Denis made it plain to her how it
+was he had come, and what he had said of her. Her name, he told her, had
+been lightly spoken of; to have defended it without authority would have
+been to do her more harm than good; to take it under his lawful
+protection had been instinctively suggested to him by his longing to
+shield her. Would she forgive him?</p>
+
+<p>"It was Mrs. Kynaston who spoke evil things of me," said Vera, wearily.
+She was very tired, she hardly understood, she scarcely cared about what
+he was saying to her; it mattered very little what was said to her. There
+was that other scene under the shadow of the roses of the gateway so
+vividly before her; the memory of Maurice's passionate kisses upon her
+lips, the sound of his beloved voice in her ears. What did anything else
+signify?</p>
+
+<p>And meanwhile Denis Wilde was pouring out his whole soul to her.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, give me the right to defend you now and always," he pleaded;
+"do not refuse me the happiness of protecting your dear name from such
+women. I know you don't love me, dear, not as I love you, but I will not
+mind that; I will ask you for nothing that you will not give me freely;
+only try me&mdash;I think I could make you happy, love. At any rate, you shall
+have anything that tenderness and devotion can give you to bring peace
+into your life. Vera, darling, answer me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I am very tired," was all she said, moaningly and wearily, passing
+her hand across her aching brow like a worn-out child.</p>
+
+<p>It was life or death to him. To her it was such a little matter! What
+were all his words and his prayers beside that heartache that was driving
+her into her grave! He could do her no good. Why could he not leave her
+in peace?</p>
+
+<p>And yet, at length, something of the fervour and the passion of his love
+struck upon her soul and arrested her attention. There is something so
+touching and so pitiful in that first boy-love that asks for nothing in
+return, craves for no other reward than to be suffered to exist; that
+amongst all the selfish and half-hearted passions of older and wiser men,
+it must needs elicit some response of gratitude at least, if not of
+answering love, in the heart of the woman who is the object of such rare
+devotion.</p>
+
+<p>It dawned at length upon Vera, as she listened to his fervent pleading,
+and as she saw the tears that rose in poor Denis's earnest eyes, and
+the traces of deep emotion on his smooth, boyish face, that here was,
+perchance, the one utterly pure and noble love that had ever been laid
+at her feet.</p>
+
+<p>There arose a sentiment of pity in her heart, and a vague wonder as to
+his grief. Did he suffer, she asked herself, as she herself suffered?</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, Vera, I only ask you to be my wife. I do not ask you for your
+heart; only give me your dear self. Only let me be always with you to
+brighten your life and to take care of you."</p>
+
+<p>How was she to resist such absolute unselfishness?</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Denis, how good you are to me!" burst from her lips. "How can I take
+you at your word? Do you not know that my heart is gone from me? I have
+no love to give you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, darling," he said, quickly, pressing her hand to his lips. "Do
+not pain yourself by speaking of it. I have guessed it. I have always
+seemed to know it. But it is hopeless, is it not? And I&mdash;I would so
+gladly take you away and comfort you if I could."</p>
+
+<p>And so, in the end, she half yielded to him. What else was she to do? She
+gave him a sort of promise.</p>
+
+<p>"If I can, it shall be as you wish," she said; "but give me till
+to-morrow night. I will think of it all day, and if you will come here
+again to-morrow evening, I will answer you. Give me one more day&mdash;only
+one," she repeated, with a dull reiteration, out of her utter weariness.</p>
+
+<p>"One day will soon be gone," he said, joyfully, as he bade her good
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, how little he knew what that day was to bring forth!</p>
+
+<p>That night the heavens were overcast with heavy clouds, and torrents of
+rain poured down upon the face of the earth, and peal after peal of
+thunder boomed through the heavy heated air. Helen could not sleep; she
+rose, feverish and unrested from her husband's side, and paced wildly and
+miserably about the room. Then she went to the window and drew back the
+curtain, and looked out upon the storm-driven world. The clouds racked
+wildly across the sky; the trees bent and swayed before the howling wind;
+the rain beat in floods upon the ground; yet greater and fiercer still
+was the tempest that raged in Helen Kynaston's heart. Hatred, jealousy,
+and malice strove and struggled within her, and something direr still&mdash;a
+terror that she could not quench nor stifle; for late that night her
+husband had said to her suddenly, without a word of warning or
+preparation&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Helen, do you know a Frenchman called D'Arblet?"</p>
+
+<p>Helen had been at her dressing-table&mdash;her back was turned to him&mdash;he did
+not see the livid pallor which blanched her cheeks at his question.</p>
+
+<p>A little pause, during which she busied herself among the trifles upon
+the table.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I never heard the name in my life," she said, at length.</p>
+
+<p>"That is odd&mdash;because neither have I&mdash;and yet the man has sent me a
+parcel." It was of so little importance to him, that it did not occur
+to him that there could possibly be any occasion for secresy concerning
+Vera's commission. What could an utter stranger have to send to him that
+could possibly concern him in any way?</p>
+
+<p>It did not strike him how strained and forced was the voice in which his
+wife presently asked him a question.</p>
+
+<p>"And the parcel! You have opened it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not yet," began Maurice, stifling a yawn; and he would have gone
+on to explain to her that it was not yet actually in his possession,
+although, probably, he would not have told her that it was Vera who was
+to give it to him; only at that minute the maid came into the room, and
+he changed the subject.</p>
+
+<p>But Helen had guessed that it was Vera who was the bearer of that parcel.
+How it had come to pass she could not tell, but too surely she divined
+that Vera had in her possession those fatal letters that she had once
+written to the French vicomte; the letters that would blast her for ever
+in her husband's estimation, and turn his luke-warmness and his coldness
+into actual hatred and repulsion.</p>
+
+<p>And was it likely that Vera, with such a weapon in her hands, would spare
+her? What woman, with so signal a revenge in her power, would forego the
+delight of wreaking it upon the woman who had taken from her the man she
+loved? Helen knew that in Vera's place she would show no mercy to her
+rival.</p>
+
+<p>It was all clear as daylight to her now; the appointment at the vicarage
+gate, the something which she had said in her note she had for him; the
+whole mystery of the secret meeting between them&mdash;it was Vera's revenge.
+Vera, whom Maurice loved, and whom she, Helen, hated with such a deadly
+hatred!</p>
+
+<p>And then, in the silence of the night, whilst her husband slept, and
+whilst the thunder and the wind howled about her home, Helen crept forth
+from her room, and sought for that fatal packet of letters which her
+husband had told her he had "not yet" opened.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, if she could only find them and destroy them before he ever saw them
+again! Long and patiently she looked for them, but her search was in
+vain. She ransacked his study and his dressing-room; she opened every
+drawer, and fumbled in every pocket, but she found nothing.</p>
+
+<p>She was frightened, too, to be about the house like a thief in the night.
+Every gust of wind that creaked among the open doors made her start,
+every flash of lightning that lighted up the faces of the old family
+portraits, looking down upon her with their fixed eyes, made her turn
+pale and shiver, lest she should see them move, or hear them speak.</p>
+
+<p>Only her jealousy and her hatred burnt fiercely above her terror; she
+would not give in, she told herself, until she found it.</p>
+
+<p>Denis Wilde, who was restless too, had heard her soft footsteps along the
+passage outside his door; and, with a vague uneasiness as to who could be
+about at such an hour, he came creeping out of his room, and peeped in at
+the library door.</p>
+
+<p>He saw her sitting upon the floor, a lighted candle by her side, an open
+drawer, out of her husband's writing-table, upon her lap, turning over
+papers, and bills, and note-books with eager, trembling hands. And he saw
+in her white, set face, and wild, scared eyes, that which made him draw
+back swiftly and shudderingly from the sight of her.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" he murmured to himself, as he sought his room again, "the
+woman has murder in her face!"</p>
+
+<p>And at last she had to give it up; the letters were not to be found. The
+storm without settled itself to rest, the thunder died away in the far
+distance over the hills, and Helen, worn out with fatigue and emotion,
+sought a troubled slumber upon the sofa in her dressing-room.</p>
+
+<p>"She cannot have given it to him," was the conclusion she came to at
+last. "Well, she will do so to-morrow, and I&mdash;I will not let her out of
+my sight, not for one instant, all the day!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A GARDEN PARTY.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I have done for ever with all these things:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The songs are ended, the deeds are done;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There shall none of them gladden me now, not one.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There is nothing good for me under the sun<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But to perish&mdash;as these things perished.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">A. L. Gordon.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Guy Miller is a young gentleman who has not played an important part
+in these pages; nevertheless, but for him, sundry events which took place
+at Shadonake at this time would not have had to be recorded.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened that Guy Miller's twenty-first birthday was in the third
+week of September, and that it was determined by his parents to celebrate
+the day in an appropriate and fitting manner. Guy was a youth of no
+particular looks, and no particular manners; he had been at Oxford,
+but his father had lately taken him away from it, with a view to his
+travelling, and seeing something of the world before he settled down
+as a country gentleman. He had had no opportunity, therefore, of
+distinguishing himself at college; but as he was not overburdened with
+brains, and had, moreover, never been known to study with interest any
+profounder literature than "Handley Cross" and "Mr. Sponge's Sporting
+Tour," it is possible that, even had he been left undisturbed to pursue
+his studies at the university, he would never have developed into a
+bright or shining ornament at that seat of learning.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, Guy came home to the paternal mansion an ignorant but amiable
+and inoffensive young man, with a small, fluffy moustache, and no
+particular bent in life beyond smoking short pipes, and loafing about the
+premises with his hands in his trousers pockets.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tolerable shot, and a plucky, though not a graceful horseman. He
+hated dancing because he trod on his partner's toes, and shunned ladies'
+society because he had to make himself agreeable to them. Nevertheless,
+having been fairly "licked into shape" by a course successively of Eton
+and of Oxford, he was able to behave like a gentleman in his mother's
+house when it was necessary for him to do so, and he quite appreciated
+the fact of his being an important personage in the Miller family.</p>
+
+<p>It was to celebrate the coming of age of this interesting young gentleman
+that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had settled to give a monster entertainment to
+several hundreds of their fellow-creatures.</p>
+
+<p>The proceedings were to include a variety of instructive and amusing
+pastimes, and were to last pretty nearly all day. There was to be a
+country flower-show in a big tent on the lawn; that was pure business,
+and concerned the farmers as much as the gentry. There were also to be
+athletic sports in a field for the active young men, lawn-tennis for the
+active young women, an amateur polo match got up by the energy and pluck
+of Miss Beatrice and her uncle Tom; a "cold collation" in a second tent
+to be going on all the afternoon; the whole to be finished up with a
+dance in the large drawing room, for a select few, after sunset.</p>
+
+<p>The programme, in all conscience, was varied enough; and the day broke
+hopefully, after the wild storm of the previous night, bright and cool
+and sunny, with every prospect of being perfectly fine.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice, happy in the possession of her lover, was full of life and
+energy; she threw herself into all the preparations of the <i>f&ecirc;te</i> with
+her whole heart. Herbert, who came over from Lutterton at an early hour,
+followed her about like a dog, obeying her orders implicitly, but
+impeding her proceedings considerably by a constant under-current of
+love-making, by which he strove to vary and enliven the operation of
+sticking standard flags into the garden borders, and nailing up wreaths
+of paper roses inside the tent.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller, having consented to the engagement, like a sensible woman,
+was resolved to make the best of it, and was, if not cordial, at least
+pleasantly civil to her future son-in-law. She had given over Beatrice
+as a bad job; she had resolved to find suitable matches for Guy and for
+Geraldine.</p>
+
+<p>By one o'clock the company was actually beginning to arrive, the small
+fry of the neighbourhood being, of course, the first to appear. By-and-by
+came the rank and fashion of Meadowshire, and by three o'clock the
+gardens were crowded.</p>
+
+<p>It was a brilliant scene; there was the gaily-dressed crowd going in and
+out of the tents, groups of elderly people sitting talking under the
+trees, lawn-tennis players at one end of the garden, the militia band
+playing Strauss's waltzes at the other, the scarlet and white flags
+floating bravely over everybody in the breeze, and a hum of many voices
+and a sound of merry laughter in every direction.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Miller, and Guy, the hero of the day, moved about amongst
+the guests from group to group. Guy, it must be owned, looking
+considerably bored. Beatrice, with her lover in attendance, looking
+flushed and rosy with the many congratulations which the news of her
+engagement called forth on every side; and the younger boys, home from
+school for the occasion, getting in everybody's way, and directing their
+main attention to the ices in the refreshment-tent. Such an afternoon
+party, it was agreed, had not been held in Meadowshire within the memory
+of man; but then, dear Mrs. Miller had such energy and such a real talent
+for organization; and if the company <i>was</i> a little mixed, why, of
+course, she must recollect Mr. Miller's position, and how important it
+was for him, with the prospect of a general election coming on, to make
+himself thoroughly popular with all classes.</p>
+
+<p>No one in all the gay crowd was more admired or more noticed than "the
+bride," as she was still called, young Mrs. Kynaston. Helen had surpassed
+herself in the elaboration of her toilette. The country dames and
+damsels, in their somewhat dowdy home-made gowns, could scarcely remember
+their manners, so eager were they to stare at the marvels of that
+wondrous garment of sheeny satin, and soft, creamy gauze, sprinkled over
+with absolute works of art in the shape of wreaths of many-hued
+embroidered birds and flowers, with which the whole dress was cunningly
+and dexterously adorned. It was a masterpiece of the great Worth; rich
+without being gaudy, intricate without losing its general effect of
+colour, and, above all, utterly and absolutely inimitable by the hands
+of any meaner artist.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kynaston looked well; no one had ever seen her look better; there
+was an unusual colour in her cheeks, an unusual glitter in her blue eyes,
+that always seemed to be roving restlessly about her as though in search
+of something even all the time she was saying her polite commonplaces in
+answer to the pleasant and pretty speeches that she received on all sides
+from men and women alike.</p>
+
+<p>But through it all she never let Vera Nevill out of her sight; where Vera
+moved, she moved also. When she walked across the lawn, Mrs. Kynaston
+made some excuse to go in the same direction; when she entered either of
+the tents, Helen also found it necessary to go into them. But the crowd
+was too great for any one to remark this; no one saw it save Denis Wilde,
+whose eyes were sharpened by his love.</p>
+
+<p>Once Helen saw that Maurice and Vera were speaking to each other. She
+could not get near enough to hear what they said, but she saw him bend
+down and speak to her earnestly, and there was a sad, wistful look in
+Vera's upturned eyes as she answered him. Helen's heart beat with a wild,
+mad jealousy as she watched them; and yet it was but a few words that had
+passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, young Wilde says you are going to marry him; is it true?"</p>
+
+<p>"He wants me to do so, but I don't think I can."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? It would be happier for you, child; forget the past and begin
+afresh. He is a good boy, and by-and-by he will be well off."</p>
+
+<p>"You, too&mdash;you advise me to do this?" she answered with unwonted
+bitterness. "Oh, how wise and calculating one ought to be to live happily
+in this miserable world!"</p>
+
+<p>He looked pained.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do you any good," he said, rather brokenly. "God knows I would
+if I could. I can only be a curse to you. Give me at least the credit of
+unselfishly wishing you to be less unhappy than you are."</p>
+
+<p>And then the crowd, moving onwards, parted them from each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not forget to meet me at the Bath," she called out to him as he went.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, to be sure! I had forgotten. I will be there just before the dancing
+begins."</p>
+
+<p>And then Denis Wilde took his place by her side.</p>
+
+<p>If Mrs. Kynaston surpassed herself in looks and animation that day, Vera,
+on the contrary, had never looked less well.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes were heavy with sleepless nights and many tears; her movements
+were slower and more languid than of wont, and her face was pale and
+thin.</p>
+
+<p>Meadowshire generally, that had ceased to trouble itself much about her
+when she had thrown over the richest baronet in the county, considered
+itself, nevertheless, to be somewhat aggrieved by the falling off in her
+appearance, and passed its appropriate and ill-natured comments upon the
+fact.</p>
+
+<p>"How ill she looks," said one woman to another.</p>
+
+<p>"Positively old. I suppose she thought she could whistle poor Sir John
+back again whenever she chose; now he is out of the country she would
+give her eyes for him!"</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay; and looks as if she had cried them out; but he must be glad
+to have escaped her! Well, it serves her right for behaving so badly. I'm
+sure I don't pity her."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I, indeed."</p>
+
+<p>And the two amiable women passed onwards to discuss some other ill-fated
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>But to the two men who loved her Vera that day was as beautiful as ever;
+for love sees no flaw in the face that reigns supreme in the soul. And
+Vera sat still in her corner of the tent where she had taken refuge, and
+leant her tired, aching head against a gaudy pink-and-white striped
+pillar. It was the tent where the flower-show was going on. From her
+sheltered nook there was not much that was lovely to be seen, not a
+vestige of a rose or a carnation to refresh her tired eyes, only a
+counter covered with samples of potatoes and monster cauliflowers;
+and there was a slab of white wood with pats of yellow butter, done up in
+moss and ferns, which had been sent from the principal dairy-farms of the
+county, and before which there was a constant succession of elderly and
+interested housewives tasting and comparing notes. There seemed some
+difficulty in deciding to whom the butter prize was to be awarded, and at
+last a committee of ladies was formed; they all tasted, solemnly, of each
+sample all round, and then they each gave their verdict differently, so
+that it had all to be done over again amidst a good deal of laughter and
+merriment.</p>
+
+<p>Vera was vaguely amused by this scene that went on just in front of her.
+When the knotty point was settled, the committee moved on to decide upon
+something else, and she was left again to the uninterrupted contemplation
+of the Flukes and the York Regents.</p>
+
+<p>Denis Wilde had sat by her for some time, but at last she had begged him
+to leave her. Her head ached, she said; if he would not mind going, and
+he went.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, Beatrice, beaming with happiness, found her out in her corner.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Vera!" she said, coming up to her, all radiant with smiles, "you are
+the only one of my friends who has not yet wished me joy."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not because I have not thought of you, Beatrice, dear," she
+answered, heartily grasping her friend's outstretched hands. "I was so
+very glad to hear that everything has come right for you at last. How did
+it all happen?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will come over to the vicarage to-morrow, and tell you the whole
+story. Oh! do you remember meeting Herbert and me, that foggy morning,
+outside Tripton station?"</p>
+
+<p>Would Vera ever forget it?</p>
+
+<p>"I little thought then how happily everything was to end for us. I used
+to think we should have to elope! Poor Herbert, he was always frightened
+out of his life when I said that. But we have had a very narrow escape
+of being blighted beings to the end of our lives. If it hadn't been for
+uncle Tom and that dear darling mare, Clochette, whom I should like
+to keep in a gold and jewelled stall to the end of her ever-blessed
+days!&mdash;--Ah, well! I've no time to tell you now&mdash;I will come over to
+Sutton to-morrow, and I may bring him, may I not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Him," of course, meaning Mr. Herbert Pryme. Vera requested that he might
+be brought by all means.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must run away now&mdash;there are at least a hundred of these stupid
+people to whom I must go and make myself agreeable. By the way, Vera, how
+dull you look, up in this corner by yourself. Why do you sit here all
+alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"My head aches; I am glad to be quiet."</p>
+
+<p>"But you mean to dance by-and-by, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I daresay. Go back to your guests, Beatrice; I am getting on
+very well."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice went off smiling and waving her hand. Vera could watch her
+outside in the sunshine, moving about from group to group, shaking hands
+with first one and then another, laughing at some playful sally, or
+smiling demurely over some graver words of kindness. She was always
+popular, was Beatrice, with her bright talk and her plain clever face,
+and there was not a man or woman in all that crowd who did not wish her
+happiness.</p>
+
+<p>And so the day wore away, and the polo match&mdash;very badly played&mdash;was
+over, and the votaries of lawn-tennis were worn out with running up and
+down, and the flowers and the fruits in the show-tent began to look
+limp and dusty. The farmers and those people of small importance who had
+only been invited "from two to five," began now to take their departure,
+and their carriage wheels were to be heard driving away in rapid
+succession from the front door. Then the hundred or so of the "best
+county people," who were remaining later for the dancing, began to think
+of leaving the lawns before the dew fell. There was a general move
+towards the house, and even the band "limbered up," and began to transfer
+itself from the garden into the hall, where its labours were to begin
+afresh.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Vera crept forth out of her sheltered corner, and,
+unseen and unnoticed save by one watchful pair of eyes, wended her way
+through the shrubbery walks in the direction of the Bath.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>SHADONAKE BATH.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A jolly place&mdash;in times of old,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But something ails it now:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The spot is cursed!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Wordsworth.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Calm and still, like the magic mirror of the legend, Shadonake Bath lay
+amongst its everlasting shadows.</p>
+
+<p>The great belt of fir-trees beyond it, the sheltering evergreens on
+the nearer side, the tiers of grey, moss-grown steps that encompassed
+it about, all found their image again upon its smooth and untroubled
+surface. There was a golden light from the setting sun to the west,
+and the pale mist of a shadowy crescent moon had risen in the east.</p>
+
+<p>It was all quiet here&mdash;faint echoes of distant voices and far-away
+laughter came up in little gusts from the house; but there was no trace
+of the festivities down by the desolate water, nothing but the dark
+fir-trees above it, and the great white heads of the water-lilies that
+lay like jewels upon its silent bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Vera sat down upon the steps, and rested her chin in her hands, and
+waited. The house and the gardens behind her were shut out by the thick
+screen of laurels and rhododendrons. Before her, on the other side, were
+the fir-trees, with their red, bronzed trunks, and the soft, dark brown
+carpet that lay at their feet; there was not even a squirrel stirring
+among their branches, nor a bird that fluttered beneath their shadows.</p>
+
+<p>Vera waited. She was not impatient nor anxious. She had nothing to say
+to Maurice when he came&mdash;she did not mean to keep him, not even for five
+minutes, by her side; she did not want to run any further risks with
+him&mdash;it was better not&mdash;better that she should never again be alone with
+him. She only meant just to give him that wretched little brown paper
+parcel that weighed upon her conscience with the sense of an unfulfilled
+vow, and then to go back with him to the house at once. They could have
+nothing more to say to each other.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, as she sat there musing all her life came back in
+review before her. The old days at Rome, with the favourite sister who
+was dead and gone; her own gay, careless life, with its worldly aims and
+desires; her first arrival at Sutton, her determination to make herself
+Sir John Kynaston's wife, and then her fatal love for his brother; it all
+came back to her again. All kinds of little details that she had long
+forgotten came flooding in upon her memory. She remembered how she had
+first seen Maurice standing at the foot of the staircase, with the light
+of the lamp upon his handsome head; and then, again, how one morning she
+and he had stood together in this very place by the Bath, and how she had
+told him, shuddering, that it would be dreadful to be drowned there, and
+she had cried out in a nameless terror that she wished she had not seen
+it for the first time with him by her side; and then Helen had come down
+from the house and joined them, and they had all three gone away
+together. She smiled a little to herself over that foolish, reasonless
+terror. The quiet pool of water did not look dreadful to her now&mdash;only
+cool, and still, and infinitely restful.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-by other thoughts came into her mind. She recalled her interview
+with old Lady Kynaston at Walpole Lodge, when she had so nearly promised
+her to give back her hand to her eldest son, when she would have done so
+had it not been for that sight of Maurice's face in the adjoining room.
+She wondered what Lady Kynaston had thought of her sudden change of mind;
+what she had been able to make of it; whether she had ever guessed at
+what had been the truth. It seemed only yesterday that the old lady had
+told her to be wise and brave, and to begin her life over again, and to
+make the best of the good things of this world that were still left to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a pain that goes right through the heart," Maurice's mother had
+said to her; "I who speak to you have felt it. I thought I should die of
+it, but you see I did not."</p>
+
+<p>Alas! did not Vera know that pain all too well; that heartache that
+banishes peace by day and sleep by night, and that will not wear itself
+out?</p>
+
+<p>And yet other women had borne it, and had lived and been even happy in
+other ways; but she could not be happy. Was it because her heart was
+deeper, or because her sense of pain was greater than that of others?</p>
+
+<p>Vera could not tell. She only wished, and longed, and even prayed that
+she might have the strength to become Denis Wilde's wife; that she might
+taste once more of peace, if not of joy; and yet all her longings and all
+her prayers only made her realize the more how utterly the thing was
+beyond her power.</p>
+
+<p>To Maurice, and Maurice alone, belonged her life and her soul, and Vera
+felt that it would be easier for her to be true to the sad, dim memory
+of his love than to give her heart and her allegiance to any other upon
+earth.</p>
+
+<p>So she sat and mused, and pondered, and the amber light in the east faded
+away into palest saffron, and the solemn shadows deepened and lengthened
+upon the still bosom of the water.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there came a sharp footstep and the rustle of a woman's silken
+skirts across the stone flags behind her. She looked up quickly; Helen
+stood beside her. Helen, in all the sheen of her gay Paris garments,
+with the evening light upon her uncovered head, and the glow of a
+passion, fiercer than madness, in her glittering eyes. Some prescience
+of evil&mdash;she knew not of what&mdash;made Vera spring to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>Helen spoke to her shortly and defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill, you are waiting here for my husband, are you not?"</p>
+
+<p>A faint flush rose in Vera's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered, very quietly. "I am waiting to speak a few words to
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"You have something to give him, have you not? Some letters that are
+mine, and which you have probably read."</p>
+
+<p>Helen said the words quickly and feverishly; her voice shook and
+trembled. Vera looked surprised and even indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand you, Mrs. Kynaston," she began, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, you understand me perfectly. Give me my letters, Miss Nevill;
+you have no doubt read them all," and she laughed harshly and sneeringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Kynaston, you are labouring under some delusion," said Vera,
+quietly; "I have no letters of yours, and if I had," with a ring of utter
+contempt, "I should not be likely to have opened them."</p>
+
+<p>For it did not occur to her that Helen was speaking of Monsieur
+D'Arblet's parcel; that did not in the least convey the idea of letters
+to her mind; nor had it ever entered into her head to speculate about
+what that unhappy little packet could possibly contain; she had never
+even thought about it.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no letters of yours," she repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"You are saying what is false," cried Helen, angrily. "How can you dare
+to deny it? You know you have got them, you are here to give them to
+Maurice, knowing that they will ruin me. You <i>shall</i> not give them to
+him. I have come to take them from you&mdash;I <i>will</i> have them."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not even know what you are speaking about," answered Vera. "Why
+should I want to ruin you, if, indeed, such a thing is to be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you hate me as much as I hate you."</p>
+
+<p>"Hate is an ugly word," said Vera, rather scornfully. "I have no reason
+to hate you, and I do not know why you should hate me."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't imagine you can put me off with empty words," cried Helen, wildly.
+She made a step forward; her white hands clenched themselves together
+with a reasonless fury; she was as white as the crescent moon that rose
+beyond the trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me my letters&mdash;the letters you are waiting here to give to my
+husband!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Kynaston, do not be so angry," said Vera, becoming almost
+bewildered by her violence; "you are really mistaken&mdash;pray calm yourself.
+I have no letters: what I was going to give your husband was only a
+little parcel from a man who is abroad&mdash;he is a foreigner. I do not think
+it is of the slightest importance to anybody. I have not opened it, I
+have no idea what it contains, and your husband himself said it was
+nothing&mdash;only I have promised to give it him alone; it was a whim of the
+little Frenchman who entrusted me with it, and whom, I must honestly tell
+you, I believe to have been half-mad. Only, unfortunately, I have
+promised to deliver it in this manner."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kynaston was looking at her fixedly; her anger seemed to have died
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, "it was Monsieur D'Arblet who gave them to you."</p>
+
+<p>"That was his name, D'Arblet. I did not like the man; but he bothered me
+until I foolishly undertook his commission. I am sorry now that I did so,
+as it seems to vex you so much; but I do not think there are letters in
+the parcel, and I certainly have not opened it."</p>
+
+<p>Helen was silent again for a minute, looking at her intently.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you," she said; "they are my letters, sure enough, and
+you have read them. What woman would not do so in your place? and you
+know that they will ruin me with my husband."</p>
+
+<p>"It is you yourself that tell me so!" cried Vera, impatiently, beginning
+to lose her temper. "I do not even know what you are talking about!"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Nevill!" cried Helen, suddenly changing her tone; "give that parcel
+to me, I entreat you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry, Mrs. Kynaston; I cannot possibly do so."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, you can&mdash;you will," said Helen, imploringly. "What can it matter
+to you now? It is I who am his wife; you cannot get any good out of a
+mere empty revenge. Why should you spoil my chance of winning his heart?
+I know well enough that he loves you, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Kynaston, pray, pray recollect yourself; do not say such words to
+me!" cried Vera, deeply distressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I not say them! You and I know well enough that it is true.
+I hate you, I am jealous of you, for I know that my husband loves you;
+and yet, if you will only give me that parcel, I will forgive you&mdash;I
+will try to live at peace with you&mdash;I will even pray and strive for your
+happiness! Let me have a chance of making him love me!"</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, Mrs. Kynaston, do not say these things to me!" cried
+Vera. She was crimson with pain and shame, and shocked beyond measure
+that his wife should be so lost to all decency and self-respect as to
+speak so openly of her husband's love for herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not and cannot listen to you!"</p>
+
+<p>"But you will not be so cruel as to ruin me?" pleaded Helen; "only give
+me that parcel, and I shall be safe! You say you have not opened it;
+well, I can hardly believe it, because in your place I should have read
+every word; yet, if you will give them to me, I will forgive you."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not understand what you are saying!" cried Vera, impatiently.
+"How can I give you what is not mine to give? I have no right to dispose
+of this parcel"&mdash;she held it in her hand&mdash;"and I have given my word that
+I will give it to your husband alone. How could I be so false as to do
+anything else with it? You are asking impossibilities, Mrs. Kynaston."</p>
+
+<p>"You will not give it to me?" There was a sudden change in Helen's
+voice&mdash;she pleaded no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"No, certainly not."</p>
+
+<p>"And that is your last word?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence. Helen looked away over the water towards the
+fir-trees. She was pale, but very quiet; all her angry agitation seemed
+to have died away. Vera stood a little beneath her on the lowest step,
+close down to the water; she held the little parcel that was the object
+of the dispute in her hands, and was looking at it with an expression of
+deep annoyance; she was wishing heartily that she had never seen either
+it or the wretched little Frenchman who had insisted upon confiding it to
+her care.</p>
+
+<p>Neither of them spoke; for an instant neither of them even moved. There
+was a striking contrast between them: Helen, slight and fragile in her
+bird-of-paradise garments, with jewels about her neck, and golden chains
+at her wrist; her pretty piquant face, almost childish in the contour of
+the small, delicate features. Vera, in her plain, tight-fitting dress,
+whose only beauty lay in the perfect simplicity with which it followed
+the lines of her glorious figure; her pure, lovely face, laden with its
+burden of deep sadness, a little turned away from the other woman who had
+taken everything from her, and left her life so desolate. And there was
+the silent pool at their feet, and the darkening belt of fir-trees
+beyond, and the pale moon ever brightening in the shadowy heavens. It was
+a picture such as a painter might have dreamt of.</p>
+
+<p>Not a sound&mdash;only once the faint cry of some wild animal in the far-off
+woods, and the flutter of a night-moth on the wing. Helen's face was
+turned eastwards towards the fast-fading evening glow.</p>
+
+<p>What is it that sends the curse of Cain into the human heart?</p>
+
+<p>Did some foul and evil thing, wandering homeless around that fatal spot,
+enter then and there, unbidden, into her sin-stained soul? Or had the
+hellish spirit been always there within her, only biding its time to
+burst forth in all its naked and hideous horror?</p>
+
+<p>God only knows.</p>
+
+<p>"Vera, gather me a water-lily! See how lovely they are. I am going back
+to dance; I want a water-lily."</p>
+
+<p>Vera looked up startled. The sudden change of manner and the familiar
+mention of her name struck her as strange. Helen was leaning towards her,
+all flushed and eager, pointing with her glistening, jewelled fingers
+over the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you see how white they are, and how they gleam in the moonlight
+like silver? Would not one of them look lovely in my hair?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think I can reach them," said Vera, slowly. She was puzzled and
+half-frightened by the quick, feverish words and manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, your arms are long&mdash;much longer than mine; you can reach them
+very well. See, I will hold the sleeve of your dress like this; it is
+very strong. I can hold you quite safely. Kneel down and reach out for
+it, Vera. Do, please, I want it so much. There is one so close there,
+just beyond your hand. Stoop over a little further; don't be afraid;
+I have got you tightly."</p>
+
+<p>And Vera knelt and stretched out over the dark face of the waters.</p>
+
+<p>Then, all at once, there was a cry&mdash;a wild struggle&mdash;a splash of the
+dark, seething waves&mdash;and Helen stood up again in her bright raiment
+alone on the margin of the pool; whilst ever-widening circles stretched
+hurriedly away and away, as though terror-stricken, from the baleful
+spot where Vera Nevill had sunk below the ill-fated waters.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Someone came madly rushing out of the bushes behind her. Helen screamed
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"It was an accident! She slipped forward&mdash;her footing gave way!" gasped
+the unhappy woman in her terror. "Oh, Maurice, for pity's sake, believe
+me; it was an accident!" She sunk upon her knees, with wildly
+outstretched arms, and trembling, and uplifted hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand aside," he said, hoarsely, pushing her roughly from him, so that
+she almost fell to the earth, and he plunged deep into the still
+quivering waters.</p>
+
+<p>It was the water-lilies that brought her to her death. The long clinging
+stems amongst which she sank held her fair body in their cold, clammy
+embraces, so that she never rose again. It was long before they found
+her.</p>
+
+<p>And, oh! who shall ever describe that dreadful scene by the margin of
+Shadonake Bath, whilst the terrified crowd that had gathered there
+quickly waited for her whom all knew to be hopelessly gone from them for
+ever!</p>
+
+<p>The sobbing, frightened women; the white, stricken faces of the men; the
+agony of those who had loved her; the distress and dismay of those who
+had only admired her; and there was one trembling, shuddering wretch, in
+her satin and her jewels, standing white and haggard apart, with knees
+that shook together, and teeth that clattered, and tearless sobs that
+shook her from head to foot, staring with a half-maddened stare upon the
+fatal waters.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when all was at an end and the worst was known, when the poor
+dripping body had been reverently covered over and borne away by loving
+arms amid a torrent of sobs and wailing tears towards the house, then
+some one came near her and spoke to her&mdash;some one off whom the water came
+pouring in streams, and whose face was white and wild as her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Get you away out of my sight," said the man whom she had loved so
+fruitlessly to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Have pity! have pity!" was the cry of despair that burst from her
+quivering lips. "Was it not all an accident?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, let it be so to the world, because you bear my name, and I will not
+have it dragged through the mire&mdash;to all others it is an accident&mdash;but
+never to me, for <i>I saw you let her go</i>! There is the stain of murder
+upon your hands. I will never call you wife, nor look upon your face
+again; get yourself away out of my sight!"</p>
+
+<p>With a low sobbing cry she turned and fled away from him, and away from
+the place, out among the shadows of the fir-trees. Once again some one
+stopped her in her terror-stricken flight.</p>
+
+<p>It was Denis Wilde, who came striding towards her under the trees, and
+caught her roughly by the wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"It is <i>you</i> who have killed her!" he said, savagely.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" she murmured, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw it in your face last night when you were wandering about the house
+during the thunderstorm; you meant her death then. I saw it in your eyes.
+My God! why did I not watch over her better, and save her from such a
+devil as you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, it is not true; it was an accident. Oh, spare me, spare me!"
+with a piteousness of terror, was all she could say.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I will spare you, poor wretch, for your husband's sake&mdash;because she
+loved him&mdash;and his burden, God help him! is heavy enough as it is. Go!"
+flinging her arm rudely from him. "Go, whilst you have got time, lest the
+thirst for your blood be too strong for me."</p>
+
+<p>And this time no one saw her go. Like a hunted animal, she fled away
+among the trees, her gleaming many-hued dress trailing all wet and
+drabbled on the sodden earth behind her, and the darkness of the
+gathering night closed in around her, and covered her in mercy with
+its pitiful mantle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>AT PEACE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Open, dark grave, and take her:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though we have loved her so,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet we must now forsake her:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Love will no more awake her:<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh bitter woe!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Open thine arms and take her<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To rest below!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">A. Procter.</span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>So Vera was at peace at last. The troubled life was over; the vexed
+question of her fate was settled for her. There was to be no more
+struggling of right against wrong, of expediency against truth, for her
+for evermore. She had all&mdash;nay, more than all she wanted now.</p>
+
+<p>"It was what she desired herself," said the vicar, brokenly, as he knelt
+by the side of her who had been so dear and precious to him. "Only a
+Sunday or two ago she said to me 'If I could die, I should be at peace.'"</p>
+
+<p>And Maurice, with hidden face at the foot of the bed, could not answer
+him for tears.</p>
+
+<p>It was there, by that white still presence, that lay so calm and so
+lovely amongst the showers of heavy-scented waxen flowers, wherewith
+loving hands had decked her for her last long sleep; it was there that
+Eustace learnt at last the secret of her life, and the fatal love that
+had so wrecked her happiness. It was all clear to him now. Her struggles,
+her temptations, her pitiful moments of weakness and misery, her
+courageous strife against the hopelessness of her fate&mdash;all was made
+plain now: he understood her at last.</p>
+
+<p>In Maurice Kynaston's passion of despairing grief he read the story of
+her sad life's trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Truly, Maurice had enough to bear; for he alone, and one other, who spoke
+no word of it to him, knew the terrible secret of her death; to all else
+it was "an accident;" to him and to Denis Wilde alone it was "murder." To
+him, too, the motive of the foul, cowardly deed had been revealed; for,
+tightly clasped in that poor dead hand, true to the last to the trust
+that had been given her, was the fatal packet of letters that had been
+the cause of her death. They were all blotted and blurred, and sodden
+with the water, but there were whole sentences in the inner folds that
+were sufficient for him to recognize his wife's handwriting, and to see
+what was the drift and the meaning of them.</p>
+
+<p>Whom they were written to, when they had been penned, he neither knew nor
+cared to discover; it was enough for him that they had been written by
+her, and that they were altogether shameful and sinful. With a deep and
+sickened disgust, he set fire to the whole packet, and scattered the
+blackened and smouldering ashes into the empty grate. They had cost a
+human life, those reckless, sinful letters; but for them, Vera would not
+have died.</p>
+
+<p>The terrible tragedy came to an end at last. They buried her beneath the
+coloured mosaic floor of the new chancel, which Sir John had built at her
+desire; and Marion smothered herself and her children in crape, and
+people shook their heads and sighed when they spoke of her; and Shadonake
+was shut up, and the Millers all went to London; and then the world went
+its way, and after a time it forgot her; and Vera Nevill's place knew her
+no more.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>After Christmas there was a wedding in Eaton Square; a wedding small and
+not at all gay. Indeed, Geraldine Miller considered her sister next door
+to a lunatic, and she told herself it would be hardly worth while to be
+married at all if there was to be no more fuss made over her marriage
+than over Beatrice's. For there were no bridesmaids and no wedding
+guests, only all the Millers, from the eldest down to the youngest, uncle
+Tom, and an ancient Miss Esterworth, unearthed from the other end of
+England for the occasion; and there were also a Mr. and Mrs. Pryme,
+a grave and aged couple&mdash;uncle and aunt to the bridegroom.</p>
+
+<p>There was, however, one remarkable feature at this particular wedding:
+when the family party came down into the dining-room to take their places
+for the conventional breakfast upon the plate of the bride's father were
+to be seen some very curious things.</p>
+
+<p>These were a faded white lace parasol with pink bows; a pair of soiled
+grey <i>peau de su&egrave;de</i> gloves, and a little black wisp of a spotted net
+veil.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless my soul!" said the member for Meadowshire, putting up his
+eye-glasses; "what on earth is all this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think you have seen them before, papa," says the bride, demurely,
+whilst uncle Tom bursts into a loud and hearty guffaw of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, turning rather red, and looking
+bewilderedly from his daughter to his wife: "I don't really understand.
+Caroline, my dear, do you know the meaning of these&mdash;these&mdash;most
+extraordinary objects?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Miller draws near and examines the little heap of faded finery
+critically. "Why, Beatrice!" she exclaims, in astonishment, "it is your
+last summer's sunshade, and a pair of your old gloves: how on earth did
+they come here on your papa's plate?"</p>
+
+<p>"I put them there; I thought papa would like to see them again," cries
+Beatrice, laughing; "he met them in Herbert's rooms in the Temple one day
+last summer."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Beatrice!</i>" falters her father, staring in amazement at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, papa, dear, don't be too dreadfully shocked at me; it was I, your
+very naughty daughter, who had gone on the sly to see Herbert in the
+Temple, and I ran into the next room to hide myself when I heard you come
+in, and left those stupid tell-tale things on the table! I don't think,
+now I am Herbert's wife, that it matters very much how much I confess of
+my improprieties, does it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, solemnly, and then turns round and
+shakes hands with his son-in-law. "And I might have retained you for that
+libel case after all, instead of getting in a young fool who lost it for
+me!" was all he said. And then the sunshade and the gloves were swept
+away, and they all sat down and ate a very good breakfast, and drank to
+the bride and bridegroom's health none the less heartily for that curious
+little explanatory scene at the beginning of the feast.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Maurice Kynaston has joined his brother in Australia, where, report says,
+they are doing very well, and rapidly making a large fortune; although no
+one thinks that either brother will ever leave the country of his
+adoption and return to England.</p>
+
+<p>Old Lady Kynaston lives on alone at Walpole Lodge; she is getting very
+aged, and is a dull, solitary old woman now, with an ever-present sadness
+at her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Before he left England Maurice told her the story of his love for Vera,
+and the whole truth about her death. The old lady knows that Vera and her
+fatal beauty has wrecked the lives of both her sons. There will be no
+tender filial hands to close her dying eyes, no troops of merry
+grandchildren to cheer and brighten her closing years. They will live
+away from her, and she will die alone. She knows it&mdash;and she is very,
+very sad.</p>
+
+<p>In South Kensington there lives a gay, world-loving woman who keeps open
+house, and entertains perpetually. She has horses and carriages, and a
+box at the opera, and is always to be seen faultlessly dressed and the
+gayest of the gay at every race meeting, and at every scene of pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>People admire her and flatter her, and speak lightly of her too,
+sometimes, for it is generally known that Mrs. Kynaston is "separated"
+from her husband; and though a separation is a perfectly respectable
+thing, and has no possible connection with a divorce, yet there are ugly
+whispers in this case as to what is the cause of the dissension between
+the husband in Australia and the wife in London; whispers that often
+do not fall very far short of the truth. And, gay as she is, and
+light-hearted as she seems to be, there are times when pretty Mrs.
+Kynaston is more to be pitied than any wretched beggar who toils along
+the streets, for always there is the terror of detection at her heart,
+and the fear that her dreadful secret, known as it is to at least two
+persons on earth, may ooze out&mdash;be guessed by others.</p>
+
+<p>There are things Mrs. Kynaston can never do: to read of some dreadful
+murder such as occasionally fills all the papers for days with its
+sickening details makes her shut herself in her own room till the
+horrible tragedy is over and forgotten; to hear of such things spoken
+of in society causes her to faint away with terror. To walk by a pond,
+or even to speak of being rowed upon a lake or river, fills her with
+such horror of soul that none of her friends ever care to suggest a
+water-party of any kind to her.</p>
+
+<p>"She saw that poor Miss Nevill drowned," say her compassionate
+acquaintances; "it has upset her nerves, poor dear; she cannot bear the
+sight of water." And there are a few who think, and who are not ashamed
+to whisper their thoughts with bated breath, that she saw Miss Nevill's
+sad death too near and too well to be utterly spotless in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>That she allowed her to perish without attempting to save her, because
+she was jealous of her, is the generally received impression; but there
+is no one who has quite realized that she was actually guilty of her
+death.</p>
+
+<p>Did they think so, they could not eat her dinners with decency. And they
+do eat her dinners, which are uncommonly good ones; and they flock to her
+house, and they sit in her carriage and her opera-box, and they take all
+they can get from her, although at their hearts they do not care to be
+intimate with her. But then money covers a multitude of sins. And a great
+many crimes may be glossed over if we are only rich enough and popular
+enough, and sufficiently the fashion.</p>
+
+<p>As to Denis Wilde, he was young, and in time he got over it and married
+an amiable young lady who bore him three children and loved him
+devotedly, so that after a while he forgot his first love.</p>
+
+<p>Shadonake Bath has been drained. Mr. Miller has at last been allowed to
+have his own way about it. It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good,
+and there could be found no voice to plead for its preservation after
+that terrible tragedy of which it was the scene.</p>
+
+<p>So the old steps have all been cleared away, and brick walls line the
+straight deep sides, whereon grow the finest peaches and nectarines in
+the county, whilst a parterre of British Queens and Hautboys cover the
+spot where Vera died with their rich red fruit and their luxuriant
+foliage.</p>
+
+<p>And at Sutton things go on much the same as of old. Old Mrs. Daintree is
+dead, and no one sorrowed much for her loss, whilst the domestic harmony
+is decidedly enhanced by her absence. Tommy and Minnie are growing big
+and lanky, and the subject of schools and education is beginning to
+occupy the minds of Marion and her husband.</p>
+
+<p>But the vicar has grown grey and old; his back is more bent and his face
+more careworn than it used to be. He has never been quite the same since
+Vera's death.</p>
+
+<p>There is a white marble monument in the middle of the chancel, raised by
+the loving hands of two brothers far away in Australia. It is by the best
+sculptor of the day, and on it lies a pale white figure, with a pure
+delicate profile, and hands always meekly crossed upon the bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Every Sunday, as Eustace Daintree passes from his place at the
+reading-desk up to the altar to read the Communion Service, there falls
+upon it a streak of sunshine from the painted window above, which he
+himself and his wife had put up to her memory, lighting up the pale
+marble image with a chequered glory of gold and crimson. And the vicar's
+eye as he passes alights for a moment with a never-dying sadness upon the
+simple words carved at the foot of her tomb&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Vera Nevill, aged</span> 23.</p>
+
+<p>AT PEACE.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h3>MRS. CAMERON'S NOVELS.</h3>
+
+<p>Jack's Secret.</p>
+
+<p>A Sister's Sin.</p>
+
+<p>A Lost Wife.</p>
+
+<p>The Cost of a Lie.</p>
+
+<p>This Wicked World.</p>
+
+<p>A Devout Lover.</p>
+
+<p>A Life's Mistake.</p>
+
+<p>Worth Winning.</p>
+
+<p>Vera Neville.</p>
+
+<p>Pure Gold.</p>
+
+<p>In a Grass Country.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Mrs. Cameron's numerous efforts in the line of fiction have
+won for her a wide circle of admirers. Her experience in novel
+writing, as well as her skill in inventing and delineating characters,
+enables her to put before the reading public stories that
+are full of interest and pure in tone."&mdash;<i>Harrisburg Telegraph</i>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Vera Nevill
+ Poor Wisdom's Chance
+
+Author: Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2006 [EBook #18385]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VERA NEVILL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mary Meehan and The Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ VERA NEVILL;
+
+ OR, POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
+
+ _A NOVEL_.
+
+ BY MRS. H. LOVETT CAMERON
+
+ Author of "Pure Gold," "In a Grass Country," etc., etc.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1893.
+
+
+
+
+ "No. Vain, alas! th' endeavour
+ From bonds so sweet to sever.
+ Poor Wisdom's Chance
+ Against a glance
+ Is now as weak as ever."
+
+ _Moore's Melodies_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. The Vicar's Family
+
+ CHAPTER II. Kynaston Hall
+
+ CHAPTER III. Fanning Dead Ashes
+
+ CHAPTER IV. The Lay Rector
+
+ CHAPTER V. "Little Pitchers"
+
+ CHAPTER VI. A Soiree at Walpole Lodge
+
+ CHAPTER VII. Evening Reveries
+
+ CHAPTER VIII. The Member for Meadowshire
+
+ CHAPTER IX. Engaged
+
+ CHAPTER X. A Meeting on the Stairs
+
+ CHAPTER XI. An Idle Morning
+
+ CHAPTER XII. The Meet at Shadonake
+
+ CHAPTER XIII. Peacock's Feathers
+
+ CHAPTER XIV. Her Wedding Dress
+
+ CHAPTER XV. Vera's Message
+
+ CHAPTER XVI. "Poor Wisdom"
+
+ CHAPTER XVII. An Unlucky Love-Letter
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Lady Kynaston's Plans
+
+ CHAPTER XIX. What She Waited For
+
+ CHAPTER XX. A Morning Walk
+
+ CHAPTER XXI. Maurice's Intercession
+
+ CHAPTER XXII. Mr. Pryme's Visitors
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII. A White Sunshade
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV. Her Son's Secret
+
+ CHAPTER XXV. St. Paul's, Knightsbridge
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI. The Russia-Leather Case
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII. Dinner at Ranelagh
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. Mrs. Hazeldine's "Long Eliza"
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX. A Wedding Tour
+
+ CHAPTER XXX. "If I could Die!"
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI. An Eventful Drive
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII. By the Vicarage Gate
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. Denis Wilde's Love
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. A Garden Party
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV. Shadonake Bath
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI. At Peace
+
+
+
+
+VERA NEVILL
+
+OR
+
+POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE VICAR'S FAMILY.
+
+ With that regal indolent air she had
+ So confident of her charm.
+
+ Owen Meredith.
+
+ Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.
+
+ Shakespeare.
+
+
+Amongst the divers domestic complications into which short-sighted man is
+prone to fall there is none which has been more conclusively proved to be
+an utter and egregious failure than that family arrangement which, for
+lack of a better name, I will call a "composite household."
+
+No one could have spoken upon this subject with greater warmth of
+feeling, nor out of the depths of a more painful experience, than
+could the Rev. Eustace Daintree, sometime vicar of the parish of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold.
+
+Mr. Daintree's family circle consisted of himself, his mother, his wife,
+and his wife's sister, and I should like to know how a man could expect
+to lead a life of peace and tranquillity with such a combination of
+inharmonious feminine elements!
+
+There were two children also, who were a fruitful source of discord and
+disunion. It is certain that, had he chosen to do so, the Rev. Eustace
+might have made many heart-rending and harrowing revelations concerning
+the private life and customs of the inhabitants of his vicarage. It is
+equally certain, however, that he would not have chosen to do so, for he
+was emphatically a man of peace and gentleness, kind hearted and given
+to good works; and was, moreover, sincerely anxious to do his duty
+impartially to those whom Providence or fate, or a combination of chances
+and changes, had somehow contrived to bring together under his roof.
+
+Things had not always been thus with him. In the early days of their
+married life Eustace Daintree and Marion his wife had had their home to
+themselves, and right well had they enjoyed it. A fairly good living
+backed up by independent means, a small rural parish, a pleasant
+neighbourhood, a pretty and comfortable vicarage-house--what more can the
+hearts of a clergyman of the Church of England and his wife desire? Mr.
+and Mrs. Daintree, at all events, had wished for nothing better. But this
+blissful state of things was not destined to last; it was, perhaps,
+hardly to be expected that it should, seeing that man is born to trouble,
+and that happiness is known to be as fleeting as time or beauty or any
+other good thing.
+
+When Eustace Daintree had been married five years, his father died,
+and his mother, accepting his warmly tendered invitation to come to
+Sutton-in-the-Wold upon a long visit, took up her abode in the pleasant
+vicarage-house.
+
+Her visit was long indeed. In a weak moment her son consented to her
+urgent request to be allowed to subscribe her quota to the household
+expenses--this was as good as giving her a ninety-nine years' lease of
+her quarters. The thin end of the wedge thus inserted, Mrs. Daintree
+_mere_ became immovable as the church tower or the kitchen chimney, and
+the doomed members of the family began to understand that nothing short
+of death itself was likely to terminate the old lady's residence amongst
+them. For the future her son's house became her home.
+
+But, even thus, things were not at their worst. Marion Daintree was a
+soft-hearted, gentle-mannered little woman. It cannot be said that she
+regarded the permanent instalment of her mother-in-law in her home with
+pleasurable feelings; she would have been more than human had she done
+so. But then she was unfeignedly fond of her husband, and desired so
+earnestly to make his home happy that, not seeing her way to oust the
+intruder without a warfare which would have distressed him, she
+determined to make the best of the situation, and to preserve the
+family peace and concord at all risks.
+
+She succeeded in her praiseworthy efforts, but at what cost no one but
+herself ever knew. Marion's whole life became one propitiatory sacrifice
+to her mother-in-law. To propitiate Mrs. Daintree was a very simple
+matter. Bearing in mind that her leading characteristics were a bad
+temper and an ungovernable desire to ride rough-shod over the feelings of
+all those who came into contact with her, in order to secure her favour
+it was only necessary to study her moods, and to allow her to tread you
+under foot as much as her soul desired. Provided that she had her own way
+in these little matters, Mrs. Daintree became an amiable old lady. Marion
+did all that was needful; figuratively speaking, she laid down in the
+dust before her, and the Juggernaut of her fate consented to be appeased
+by the lowly attitude, and crushed its way triumphantly over her fallen
+body.
+
+Thus Marion accepted her fate, and peace was preserved in her husband's
+house. But by-and-by there came somebody into the family who would by no
+manner of means consent to be so crushed and trodden under foot. This
+somebody was Vera Nevill.
+
+In order duly to set forth who and what was this young woman, who thus
+audaciously set at defiance the powers that were, it will be necessary
+that I should take a brief survey of Marion's family history.
+
+Marion, then, be it known, was the eldest of three sisters; so much the
+eldest, that when Mr. Daintree had met her and married her in Rome during
+one of his brief holidays, the two remaining sisters had been at the time
+hardly more than children. Colonel Nevill, their father, had married an
+Italian lady, long since dead, and had lived a nomad life ever since he
+had become a widower; moving about chiefly between Nice, Rome, and Malta.
+Wherever pleasant society was to be found, there would Colonel Nevill and
+his daughters instinctively drift, and year after year they became more
+and more enamoured of their foreign life, and less and less disposed to
+venture back to the chill fogs and cloudy skies of their native land.
+
+Three years after Marion had left them, and gone away with her husband to
+his English vicarage; Theodora, the second daughter, had at eighteen
+married an Italian prince, whose lineage was ancient, but whose acres
+were few; and Colonel Nevill, dying rather suddenly almost immediately
+after, Vera, the youngest daughter, as was most natural, instantly found
+a home with Princess Marinari.
+
+All this time Marion lived at Sutton-in-the-Wold, and saw none of them.
+She wept copiously at the news of her father's death, regretting bitterly
+her inability to receive his parting blessing; but, her little Minnie
+being born shortly after, her thoughts were fortunately diverted into a
+happier channel, and she suffered from her loss less keenly and recovered
+from it more quickly than had she had no separate life and no separate
+interests of her own to engross her. Still, being essentially
+affectionate and faithful, she clung to the memory of the two sisters now
+separated so entirely from her. For some years she and Theodora kept up a
+brisk correspondence. Marion's letters were full of the sayings and
+doings of Tommy and Minnie, and Theodora's were full of nothing but Vera.
+
+What Vera had looked like at her first ball, how Prince this and Marquis
+so-and-so had admired her; how she had been smothered with bouquets and
+bonbons at Carnival time; how she had sat to some world-famed artist, who
+had entreated to be allowed to put her face into his great picture, and
+how the house was literally besieged with her lovers. By all this, and
+much more in the same strain, Marion perceived that her young sister,
+whom she had last seen in all the raw unformed awkwardness of early
+girlhood, had developed somehow into a beautiful woman.
+
+And there came photographs of Vera occasionally, fully confirming the
+glowing accounts Princess Marinari gave of her; fantastic photographs,
+portraying her in strange and different ways. There was Vera looking out
+through clouds of her own dark hair hanging loosely about her face; Vera
+as a Bacchante crowned with vine leaves, laughing saucily; Vera draped as
+a _devote_, with drooping eyes and hands crossed meekly upon her bosom.
+Sometimes she would be in a ball-dress, with lace about her white
+shoulders; sometimes muffled up in winter sables, her head covered with
+a fur cap. But always she was beautiful, always a young queen, even in
+these poor, fading photographs, that could give but a faint idea of her
+loveliness to those who knew her not.
+
+"She must be very handsome," Eustace Daintree would say heartily, as his
+wife, with a little natural flush of pride, handed some picture of her
+young sister across the breakfast-table to him. "How I wish we could see
+her, she must be worth looking at, indeed. Mother, have you seen this
+last one of Vera?"
+
+"Beauty is a snare," the old lady would answer viciously, hardly deigning
+to glance at the lovely face; "and your sister seems to me, Marion, to be
+dressed up like an actress, most unlike my idea of a modest English
+girl."
+
+Then Marion would take her treasure away with her up into her own room,
+out of the way of her mother-in-law's stern and repelling remarks.
+
+But one day there came sad news to the vicarage at Sutton. Theodora,
+Princess Marinari, caught the Roman fever in its worst form, and after
+a few agonizing letters and telegrams, that came so rapidly one upon the
+other that she had hardly time to realize the dreadful truth, Marion
+learnt that her sister was dead.
+
+After that, the elder sister's English home became naturally the right
+and fitting place for Vera to come to. So she left her gay life and her
+lovers, her bright dresses and all that had hitherto seemed to her worth
+living for, and came back to her father's country and took up her abode
+in Eustace Daintree's quiet vicarage, where she became shortly her
+sister's idol and her sister's mother-in-law's mortal foe.
+
+And then it was that the worthy clergyman came to discover that to put
+three grown-up women into the same house, and to expect them to live
+together in peace and amity, is about as foolhardy an experiment as to
+shut up a bulldog, a parrot, and a tom-cat in a cupboard, and expect
+them to behave like so many lambs.
+
+It is now rather more than a year since Vera Nevill came to live in her
+brother-in-law's house. Let me waste no further time, but introduce her
+to you at once.
+
+The time of the year is October--the time of day is five o'clock. In the
+vicarage drawing-room the afternoon tea-table has just been set out, and
+the fire just lit, for it is chilly; but one of the long French windows
+leading into the garden is still open, and through it Vera steps into
+the room.
+
+There is a background of brown and yellow foliage behind her, across the
+garden, all aglow with the crimson light of the western sky, against
+which the outlines of her figure, in its close-fitting dark dress, stand
+out clearly and distinctly. Vera has the figure, not of a sylph, but of
+a goddess; it is the absolute perfection of the female form. She is
+tall--very tall, and she carries her head a little proudly, like a young
+queen conscious of her own power.
+
+She comes in with a certain slow and languid grace in her movements, and
+pauses for an instant by the hearth, holding out her hand, that is white
+and well-shaped, though perhaps a trifle too long-fingered, to the
+warmth.
+
+The glow of the newly-lit fire flickers up over her face--her face, with
+its pure oval outlines, its delicate, regular features, and its dreamy
+eyes, that are neither blue nor gray nor hazel, but something vague and
+indistinctly beautiful, entirely peculiar to themselves. Her hair, a soft
+dusky cloud, comes down low over her broad forehead, and is gathered up
+at the back in some strange and thoroughly un-English fashion that would
+not suit every one, yet that somehow makes a fitting crown to the stately
+young head it adorns.
+
+"Tea, Vera?" says Marion, from behind the cups and saucers.
+
+Old Mrs. Daintree sits darning socks, severely, by the fading light.
+There is a sound of distant whimpering from the shadowy corner behind the
+piano; it is Tommy in disgrace. Vera turns round; Marion's kind face
+looks troubled and distressed; the old lady compresses her lips firmly
+and savagely.
+
+Vera takes the cup from her sister's hands, and putting it down again on
+the table, proceeds to cut a slice of bread from the loaf, and to spread
+it thickly with strawberry jam.
+
+"Come here, Tommy, and have some of Auntie's bread and jam."
+
+Out comes a small person, with a very swollen face and a very dirty
+pinafore, from the distant seclusion of the corner, and flies swiftly
+to Vera's sheltering arm.
+
+Mrs. Daintree drops her work angrily into her lap.
+
+"Vera, I must beg of you not to interfere with Tom; are you aware that he
+is in the corner by my orders?"
+
+"Perfectly, Mrs. Daintree; and also that he was there before I went out,
+exactly three-quarters of an hour ago; there are limits to all human
+endurance."
+
+"I consider it extremely impertinent," begins the old lady, nodding her
+head violently.
+
+"Darling Vera," pleads Marion, almost in tears; "perhaps you had better
+let him go back."
+
+"Tommy is quite good now," says Vera, calmly passing her hand over the
+rough blonde head. Master Tommy's mouth is full of bread and jam, and he
+looks supremely indifferent to the warfare that is being carried on on
+his account over his head.
+
+His crime having been the surreptitious purloining of his grandmamma's
+darning cotton, and the subsequent immersion of the same in the inkstand,
+Vera feels quite a warm glow of approval towards the little culprit and
+his judiciously-planned piece of mischief.
+
+"Vera, I _insist_ upon that child being sent back into the corner!"
+exclaims Mrs. Daintree, angrily, bringing her large fist heavily down
+upon her knee.
+
+"The child has been over-punished already," she answers, calmly, still
+administering the soothing solace of strawberry jam.
+
+"Oh, Vera, _pray_ keep the peace!" cries Marion, with clasped hands.
+
+"Here, I am thankful to say, comes my son;" as a shadow passes the
+window, and Eustace's tall figure with the meekly stooping head comes
+in at the door. "Eustace, I beg that you will decide who is to be in
+authority in this house--your mother or this young lady. It is
+insufferable that every time I send the children into the corner Vera
+should call them out and give them cakes and jam."
+
+Eustace Daintree looks helplessly from one to the other.
+
+"My dear mother--my dear girls--what is it all about? I am sure Vera does
+not mean----"
+
+"No, Vera only means to be kind, grandmamma," cries Marion, nervously;
+"she is so fond of the children----"
+
+"Hold your tongue, Marion, and don't take your sister's part so
+shamelessly!"
+
+Meanwhile Vera rises silently and pushes Tommy and all his enormities
+gently by the shoulders out of the room. Then she turns round and faces
+her foe.
+
+"Judge between us, Eustace!" the old lady is crying; "am I to be defied
+and set at nought? are we all to bow down and worship Miss Vera, the most
+useless, lazy person in the house, who turns up her nose at honest men
+and prefers to live on charity, a burden to her relations?"
+
+"Vera is no burden, only a great pleasure to me, my dear mother," said
+the clergyman, holding out his hand to the girl.
+
+"Oh, grandmamma, how unkind you are," says Marion, bursting into tears.
+But Vera only laughs lazily and amusedly, she is so used to it all! It
+does not disturb her.
+
+"Is she to be mistress here, I ask, or am I?" continues Mrs. Daintree,
+furiously.
+
+"Marion is the mistress here," says Vera, boldly; "neither you nor I have
+any authority in her house or over her children." And then the old lady
+gathers up her work and sails majestically from the room, followed by her
+weak, trembling daughter-in-law, bent on reconciliation, on cajolement,
+on laying herself down for her own sins, and her sister's as well, before
+the avenging genius of her life.
+
+The clergyman stands by the hearth with his head bent and his hands
+behind him. He sighs wearily.
+
+Vera creeps up to him and lays her hand softly upon his coat sleeve.
+
+"I am a firebrand, am I not, Eustace?"
+
+"My dear, no, not that; but if you could try a little to keep the peace!"
+He stayed the caressing hand within his own and looked at her tenderly.
+His face is a good one, but not a handsome one; and, as he looks at his
+wife's young sister, it is softened into its best and kindest. Who can
+resist Vera, when she looks gentle and humble, with that rare light in
+her dark eyes?
+
+"Vera, why don't you look like that at Mr. Gisburne?" he says, smiling.
+
+"Oh, Eustace! am I indeed a burden to you, as your mother says?" she
+exclaims, evasively.
+
+"No, no, my dear, but it seems hard for you here; a home of your own
+might be happier for you; and Gisburne is a good man."
+
+"I don't like good men who are poor!" says Vera, with a little grimace.
+
+Her brother-in-law looks shocked. "Why do you say such hard worldly
+things, Vera? You do not really mean them."
+
+"Don't I? Eustace, look at me: do I look like a poor clergyman's wife? Do
+survey me dispassionately." She holds herself at arm's length from him,
+and looks comically up and down the length of her gray skirts. "Think of
+the yards and yards of stuff it takes to clothe me; and should not a
+woman as tall as I am be always in velvet and point lace, Eustace? What
+is the good of condemning myself to workhouse sheeting for the rest of my
+days?"
+
+Mr. Daintree looks at her admiringly; he has learnt to love her; this
+beautiful southern flower that has come to blossom in his home. Women
+will be hard enough on Vera through her life--men, never.
+
+"You have great gifts and great temptations, my child," he says,
+solemnly. "I pray that I may be enabled to do my duty to you. Do not say
+you do not like good men, Vera, it pains me to hear you say it."
+
+"I like _one_ good man, and his name is Eustace Daintree!" she answers,
+softly; "is not that a hopeful sign?"
+
+"You are a little flatterer, Vera," he says, kissing her; but, though he
+is a middle-aged clergyman and her brother-in-law, he is by no means
+impervious to the flattery.
+
+Meanwhile, upstairs, Marion is humbling herself into the dust, at the
+footstool of her tyrant. Mrs. Daintree is very angry with Marion's
+sister, and Mr. Gisburne is also the text whereon she hangs her sermon.
+
+"I wish her no harm, Marion; why should I? She is most impertinent to me,
+but of that I will not speak."
+
+"Indeed, grandmamma, you do not understand Vera. I am sure she----"
+
+"Oh, yes, excuse me, my dear, I understand her perfectly--the
+impertinence to myself I waive--I hope I am a Christian, but I cannot
+forgive her for turning up her nose at Mr. Gisburne--a most excellent
+young man; what can a girl want more?"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Daintree, does Vera look like a poor clergyman's wife?" said
+Marion, using unconsciously Vera's own arguments.
+
+"Now, Marion, I have no patience with such folly! Whom do you suppose she
+is to wait for? We haven't got any Princes down at Sutton to marry her;
+and I say it's a shame that she should go on living on her friends, a
+girl without a penny! when she might marry a respectable man, and have
+a home of her own."
+
+And then even Marion said that, if Vera could be brought to like Mr.
+Gisburne, it might possibly be happier for her to marry him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KYNASTON HALL.
+
+ Only the wind here hovers and revels
+ In a round where life seems barren as death.
+ Here there was laughing of old, there was weeping,
+ Haply of lovers none ever will know.
+
+ Swinburne, "A Forsaken Garden."
+
+
+It seemed to be generally acknowledged by the Daintree family that if
+Vera would only consent to yield to the solicitations of the Reverend
+Albert Gisburne, and transfer herself to Tripton Rectory for life, it
+would be the simplest and easiest solution of a good many difficult
+problems concerning her.
+
+In point of fact, Vera Nevill was an incongruous element in the Daintree
+household. In that quiet humdrum country clergyman's life she was as much
+out of her proper place as a bird of paradise in a chicken yard, or a
+Gloire de Dijon rose in a field of turnips.
+
+It was not her beauty alone, but her whole previous life which unfitted
+her for the things amongst which she found herself suddenly transplanted.
+She was no young unformed child, but a woman of the world, who had been
+courted and flattered and sought after; who had learnt to hold her own,
+and to fight her battles single-handed, and who knew far more about
+the dangers and difficulties of life than did the simple-hearted
+brother-in-law, under whose charge she now found herself, or the timid,
+gentle sister who was so many years her senior.
+
+But if she was cognizant of the world and its ways, Vera knew absolutely
+nothing about the life of an English vicarage. Sunday schools and
+mothers' meetings were enigmas to her; clothing clubs and friendly
+societies, hopeless and uninteresting mysteries which she had no desire
+to solve. She had no place in the daily routine. What was she to do
+amongst it all?
+
+Vera did what was most pleasant and also most natural to her--she did
+nothing. She was by habit and by culture essentially indolent. The
+southern blood she inherited, the life of the Italian fine lady she had
+led, made her languid and fond of inaction. To lie late in bed, to sip
+chocolate, and open her letters before she rose; to be dressed and
+re-dressed by a fashionable lady's maid; to recline in luxurious
+carriages, and to listen lazily to the flattery and adulation that had
+surrounded her--that had been Vera's life from morning till night ever
+since she grew up.
+
+How, with such antecedents, was she to enter suddenly into all the
+activity of an English clergyman's home? There were the schools, and the
+vestry meetings, and the sick and the destitute to be fretted after from
+Monday morning till Saturday night--Eustace and Marion hardly ever had a
+moment's respite or a leisure hour the whole week; whilst Sunday, of
+course, was the hardest day's work of all.
+
+But Vera could not turn her life into these things. She would not have
+known how to set about them, and assuredly she had no desire to try.
+
+So she wandered about the garden in the summer time, or sat dreamily by
+the fire in winter. She gathered flowers and decorated the rooms with
+them; she spoilt the children, she quarrelled with their grandmother, but
+she did nothing else; and the righteous soul of Eustace Daintree was
+disquieted within him on account of her. He felt that her life was
+wasted, and the responsibility of it seemed, to his over-sensitive
+conscience, to rest upon himself.
+
+"The girl ought to be married," he would say to his wife, anxiously. "A
+husband and a home of her own is what she wants. If she were happily
+settled she would find occupation enough."
+
+"I don't see whom she could marry, Eustace; men are so scarce, and there
+are so many girls in the county."
+
+"Well, she might have had Barry." Barry was a curate whom Vera had lately
+scorned, and who had, in consequence of the crushed condition of his
+affections, incontinently fled. "And then there is Gisburne. Why couldn't
+she marry Gisburne? He is quite a catch, and a good young man too."
+
+"Yes, it is a pity; perhaps she may change her mind, and he will ask her
+again after Christmas; he told me as much."
+
+"You must try and persuade her to think better of it by then, my dear.
+Now I must be off to old Abraham, and be sure you send round the port to
+Mary Williams; and you will find the list for the blanket club on my
+study table, love."
+
+Her husband started on his morning rounds, and Marion, coming down into
+the drawing-room, found old Mrs. Daintree haranguing Vera on the same
+all-important topic.
+
+"I am only speaking for your good, Vera; what other object could I have?"
+she was saying, as she dived into the huge basket of undarned socks on
+the floor before her, and extracted thereout a ragged specimen to be
+operated upon. "It is sheer obstinacy on your part that you will not
+accept such a good offer. And there was poor Mr. Barry, a most worthy
+young man, and his second cousin a bishop, too, quite sure of a living,
+I should say."
+
+"Another clergyman!" said Vera, with a soft laugh, just lifting up her
+hands and letting them fall down again upon her lap, with a little,
+half-foreign movement of impatience. "Are there, then, no other men but
+the clergy in this country?"
+
+"And a very good thing if there were no others," glared the old lady,
+defiantly, over her spectacles.
+
+"I do not like them," said Vera, simply.
+
+"Not like them! Considering that I am the daughter, the widow, and the
+mother of clergymen, I consider that remark a deliberate insult to me!"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Daintree, I am sure Vera never meant----" cried Marion,
+trembling for fear of a fresh battle.
+
+"Don't interrupt me, Marion; you ought to have more proper pride than to
+stand by and hear the Church reviled."
+
+"Vera only said she did not like them."
+
+"No more I do, Marion," said Vera, stifling a yawn--"not when they are
+young; when they are old, like Eustace, they are far better; but when
+they are young they are all exactly alike--equally harmless when out of
+the pulpit, and equally wearisome when in it!"
+
+A few moments of offended silence on the part of the elder lady,
+during which she tugs fiercely and savagely at the ragged sock in her
+hands--then she bursts forth again.
+
+"You may scorn them as much as you like, but let me tell you that the
+life of a clergyman's wife--honoured, respected, and useful--is a more
+profitable one than the idle existence which you lead, utterly
+purposeless and lazy. You never do one single thing from morning till
+night."
+
+"What shall I do? Shall I help you to darn Eustace's socks?" reaching at
+one of them out of the basket.
+
+Mrs. Daintree wrenched it angrily from her hand.
+
+"Good gracious! as if you could! What a bungle it would be. Why, I never
+saw you with a piece of work in your hand in my life. I dare say you
+could not even thread a needle."
+
+"I am quite sure I have never threaded one yet," laughed Vera, lazily. "I
+might try; but you see you won't let me be useful, so I had better resign
+myself to idleness." And then she rose and took her hat, and went out
+through the French window, out among the fallen yellow leaves, leaving
+the other women to discuss the vexed problem of her existence.
+
+She discussed it to herself as she walked dreamily along under the trees
+in the lane beyond the garden, her head bent, and her eyes fixed upon the
+ground; she swung her hat idly in her hand, for it was warm for the time
+of year, and the gold-brown leaves fluttered down about her head and
+rustled under the dark, trailing skirts behind her.
+
+About half a mile up the lane, beyond the vicarage, stood an old iron
+gateway leading into a park. It was flanked by square red-brick columns,
+upon whose summits two stone griffins, "rampant," had looked each other
+in the face for the space of some two hundred years or so, peering grimly
+over the tops of the shields against which they stood on end, upon which
+all the family arms and quarterings of the Kynastons had become softly
+coated over by an indistinct veil of gray-green moss.
+
+Vera turned in at this gate, nodding to the woman at the lodge within,
+who looked out for a minute at her as she passed. It was her daily walk,
+for Kynaston was uninhabited and empty, and any one was free to wander
+unreproved among its chestnut glades, or to stand and gossip to its
+ancient housekeeper in the great bare rooms of the deserted house.
+
+Vera did so often. The square, red-brick building, with its stone
+copings, the terrace walk before the windows, the peacocks sunning
+themselves before the front door, the fountain plashing sleepily in the
+stone basin, the statues down the square Italian garden--all had a
+certain fascination for her dreamy poetical nature. Then turning in at
+the high narrow doorway, whose threshold Mrs. Eccles, the housekeeper,
+had long ago given her free leave to cross, she would stroll through the
+deserted rooms, touching the queer spindle-legged furniture with gentle
+reverent fingers, gazing absorbedly at the dark rows of family portraits,
+and speculating always to herself what they had been like, these dead and
+gone Kynastons, who had once lived and laughed, and sorrowed and died, in
+the now empty rooms, where nothing was left of them save those dim and
+faded portraits, and where the echo of her own footsteps was the only
+sound in the wilderness of the carpetless chambers where once they had
+reigned supreme.
+
+She got to know them all at last by name--whole generations of them.
+There was Sir Ralph in armour, and Bridget, his wife, in a ruff and a
+farthingale; young Sir Maurice, who died in boyhood, and Sir Penrhyn, his
+brother, in long love-locks and lace ruffles. A whole succession of Sir
+Martins and Sir Henrys; then came the first Sir John and his wife in
+powder and patches, with their fourteen children all in a row, whose
+elaborate marriages and family histories, Vera, although assisted by Mrs.
+Eccles, who had them all at her fingers' ends, had considerable
+difficulty in clearly comprehending. It was a relief to be firmly landed
+with Sir Maurice, in a sad-coloured suit and full-bottomed wig, "the
+present baronet's grandfather," and, lastly, Sir John, "the present
+baronet's father," in a deputy-lieutenant's scarlet uniform, with a
+cocked hat under his arm--by far the worst and most inartistic painting
+in the whole collection.
+
+It was all wonderful and interesting to Vera. She elaborated whole
+romances to herself out of these portraits. She settled their loves and
+their temptations, heart-broken separations, and true lovers' meetings
+between them. Each one had his or her history woven out of the slender
+materials which Mrs. Eccles could give her of their real lives. Only one
+thing disappointed her, there was no portrait of the present Sir John.
+She would have liked to have seen what he was like, this man who was
+unmarried still, and who had never cared to live in the house of his
+fathers. She wondered what the mystery had been that kept him from it.
+She could not understand that a man should deliberately prefer dark,
+dirty, dingy London, which she had only once seen in passing from one
+station to the other on her way to Sutton, to a life in this quiet
+old-world red-brick house, with the rooks cawing among trees, and the
+long chestnut glades stretching away into the park, and all the venerable
+associations of those portraits of his ancestors. Some trouble, some
+sorrow, must have kept him away from it, she felt.
+
+But she would not question Mrs. Eccles about him; she encouraged her to
+talk of the dead and gone generations as much as she pleased, but of the
+man who was her master Vera would have thought it scarcely honourable to
+have spoken to his servant. Perhaps, too, she preferred her dreams. One
+day, idly opening the drawer of an old bureau in the little room which
+Mrs. Eccles always called religiously "My lady's morning room," Vera came
+upon a modern photograph that arrested her attention wonderfully.
+
+It represented, however, nothing very remarkable; only a
+broad-shouldered, good-looking young man, with an aquiline noise and a
+close-cropped head. On the reverse side of the card was written in
+pencil, "My son--for Mrs. Eccles." Lady Kynaston, she supposed, must
+therefore have sent it to the old housekeeper, and of course it was Sir
+John. Vera pushed it back again into the drawer with a little flush, as
+though she had been guilty of an indiscretion in looking at it, and she
+said no word of her discovery to the housekeeper. A day or two later she
+sought for it again in the same place, but it had been taken away.
+
+But the face thus seen made an impression upon her. She did not forget
+it; and when Sir John Kynaston's name was mentioned, she invested him
+with the living likeness of the photograph she had seen.
+
+On this particular October morning that Vera strolled up idly to the old
+house she did not feel inclined to wander among the deserted rooms; the
+sunshine came down too pleasantly through the autumn leaves; the air was
+too full of the lingering breath of the dying summer for her to care to
+go indoors. She paused a minute by the open window of the housekeeper's
+room, and called the old lady by name.
+
+The room, however, was empty and she received no answer, so she wandered
+on to the terrace and leant over the stone parapet that looked over the
+gardens and the fountains, and the distant park beyond, and she thought
+of the photograph in the drawer.
+
+And then and there there came into Vera Neville's mind a thought that,
+beginning with nothing more than an indistinct and idle fancy, ended in
+a set and determined purpose.
+
+The thought was this:--
+
+"If Sir John Kynaston ever comes down here, I will marry him."
+
+She said it to herself, deliberately and calmly, without the slightest
+particle of hesitation or bashfulness. She told herself that what her
+relations were perpetually impressing upon her concerning the
+desirableness of her marrying and making a home of her own, was perfectly
+just and true. It would undoubtedly be a good thing for her to marry; her
+life was neither very pleasant nor very satisfactory to herself or to any
+one else. She had never intended to end her days at Sutton Vicarage; it
+had only been an intermediate condition of things. She had no vocation
+for visiting the poor, or for filling that useful but unexciting family
+office of maiden aunt; and, moreover, she felt that, with all their
+kindness to her, her brother-in-law and his wife ought not to be burdened
+with her support for longer than was necessary. As to turning governess,
+or companion, or lady-help, there was an incongruity in the idea that
+made it too ludicrous to contemplate even for an instant. There is no
+other way that a handsome and penniless woman can deliver her friends
+of the burden of her existence than by marriage.
+
+Marriage decidedly was what Vera had to look to. She was in no way averse
+to the idea, only she intended to look at the subject from the most
+practical and matter-of-fact point of view.
+
+She was not going to render herself wretched for life by rashly
+consenting to marry Mr. Gisburne, or any other equally unsuitable husband
+that her friends might choose to press upon her. Vera differed in one
+important respect from the vast majority of young ladies of the present
+day--she had no vague and indistinct dreams as to what marriage might
+bring her. She knew exactly what she wanted from it. She wanted wealth
+and position, because she knew what they were and what life became
+without them; and because she knew that she was utterly unfitted to be
+the wife of any one but a rich man.
+
+And therefore it was that Vera looked from the square red house behind
+her over the wide gardens and broad lawns, and down the noble avenues
+that spread away into the distance, and said to herself, "This is what
+will suit me, to be mistress of a place like this; I should love it
+dearly; I should find real happiness and pleasure in the duties that such
+a position would bring me. If Sir John Kynaston comes here, it is he whom
+I will marry, and none other."
+
+As to what her feelings might be towards the man whom she thus proposed
+to marry it cannot be said that Vera took them into consideration at all.
+She was not, indeed, aware whether or no she possessed any feelings; they
+had never incommoded her hitherto. Probably they had no existence. Such
+vague fancy as had been ever roused within her had been connected with a
+photograph seen once in a writing-table drawer. The photograph of Sir
+John Kynaston! The reflection did not influence her in the least, only
+she said to herself also, "If he is like his photograph, I should be sure
+to get on with him."
+
+She was an odd mixture, this Vera. Ambitious, worldly-wise, mercenary
+even, if you will; conscious of her own beauty, and determined to exact
+its full value; and yet she was tender and affectionate, full of poetry
+and refinement, honest and true as her own fanciful name.
+
+The secret of these strange contradictions is simply this. Vera has never
+loved. No one spark of divine fire has ever touched her soul or warmed
+the latent energies of her being. She has lived in the thick of the
+world, but love has passed her scatheless. Her mind, her intellect, her
+brain, are all alive, and sharpened acutely; her heart slumbers still.
+Happier for her, perhaps, had it never awakened.
+
+She leant upon the stone parapet, supporting her chin upon her hand,
+dreaming her dreams. Her hat lay by her side, her long dark dress fell in
+straight heavy folds to her feet. The yellow leaves fluttered about her,
+the peacocks strutted up and down, the gardeners in the distance were
+sweeping up the dead leaves on the lawns, but Vera stirred not; one
+motionless, beautiful figure giving grace, and life, and harmony to the
+deserted scene.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some one was passing along among the upper rooms of the house, followed
+by Mrs. Eccles, panting and exhausted.
+
+"I am sure, Sir John, I am quite ashamed that you should see the place so
+choked up with dust and lumber. If you had only let me have a day's
+notice, instead of being took all of a sudden like, I'd have had the
+house tidied up a bit; but what with not expecting to see any of the
+family, and my being old, and not so quick at the cleaning as I used to
+be----"
+
+"Never mind, Mrs. Eccles; I had just as soon see it as it is. I only
+wanted to see if you could make three or four rooms tolerably habitable
+in case I thought of bringing my horses down for a month or so. The
+stables, I find, are in good repair."
+
+"Yes, Sir John, and so is the house; though the furniture is that
+old-fashioned, that it is hardly fit for you to use."
+
+"Oh! it will do well enough; besides, I have not made up my mind at all.
+It is quite uncertain whether I shall come----Who is that?" stopping
+suddenly short before the window.
+
+"That! Oh, bless me, Sir John, it's Miss Vera, from the vicarage. I hope
+you won't object to her being here; of course, she could not know you was
+back. I had given her leave to walk in the grounds."
+
+"The vicarage! Has Mr. Daintree a daughter so old as that?"
+
+"Oh, law! no, Sir John. It is Mrs. Daintree's sister. She came from
+abroad to live with them last year. A very nice young lady, Sir John, is
+Miss Nevill, and seems lonely like, and it kind of cheers her up to come
+and see me and walk in the garden. I am sure I hope you won't take it
+amiss that I should have allowed her to come."
+
+"Take it amiss--good gracious, no! Pray, let Miss--Miss Nevill, did you
+say?--come as often as she likes. What about the cellars, Mrs. Eccles?"
+
+"I will get the key, Sir John." The housekeeper precedes him out of the
+room, but Sir John stands still by the window.
+
+"What a picture," he says to himself below his breath; "how well she
+looks there. She gives to the old place just the one thing it lacks--has
+always lacked ever since I have known it--the presence of a beautiful
+woman. Yes, Mrs. Eccles, I am coming." This last aloud, and he hastens
+downstairs.
+
+Five minutes later, Sir John Kynaston says to his housekeeper,
+
+"You need not scare that young lady away from the place by telling her
+I was here to-day and saw her. And you may get the rooms ready, Mrs.
+Eccles, and order anything that is wanted, and get in a couple of maids,
+for I have made up my mind to bring my horses down next month."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FANNING DEAD ASHES.
+
+ Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan,
+ Sorrow calls no time that's gone,
+ Violets plucked, the sweetest rain
+ Makes not fresh, nor grow again.
+
+ Fletcher.
+
+
+"Have you heard of Sir John's latest vagary, grandpapa? He is gone down
+to Kynaston to hunt--so there's an end of _him_."
+
+"Humph! Where did you hear that?"
+
+"I've been lunching at Lady Kynaston's."
+
+The speaker stood by the window of one of the large houses at Prince's
+Gate overlooking the Horticultural Gardens. She was a small, slight
+woman, with fair pale features and a mass of soft yellow hair. She had a
+delicate complexion and very clear blue eyes. Altogether she was a pretty
+little woman. A stranger would have guessed her to be a girl barely out
+of her teens. Helen Romer was in reality five-and-twenty, and she had
+been a widow four years.
+
+Of her brief married life few people could speak with any certainty,
+although there were plenty of surmises and conjectures concerning it. All
+that was known was that Helen had lived with her grandfather till she was
+nineteen; that one fine morning she had walked out of the house and had
+been married to a man whom her grandfather disapproved of, and to whom
+she had always professed perfect indifference. It was also known that
+eighteen months later her husband, having rapidly wasted his existence by
+drink and other irregular courses, had died in miserable poverty; and
+that Helen, not being able to set up a home of her own, upon her slender
+fortune of some five or six thousand pounds, had returned to her
+grandfather's house in Prince's Gate, where she had lived ever since.
+
+Why she had married William Romer no one ever exactly knew--perhaps Helen
+herself least of any one. It certainly was not for love; it could hardly
+have been from any worldly motive. Some people averred, and possibly they
+were not far wrong, that she had done so out of pique because the man she
+loved did not want her.
+
+However that might be, Mrs. Romer returned a widow, and not a very
+disconsolate one, to her grandfather's house.
+
+It is certain that she would not have lived there could she have helped
+it. She did not love old Mr. Harlowe, neither did Mr. Harlowe love her. A
+sense of absolute duty to his dead daughter's child on the one side, a
+sense of absolute necessity on the other, kept the two together. Their
+natures were inharmonious. They kept up a form of affection and intimacy
+openly; in reality, they had not one single thought in common.
+
+It is not too much to say that Mr. Harlowe positively disliked his
+grand-daughter. He had, perhaps, good reason for it. Helen had been
+nothing but a trouble to him. He had not desired to bring up a young
+lady in his house; he had not wished for the society which her presence
+entailed, nor for the dissipations of London life into which he was
+dragged more or less against his will. Added to which, Helen had not
+striven to please him in essential matters. She had married a gambling,
+drinking blackguard, whom he had forbidden to enter his doors; and now,
+when she might retrieve her position, and marry well and creditably, she
+refused to make the slightest effort to meet his views.
+
+Helen's life was a mystery to all but herself. To the world she was a
+pretty, lively little widow, with a good house to live in, and sufficient
+money of her own to spend to very good effect upon her back, with not a
+single duty or responsibility in her existence, and with no other
+occupation in life than to amuse herself. At her heart Helen knew herself
+to be a soured and disappointed woman, who had desired one thing all her
+life, and who, having attained with great pains and toil that forbidden
+fruit which she had coveted, had found it turn, as such fruits too often
+do, to dust and ashes between her teeth. It was to have been sweet as
+honeydew--and behold, it was nothing but bitterness!
+
+She stood at the window looking out at the waning light of the November
+afternoon. She was handsomely dressed in dark-green velvet, with a heavy
+old-fashioned gold chain round her neck; every now and then she looked at
+her watch, and a frown passed over her brow. The old man was bending over
+the fire behind her.
+
+"Gone to Kynaston, is he? Humph! that is your fault, you frightened him
+off."
+
+"Did I set my cap at him so palpably then?" said Helen, with a short,
+hard laugh.
+
+"You know very well what I mean," answered her grandfather, sulkily. "Set
+your cap! No, you only do that to the men you know I don't approve of,
+and who don't want you."
+
+Helen winced a little. "You put things very coarsely, grandpapa," she
+said, and laughed again. "I am sorry I have been unable to make love to
+Sir John Kynaston to please you. Is that what you wanted me to do?"
+
+"I want you to look after a respectable husband, who can afford to keep
+you. What is the meaning of that perpetual going to Lady Kynaston's then?
+And why have you dragged me up to town at this confounded time of the
+year if it wasn't for that? You have played your cards badly as usual.
+You might have had him if you had chosen."
+
+"I have never had the least intention of casting myself at Sir John's
+head," said Helen, scornfully.
+
+"You can cast yourself, as you call it, at that good-for-nothing young
+spendthrift's head fast enough if you choose it."
+
+"I don't in the least know whom you mean," she said, shortly.
+
+The old man chuckled. "Oh, yes, you know well enough--the brother who
+spends his time racing and betting. You are a fool, Helen; he doesn't
+want you; and if he did, he couldn't afford to keep you."
+
+"Suppose we leave Captain Kynaston's name out of the discussion,
+grandpapa," she said, quietly, but her face flushed suddenly and her
+hands twisted themselves nervously in and out of her heavy chain. "Are
+you not going to your study this evening?"
+
+"Oh yes, I'm going, fast enough. You want me out of the way, I suppose.
+Somebody coming to tea, eh? Oh yes, I'll clear out. I don't want to
+listen to your rubbish."
+
+The old man gathered up his books and papers and shuffled out of the
+room, muttering to himself as he went.
+
+The servant came in, bringing the lamp, replenished the fire and drew the
+curtains, shutting out the light of day.
+
+"Any one to tea, ma'am?" he inquired, respectfully.
+
+"One gentleman--no one else. Bring up tea when he comes."
+
+"Very well, ma'am;" and the servant withdrew. Mrs. Romer paced
+impatiently up and down the room, stopping again and again before the
+clock.
+
+"Late again! A whole half-hour behind his time! It is insufferable that
+he should treat me like this. He would go quickly enough to see some new
+face--some fresh fancy that had attracted him."
+
+She took out her watch and laid it on the table. "Let me see if he will
+come before the minute-hand touches the quarter; he _must_ be here by
+then!"
+
+She continued to pace steadily up and down the room. The clock ticked on,
+the minute-hand of the watch crept ever stealthily forward over the
+golden dial; now and then a passing vehicle without made her heart beat
+with sudden hope, and then sink down again with disappointment, as the
+sound of the wheels went by and died away in the distance.
+
+Suddenly she sank into an arm-chair, covering her face with her hands.
+
+"Oh, what a fool--what a fool I am!" she exclaimed aloud. "Why have I not
+strength of mind to go out before he comes, to show him that I don't
+care? Why, at least, can I not call up grandpapa, and pretend I had
+forgotten he was coming? That would be the best way to treat him; the way
+to show him that I am not the miserable slave he thinks me. Why can I,
+who know so well how to manage all other men, never manage the one man
+whose love I want? That horrid old man was right--he does not want me--he
+never did. Oh, if I only could be proud, and pretend I do not care! But I
+can't, I can't--there is always this miserable sickening pain at my heart
+for him, and he knows it. I have let him know it!"
+
+A ring at the bell made her spring to her feet, whilst a glad flush
+suddenly covered her face.
+
+In another minute the man she loved was in the room.
+
+"Nearly three-quarters of an hour late!" she cried, angrily, as he
+entered. "How shamefully you treat me!"
+
+He stood in front of the fire, pulling off his dogskin gloves:
+a broad-shouldered, handsome fellow, with an aquiline nose and a
+close-cropped head.
+
+"Am I late?" he said, indifferently. "I really did not know it. I have
+had fifty places to go to in as many minutes."
+
+"Of course I shall forgive you if you have been so busy," she said,
+softening at once. "Maurice, darling, are you not going to kiss me?" She
+stood up by his side upon the hearthrug, looking at him with all her
+heart in her eyes, whilst his were on the fire. She wound her arms round
+his neck, and drew his head down. He leant his cheek carelessly towards
+her lips, and she kissed him passionately; and he--he was thinking of
+something else.
+
+"Poor little woman," he said, almost with an effort recalling himself
+to the present; he patted her cheek lightly and turned round to toss
+his gloves into his hat on the table behind him. "How cold it has
+turned--aren't you going to give me some tea?" And then he sat down on
+the further side of the fire and stretched himself back in his arm-chair,
+throwing his arms up behind his head.
+
+Helen rang the bell for the tea.
+
+"Is that all you have to say to me?" she said, poutingly.
+
+Maurice Kynaston looked distressed.
+
+"Upon my word, Helen, I am sure I don't know what you expect. I haven't
+heard any particular news. I saw you only yesterday, you know. I don't
+know what you want me to say."
+
+Helen was silent. She knew very well what she wanted, she wanted him to
+say and do things that were impossible to him--to play the lover to her,
+to respond to her caresses, to look glad to see her.
+
+Maurice was so tired of it all! tired alike of her reproaches and her
+caresses. The first irritated him, the second gave him no pleasure. There
+was no longer any attraction to him about her, her love was oppressive to
+him. He did not want it, he had never wanted it; only somehow she had
+laid it so openly and freely at his feet, that it had seemed almost
+unmanly to him not to put forth his hand and take it. And now he was
+tired of his thraldom, sick of her endearments, satiated with her kisses.
+And what was it all to end in? He could not marry her, he would not have
+desired to do so had he been able; but as things were, there was no money
+to marry on either side. At his heart Maurice Kynaston was glad of it,
+for he did not want her for a wife, and yet he feared that he was bound
+to her.
+
+Man-like, he had no courage to break the chains that bound him, and yet
+to-night he had said to himself that he would make the effort--the state
+of his affairs furnished him with a sufficiently good pretext for
+broaching the subject.
+
+"There is something I wanted to say to you," he said, after the tea had
+been brought in and they were alone again. He sat forward in his chair
+and stroked his moustache nervously, not looking at her as he spoke.
+
+Helen came and sat on the hearthrug at his feet, resting her cheek
+caressingly against his knee.
+
+"What is it, Maurice?"
+
+"Well, it's about myself. I have been awfully hard hit this last week at
+Newmarket, you know."
+
+"Yes, so you told me. I am so sorry, darling." But she did not care much
+as long as he was with her and was kind to her--nothing else signified
+much to her.
+
+"Yes, but I am pretty well broke this time--I had to go to John again. He
+is an awfully good fellow, is old John; he has paid everything up for me.
+But I've had to promise to give up racing, and now I've got to live on
+my pay."
+
+"I could lend you fifty pounds."
+
+"Fifty pounds! pooh! what nonsense! What would be the good of fifty
+pounds to me?"
+
+He said it rather ungraciously, perhaps, and her eyes filled with tears.
+When a man does not love a woman, her little childish offers of help do
+not touch him as they would if he loved her. He would not have taken five
+thousand from her, yet he was angry with her for talking of fifty pounds.
+
+"What I wanted to say to you, Helen, was that, of course, now I am so
+hard up it's no good thinking of--of marrying--or anything of that kind;
+and don't you think it would be happiest if you and I--I mean, wisest for
+us both--for you, of course, principally----"
+
+"_What!_" She lifted her head sharply. She saw what he meant at once. A
+wild terror filled her heart. "You mean that you want to throw me over!"
+she said, breathlessly.
+
+"My dear child, do be reasonable. Throw you over! of course not--but what
+is it all to lead to? How can we possibly marry? It was bad enough
+before, when I had my few hundreds a year. But now even that is gone.
+A captain in a line regiment is not exactly in a position to marry. Why,
+I shall hardly be able to keep myself, far less a wife too. I cannot drag
+you down to starvation, Helen; it would not be right or honourable to
+continue to bind you to my broken fortunes."
+
+She was standing up now before him very white and very resolute.
+
+"Why do you make so many excuses? You want to be rid of me."
+
+"My dear child, how unjust you are."
+
+"Am I unjust? Wait! let me speak. How have we altered things? Could you
+marry me any more before you lost this money? You know you could not.
+Have we not always agreed to wait till better times? Why cannot we go on
+waiting?"
+
+"It would not be fair to tie you."
+
+He had not the courage to say, "I do not love you--money or no money, I
+do not wish to marry you." How indeed is a man who is a gentleman to say
+such a discourteous thing to a lady for whom he has once professed
+affection? Maurice Kynaston, at all events, could not say so.
+
+"It would not be fair to tie you; it would be better to let you be free:"
+that was all he could find to say. And then Helen burst forth
+impetuously,
+
+"I wish to be tied--I do not want to be free--I will not marry any other
+man on earth but you. Oh! Maurice, my love, my darling!" casting herself
+down again at his feet and clasping her arms wildly round him. "Whom else
+do I want but you--whom else have I ever loved? You know I have always
+been yours--always--long ago, in the old days when you never even gave me
+a look, and I was so maddened with misery and despair that I did not care
+what became of me when I married poor Willie, hardly knowing what I was
+doing, only because my life was so unbearable at home. And now that I
+have got you, do you think I will give you up? And you love me--surely,
+surely, you _must_ love me. You said so once, Maurice--tell me so again.
+You do love me, don't you?"
+
+What was a man to do? Maurice moved uneasily under her embrace as though
+he would withdraw her arms from about his neck.
+
+"Of course," he said, nervously; "of course, I am fond of you, and all
+that, but we can't marry upon less than nothing. You must know that as
+well as I do."
+
+"No; but we can wait."
+
+"What are we to wait for?" he said, irritably.
+
+"Oh, a hundred things might happen--your brother might die."
+
+"God forbid!" he said, pushing her from him, in earnest this time.
+
+"Well, we will hope not that, perhaps; but grandpapa can't live for ever,
+and he ought to leave me all his money, and then we should be rich."
+
+"It is horrible waiting for dead people's shoes," said Maurice, with a
+little shudder; "besides, Mr. Harlowe is just as likely as not to leave
+his money to a hospital, or to the British Museum, or the National
+Gallery--you could not count upon anything."
+
+"We could at all events wait and see."
+
+"And be engaged all that time on the off-chance?" he said, drearily;
+"that is a miserable prospect."
+
+"Then you do wish to get rid of me!" she said, looking at him
+suspiciously; "you have seen some other woman."
+
+"Pooh! what a little fool you are!" He jumped up angrily from his chair,
+leaving her there upon the hearthrug. A woman makes a false move when she
+speaks of "another woman" to the man whose affection for her is on the
+wane. In the present instance the accusation was utterly without
+foundation. Many as were his self-reproaches on her account, that one had
+never been amongst them. If he did not love her, neither had he the
+slightest fancy for any other woman. Her remark irritated him beyond
+measure; it seemed to annul and wipe out the score of his own
+shortcomings towards her, and to make himself, not her, the injured one.
+
+"Women are the most irrational, the most unjust, the most thoroughly
+pig-headed set of creatures on the face of the earth!" he burst forth,
+angrily.
+
+She saw her mistake by this time. She was no fool; she was quick
+enough--sharp as a needle--where her love did not, as love invariably
+does, warp and blind her judgment.
+
+"I am sorry, Maurice," she said, humbly. "I did not mean to doubt you, of
+course. Have you not said you love me? Sit down again, please."
+
+He sat down only half appeased, looking glum and sulky. She felt that
+some concession on her part was necessary. She took his hand and stroked
+it softly. She knew so well that he did not love her, and yet she clung
+so desperately to the hope that she could win him back; she would not own
+to herself even in the furthermost recesses of her own heart that his
+love was dead. She would not believe it; to put it in words to herself
+even would have half killed her; but still she was forced to acknowledge
+that unless she met him half-way she might lose him altogether.
+
+"I will tell you what I will do, Maurice," she said thoughtfully. "I will
+consent to let our engagement be in abeyance for the present; I will
+cease to write to you unless I have anything particular to say, and I
+will not expect you to write to me. If people question us, we will deny
+any engagement between us--we will say that we are each of us free--but
+on one condition only, that you will promise me most solemnly, on your
+honour as a gentleman, that should either of us be left any money--should
+there be, say, a clear thousand a year between us, within the next five
+years----"
+
+"My dear Helen, I am as likely to have a thousand a year as to be
+presented with the regalia."
+
+"Never mind. If it is unlikely, so much the worse--or the better,
+whichever you may like to call it. But if such a thing does happen, give
+me your word of honour that you will come to me at once--that, in fact,
+our engagement shall be renewed. If things are no better, our prospects
+no brighter, in five years from now--well, then, let us each be free to
+marry elsewhere."
+
+There was a moment or two of silence between them. Maurice bent forward
+in his chair, leaning his arms upon his knees, and staring moodily into
+the fire. He was weighing her proposition. It was something; but it was
+not enough. It virtually bound him to her for five years, for, of course,
+an engagement that is to be tacitly consented to between the principal
+contractors is an engagement still, though the whole world be in
+ignorance of it. But then it gave him a chance, and a very good chance
+too, of perfect liberty in five years' time. It was something, certainly;
+though, as he had wanted his freedom at once, it could hardly be said to
+be altogether satisfactory.
+
+Helen knelt bolt upright in front of him, watching his face. How
+passionately she desired to hear him indignantly repudiate the
+half-liberty she offered him! How ardently she desired that he should
+take her in his arms, and swear to her that he would never consent to her
+terms, no one but herself could know. It had been her last expedient to
+revive the old love, to rekindle the dead ashes of the smouldering fire.
+Surely, if there was but a spark of it left, it must leap up into life
+and vitality again at her words. But, as she watched him, her heart, that
+had beat so wildly, sank cold and colder within her. She felt that his
+heart was gone from her; she had cast her last die and lost. But, for all
+that, she was not minded to let him go free--her wild, ungoverned passion
+for him was too deeply rooted within her; since he would not be hers
+willingly, he should be hers by force.
+
+"Surely," she said, wistfully, "you cannot find my terms too hard to
+consent to--you who--who love me?"
+
+He turned to her quickly and took her hands, every feeling of
+gentleman-like honour, every spark of manly courtesy towards her, aroused
+by her gentle words.
+
+"Say no more, Helen--you are too good--too generous to me. It shall be as
+you say."
+
+And then he left, thankful to escape from her presence and to be alone
+again with his thoughts in the raw darkness of the November evening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE LAY RECTOR.
+
+ Or art thou complaining
+ Of thy lowly lot,
+ And, thine own disdaining,
+ Dost ask what thou hast not?
+ Of the future dreaming,
+ Weary of the past,
+ For the present scheming
+ All but what thou hast.
+
+ L. E. Landon.
+
+
+In the churchyard at Sutton-in-the-Wold was a monument which, for
+downright ugliness and bad taste, could hardly find its fellow in the
+whole county. It was a wonderful and marvellous structure of gray
+granite, raised upon a flight of steps, and consisted of an object like
+unto Cleopatra's Needle surmounting a family tea-urn. It had been erected
+by one Nathaniel Crupps, a well-to-do farmer in the parish, upon the
+death of his second wife. The first partner of his affections had been
+previously interred also in the same spot, but it was not until the death
+of the second Mrs. Crupps, who was undoubtedly his favourite, that
+Nathaniel bethought him of immortalizing the memory of both ladies by one
+bold stroke of fancy, as exemplified by this portentous granite
+monstrosity. On it the virtues of both wives were recorded, as it was
+touchingly and naively stated, by their "sorrowing husband with strict
+impartiality."
+
+It was upon this graceful structure that Vera Nevill leant one foggy
+morning in the first week of November, and surveyed the church in front
+of her. She was not engaged in any sentimental musings appropriate to the
+situation. She was neither meditating upon the briefness of life in
+general, nor upon the many virtues of the ladies of the Crupps family,
+over whose remains she was standing. She was simply waiting for Jimmy
+Griffiths, and looking at the church because she had nothing else to look
+at. The church, indeed, afforded her some food for reflection, purely, I
+regret to state, of a practical and mundane character. It was a large and
+handsome building, with a particularly fine old tower, that was sadly out
+of repair; but the chancel was a modern and barn-like structure of brick
+and plaster, which ought, of course, to be entirely swept away, and a new
+and more appropriate one built in its stead. The chancel belonged, as
+most chancels do, to the lay rector, and the lay rector was Sir John
+Kynaston.
+
+As soon as it became bruited abroad that Sir John was coming down to the
+old house for the winter, there was a general excitement throughout the
+parish, but no one partook of the excitement to a greater degree than did
+its worthy vicar.
+
+It was the dream of Eustace Daintree's life to get his church restored,
+and more especially to get the chancel rebuilt. There had been a
+restoration fund accumulating for some years, and could he have had the
+slightest assistance from the lay rector concerning the chancel, Mr.
+Daintree would assuredly have sent for the architect, and the builders,
+and the stone-cutters, and have begun his church at once with that
+beautiful disregard of the future chances of being able to get the money
+to pay for it, and with that sparrow-like trust in Providence, which is
+usually displayed by those clerical gentlemen who, in the face of an
+estimate which tells them that eight thousand pounds will be the sum
+total required, are ready to dash into bricks and mortar upon the actual
+possession of eight hundred. But there was the chancel! To leave it as it
+was whilst restoring the nave would have been too heart-rending; to touch
+it without Sir John Kynaston's assistance, impossible and illegal.
+Several times Eustace Daintree had applied to Sir John in writing upon
+the subject. The answers had been vague and unsatisfactory. He would
+promise nothing at all; he would come down and see it some day possibly,
+and then he would be able to say more about it; meanwhile, for the
+present, things must remain as they were.
+
+When, therefore, the news was known that Sir John was actually coming
+down, Mr. Daintree's thoughts flew at once to his beloved church.
+
+"Now we shall get the chancel done at last," he said to his wife
+gleefully, rubbing his hands. And the very day after Sir John's arrival
+Eustace went up to the Hall after dinner to see him upon the subject.
+
+"Had you not better wait a day or two?" counselled his more prudent wife.
+"Wait till you meet him, naturally. You don't very well know what kind of
+man he is, nor how he will take it."
+
+"What is the use of waiting? I knew him well enough eight years ago; he
+was a pleasant fellow enough then. He won't kill me, I suppose, and the
+chancel is a disgrace--a positive disgrace to him. It is my duty to point
+it out to him; the thing can't afford to wait, it ought to be done at
+once."
+
+So he disregarded Marion's advice, and Vera helped him on with his
+great-coat in the hall, and wound his woollen comforter round his neck,
+and bade him good luck on his expedition to Kynaston.
+
+He came back sorrowful and abashed. Sir John had been civil, very civil;
+he had insisted on his sitting down at his table--for he had apparently
+not finished his dinner--and had opened a bottle of fine old port in his
+honour. He had inquired about many of the old people, and had expressed
+a friendly interest in the parish generally; but with regard to the
+chancel, he had been as adamant.
+
+He did not see, he had said, why it could not go on well enough as it
+was. If it was in bad repair, Davis should see to it; a man with a
+barrowful of bricks and a shovelful of mortar should be sent down. That,
+of course, it was his duty to do. Sir John did not understand that more
+could possibly be expected of him. The chancel had been good enough for
+his father, it would probably be good enough for him; it would last his
+time, he supposed, in any case.
+
+But the soul of the Rev. Eustace became as water within him. It was
+not of a barrowful of bricks and shovelful of mortar that he had been
+dreaming, but of lancet windows and stone mouldings; of polished oak
+rafters within, and of high gables and red tiles without.
+
+He came down from the Hall disheartened and discomfited, with all the
+spirit crushed out of him; and the ladies of his family, for once,
+were of one mind about the matter. There arose about him a storm of
+indignation and a gush of sympathy, which could not fail to soothe him
+somewhat. Eustace went to rest that night sore and heavy-hearted, it is
+true, but with all the damnatory verses in the Scriptures concerning the
+latter end of the "rich man" ringing in his head; a course of meditation
+which, upon the whole, afforded him a distinct sensation of consolation
+and comfort.
+
+And the next morning in the churchyard Vera leant against the Cruppsian
+sarcophagus, and thought about it.
+
+"Poor old Eustace," she said to herself; "how I wish I were very rich,
+and could do his chancel for him! How pleased he would be; and what a
+good fellow he is! How odd it is to think what different aims there are
+in people's lives! There are Eustace and Marion simply miserable this
+morning because of that hideous barn they can't get rid of. Well, it _is_
+hideous certainly; but it doesn't disturb my peace of mind in the least.
+What a mean curmudgeon Sir John must be, by the way! I should not have
+thought it from his photograph; such a frank, open, generous face he
+seemed to have. However, we all know how photographs can mislead one.
+I wonder where that wretched boy can be!"
+
+The "wretched boy" was Jimmy Griffiths afore-mentioned; he was the youth
+who was in the habit of blowing the organ. The schoolmaster, who was also
+the organist, was ill, and had sent word to Mr. Daintree that he would be
+unable to be at the church on the morrow. Eustace had asked Vera to take
+his place. Now Vera was not accomplished; she neither sang, nor played,
+nor painted in water-colours; but she had once learnt to play the organ
+a little--a very little. So she professed herself willing to undertake
+the office of organ-player for once, that is to say, if she found she
+could do it pretty well, only she must go into church and try all the
+chants over. So Jimmy Griffiths was sent for from the village, and Vera,
+with the church key in her pocket, strolled idly into the churchyard,
+and, whilst awaiting him, meditated upon the tomb of the two Mrs. Crupps.
+
+She had come in from the private gate of the vicarage, and the vicarage
+garden--very bleak and very desolate by this time--lay behind her. To the
+right, the public pathway led down through the lych-gate into the
+village. Anybody coming up from the village could have seen her as she
+stood against the granite monument. She wore a long fur cloak down almost
+to her feet, and a round fur cap upon her head; they were her sister
+Theodora's sables, which she had left to her. Old Mrs. Daintree always
+told her she ought to sell them, a remark which made Vera very angry. Her
+back was turned to the village and to the lych-gate, and she was looking
+up at poor Eustace's bug-bear--the barn-like chancel.
+
+Suddenly somebody came up close behind her and spoke to her.
+
+"Can you tell me, please, where the keys of the church are kept?"
+
+A gentleman stood beside her, lifting his hat as he spoke. Vera started
+a little at being so suddenly spoken to, but answered quite quietly and
+unconfusedly,
+
+"They are generally kept at the vicarage, or else in the clerk's
+cottage."
+
+"Thank you; then I will go and fetch them."
+
+"But they are not there now," said Vera, as though finishing her former
+remark.
+
+"If you will kindly tell me where I can find them," continued the
+stranger, very politely, "I will go and get them."
+
+"I am afraid you can't do that," said Vera, with just the vestige of a
+smile playing upon her face, "because they are at present in my pocket."
+
+"Oh, I beg your pardon;" and the stranger smiled outright.
+
+"But I will let you into the church, if you like; if that is what you
+wish?" she said, quite simply.
+
+"Yes, if you please." Vera moved up the path to the porch, the gentleman
+following her. She turned the key in the heavy door and held it open. "If
+you will go in, please, I will take the keys; I must not leave them in
+the door." The gentleman went in, and Vera looked at him as he passed by.
+
+Most uninteresting! was her verdict as he passed her; forty at the very
+least! What a beautiful situation for an adventure! What a romantic
+incident! And how excessively tame is the _denouement_! A middle-aged
+gentleman, tall and slightly bald, with close-cropped whiskers and grave,
+set features; who on earth could he be? A stranger, evidently; perhaps he
+was staying at some neighbouring country house, and had walked over to
+Sutton for the sake of exercise; but what on earth could he want to see
+the church for!
+
+The stranger stood just inside the door with his hat off, looking at her.
+
+"Won't you come in and show it to me?" he asked, rather hesitatingly.
+
+"The church? oh, certainly, if you like, but there is nothing to see in
+it." She came in, closing the door behind her, and stood beside him. It
+did not strike her as unusual or interesting, or as anything, in fact,
+but the most common-place and unexciting proceeding, that she should do
+the honours of the church to this middle-aged stranger.
+
+They stood side by side in the centre of the small nave with all the
+ugly, high, red-cushioned pews around them. Vera looked up and down the
+familiar place as though she and not he were seeing it for the first
+time; from the row of whitewashed pillars to the staring white windows;
+from the hatchment on the plastered walls to the disfiguring gallery
+along the west end.
+
+"It is very hideous," she said, almost apologetically, "especially the
+chancel; Mr. Daintree wants to have it restored, but I suppose that can't
+be done at all now."
+
+"Why can't it be done?"
+
+"Oh, because nothing can be done unless the chancel is pulled down; that
+belongs to the lay rector, and he has refused to restore it."
+
+"Sir John Kynaston is the lay rector."
+
+"Yes!" Vera looked a little startled; "do you know him?"
+
+The gentleman passed his hand over his chin.
+
+"Slightly," he answered, not looking at her.
+
+"It is a pity he cannot be brought to see how necessary it is, for he
+certainly ought to do it," continued Vera. "You see I cannot help being
+interested in it because Mr. Daintree is such a good man, and has worked
+so hard to get up money to begin the rest of the church. He had quite
+counted upon the chancel being done, and now he is so much disappointed;
+but, I beg your pardon, this cannot interest you."
+
+"But it interests me very much. Why does not somebody put it in this
+light to Sir John; he would not surely refuse?"
+
+"My brother-in-law, Mr. Daintree, I mean, did ask him last night, and he
+would not promise to do anything."
+
+The stranger suddenly left her side and walked up the church by himself
+into the chancel. He went straight up to the east end and made a minute
+examination apparently of the wall; after that, he came slowly down
+again, looking carefully into every corner and cranny from the
+whitewashed ceiling down to the damp and uneven stone paving at his feet;
+Vera thought him a very odd person, and wondered what he was thinking
+about.
+
+He came back to her and stood before her looking at her for a minute. And
+then he made this most remarkable speech:
+
+"If _you_ were to ask Sir John Kynaston this he would restore the
+chancel!" he said.
+
+For half-a-second Vera stared at him in blank amazement. Then she turned
+haughtily round, and flushed hotly with angry indignation.
+
+"There is nothing more to see in the church," she said, shortly, and
+walked straight out of it.
+
+The stranger had followed her; when they reached the churchyard he said
+to her, quite humbly,
+
+"I beg your pardon; Miss Nevill; how unlucky I am to have made you angry,
+to begin with."
+
+Vera looked at him in astonishment. How did he know her name; who was he?
+He was looking at her with such a penitent and distressed expression,
+that for the first time she noticed what a kind face it was. Then, before
+she could answer him, she saw her brother-in-law over the paling of the
+vicarage garden, coming towards them.
+
+The stranger saw him, too, and lifted his hat to her.
+
+"Good-bye," he said, rather hastily; "I did not mean to offend you; don't
+be angry about it;" and, before she could say a word, he turned quickly
+down the churchyard through the lych-gate into the road, and was gone.
+
+"Vera," said Eustace Daintree, coming leisurely up to her through the
+garden gate, "how on earth do you come to be talking to Sir John; has he
+been saying anything to you about the chancel?"
+
+"_Who_ was it? _who_ did you say?" cried Vera, aghast.
+
+"Why, Sir John Kynaston, to be sure. Did you not know it was he?"
+
+She was thunderstruck. "Are you quite sure?" she faltered.
+
+"Why, of course! I saw him only last night, you know. I wonder why he
+went off in such a hurry when he saw me?"
+
+Vera was walking silently down the garden towards the house by his side.
+The thought in her mind was, "If that was Sir John Kynaston, who then is
+the photograph I found in the writing-table drawer?"
+
+"What did he say to you, Vera? How came you to be talking to him?"
+pursued her brother-in-law.
+
+"I only let him into the church. I did not know who he was. I told him
+the chancel ought to be restored--by himself."
+
+Eustace Daintree looked dismayed.
+
+"How very unfortunate. It will, perhaps, make him still more decided to
+do nothing."
+
+Vera smiled a little to herself. "I hope not, Eustace," was all she said.
+But although she said no word of it to him, she knew at her heart that
+his chancel would be restored for him.
+
+Late that night Vera sat alone by her fireside, and thought over her
+morning's adventure; and once again she said to herself, with a little
+regretful sigh, "Whose, then, was the photograph?" But she put the
+thought away from her.
+
+After all, she said to herself, it made no difference. He was still Sir
+John Kynaston of Kynaston Hall, and just as well worth a woman's while to
+marry. She had made some mistake, that was all; and the real Sir John was
+not the least romantic or interesting to look at, but Kynaston Hall
+belonged to him all the same.
+
+They were not very exalted or very much to be admired, these dreams of
+Vera's girlhood. But neither were they quite so coarse and unlovely as
+would have been those of a purely mercenary woman. She was free from the
+vulgarity of desiring the man's money and his name from any desire to
+raise herself above her relations, or to feed her own vanity and ambition
+at their expense. It was only that, marriage being a necessity for her,
+to marry anything but a rich man would have been, with her tastes and the
+habits to which she had been brought up, the sheerest and rankest folly.
+She thought she could make a good wife to any man whose life she would
+like to share--that is to say, a life of ease and affluence. She knew she
+would make a very bad wife to a poor man. Therefore she determined upon
+so carving out her own fortunes that she should not make a failure of
+herself. It was worldly wisdom of the purest and simplest character.
+
+She was as much determined as ever upon winning Kynaston's owner if he
+was to be won. Only she wished, with a little sigh, that he had happened
+to be the man in the photograph. She hardly knew why she wished it--but
+the wish was there.
+
+She sat bending over her fire, with all her soft, dark hair loose about
+her face and flowing down her back, and her eyes fixed dreamily upon the
+flames. Her past life came back to her, her old life in the whirl and
+turmoil of pleasure which had suited her so well. She compared it, a
+little drearily, with the present; with the humdrum routine of the
+vicarage; with the parish talk about the old women and the schools; and
+the small tittle-tattle about the schoolmaster and the choir, going on
+around her all day; with old Mrs. Daintree's sharp tongue and her
+sister's meek rejoinders. She was very tired of it. It did not amuse her.
+She was not exactly discontented with her lot. Eustace and her sister
+were very kind to her, and she loved them dearly; but she did not live
+their life--she was with them, but not of them. As for herself, for her
+interests and her delights, they stagnated amongst them all. How long was
+it to last?
+
+And Kynaston, by contrast, appeared very fair, with its smooth lawns and
+its terrace walks, and its great desolate rooms, that she would so well
+understand how to fill with life and brightness; but Kynaston's master
+counted for very little to her. She knew the power of her own beauty so
+well. Experience had taught her that Vera Nevill had but to smile and to
+win; it had been so easy to her to be loved and wooed.
+
+"Only," she said to herself, as she stood up before her fire, and
+stretched up her arms so that her long hair fell back like a cloud around
+her, "only he is a different sort of man to what I had pictured him. It
+will, perhaps, not be such an easy matter to win a man like that."
+
+She went to bed and dreamt--not of Sir John Kynaston--but of the man
+whose pictured face once seen had haunted her ever since.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+"LITTLE PITCHERS."
+
+ Once at least in a man's life, if only for a brief space, he reverences
+ the saint in the woman he desires. He may love and pursue again and
+ again, but she who has power to hold him back, who can make him tremble
+ instead of woo, who can make him silent when he feels eloquent, and
+ restrained when most impassioned, has won from him what never again can
+ be given.
+
+
+It was an easier matter to win him than Vera thought.
+
+A week later Sir John Kynaston sat alone by his library fire, after
+breakfast, and owned to himself that he had fallen hopelessly and
+helplessly in love with Vera Nevill.
+
+This was all the more remarkable because Sir John was not a very young
+man, and that he was, moreover, not of a nature to do things rashly or
+impulsively.
+
+He was, on the contrary, of a slow and hesitating disposition. He was in
+the habit of weighing his words and his actions before he spoke or acted,
+his mind was tardy to take in new thoughts and new ideas, and he was
+cautious and almost sluggish in taking any steps in a strange and
+unaccustomed direction.
+
+Nevertheless, in this matter of Vera, he had succumbed to his fate with
+all the uncalculating blindness of a boy in his teens.
+
+Vera was like no other woman he had ever seen; she was as far removed
+above common young-ladyhood as Raphael's Madonnas are beyond and above
+Greuze's simpering maidens; there could be no other like her--she was
+a queen, a goddess among women.
+
+From the very first moment that he had caught sight of her on the terrace
+outside his house her absolute mastery over him had begun. Her rare
+beauty, her quiet smile, her slow, indolent movements, the very tones of
+her rich, low voice, all impressed him in a strange and wonderful manner.
+She seemed to him to be the incarnation of everything that was pure and
+elevated in womanhood. To have imagined that such a one as she could have
+thought of his wealth or his position would have been the rankest
+blasphemy in his eyes.
+
+He raised her up on a pedestal of his own creating, and then he fell down
+before her and adored her.
+
+John Kynaston had but little knowledge of women. Shy and retiring in
+manner--somewhat suspicious and distrustful also--he had kept out of
+their way through life. Once, in very early manhood, he had been
+deceived; he had become engaged to a girl whom he afterwards discovered
+to have accepted him only for his money and his name, whilst her heart
+really belonged to another and a poorer man. He had shaken himself free
+of her, with horror and disgust, and had sworn to himself that he would
+never be so betrayed again. Since then he had been suspicious--and not
+without just cause--of the young ladies who had smiled upon him, and of
+their mothers, who had pressed him with gracious invitations to their
+houses. He was a rich man, but he did not mean to be loved for his
+wealth; he said to himself that, sooner than be so, he would die
+unmarried and leave to Maurice the task of keeping up the old name and
+the old family.
+
+But he had seen Vera; and all at once all the old barriers of pride and
+reserve were broken down! Here was the one woman on earth who realized
+his dreams, the one woman whom he would wait and toil for, even as Jacob
+waited and toiled for Rachel!
+
+He had come down to Kynaston to hunt; but hitherto hunting had been very
+little in his thoughts. He had been down to the vicarage once or twice,
+he had met her once in the lanes, and he had longed for a glimpse of her
+daily; as yet he had done nothing else. He opened his letters on this
+particular morning slowly and abstractedly, tossing them into the fire,
+one after the other, as he read them, and not paying very much attention
+to their contents.
+
+There was one, however, from his brother, "I wish you would ask me down
+to Kynaston for a week or two, old fellow," wrote Maurice. "I know you
+would mount me--now I have got rid of all my horses to please you--and
+I should like a glimpse of the old country. Write and tell me if I shall
+come down on Monday."
+
+This letter Sir John did pay attention to. He rose hastily, as though not
+a moment was to be lost, and answered it:--
+
+"Dear Maurice,--I can't possibly have you down here yet. My own plans are
+very uncertain, and if you are going to take your leave after Christmas,
+you had far better not go away from your work now. If I am still here in
+January, I shall be delighted if you will come down, and will mount you
+as much as you like."
+
+He was happier when he had written and directed this letter.
+
+"I must be alone just now," he murmured. "I could not bear Maurice's
+chatter--it would jar upon me."
+
+Then he put on his hat and strolled out. He looked in at the stables one
+minute, and called the head groom to him.
+
+"Wright, did not Mr. Beavan say, when I bought that new bay mare of him,
+that she had carried a lady to hounds?"
+
+"Yes, Sir John; Miss Beavan rode her last season."
+
+"Ah, she is a good rider. Well, I wish you would put a side-saddle and a
+skirt on her, and exercise her this morning. I might want to--to lend her
+to a lady; but she must be perfectly quiet. You can take her out every
+day this week."
+
+Sir John went on his way, leaving the worthy Wright a prey to speculation
+as to who the mysterious lady might be for whom the bay mare was to be
+exercised.
+
+His master, meanwhile, bent his steps almost instinctively to the
+vicarage.
+
+Vera was undergoing a periodical persecution concerning Mr. Gisburne
+at the hands of old Mrs. Daintree. She was standing up by the table
+arranging some scarlet berries and some long trails of ivy which the
+children had brought to her in a vase. Tommy and Minnie stood by watching
+her intently; Mrs. Daintree sat at a little distance, her lap full of
+undarned socks, and rated her.
+
+"It is not as if you were a girl who could earn her living in case of
+need. There is not one single thing you can do."
+
+"Aunt Vera can make nosegays of berries boofully, grandma," interpolates
+Tommy, earnestly; "can't she, Minnie?"
+
+"Yes, she do," assented the smaller child, with emphasis.
+
+"I wasn't speaking to you, Tom; little boys should be--"
+
+"Heard and not seen," puts in Tommy, rapidly; "you always say that,
+grandma."
+
+Vera laughs softly. Mrs. Daintree goes on with her lecture.
+
+"Many girls in your position are very accomplished; can teach the piano,
+and history, and the elements of Latin; but it seems to me you have been
+brought up in idleness."
+
+"Idleness is not to be despised in its way," answers Vera, composedly.
+"Another bit of ivy, Tommy. What shall I do, Mrs. Daintree?" she
+continues, whilst her deft fingers wind the trailing greenery round and
+round the glass stem of the vase. "Shall I go down to the village school
+and sit at the feet of Mr. Dee? I have no doubt he could teach me a great
+many things I know nothing about."
+
+"That is nonsense; of course I don't mean that you can educate yourself
+to any purpose now; it is too late for that; but you need not, at all
+events, turn up your nose at the blessings that Providence sets before
+you; and I must say, that for a young woman deliberately to choose to
+remain a burden upon her friends, betokens an amount of servility and
+a lack of the spirit of independence which I should not have supposed
+possible even in you!"
+
+"What do you want me to do?" said Vera, without a sign of impatience.
+"Shall I walk over to Tripton this afternoon, and make a low curtsey to
+Mr. Gisburne, and say to him very politely, 'Here is an idle and
+penniless young woman who would be very pleased to stop here and marry
+you!' Would that be the way to do it, Mrs. Daintree?"
+
+"No, no, _no_!" imperatively from Tommy, who was listening with rapidly
+crimsoning cheeks; "you shall _not_ go and stop at Tripton, and tell Mr.
+Gisburne you will marry him!"
+
+Vera laughed. "No, Tommy, I don't think I will; not, that is to say, if
+you are a good boy. I think I can do something better than that with
+myself!" she added, softly, as if to herself. Mrs. Daintree caught the
+words.
+
+"And _what_ better, pray? What better chance are you ever likely to have?
+Let me tell you, bachelors who want penniless wives don't grow on the
+blackberry bushes down here! If you were not so selfish and so conceited,
+you would see where your duty to my son, who is supporting you, lay. You
+would see that to be married to an honest, upright man like Albert
+Gisburne is a chance that most girls would catch at only too thankfully."
+
+The old lady had raised her voice; she spoke loud and angrily; she was
+rapidly working herself into a passion. Tommy, accustomed to family rows,
+stood on the hearthrug, looking excitedly from his grandmother to his
+aunt. He was a precocious child; he did not quite understand, and yet he
+understood partly. He knew that his grandmother was scolding Vera, and
+telling her she was to go away and marry Mr. Gisburne. That Vera should
+go away! That, in itself, was sufficiently awful. Tommy adored Vera with
+all the intensity of his childish soul; that she should go away from him
+to Mr. Gisburne seemed to him the most terrible visitation that could
+possibly happen. His little heart swelled within him; the tears were very
+near his eyes.
+
+At this very minute the door softly opened, and Sir John Kynaston, whose
+ring had been unheard in the commotion, was ushered in.
+
+Tommy thought he saw a deliverer, specially sent in by Providence for the
+occasion. He made one spring at him and caught him round the legs, after
+the manner of enthusiastic small boys.
+
+"Please--please--don't let grandmamma send aunt Vera away to Tripton
+to marry Mr. Gisburne! He has red hair, and I hate him; and aunt Vera
+doesn't want to go, she wants to stop at home and do something better!"
+
+A moment of utter confusion on all sides; then Vera, crimson to the roots
+of her hair, stepped forward and held out her hand.
+
+"Little pitchers have long ears!" she said, laughing: "and Tommy is a
+very silly little boy."
+
+"No, but, aunt Vera, you said--you said," cried the child. What further
+revelations he might have made were fortunately not destined to be known.
+His aunt placed her hand unceremoniously over his small, eager mouth, and
+hustled both children in some haste out of the room.
+
+Meanwhile, Sir John, looking the picture of distress and embarrassment,
+had shaken hands with the old lady, and inquired if he could speak with
+her son.
+
+"Mr. Daintree is in his study; I will take you to him," she said, rising,
+and led him away out of the room. She looked at him sharply as she showed
+him into the study; and it did come across her mind, "I wonder what you
+come so often for." Still, no thought of Vera entered into her head. Sir
+John was the great man of the place, the squire, the potentate in the
+hollow of whose hand lay Sutton-in-the-Wold and all its inhabitants, and
+Vera was a nobody in the old lady's eyes,--a waif, whose presence was of
+no account at all. Sir John was no more likely to notice her than any of
+the village girls; except, indeed, that he would speak politely to her
+because she was Eustace's sister-in-law. Still, it did come across her
+mind to wonder what he came so often for.
+
+Five minutes later the two gentlemen were seen going across the vicarage
+garden towards the church.
+
+They remained there a very long time, more than half an hour. When they
+came back Marion had finished her housekeeping and was in the room busy
+cutting out unbleached calico into poor men's shirts, on the grand piano,
+an instrument which she maintained had been specially and originally
+called into existence for no other purpose. Mrs. Daintree still sat in
+her chimney corner. Vera was at the writing-table with her back to the
+room, writing a letter.
+
+The vicar came in with his face all aglow with excitement and delight;
+his wife looked up at him quickly, she saw that something unusual and of
+a pleasant character had happened.
+
+"My dear Marion, we must both thank our good friend, Sir John. I am happy
+to tell you that he has consented to restore the chancel."
+
+"Oh, Sir John, how can we ever thank you enough!" cried Marion, coming
+forward breathlessly and pressing his hands in eager gratitude. Sir John
+looked as if he didn't want to be thanked, but he glanced towards the
+writing-table. Vera's back was turned; she made no sign of having heard.
+
+"I am sure I had given up all hopes of it altogether," continued the
+vicar. "You gave such an unqualified refusal when I spoke to you about
+it before, I never dreamt that you would be induced to change your mind."
+
+"Some one--I mean--I thought it over--and--and it was presented to my
+notice--in another light," stammered Sir John, somewhat confusedly.
+
+"And it is most kind, most generous of you to allow it to be done in my
+own way, according to the plans I had wished to follow."
+
+"Oh, I am quite sure you will understand it much better than I am likely
+to do. Besides, I have no time to attend to it; it will suit me better to
+leave it entirely in your hands."
+
+"Would you not like to see the plans Mr. Woodley drew for us last year?"
+
+"Not now, I think, thank you; I must be going; another time, Mr.
+Daintree; I can't wait just now."
+
+He was standing irresolute in the middle of the room. He looked again
+wistfully at Vera's back. Was it possible that she was not going to give
+him one word, one look, when surely she must know by whose influence he
+had been induced to consent to rebuild the chancel!
+
+Almost in despair he moved to the door, and just as he reached it, when
+his hand was already on the handle, she looked up. Her eyes, all softened
+with pleasure and gratitude, nay, almost with tenderness, met his. He
+stopped suddenly short.
+
+"Miss Nevill, might I ask you to walk with me as far as the clerk's
+cottage? I--I forget which it is!"
+
+It was the lamest and most blundering excuse. Any six-year-old child in
+the village could have pointed out the cottage to him. Mrs. Daintree
+looked up in astonishment. Vera blushed rosy red; Eustace, man-like, saw
+nothing, and began eagerly,
+
+"I am walking that way myself; we can go together----" Suddenly his coat
+tails were violently pulled from behind. "Quite impossible, Eustace; I
+want you at home for the next hour," says Marion, quietly standing by his
+side, with a look of utter innocence upon her face. The vicar, almost
+throttled by the violence of the assault upon his garments, perceived
+that, in some mysterious manner, he had said something he ought not to
+have said. He deemed it wisest to subside into silence.
+
+Vera rose from the writing-table. "I will go and put my hat on," she
+said, quietly, and left the room.
+
+Three minutes later she and Sir John went out of the front door together.
+
+"Well, that is the oddest fellow I ever came across in my life," said
+Eustace, fairly puzzled as soon as he was gone. "It is my belief,"
+tapping his forehead significantly, "that he is a little touched _here_.
+I don't believe he quite knows what he is talking about. Why, the other
+night he would have nothing to say to the chancel, wouldn't even listen
+to me, cut me so short about it I really couldn't venture to pursue the
+subject; and here he comes, ten days later, all of his own accord, and
+proposes to do it exactly as it ought to be done, in the best and most
+expensive way--purbeck columns round the lancet windows, and all, Marion,
+just what I wanted; gives me absolute _carte blanche_ about it. I only
+hope he won't take a fresh fancy into his head and change his mind
+again."
+
+"Perhaps he found he would make himself unpopular if he did not do it,"
+suggested his mother.
+
+Marion held her tongue, and snipped away at her unbleached calico.
+
+"And then, again, about old Hoggs' cottage," pursued Mr. Daintree. "What
+on earth could make him forget where it was? He might as well forget the
+way to his own house. I really do think he must be a little gone in the
+upper storey, poor fellow! Marion, what have you to say about it?"
+
+"I have to say that if you stand chattering here all the morning, we
+shall never get anything done. I want to speak to you immediately,
+Eustace, in the other room."
+
+She hurried her husband out into the study, and carefully closed the door
+upon them.
+
+What then was the Rev. Eustace's amazement to behold his wife suddenly
+execute a series of capers round the room, which would not have disgraced
+a _coryphee_ at a Christmas pantomime, but were hardly in keeping with
+the demure and highly respectable bearing of the wife of the vicar of
+Sutton-in-the-Wold!
+
+Mr. Daintree began to think that everybody was going mad this morning.
+
+"My dear Marion, what on earth is the matter?"
+
+"Oh, you dear, stupid, blunder-headed old donkey!" exclaimed his wife,
+finishing her _pas seul_ in front of him, and hugging him vehemently as a
+finale to the entertainment. "Do you mean to say that you don't see it?"
+
+"See it? See what?" repeated the unfortunate clergyman, in mortal
+bewilderment, staring at her hard.
+
+"Oh, you dear, stupid old goose! why, it's as plain as daylight. Can't
+you guess?"
+
+Eustace shook his head dolefully.
+
+"Why, Sir John Kynaston has fallen in love with Vera!"
+
+"_Marion!_ impossible!" in an awe-struck whisper. "What can make you
+imagine such a thing?"
+
+"Why, everything--the chancel, of course. She must have spoken to him
+about it; it is to be done for her; did you not see him look at her? And
+then, asking her to go down the village with him; he knows where Hoggs'
+cottage is as well as you do, only he couldn't think of anything better."
+
+Eustace literally gasped with the magnitude of the revelation.
+
+"Great Heavens! and I offered to go with him instead of her."
+
+"Yes, you great blundering baby!"
+
+"Oh, my dear, are you sure--are you quite sure? Remember his position and
+Vera's."
+
+"Well, and isn't Vera good enough, and beautiful enough, for any
+position?" answered her sister, proudly.
+
+"Yes, yes; that is true; God bless her!" he said, fervently. "Marion,
+what a clever woman you are to find it out."
+
+"Of course I am clever, sir. But, Eustace, it is only beginning, you
+know; so we must just let things take their course, and not seem to
+notice anything. And, mind, not a word to your mother."
+
+Meanwhile Vera and Sir John Kynaston were walking down the village street
+together. The man awkward and ill at ease, the woman calm and composed,
+and thoroughly mistress of the occasion.
+
+"It is very good of you about the chancel," said Vera, softly, breaking
+the embarrassment of the silence between them.
+
+"You _knew_ I should do it," he said, looking at her.
+
+She smiled. "I thought perhaps you would."
+
+"You know _why_ I am going to do it--for whose sake, do you not?" he
+pursued, still keeping his eyes upon her downcast face.
+
+"Because it is the right thing to do, I hope; and for the sake of doing
+good," she answered, sedately; and Sir John felt immediately reproved and
+rebuked, as though by the voice of an angelic being.
+
+"Tell me," he said, presently, "is it true that they want you to
+marry--that parson--Gisburne, of Tripton? Forgive me for asking."
+
+Vera coloured a little and laughed.
+
+"What dreadful things little boys are!" was all she said.
+
+"Nay, but I want to know. Are you--are you _engaged_ to him?" with a
+sudden painful eagerness of manner.
+
+"Most decidedly I am not," she answered, earnestly.
+
+Sir John breathed again.
+
+"I don't know what you will think of me; you will, perhaps, say I am very
+impertinent. I know I have no right to question you."
+
+"I only think you are very kind to take an interest in me," she answered,
+gently, looking at him with that wonderful look in her shadowy eyes that
+came into them unconsciously when she felt her softest and her best.
+
+They had passed through the village by this time into the quiet lane
+beyond; needless to say that no thought of Hoggs, the clerk, or his
+cottage, had come into either of their heads by the way.
+
+Sir John stopped short, and Vera of necessity stopped too.
+
+"I thought--it seemed to me by what I overheard," he said, hesitatingly,
+"that they were tormenting you--persecuting you, perhaps--into a marriage
+you do not wish for."
+
+"They have wished me to marry Mr. Gisburne," Vera admitted, in a low
+voice, rustling the fallen brown leaves with her foot, her eyes fixed on
+the ground.
+
+"But you won't let them over-persuade you; you won't be induced to listen
+to them, will you? Promise me you won't?" he asked, anxiously.
+
+Vera looked up frankly into his face and smiled.
+
+"I give you my word of honour I will not marry Mr. Gisburne," she
+answered; and then she added, laughingly, "You had no business to make me
+betray that poor man's secrets."
+
+And then Sir John laughed too, and, changing the subject, asked her if
+she would like to ride a little bay mare he had that he thought would
+carry her. Vera said she would think of it, with the air of a young queen
+accepting a favour from a humble subject; and Sir John thanked her as
+heartily as though she had promised him some great thing.
+
+"Now, suppose we go and find Hoggs' cottage," she said, smiling. And they
+turned back towards the village.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+A SOIREE AT WALPOLE LODGE.
+
+ When the lute is broken,
+ Sweet notes are remembered not;
+ When the lips have spoken,
+ Loved accents are soon forgot.
+ As music and splendour
+ Survive not the lamp and the lute,
+ The heart's echoes render
+ No song when the spirit is mute.
+
+ Shelley.
+
+
+About three miles from Hyde Park Corner, somewhere among the cross-roads
+between Mortlake and Kew, there stands a rambling, old-fashioned house,
+within about four acres of garden, surrounded by a very high, red-brick
+wall. It is one of those houses of which there used to be scores within
+the immediate neighbourhood of London--of which there still are dozens,
+although, alas! they are yearly disappearing to make room for gay rows of
+pert, upstart villas, whose tawdry flashiness ill replaces the sedate
+respectability of their last-century predecessors. But, uncoveted by the
+contractor's lawless eye, untouched by the builder's desecrating hand,
+Walpole Lodge stands on, as it did a hundred years ago, hidden behind
+the shelter of its venerable walls, and half smothered under masses of
+wisteria and Virginia creeper. On the wall, in summer time, grow
+countless soft green mosses, and brown, waving grasses. Thick masses of
+yellow stonecrop and tufts of snapdragon crown its summit, whilst the
+topmost branches of the long row of lime-trees within come nodding
+sweet-scented greetings to the passers-by along the dusty high road
+below.
+
+But in the winter the wall is flowerless and the branches of the
+lime-trees are bare, and within, in the garden, there are only the
+holly-trees and the yew-hedge of the shrubbery walks, and the empty brown
+flower-beds set in the faded grass. But winter and summer alike, old Lady
+Kynaston holds her weekly receptions, and thither flock all the wit, and
+the talent, and the fashion of London. In the summer they are garden
+parties, in the winter they become evening receptions. How she manages it
+no one can quite tell; but so it is, that her rooms are always crowded,
+that no one is ever bored at her house, that people are always keen to
+come to her, and that there are hundreds who would think it an effort to
+go to other people's parties across the street who think it no trouble at
+all to drive nearly to Richmond, to hers. She has the rare talent of
+making society a charm in itself. No one who is not clever, or beautiful,
+or distinguished in some way above his or her fellows ever gains a
+footing in her drawing-rooms. Every one of any note whatever is sure to
+be found there. There are savants and diplomatists, poets and painters,
+foreign ambassadors, and men of science. The fashionable beauty is sure
+to be met there side by side with the latest type of strong-minded woman;
+the German composer, with the wild hair, whose music is to regenerate
+the future, may be seen chatting to a cabinet minister; the most rising
+barrister of the day is lingering by the side of a prima-donna, or
+discoursing to an Eastern traveller. Old Lady Kynaston herself has
+charming manners, and possesses the rare tact of making every one feel
+at home and happy in her house.
+
+It was not done in a day--this gathering about her of so brilliant and
+delightful a society. She had lived many years at Walpole Lodge, ever
+since her widowhood, and was now quite an old lady. In her early life she
+had written several charming books--chiefly biographies of distinguished
+men whom she had known, and even now she occasionally put pen again to
+paper, and sent some delightful social essay or some pleasantly written
+critique to one or other of the Reviews of the day.
+
+Her married life had been neither very long nor very happy. She had never
+learnt to love her husband's country home. At his death she had turned
+her back thankfully upon Kynaston, and had never seen it again. Of her
+two sons, she stood in some awe of the elder, whose cold and unresponsive
+character resembled her dead husband's, whilst she adored Maurice, who
+was warm-hearted and affectionate in manner, like herself. There were ten
+years between them, for she had been married twelve years; and at her
+secret heart Lady Kynaston hoped and believed that John would remain
+unmarried, so that the estates and the money might in time become
+Maurice's.
+
+It is the second Thursday in December, and Lady Kynaston is "at home" to
+the world. Her drawing-rooms--there are three of them, not large, but
+low, comfortable rooms, opening one out of the other--are filled, as
+usual, with a mixed and brilliant crowd.
+
+Across the square hall is the dining-room, where a cold supper, not very
+sumptuous or very _recherche_, but still sufficient of its kind for the
+occasion, is laid out; and beyond that is Lady Kynaston's boudoir, where
+there is a piano, and which is used on these occasions as a music-room,
+so that those who are musical may retire there, and neither interfere,
+nor be interfered with, by the rest of the company. Some one is singing
+in the music-room now--singing well, you may be sure, or he would not be
+at Walpole Lodge--but the strains of the song can hardly be heard at all
+across dining-room and hall, in the larger of the three rooms, where most
+of the guests are congregated.
+
+Lady Kynaston, a small, slight woman in soft gray satin and old lace,
+moves about graciously and gracefully still, despite her seventy years,
+among her guests--stopping now at one group, now at another, talking
+politics to one, science to a second, whispering a few discreet words
+about the latest scandal to this great lady, murmuring words of approval
+upon her clever book or her charming poem to another. Her smiles are
+equally dispensed, no one is passed over, and she has the rare talent of
+making every single individual in the crowded room feel himself to be the
+one particular person whom Lady Kynaston is especially rejoiced to see.
+She has tact, and she has sympathy--two invaluable gifts in a woman.
+
+Conspicuous among the crowd of well-dressed and handsome women is Helen
+Romer. She sits on an ottoman at the further end of the room, where she
+holds a little court of her own, dispensing her smiles and pleasant words
+among the little knot of men who linger admiringly by her side.
+
+She is in black, with masses of gold embroidery about her, and she
+carries a large black and gold feather fan in her hands, which she
+moves rapidly, almost restlessly, up and down; her eyes wander often
+to the doorway, and every now and then she raises her hand with a short,
+impatient action to her blonde head, as though she were half weary of
+the talk about her.
+
+Presently, Lady Kynaston, moving slowly among her guests, comes near her,
+and, leaning for a moment on the back of the ottoman, presses her hand as
+she passes.
+
+Mrs. Romer is a favourite of hers; she is pretty, and she is piquant in
+manner and conversation; two very good things, which she thinks highly of
+in any young woman. Besides that, she knows that Helen loves her younger
+son; and, although she hardly understands how things are between them,
+nor how far Maurice himself is implicated, she believes that Helen will
+eventually inherit her grandfather's money, and, liking her personally,
+she has seen no harm in encouraging her too plainly displayed affection.
+Moreover, the love they both bear to him has been a link between them.
+They talk of him together almost as a mother and a daughter might do;
+they have the same anxieties over his health, the same vexations over
+his debts, the same rejoicings when his brother comes forward with his
+much-needed help. Lady Kynaston does not want her darling to marry yet,
+but when the time shall come for him to take unto himself a wife, she
+will raise no objection to pretty Helen Romer, should he bring her to
+her, as a daughter-in-law.
+
+As the old lady stoops over her, Helen's upturned wistful eyes say as
+plainly as words can say it--
+
+"Is he coming to-night?"
+
+"Maurice will be here presently, I hope," says his mother, answering the
+look in her eyes; "he was to come up by the six o'clock train; he will
+dine at his club and come on here later." Helen's face became radiant,
+and Lady Kynaston passed on.
+
+Maurice Kynaston's regiment was quartered at Northampton; he came up to
+town often for the day or for the night, as he could get leave; but his
+movements were never quite to be depended upon.
+
+Half-an-hour or so more of feverish impatience. Helen watches the gay
+crowd about her with a feeling of sick weariness. Two members of
+Parliament are talking of Russian aggression and Turkish misrule close to
+her; they turn to her presently and include her in the conversation; Mrs.
+Romer gives her opinion shrewdly and sensibly. An elderly duchess is
+describing some episode of Royalty's last ball; there is a general laugh,
+in which Helen joins heartily; a young attache bends over her and
+whispers some admiring little speech in her ear, and she blushes and
+smiles just as if she liked it above all things; while all the time her
+eyes hardly stray for one second from the open doorway through which
+Maurice will come, and her heart is saying to itself, over and over
+again,
+
+"Will he come, will he come?"
+
+He comes at last. Long before the servant, who opens the door to him, has
+taken his coat and hat from him, Helen catches sight of his handsome head
+and his broad shoulders through an opening in the crowd. In another
+minute he is in the room standing irresolute in the doorway, looking
+round as if to see who is and who is not there to-night.
+
+He is, after all, only a very ordinary type of a good-looking soldierly
+young Englishman, just such a one as may be seen any day in our parks or
+our drawing-rooms. He has clearly-cut and rather _prononce_ features, a
+strong-built, well made figure, a long moustache, close-shaven cheeks,
+and eyes that are rather deep-set, and are, when you are near enough to
+see them well, of a deep blue-gray. In all that Maurice Kynaston is in no
+way different from scores of other good-looking young men whom we may
+have met. But there is just something that makes his face a remarkable
+one: it is a strong-looking face--a face that looks as if he had a will
+of his own and knew how to stick to it; a face that looks, too, as if he
+could do and dare much for truth and honour's sake. It is almost stern
+when he is silent; it can soften into the tenderness of a woman when he
+speaks.
+
+Look at him now as he catches sight of his mother, and steps forward for
+a minute to press her loving hands. All the hardness and all the strength
+are gone out of his face now; he only looks down at her with eyes full of
+love and gentleness--for life as yet holds nothing dearer or better for
+him than that little white-haired old woman. Only for a minute, and then
+he leaves go of her hands, and passes on down the room, speaking to the
+guests whom he knows.
+
+"He does not see me," says Helen, bitterly, to herself; "he will go on
+into the next room, and never know that I am here."
+
+But he had seen her perfectly. Next to the woman he most wishes to see in
+a room, the one whom a man first catches sight of is the woman he would
+sooner were not there. He had seen Helen the very instant he came in, but
+he had noticed thankfully that some one was talking to her, and he said
+to himself that there was no occasion for him to hurry to her side; it
+was not as if they were openly engaged; there could be no necessity for
+him to rush into slavery at once; he would speak to her, of course,
+by-and-by; and whenever he came to her he well knew that he would be
+equally welcomed: he was so sure of her. Nothing on earth or under Heaven
+is so fatal to a man's love as that. There was no longer any uncertainty;
+there was none of the keenness of pursuit dear to the old hunting
+instinct inherent in man; there was not even the charm of variety in her
+moods. She was always the same to him; always she pouted a little at
+first, and looked ill-tempered, and reproached him; and always she came
+round again at his very first kind word, and poured out her heart in a
+torrent of worship at his feet. Maurice knew it all by heart, the sulks
+and the cross words, and then the passionate denials, and the wild
+protestations of her undying love. He was sorry for her, too, in his way;
+he was too tender-hearted, too chivalrous, to be anything but kind to
+her; but though he was sorry, he could not love her; and, oh! how
+insufferably weary of her he was!
+
+Presently he did come up to her, and took the seat by her side just
+vacated by the attache. The little serio-comedy instantly repeated
+itself.
+
+A little pout and a little toss of the head.
+
+"You have been as long coming to speak to me as you possibly could be."
+
+"Do you think it would look well if I had come rushing up to you the
+instant I came in?"
+
+"You need not, at all events, have stood talking for ten minutes to that
+great black-eyed Lady Anderleigh. Of course, if you like her better than
+me, you can go back to her."
+
+"Of course I can, if I choose, you silly little woman; but seeing that
+I am by you, and not by her, I suppose it is a proof that I prefer your
+society, is it not?"
+
+Very polite, but not strictly true, Captain Maurice! At his heart he
+preferred talking to Lady Anderleigh, or to any other woman in the room.
+The admission, however, was quite enough for Helen.
+
+"Dear Maurice," she whispered, "forgive me; I am a jealous, bad-tempered
+wretch, but," lower still, "it is only because I love you so much."
+
+And had there been no one in the room, Maurice knew perfectly that at
+this juncture Mrs. Romer would have cast her arms around his neck--as
+usual.
+
+To his unspeakable relief, a man--a clever lawyer, whose attention was a
+flattering thing to any woman--came up to Helen at this moment, and took
+a vacant chair beside her. Maurice thankfully slipped away, leaving his
+inamorata in a state of rage and disgust with that talented and elderly
+lawyer, such as no words can describe.
+
+Captain Kynaston took the favourable opportunity of escaping across the
+hall, where he spent the remainder of the evening, dividing his attention
+between the music and supper rooms, and Helen saw him no more that night.
+
+She saw, however, some one she had not reckoned upon seeing. Glancing
+carelessly across to the end of the room, she perceived, talking to Lady
+Kynaston, a little French gentleman, with a smooth black head, a neat,
+pointed, little black beard, and the red ribbon of the Legion d'Honneur
+in his button-hole.
+
+What there was in the sight of so harmless and inoffensive a personage to
+upset her it may be difficult to say; but the fact is that, when Mrs.
+Romer perceived this polite little Frenchman talking to her hostess, she
+turned suddenly so sick and white, that a lady sitting near her asked her
+if she was going to faint.
+
+"I feel it a little hot," she murmured; "I think I will go into the next
+room." She rose and attempted to escape--whether from the heat or the
+observation of the little Frenchman was best known to herself.
+
+Her maneuver, however, was not destined to succeed. Before she could
+work her way half-way through the crush to the door, the man whom she was
+bent upon avoiding turned round and saw her. A look of glad recognition
+flashed into his face, and he instantly left Lady Kynaston's side, and
+came across the room to speak to her.
+
+"This is an unlooked-for pleasure, madame."
+
+"I certainly never expected to meet you here, Monsieur D'Arblet,"
+faltered Helen, turning red and white alternately.
+
+"Will you not come and have a little conversation with me?"
+
+"I was just going away."
+
+"So soon! Oh, bien! then I will take you to your carriage." He held out
+his arm, and Helen was perforce obliged to take it.
+
+There was a little delay in the hall, whilst Helen waited for her, or
+rather for her grandfather's carriage, during which she stood with her
+hand upon her unwelcome friend's arm. Whilst they were waiting he
+whispered something eagerly in her ear.
+
+"No, no; it is impossible!" reiterated Helen, with much apparent
+distress.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet whispered something more.
+
+"Very well, if you insist upon it!" she said, faintly, and then got into
+her carriage and was driven away.
+
+Before, however, she had left Walpole Lodge five minutes, she called out
+to the servants to stop the carriage. The footman descended from the box
+and came round to the window.
+
+They had drawn up by the side of a long wall quite beyond the crowd of
+carriages that was waiting at Lady Kynaston's house.
+
+"I want to wait here a few minutes, for--for a gentleman I am going to
+drive back to town," she said to the servant, confusedly. She was ashamed
+to give such an order to him.
+
+She was frightened too, and trembled with nervousness lest any one should
+see her waiting here.
+
+It was a cold, damp night, and Helen shivered, and drew her fur cloak
+closer about her in the darkness. Presently there came footsteps along
+the pathway, and a man came through the fog up to the door. It was opened
+for him in silence, and he got in, and the carriage drove off again.
+
+Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet had a mean, cunning-looking countenance;
+strictly speaking, indeed, he was rather handsome, his features being
+decidedly well-shaped, but the evil and vindictive expression of his
+face made it an unpleasant one to look upon. As he took his seat in the
+brougham by Helen's side she shrank instinctively away from him.
+
+"So, ma mie!" he said, peering down into her face with odious
+familiarity, "here I find you again after all this time, beautiful as
+ever! It is charming to be with you again, once more."
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, pray understand that nothing but absolute necessity
+would have induced me to drive you home to-night," said Helen, who was
+trembling violently.
+
+"You are not polite, ma belle--there is a charming _franchise_ about you
+Englishwomen, however, which gives a piquancy to your conversation."
+
+"You know very well why it is that I am obliged to speak to you alone,"
+she interrupted, colouring hotly under his bold looks of admiration.
+
+"_Le souvenir du beau passe!_" murmured the Frenchman, laughing softly.
+"Is that it, ma belle Helene?"
+
+"Monsieur," she cried, almost in tears, "pray listen to me; for pity's
+sake tell me what you have done with my letters--have you destroyed
+them?"
+
+"Destroyed them! What, those dear letters that are so precious to my
+heart? Ah, madame, could you believe it of me?"
+
+"You have kept them?" she murmured, faintly.
+
+"Mais si, certainement, that I have kept them, every one--every single
+one of them," he repeated, looking at her meaningly, with a cold glitter
+in his black eyes.
+
+"Not that--_that_ one?" pleaded Helen, piteously.
+
+"Yes--that one too--that charming and delightful letter in which you so
+generously offered to throw yourself upon my protection--do you remember
+it?"
+
+"Alas, only too well!" she murmured, hiding her face in her hands.
+
+"Ah!" he continued, with a sort of relish in torturing her, which
+resembled the feline cruelty of a wild beast playing with its prey. "Ah!
+it was a delightful letter, that; what a pity it was that I was out of
+Paris that night, and never received it till, alas! it was too late to
+rush to your side. You remember how it was, do you not? Your husband was
+lying ill at your hotel; you were very tired of him--ce pauvre mari!
+Well, you had been tired of him for some time, had you not? And he was
+not what you ladies call 'nice;' he did drink, and he did swear, and I
+had been often to see you when he was out, and had taken you to the
+theatre and the bal d'Opera--do you remember?"
+
+"Ah, for Heaven's sake spare me these horrible reminiscences!" cried
+Helen, despairingly.
+
+He went on pitilessly, as though he had not heard her, "And you were good
+enough to write me several letters--there were one, two, three, four of
+them," counting them off upon his fingers; "and then came the fifth--that
+one you wrote when he was ill. Was it not a sad pity that I had gone out
+of Paris for the day, and never received it till you and your husband had
+left for England? But think you that I will part with it ever? It is my
+consolation, my tresor!"
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, if you have one spark of honour or of gentleman-like
+feeling, you will give me those mad, foolish letters again. I entreat you
+to do so. You know that I was beside myself when I wrote them, I was so
+unhappy--do you not see that they compromise me fatally; that it is my
+good name, my reputation, which are at stake?" In her agony she had half
+sunk at his feet on the floor of the carriage, clasping her hands
+entreatingly together.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet raised her with _empressement_.
+
+"Ah, madame, do not thus humiliate yourself at my feet. Why should you be
+afraid? Are not your good name and your reputation safe in my hands?"
+
+Helen burst into bitter tears.
+
+"How cruel, how wicked you are!" she cried; "no Englishman would treat a
+lady in this way."
+
+"Your Englishmen are fools, ma chere--and I--I am French!" he replied,
+shrugging his shoulders expressively.
+
+"But what object, what possible cause can you have for keeping those
+wretched letters?"
+
+He bent his face down close to hers.
+
+"Shall I tell you, belle Helene? It is this: You are beautiful and you
+have talent; I like you. Some day, perhaps, when the grandpapa dies, you
+will have money--then Lucien D'Arblet will come to you, madame, with
+that precious little packet in his hands, and he will say, 'You will
+marry me, ma chere, or I will make public these letters.' Do you see?
+Till then, amusez vous, ma belle; enjoy your life and your liberty as
+much as you desire; I will not object to anything you do. Only you will
+not venture to marry--because I have these letters?"
+
+"You would prevent my marrying?" said Helen, faintly.
+
+"Mais, certainement that I should. Do you suppose any man would care to
+be your husband after he had read that last letter--the fifth, you know?"
+
+No answer, save the choking sobs of his companion.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet waited a few minutes, watching her; then, as she did
+not raise her head from the cushions of the carriage, where she had
+buried it, the Frenchman pulled the check-string of the carriage.
+
+"Now," he said, "I will wish you good-night, for we are close to your
+house. We have had our little talk, have we not?"
+
+The brougham, stopped, and the footman opened the door.
+
+"Good-night, madame, and many thanks for your kindness," said D'Arblet,
+raising his hat politely.
+
+In another minute he was gone, and Helen, hoping that the darkness had
+concealed the traces of her agitation from the servant's prying eyes, was
+driven on, more dead than alive, to her grandfather's house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+EVENING REVERIES.
+
+ For nothing on earth is sadder
+ Than the dream that cheated the grasp,
+ The flower that turned to the adder,
+ The fruit that changed to the asp,
+ When the dayspring in darkness closes,
+ As the sunset fades from the hills,
+ With the fragrance of perished roses,
+ And the music of parched-up rills.
+
+ A. L. Gordon.
+
+
+It had been the darkest chapter of her life, that fatal month in Paris,
+when she had foolishly and recklessly placed herself in the power of a
+man so unscrupulous and so devoid of principle as Lucien D'Arblet.
+
+It had begun in all innocence--on her part, at least. She had been very
+miserable; she had discovered to the full how wild a mistake her marriage
+had been. She had felt herself to be fatally separated from Maurice, the
+man she loved, for ever; and Monsieur D'Arblet had been kind to her; he
+had pitied her for being tied to a husband who drank and who gambled, and
+Helen had allowed herself to be pitied. D'Arblet had charming manners,
+and an accurate knowledge of the weakness of the fair sex; he knew when
+to flatter and when to cajole her, when to be tenderly sympathetic to her
+sorrows, and when to divert her thoughts to brighter and pleasanter
+topics than her own miseries. He succeeded in fascinating her completely.
+Whilst her husband was occupied with his own disreputable friends, Helen,
+sooner than remain alone in their hotel night after night, was persuaded
+to accept Monsieur D'Arblet's escort to theatres and operas, and other
+public places, where her constant presence with him very soon compromised
+her amongst the few friends who knew her in Paris.
+
+Then came scenes with her husband; frantic letters of misery to this
+French vicomte, whom she imagined to be so devotedly attached to her,
+and, finally, one ever-to-be-repented letter, in which she offered to
+leave her husband for ever and to come to him.
+
+True, this letter did not reach its destination till too late, and Helen
+was mercifully saved from the fate which, in her wicked despair, she was
+ready to rush upon. Twenty-four hours after her return to England she saw
+the horrible abyss upon which she had stood, and thanked God from the
+bottom of her heart that she had been rescued, in spite of herself, from
+so dreadful a deed. But the letter had been written, and was in Lucien
+D'Arblet's possession. Later on she learnt, by a chance conversation, the
+true character of the man, and shuddered when she remembered how nearly
+she had wrecked her whole life for him. And when her husband's death had
+placed her once more in the security and affluence of her grandfather's
+house, with fresh hopes and fresh chances before her, she had but one
+wish with regard to that Parisian episode of her life,--to forget it as
+though it had never been.
+
+She hoped, and, as time went on, she felt sure, that she would never see
+Monsieur D'Arblet again. New hopes and new excitements occupied her
+thoughts. The man to whom in her youth she had given her heart once more
+came across her life; she was thrown very much into his society; she
+learnt to love him more devotedly than ever, and when at last she had
+succeeded in establishing the sort of engagement which existed between
+them, she had assured him, and also assured herself, that no other man
+had ever, for one instant, filled her fancy. That stormy chapter of her
+married life was forgotten; she resolutely wiped it out of her memory, as
+if it had never existed.
+
+And now, after all this time--it was five years ago--she had met him
+again--this Frenchman, who had once compromised her name, and who now had
+possession of her letters.
+
+There was a cruel irony of fate in the fact that she should be destined
+to meet him again at Lady Kynaston's, the very house of all others where
+she would least have wished to see him.
+
+There was, however, had she thought of it, nothing at all extraordinary
+in her having done so. No house in all London society was so open to
+foreigners as Walpole Lodge, and Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet was no
+unknown upstart; he bore a good old name; he was clever, had taken an
+active part in diplomatic life, and was a very well-known individual in
+Parisian society. He had been brought to Lady Kynaston's by a member of
+the French Embassy, who was a frequenter of her soirees.
+
+Neither, however, was meeting with Mrs. Romer entirely accidental on
+Monsieur D'Arblet's part. He had never forgotten the pretty Englishwoman
+who had so foolishly and recklessly placed herself in his power.
+
+It is true he had lost sight of her, and other intrigues and other
+pursuits had filled his leisure hours; but when he came to England he had
+thought of her again, and had made a few careless inquiries after her. It
+was not difficult to identify her; the Mrs. Romer who was now a widow,
+who lived with her rich grandfather, who was very old, who would probably
+soon die and leave her all his wealth, was evidently the same Mrs. Romer
+whom he had known. The friend who gave him the information spoke of her
+as lovely and _spirituelle_, and as a woman who would be worth marrying
+some day. "She is often at Lady Kynaston's receptions," he had added.
+
+"Mon cher, take me to your Lady Kynaston's soirees," had been Lucien
+D'Arblet's lazy rejoinder as they finished their evening smoke together.
+"I would like to meet my friend, la belle veuve, again, and I will see if
+she has forgotten me."
+
+Bitter, very bitter, were Mrs. Romer's remorseful meditations that night
+when she reached her grandfather's house at Prince's Gate. Every detail
+of her acquaintance with Lucien D'Arblet came back to her with a horrible
+and painful distinctness. Over and over again she cursed her own folly,
+and bewailed the hardness of the fate which placed her once more in the
+hands of this man.
+
+Would he indeed keep his cruel threats to her? Would he bring forward
+those letters to spoil her life once more--to prevent her from marrying
+Maurice should she ever have the chance of doing so?
+
+Stooping alone over her fire, with all the brightness, and all the
+freshness gone out of her, with an old and almost haggard look in the
+face that was so lately beaming with smiles and dimples, Helen Romer
+asked herself shudderingly these bitter questions over and over again.
+
+Had she been sure of Maurice's love, she would have been almost tempted
+to have confessed her fault, and to have thrown herself upon his mercy;
+but she knew that he did not love her well enough to forgive her. Too
+well she knew with what disgust and contempt Maurice would be likely to
+regard her past conduct; such a confession would, she knew, only induce
+him to shake himself clear of her for ever. Indeed, had he loved her, it
+is doubtful whether Maurice would have been able to condone so grave a
+fault in the past history of a woman; his own standard of honour stood
+too high to allow him to pass over lightly any disgraceful or
+dishonourable conduct in those with whom he had to do. But, loving her
+not, she would have been utterly without excuse in his eyes.
+
+She knew it well enough. No, her only chance was in silence, and in vague
+hopes that time might rescue her out of her difficulties.
+
+Meanwhile, whilst Helen Romer sat up late into the early morning,
+thinking bitterly over her past sins and her future dangers, Maurice
+Kynaston and his mother also kept watch together at Walpole Lodge after
+all the guests had gone away, and the old house was left alone again to
+the mother and son.
+
+"Something troubles you, little mother," said Maurice, as he stretched
+himself upon the rug by her bedroom fire, and laid his head down
+caressingly upon her knees.
+
+Lady Kynaston passed her hand fondly over the short dark hair. "How well
+you know my face, Maurice! Yes, something has worried me all day--it is a
+letter from your brother."
+
+Maurice looked up laughingly. "What, is old John in trouble? That would
+be something new. Has he taken a leaf out of my book, mother, and dropped
+his money at Newmarket, too?"
+
+"No, you naughty boy? John has got more sense. No!" with a sigh--"I wish
+it were only money; I fear it is a worse trouble than that."
+
+"My dear mother, you alarm me," cried Maurice, looking up in mock dismay;
+"why, whatever has he been and gone and done?"
+
+"Oh, Maurice, it is nothing to laugh at--it is some woman--a girl he has
+met down at Kynaston; some nobody--a clergyman's daughter, or sister, or
+something--whom he says he is going to marry!" Lady Kynaston looked the
+picture of distress and dismay.
+
+Maurice laughed softly. "Well, well, mother; there is nothing very
+dreadful after all--I am sure I wish him joy."
+
+"My boy," she said, below her breath, "I had so hoped, so trusted he
+would never marry--it seemed so unlikely--he seemed so completely happy
+in his bachelor's life; and I had hoped that you--that you----"
+
+"Yes, yes, mother dear, I know," he said, quickly, and twisted himself
+round till he got her hand between his, kissing it as he spoke; "but I--I
+never thought of that--dear old John, he has been the best of brothers to
+me; and, mother dear, I know it is all your love to me; but you and I,
+dear, we will not grudge him his happiness, will we?"
+
+He knew so well her weakness--how that she had loved him at the expense
+of the other son, who was not so dear to her; he loved her for it, and
+yet he did not at his heart think it right.
+
+Lady Kynaston wiped a few tears away. "You are always right, my boy,
+always, and I am a foolish old woman. But oh, Maurice, that is only half
+the trouble! Who is this woman whom he has chosen? Some country girl,
+ignorant of the ways of the world, unformed and awkward--not fitted to be
+his wife!"
+
+"Does he say so?" laughed Maurice.
+
+"No, no, of course not. Stay, where is his letter? Oh, there, on the
+dressing-table; give it me, my dear. No, this is what he says: 'Miss
+Nevill seems to me in every way to fulfil my ideal of a good and perfect
+woman, and, if she will consent to marry me, I intend to make her my
+wife.'"
+
+"Well, a good and perfect woman is a _rara avis_, at all events mother."
+
+"Oh, dear! but all men say that of a girl when they are in love--it
+amounts to very little."
+
+"You see, he has evidently not proposed to her yet; perhaps she will
+refuse him."
+
+"Refuse Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall! A poor clergyman's daughter!
+My dear Maurice, I gave you credit for more knowledge of the world.
+Besides, John is a fine-looking man. Oh, no, she is not in the least
+likely to refuse him."
+
+"Then all we have got to do is to make the best of her," said Maurice,
+composedly.
+
+"That is easily said for you, who need see very little of her. But
+John's wife is a person who will be of great importance to my
+happiness. Dear me! and to think he might have had Lady Mary Hendrie
+for the asking: a charming creature, well born, highly educated and
+accomplished--everything that a man could wish for. And there were the De
+Vallery girls--either of them would have married him, and been a suitable
+wife for him; and he must needs go and throw himself away on a little
+country chit, who could have been equally happy, and much more suitably
+mated, with her father's curate. Maurice, my dear," with a sudden change
+of voice, "I wish you would go down and cut him out; if you made love to
+her ever so little you could turn her head, you know."
+
+Maurice burst out laughing. "Oh, you wicked, immoral little mother! Did I
+ever hear such an iniquitous proposition! Do you want _me_ to marry her?"
+
+"No, no!" laughed his mother; "but you might make her think you meant to,
+and then, perhaps, she would refuse John."
+
+"I have not Kynaston Hall at my back, remember, after which you have
+given her the credit of angling. Besides, mother dear, to speak plainly,
+I honestly do not think my taste in women is in the least likely to be
+the same as John's. No, I think I will keep out of the way whilst the
+love-making is going on. I will go down and have a look at the young
+woman by-and-by when it is all settled, and let you know what I think of
+her. I dare say a good, honest country lass will suit John far better
+than a beautiful woman of the world, who would be sure to be miserable
+with him. Don't fret, little mother; make the best of her if you can."
+
+He rose and stretched himself up to his full height before the fire. Lady
+Kynaston looked up at him admiringly. Oh, she thought, if the money and
+the name could only have been his! How well he would have made use of it;
+how proud she would have been of him--her handsome boy, whom all men
+liked, and all women would gladly love.
+
+"A good son makes a good husband," she said aloud, following her own
+thoughts.
+
+"And John has been a good son, mother," said Maurice, cordially.
+
+"Yes, yes, in his way, perhaps; but I was thinking of you, my boy, not
+of him, and how lucky will be the woman who is your wife, Maurice--will
+it be----"
+
+Maurice stooped quickly, and laid his hand playfully over her lips.
+
+"I don't know, mother dear--never ask me--for I don't know it myself."
+And then he kissed her, and wished her good-night, and left her.
+
+She sat long over her fire, dreaming, by herself, thinking a little,
+perhaps, of the elder son, and the bride he was going to bring her, whom
+she should have to welcome whether she liked her or no, but thinking more
+of the younger, whose inner life she had studied, and who was so entirely
+dear and precious to her. It was very little to her that he had been
+extravagant and thoughtless, that he had lost money in betting and
+racing--these were minor faults--and she and John between them had always
+managed to meet his difficulties; they had not been, in truth, very
+tremendous. But for that, he had never caused her one day's anxiety,
+never given her one instant's pain. "God grant he may get a wife who
+deserves him," was the mother's prayer that night. "I doubt if Helen
+be worthy of him; but if he loves her, as I believe he must do, no word
+of mine shall stand between him and his happiness."
+
+And then she went to bed, and dreamed, as mothers dream of the child they
+love best.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE MEMBER FOR MEADOWSHIRE.
+
+ Honour and shame from no condition rise;
+ Act well your part, there all the honour lies.
+
+ Pope, "Essay on Man."
+
+
+About five miles from Kynaston Hall, as the crow flies, across the
+fields, stood, as the house-agents would have described it, "a large
+and commodious modern mansion, standing in about eighty acres of
+well-timbered park land."
+
+I do not know that any description that could be given of Shadonake would
+so well answer to the reality as the above familiar form of words.
+
+The house was undoubtedly large, very large, and it was also modern, very
+modern. It was a handsome stone structure, with a colonnade of white
+pillars along the entrance side, and with a multiplicity of large
+plate-glass windows stretching away in interminable vistas in every
+direction. A broad gravel sweep led up to the front door; to the right
+were the stables, large and handsome too, with a clock-tower and a belfry
+over the gateway; and to the left were the gardens and the shrubberies.
+
+There had been an old house once at Shadonake, old and picturesque and
+uncomfortable; but when the property had been purchased by the present
+owner--Mr. Andrew Miller--after he had been returned as Conservative
+member for the county, the old house was swept away, and a modern
+mansion, more suited to the wants and requirements of his family, arose
+in its place.
+
+The park was flat, but well wooded. The old trees, of course, remained
+intact; but the gardens of the first house, being rambling and
+old-fashioned, had been done away with, to make room for others on a
+larger and more imposing scale; and vineries and pineries, orchid-houses,
+and hot-houses of every description arose rapidly all over the site of
+the old bowling-green and the wilderness, half kitchen garden, half
+rosary, that had served to content the former owners of Shadonake, now
+all lying dead and buried in the chancel of the village church.
+
+The only feature of the old mansion which had been left untouched was
+rather a remarkable one. It was a large lake or pond, lying south of the
+gardens, and about a quarter of a mile from the house. It lay in a sort
+of dip in the ground, and was surrounded on all four sides--for it was
+exactly square--by very steep high banks, which had been cut into by
+steep stone steps, now gray, and broken, and moss-grown, which led down
+straight into the water. This pool was called Shadonake Bath. How long
+the steps had existed no one knew; probably for several hundred years,
+for there was a ghost story connected with them. Somebody was supposed,
+before the memory of any one living, to have been drowned there, and to
+haunt the steps at certain times of the year.
+
+It is certain that but for the fact of a mania for boating, and punting,
+and skating indulged in by several of his younger sons, Mr. Miller, in
+his energy for sweeping away all things old, and setting up all things
+new, would not have spared the Bath any more than he had spared the
+bowling-green. He had gone so far, indeed, as to have a plan submitted to
+him for draining it, and turning it into a strawberry garden, and for
+doing away with the picturesque old stone steps altogether in order to
+encase the banks in red brick, suitable to the cultivation of peaches and
+nectarines; but Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys, had thought about
+their punts and their canoes, and had pleaded piteously for the Bath; so
+the Bath was allowed to remain untouched, greatly to the relief of many
+of the neighbours, who were proud of its traditions, and who, in the
+general destruction that had been going on at Shadonake, had trembled for
+its safety.
+
+Where Mr. Miller had originally come from nobody exactly knew. It was
+generally supposed that he had migrated early in life from northern and
+manufacturing districts, where his father had amassed a large fortune.
+In spite, however, of his wealth, it is doubtful whether he would ever
+have achieved the difficult task of being returned for so exclusive and
+aristocratic a county as Meadowshire had he not made a most prudent and
+politic marriage. He had married one of the Miss Esterworths, of
+Lutterton.
+
+Now, everybody who has the slightest knowledge of Meadowshire and its
+internal politics will see at once that Andrew Miller could not have done
+better for himself. The Esterworths are the very oldest and best of the
+old county families; there can be no sort of doubt whatever as to their
+position and standing. Therefore, when Andrew Miller married Caroline
+Esterworth, there was at once an end of all hesitation as to how he was
+to be treated amongst them. Meadowshire might wonder at Miss Caroline's
+taste, but it kept its wonder to itself, and held out the right hand of
+fellowship to Andrew Miller then and ever after.
+
+It is true that there were five Miss Esterworths, all grown up, and all
+unmarried, at the time when Andrew came a-wooing to Lutterton Castle;
+they were none of them remarkable for beauty, and Caroline, who was the
+eldest of the five, less so than the others. Moreover, there were many
+sons at Lutterton, and the daughters' portions were but small. Altogether
+the love-making had been easy and prosperous, for Caroline, who was a
+sensible young woman, had readily recognized the superior advantages
+of marrying an excellent man of no birth or breeding, with twenty
+thousand a year, to remaining Miss Esterworth to her dying day, in
+dignified but impecunious spinsterhood. Time had proved the wisdom of her
+choice. For some years the Millers had rented a small but pretty little
+house within two miles of Lutterton, where, of course, everybody visited
+them, and got used to Andrew's squat, burly figure, and agreed to
+overlook his many little defects of speech and manner in consideration of
+his many excellent qualities--and his wealth--and where, in course of
+time, all their children, two daughters and six sons, were born.
+
+And then, a vacancy occurring opportunely, Mrs. Miller determined that
+her husband should stand in the Conservative interest for the county. She
+would have made a Liberal of him had she thought it would answer better.
+How she toiled and how she slaved, and how she kept her Andrew, who was
+not by any means ambitious of the position, up to the mark, it boots not
+here to tell. Suffice it to say, that the deed was accomplished, and that
+Andrew Miller became M.P. for North Meadowshire.
+
+Almost at the same time Shadonake fell into the market, and Mrs. Miller
+perceived that the time had now come for her husband's wealth to be
+recognized and appreciated; or, as he himself expressed it, in vernacular
+that was strictly to the point if inelegant in diction, the time was
+come for him "to cut a splash."
+
+She had been very clever, this daughter of the Esterworths. She had kept
+a tight rein over her husband all through the early years of their
+married life. She would have no ostentation, no vulgar display of wealth,
+no parading and flaunting of that twenty thousand per annum in their
+neighbours' faces. And she had done what she had intended; she had
+established her husband's position well in the county--she had made him
+to be accepted, not only by reason of his wealth, but also because he was
+her husband; she had roused no one's envy--she had never given cause for
+spite or jealousy--she had made him popular as well as herself. They had
+lived quietly and unobtrusively; they had, of course, had everything of
+the best; their horses and carriages were irreproachable, but they had
+not had more of them than their neighbours. They had entertained freely,
+and they had given their guests well-cooked dinners and expensive wines;
+but there had been nothing lavish in their entertainments, nothing that
+could make any of them go away and say to themselves, with angry
+discontent, that "those Millers" were purse-proud and vulgar in their
+wealth. When she had gone to her neighbours' houses Mrs. Miller had been
+handsomely but never extravagantly dressed; she had praised their cooks,
+and expressed herself envious of their flowers, and had bemoaned her own
+inability to vie with their peaches and their pineapples; she had never
+talked about her own possessions, nor had she ever paraded her own eight
+thousand pounds' worth of diamonds before the envious eyes of women who
+had none.
+
+In this way she had made herself popular--and in this way she had won the
+county seat for her husband.
+
+When, however, that great end and aim of her existence was accomplished,
+Caroline Miller felt that she might now fairly launch out a little. The
+time was come when she might reap the advantage of her long years of
+repression and patient waiting. Her daughters were growing up, her sons
+were all at school. For her children's sake, it was time that she should
+take the lead in the county which their father's fortune and new position
+entitled them to, and which no one now was likely to grudge them.
+Shadonake therefore was bought, and the house straightway pulled down,
+and built up again in a style, and with a magnificence, befitting Mr.
+Miller's wealth.
+
+Bricks and mortar were Andrew Miller's delight. He was never so happy as
+during the three years that Shadonake House was being built; every stone
+that was laid was a fresh interest to him; every inch of brick wall a
+keen and special delight. He had been disappointed not to have had the
+spoliation of Shadonake Bath; it had been a distinct mortification to him
+to have to forego the four brick walls which would have replaced its
+ancient steps; but then he had made it up to himself by altering the
+position of the front door three times before it was finally settled
+to his satisfaction.
+
+But all this was over by this time, and when my story begins Shadonake
+new House, as it was sometimes called, was built, and furnished and
+inhabited in every corner of its lofty rooms, and all along the spacious
+length of its many wide corridors.
+
+One afternoon--it is about a week later than that soiree at Walpole
+Lodge, mentioned in a previous chapter--Mrs. Miller and her eldest
+daughter are sitting together in the large drawing-room at Shadonake. The
+room is furnished in that style of high artistic decoration that is now
+the fashion. There are rich Persian rugs over the polished oak floor; a
+high oak chimney-piece, with blue tiles inserted into it in every
+direction, and decorated with old Nankin china bowls and jars; a wide
+grate below, where logs of wood are blazing between brass bars;
+quantities of spindle-legged Chippendale furniture all over the room,
+and a profusion of rich gold embroidery and "textile fabrics" of all
+descriptions lighting up the carved oak "dado" and the sombre sage green
+of the walls. There are pictures, too, quite of the best, and china of
+every period and every style, upon every available bracket and shelf and
+corner where a cup or a plate can be made to stand. Four large windows on
+one side open on to the lawn; two, at right angles to them, lead into
+a large conservatory, where there is, even at this dead season of the
+year, a blaze of exotic blossoms that fill the room with their sweet rich
+odour.
+
+Mrs. Miller sits before a writing bureau of inlaid satin-wood of an
+ancient pattern. She has her pen in her hand, and is docketing her
+visiting list. Beatrice Miller sits on a low four-legged stool by her
+mother's side, with a large Japanese china bowl on her knees filled with
+cards, which she takes out one after the other, reading the names upon
+them aloud to her mother before tossing them into a basket, also of
+Japanese structure, which is on the floor in front of her.
+
+Beatrice is Mrs. Miller's eldest daughter, and she is twenty. Guy is only
+eleven months older, and Edwin is a year younger--they are both at
+Oxford; next comes Geraldine, who is still in the school-room, but who is
+hoping to come out next Easter; then Ernest and Charley, the Eton boys;
+and lastly, Teddy and Ralph, who are at a famous preparatory school,
+whence they hope, in process of time, to be drafted on to Eton, following
+in the footsteps of their elder brothers.
+
+Of all this large family it is Beatrice, the eldest daughter, who causes
+her mother the most anxiety. Beatrice is like her mother--a plain but
+clever-looking girl, with the dark swart features and colouring of the
+Esterworths, who are not a handsome race. Added to which, she inherits
+her father's short and somewhat stumpy figure. Such a personal appearance
+in itself is enough to cause uneasiness to any mother who is anxious for
+her daughter's future; but when these advantages of looks are rendered
+still more peculiar by the fact that her hair had to be shaved off some
+years ago when she had scarlet fever, and that it has never grown again
+properly, but is worn short and loose about her face like a boy's, with
+its black tresses tumbling into her eyes every time she looks down--and
+when, added to this, Mrs. Miller also discovered to her mortification
+that Beatrice possessed a will of her own, and so decided a method of
+expressing her opinions and convictions, that she was not likely to be
+easily moulded to her own views, you will, perhaps, understand the extent
+of the difficulties with which she has to deal.
+
+For, of course, so clever and so managing a woman as Mrs. Miller has not
+allowed her daughter to grow up to the age of twenty without making the
+most careful and judiciously-laid schemes for her ultimate disposal. That
+Beatrice is to marry is a matter of course, and Mrs. Miller has well
+determined that the marriage is to be a good one, and that her daughter
+is to strengthen her father's position in Meadowshire by a union with one
+or other of its leading families. Now, when Mrs. Miller came to pass the
+marriageable men of Meadowshire under review, there was no such eligible
+bachelor amongst them all as Sir John Kynaston, of Kynaston Hall.
+
+It was on him, therefore, that her hopes with regard to Beatrice were
+fixed. Fortune hitherto had seemed to smile favourably upon her. Beatrice
+had had one season in town, during which she had met Sir John frequently,
+and he had, contrary to his usual custom, asked her to dance several
+times when he had met her at balls. Mrs. Miller said to herself that Sir
+John, not being a very young man, did not set much store upon mere
+personal beauty; that he probably valued mental qualities in a woman more
+highly than the transient glitter of beauty; and that Beatrice's good
+sense and sharp, shrewd conversation had evidently made a favourable
+impression upon him.
+
+She never was more mistaken in her life. True, Sir John did like Miss
+Miller, he found her unconventional and amusing; but his only object in
+distinguishing her by his attentions had been to pay a necessary
+compliment to the new M.P.'s daughter, a duty which he would have
+fulfilled equally had she been stupid as well as plain: moreover, as we
+have seen, few men were so intensely sensitive to beauty in a woman as
+was Sir John Kynaston. Mrs. Miller, however, was full of hopes concerning
+him. To do her justice, she was not exactly vulgarly ambitious for her
+daughter; she liked Sir John personally, and had a high respect for his
+character, and she considered that Beatrice's high spirit and self-willed
+disposition would be most desirably moderated and kept in check by a
+husband so much older than herself. Lady Kynaston, moreover, was one of
+her best and dearest friends, and was her beau-ideal of all that a clever
+and refined lady should be. The match, in every respect, would have been
+a very acceptable one to her. Whether or no Miss Beatrice shared her
+mother's views on her behalf remains to be seen.
+
+The mother and daughter are settling together the preliminaries of a
+week's festivities which Mrs. Miller has decided shall be held at
+Shadonake this winter. The house is to be filled, and there are to be a
+series of dinner parties, culminating in a ball.
+
+"The Bayleys, the Westons, the Foresters, and two daughters, I suppose,"
+reads Mrs. Miller, aloud, from the list in her hand, "Any more for the
+second dinner-party, Beatrice?"
+
+"Are you not going to ask the Daintrees, of Sutton, mother?"
+
+"Oh, dear me, another parson, Beatrice! I really don't think we can; I
+have got three already. They shall have a card for the ball."
+
+"You will ask that handsome girl who lives with them, won't you?"
+
+"Not the slightest occasion for doing so," replied her mother, shortly.
+Beatrice lifted her eyebrows.
+
+"Why, she is the best-looking woman in all Meadowshire; we cannot leave
+her out."
+
+"I know nothing about her, not even her name; she is some kind of poor
+relation, I believe--acts as the children's governess. We have too many
+women as it is. No, I certainly shall not ask her. Go on to the next,
+Beatrice."
+
+"But, mother, she is so very handsome! Surely you might include her."
+
+"Dear me, Beatrice, what a stupid girl you are! What is the good of
+asking handsome girls to cut you out in your own house? I should have
+thought you would have had the sense to see that for yourself," said Mrs.
+Miller, impatiently.
+
+"I think you are horribly unjust, mamma," says Miss Beatrice,
+energetically; "and it is downright unkind to leave her out because
+she is handsome--as if I cared."
+
+"How can I ask her if I do not know her name?" said her mother,
+irritably, with just that amount of dread of her daughter's rising temper
+to make her anxious to conciliate her. "If you like to find out who she
+is and all about her----"
+
+"Yes, I will find out," said Beatrice, quietly; "give me the note, I will
+keep it back for the present."
+
+"Now, for goodness sake, go on, child, and don't waste any more time. Who
+are coming from town to stay in the house?"
+
+"Well, there will be Lady Kynaston, I suppose."
+
+"Yes. She won't come till the end of the week. I have heard from her; she
+will try and get down in time for the ball."
+
+"Then there will be the Macpherson girls and Helen Romer. And, as a
+matter of course, Captain Kynaston must be asked?"
+
+"Yes. What a fool that woman is to advertise her feelings so openly that
+one is obliged to ask her attendant swain to follow her wherever she
+goes!"
+
+"On the contrary, I think her remarkably clever; she gets what she wants,
+and the cleverest of us can do no more. It is a well-known fact to all
+Helen's acquaintances that not to ask Captain Kynaston to meet her would
+be deliberately to insult her--she expects it as her right."
+
+"All the same, it is in very bad taste and excessively underbred of her.
+However, I should ask Captain Kynaston in any case, for his mother's
+sake, and because I like him. He is a good shot, too, and the coverts
+must be shot that week. Who next?"
+
+"Mr. Herbert Pryme."
+
+"Goodness me! Beatrice, what makes you think of _him_? We don't know
+anything about him--where he comes from or who are his belongings--he is
+only a nobody!"
+
+"He is a barrister, mamma!"
+
+"Yes, of course, I know that--but, then, there are barristers of all
+sorts. I am sure I do not know what made you fix upon him; you only met
+him two or three times in town."
+
+"I liked him," said Beatrice, carelessly; "he is a gentleman, and would
+be a pleasant man to have in the house."
+
+Her mother looked at her sharply. She was playing with the gold locket
+round her neck, twisting it backwards and forwards along its chain, her
+eyes fixed upon the heap of cards on her lap. There was not the faintest
+vestige of a blush upon her face.
+
+"However," she continued, "if you don't care about having him, strike his
+name out. Only it is a pity, because Sophy Macpherson is rather fond of
+him, I fancy."
+
+This was a lie; it was Miss Beatrice herself who was fond of him, but not
+even her mother, keen and quick-scented as she was, could have guessed it
+from her impassive face. Mrs. Miller was taken in completely.
+
+"Oh," she said, "if Sophy Macpherson likes him, that alters the case. Oh,
+yes, I will ask him by all means--as you say, he is a gentleman and
+pleasant."
+
+"Look, mamma!" exclaimed Beatrice, suddenly; "there is uncle Tom riding
+up the drive."
+
+Now, Tom Esterworth was a very important personage; he was the present
+head of the Esterworth family, and, as such, the representative of its
+ancient honours and traditions. He was a bachelor, and reigned in
+solitary grandeur at Lutterton Castle, and kept the hounds as his
+fathers had done before him.
+
+Uncle Tom was thought very much of at Shadonake, and his visits always
+caused a certain amount of agitation in his sister's mind. To her dying
+day she would be conscious that in Tom's eyes she had been guilty of a
+_mesalliance_. She never could get that idea out of her head; it made her
+nervous and ill at ease in his presence. She hustled all her notes and
+cards hurriedly together into her bureau.
+
+"Uncle Tom! Dear me, what can he have come to-day for! I thought the
+hounds were out. Ring the bell, Beatrice; he will like some tea. Where
+is your father?"
+
+"Papa is out superintending the building of the new pigsties," said
+Beatrice as she rang the bell. "I think uncle Tom has been hunting; he is
+in boots and breeches I see."
+
+"Dear me, I hope your father won't come in with his muddy feet and his
+hands covered with earth," said Mrs. Miller, nervously.
+
+Uncle Tom came in, a tall, dark-faced, strong-limbed man of fifty--an
+ugly man, if you will, but a gentleman, and an Esterworth, every inch of
+him. He kissed his sister, and patted his niece on the cheek.
+
+"Why weren't you out to-day, Pussy?"
+
+"You met so far off, uncle. I had no one to ride with to the meet. The
+boys will be back next week. Have you had a good run?"
+
+"No, we've done nothing but potter about all the morning; there isn't a
+scrap of scent."
+
+"Uncle Tom, will you give us a meet here when we have our house-warming?"
+
+"Humph! you haven't got any foxes at Shadonake," answered her uncle. He
+had drawn his chair to the fire, and was warming his hands over the
+blazing logs. Beatrice was rather a favourite with him. "I will see about
+it, Pussy," he added, kindly, seeing that she looked disappointed. Mrs.
+Miller was pouring him out a cup of tea.
+
+"Well, I've got a piece of news for you women!" says Mr. Esterworth,
+stretching out his hand for his tea. "John Kynaston's going to be
+married!"
+
+Mrs. Miller never knew how it was that the old Worcester tea-cup in her
+hand did not at this juncture fall flat on the ground into a thousand
+atoms at her brother's feet. It is certain that only a very strong
+exercise of self-control and presence of mind saved it from destruction.
+
+"Engaged to be married!" she said, with a gasp.
+
+"That is news indeed," cried Beatrice, heartily, "I am delighted."
+
+"Don't be so foolish, Beatrice," said her mother, quite sharply. "How on
+earth can you be delighted when you don't even know who it is? Who is it,
+Tom?"
+
+"Ah, that is the whole pith of the matter," said Mr. Esterworth, who was
+not above the weakness of liking to be the bearer of a piece of gossip.
+"I'll give you three guesses, and I'll bet you won't hit it."
+
+"One of the Courtenay girls?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Anna Vivian?"
+
+"I know," says Beatrice, nodding her head sagely; "it is that girl who
+lives with the Daintrees."
+
+"Beatrice, how silly you are!" cries her mother.
+
+Tom Esterworth turns round in his chair, and looks at his niece.
+
+"By Jove, you've hit it!" he exclaims. "What a clever pussy you are to be
+sure."
+
+And then the soul of the member's wife became filled with consternation
+and disgust.
+
+"Well, I call it downright sly of John Kynaston!" she exclaims, angrily;
+"picking out a nobody like that behind all our backs, and keeping it so
+quiet, too; he ought to be ashamed of himself for such an unsuitable
+selection!"
+
+Beatrice laughed. "You know, uncle Tom, mamma wanted him to marry me."
+
+"Beatrice, you should not say such things," said her mother, colouring.
+
+"Whew!" whistled Mr. Esterworth. "So that was the little game, Caroline,
+was it? John Kynaston has better taste. He wouldn't have looked at an
+ugly little girl like our pussy here, would he, Puss? Miss Nevill is one
+of the finest women I ever saw in my life. She was at the meet to-day on
+one of his horses; and, by Jove! she made all the other women look plain
+by the side of her! Kynaston is a very lucky fellow."
+
+"I think, mamma, there can be no doubt about sending Miss Nevill an
+invitation to our ball now," said Beatrice, laughingly.
+
+"She will have to be asked to stay in the house," said Mrs. Miller, with
+something akin to a groan. "I cannot leave her out, as Lady Kynaston is
+coming. Oh, dear! oh, dear! what fools men are, to be sure!"
+
+But Beatrice was wicked enough to laugh again over her mother's
+discomfiture.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ENGAGED.
+
+ I wonder did you ever count
+ The value of one human fate,
+ Or sum the infinite amount
+ Of one heart's treasures, and the weight
+ Of one heart's venture.
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+It was quite true what Mr. Thomas Esterworth had said, that Vera was
+engaged to Sir John Kynaston.
+
+It had all come about so rapidly, and withal so quietly, that, when Vera
+came to think of it, it rather took her breath away. She had expected it,
+of course; indeed, she had even planned and tried for it; but, when it
+had actually come to her, she felt herself to be bewildered by the
+suddenness of it.
+
+In the end the climax of the love-making had been prosaic enough. Sir
+John had not felt himself equal to the task of a personal interview with
+the lady of his affections, with the accompanying risks of a personal
+rejection, which, in his modesty and humility with reference to her, he
+had believed to be quite on the cards. So he had written to her. The note
+had been taken up to the vicarage by the footman, and had been brought
+into the dining-room by the vicarial parlour-maid, just as the three
+ladies were finishing breakfast, and after the vicar himself had left the
+room.
+
+"A note from Kynaston, please 'm," says rosy-cheeked Hannah, holding it
+forth before her, upon a small japanned tray, as an object of general
+family interest and excitement.
+
+"For your master, Hannah?" says old Mrs. Daintree. "Are they waiting for
+an answer? You will find him in his study."
+
+"No, ma'am, it's for Miss Vera."
+
+"Dear me!" with a suspicious glance across the table; "how very odd!"
+
+Vera takes up the note and opens it.
+
+"May I have the crest, auntie?" clamours Tommy before she had read three
+words of it.
+
+"Is it about the horse he has offered you to ride?" asks his mother.
+
+But Vera answers nothing; she gets up quietly, and leaves the room
+without a word.
+
+"Extraordinary!" gasps Mrs. Daintree; "Vera's manners are certainly most
+abrupt and unlady-like at times, Marion. I think you ought to point it
+out to her."
+
+Marion murmurs some unintelligible excuse and follows her sister--leaving
+the unfortunate Tommy a prey to his grandmother's tender mercies. So
+brilliant an opportunity is not, of course, to be thrown away. Tommy's
+fingers, having incontinently strayed in the direction of the
+sugar-basin, are summarily slapped for their indiscretion, and an
+admonition is straightway delivered to him in forcible language
+concerning the pains and penalties which threaten the ulterior destiny of
+naughty little boys in general and of such of them in particular who are
+specially addicted to the abstraction of lumps of sugar from the
+breakfast-table.
+
+Meanwhile, Marion has found her sister in the adjoining room standing up
+alone upon the hearthrug with Sir John Kynaston's letter in her hands.
+She is not reading it now, she is looking steadfastly into the fire. It
+has fulfilled--nay, more than fulfilled--her wishes. The triumph of her
+success is pleasant to her, and has brought a little more than their
+usual glow into her cheeks, and yet--Heaven knows what vague and
+intangible dreams and fancies have not somehow sunk down chill and cold
+within her during the last five minutes.
+
+Gratified ambition--flattered vanity--the joy of success--all this she
+feels to the full; but nothing more! There is not one single other
+sensation within her. Her pulses have not quickened, ever so little, as
+she read her lover's letter; her heart has not throbbed, even once, with
+a sweeter, purer delight--such as she has read and heard that other women
+have felt.
+
+"I suppose I have no heart," said Vera to herself; "it must be that I am
+cold by nature. I am happy; but--but--I wonder what it feels like--this
+_love_--that there is so much talked and written about?"
+
+And then Marion came in breathlessly.
+
+"Oh, Vera, what is it?"
+
+Vera turns round to her, smiling serenely, and places the note in her
+hands.
+
+This is what Sir John Kynaston has written:--
+
+ "Dear Miss Nevill,--I do not think what I am about to say will be
+ altogether unexpected by you. You must have surely guessed how sincere
+ an affection I have learnt to feel for you. I know that I am unworthy
+ of you, and I am conscious of how vast a disparity there is between
+ my age and your own youth and beauty. But if my great love and devotion
+ can in any way bridge over the gap that lies between us, believe me,
+ that if you will consent to be my wife, my whole life shall be devoted
+ to making you happy. If you can give me an answer to-day, I shall be
+ very grateful, as suspense is hard to bear. But pray do not decide
+ against me in haste, and without giving me every chance in your power.
+
+ "Yours devotedly,
+ "John Kynaston."
+
+"Oh! Vera, my darling sister, I am so glad!" cries Marion, in tearful
+delight, throwing her arms up round the neck of the young sister, who is
+so much taller than she is; "I had guessed it, dearest; I saw he was in
+love with you; and oh, Vera, I shall have you always near me!"
+
+"Yes, that will be nice," assents Vera, quietly, and a trifle absently,
+stroking her sister's cheek, with her eyes still fixed on the fire; "and
+of course," rousing herself with an effort, "of course I am a very lucky
+woman."
+
+And then Mr. Daintree came in, and his wife rushed to him rapturously to
+impart the joyful news. There was a little pleasant confusion of broken
+words and explanations between the three, and then Marion whisked away,
+brimming over with triumphant delight to wave the flags of victory
+exultingly in her mother-in-law's face.
+
+Eustace Daintree and Vera were alone. He took her hands within his, and
+looked steadfastly in her face.
+
+"Vera, are you sure of yourself, my dear, in this matter?"
+
+Her eyes met his for a moment, and then fell before his earnest gaze. She
+coloured a little.
+
+"I am quite sure that I mean to accept Sir John's proposal," she said,
+with a little uneasy laugh.
+
+"Child, do you love him?"
+
+Her eyes met his again; there was a vague trouble in them. The man had a
+power over her, the power of sheer goodness of soul. She could never be
+untrue to herself with Eustace Daintree; she was always at her very best
+with him, humble and gentle; and she could no more have told him a lie,
+or put him off with vague conventionalities, than she could have
+committed a deadly sin.
+
+What is it about some people that, in spite of ourselves, they thus force
+out of us the best part of our nature; that base and unworthy thoughts
+cannot live in us before them,--that they melt out of our hearts as the
+snow before the rays of the sun? Even though the effect may be transient,
+such is the power of their faith, and their truth, and their goodness,
+that it must needs call forth in us something of the same spirit as their
+own.
+
+Such was Eustace Daintree's influence over Vera. It was not because of
+his office, for no one was less susceptible than Vera--a Protestant
+brought up, with but vague ideas of her own faith, in a Catholic land--to
+any of those recognized associations with which a purely English-bred
+girl might have felt the character of the clergyman of the parish where
+she lived to be invested. It was nothing of that sort that made him great
+to her; it was, simply and solely, the goodness of the man that impressed
+her. His guilelessness, his simplicity of mind, his absolute uprightness
+of character, and, with it all, the absence in him of any assumption of
+authority, or of any superiority of character over those about him. His
+very humility made her humble with him, and exalted him into something
+saintly in her eyes.
+
+When Eustace looked at her fixedly, with all his good soul in his earnest
+eyes, and said to her again, "Do you love him, Vera?" Vera could but
+answer him simply and frankly, almost against her will, as it were.
+
+"I don't think I do, Eustace; but then I do not quite know what love is.
+I do not think, however, that it can be what I feel."
+
+"My child, no union can be hallowed without love. Vera, you will not run
+into so great a danger?" he said anxiously.
+
+She looked up at him smiling.
+
+"I like him better than any one else, at all events. Better than Mr.
+Gisburne, for instance. And I think, I do really think, Eustace, it will
+be for my happiness."
+
+The vicar looked grave. "If Sir John Kynaston were a poor man, would you
+marry him?"
+
+And Vera answered bravely, though with a heightened colour--
+
+"No; but it is not only for the money, Eustace; indeed it is not.
+But--but--I should be miserable without it; and I must do something with
+my life."
+
+He drew her near to him, and kissed her forehead. He understood her. With
+that rare gift of sympathy--the highest, the most God-like of all human
+attributes--he felt at once what she meant. It was wonderful that this
+man, who was so unworldly, so unselfish, so pure of the stains of earth
+himself, should have seen at once her position from her own point of
+view; that was neither a very exalted one, nor was it very free from the
+dross of worldliness. But it was so. All at once he seemed to know by a
+subtle instinct what were the weaknesses, and the temptations, and the
+aims of this girl, who, with all her faults, was so dear to him. He
+understood her better, perhaps, than she understood herself. Her soul was
+untouched by passion; the story of her life was unwritten; there was no
+danger for her yet; and perchance it might be that the storms of life
+would pass her by unscathed, and that she might remain sheltered for ever
+in the safe haven which had opened so unexpectedly to receive her.
+
+"There is a peril in the course you have chosen," he said, gravely; "but
+your soul is pure, and you are safe. And I know, Vera, that you will
+always do your duty."
+
+And the tears were in her eyes as he left her.
+
+When he had gone she sat down to write her answer to Sir John Kynaston.
+She dipped her pen into the ink, and sat with it in her hand, thinking.
+Her brother-in-law's words had aroused a fresh train of thought within
+her. There seemed to be an amount of solemnity in what she was about to
+do that she had not considered before. It was true that she did not love
+him; but then, as she had told Eustace just now, she loved no one else;
+she did not rightly understand what love meant, indeed. And is a woman to
+wait on in patience for years until love comes to her? Would it ever
+come? Probably not, thought Vera; not to her, who thought herself to be
+cold, and not easily moved. There must be surely many women to whom this
+wonderful thing of love never comes. In all her experience of life there
+was nothing to contradict this. It was not as if she had been a girl who
+had never left her native village, never tasted of the pleasures of life,
+never known the sweet incense of flattery and devotion. Vera had known it
+all. Many men had courted her; one or two had loved her dearly, but she
+had not loved them. Amongst them all, indeed, there had been never one
+whom she had liked with such a sincere affection as she now felt for this
+man, who seemed to love her so much, and who wrote to her so diffidently,
+and yet so devotedly.
+
+"I love him as well as I am ever likely to love any one," said Vera, to
+herself. Yet still she leant her chin upon her hand and looked out of the
+window at the gray bare branches of the elm-trees across the damp green
+lawn, and still her letter was unwritten.
+
+"Vera!" cries Marion, coming in hurriedly and breaking in upon her
+reverie, "the footman from Kynaston is waiting all this time to know if
+there is any answer! Shall I send him away? Or have you made up your
+mind?"
+
+"Oh yes, I have made up my mind. My note will be ready directly; he may
+as well take it. It will save the trouble of sending up to the Hall
+later." For Vera remembers that there is not a superfluity of servants
+at the vicarage, and that they all of them have plenty to do.
+
+And thus, a mere trifle--a feather, as it were, on the river of
+life--settled her destiny for her out of hand.
+
+She dipped her pen into the ink once more, and wrote:--
+
+ "Dear Sir John,--You have done me a great honour in asking me to be
+ your wife. I am fully sensible of your affection, and am very grateful
+ for it. I fear you think too highly of me; but I will endeavour to
+ prove myself worthy of your good opinion, and to make you as good a
+ wife as you deserve.
+
+ "Yours,
+ "Vera Nevill."
+
+She was conscious herself of the excessive coldness of her note, but she
+could not help it. She could not, for the life of her, have made it
+warmer. Nothing, indeed, is so difficult as to write down feelings that
+do not exist; it is easier to simulate with our spoken words and our
+looks; but the pen that is urged beyond its natural inclination seems to
+cool into ice in our fingers. But, at all events, she had accepted him.
+
+It was a relief to her when the thing was done, and the note sent off
+beyond the possibility of recall.
+
+After that there had been no longer any leisure for her doubting
+thoughts. There was her sister's delighted excitement, Mrs. Daintree's
+oppressive astonishment, and even Eustace's calmer satisfaction in her
+bright prospects, to occupy and divert her thoughts. Then there came her
+lover himself, tender and grateful, and with so worshipful a respect in
+every word and action that the most sensitive woman could scarcely have
+been ruffled or alarmed by the prospects of so deferential a husband.
+
+In a few days Vera became reconciled to her new position, which was in
+truth a very pleasant one to her. There were the congratulations of
+friends and acquaintances to be responded to; the pleasant flutter of
+adulation that surrounded her once more; the little daily excitement
+of John Kynaston's visits--all this made her happy and perfectly
+satisfied with the wisdom of her decision.
+
+Only one thing vexed her.
+
+"What will your mother say, John?" she had asked the very first day she
+had been engaged to him.
+
+"It will not make much difference to me, dearest, whatever she may say."
+
+Nor in truth would it, for Sir John, as we have seen, had never been a
+devoted son, nor had he ever given his confidence to his mother; he had
+always gone his own way independently of her.
+
+"But it must needs make a difference to me," Vera had insisted. "You have
+written to her, of course."
+
+"Oh, yes; I wrote and told her I was engaged to you."
+
+"And she has not written?"
+
+"Yes, there was a message for you--her love or something."
+
+Sir John evidently did not consider the subject of much importance. But
+Vera was hurt that Lady Kynaston had not written to her.
+
+"I will never enter any family where I am not welcome," she had said to
+her lover, proudly.
+
+And then Sir John had taken fright, for she was so precious to him that
+the fear of losing her was becoming almost as a nightmare to him, and,
+possibly, at the bottom of his heart he knew how feeble was his hold
+over her. He had written off to his mother that day a letter that was
+almost a command, and had told her to write to Vera.
+
+This letter was not likely to prepossess Lady Kynaston, who was a
+masterful little lady herself, in her daughter-in-law's favour; it did
+more harm than good. She had obeyed her son, it is true, because he was
+the head of the family, and because she stood in awe of him; but the
+letter, thus written under compulsion, was not kind--it was not even
+just.
+
+"Horrid girl!" had said Lady Kynaston, angrily, to herself, as she had
+sat down to her writing-table to fulfil her son's mandate. "It is not
+likely that I can be very loving to her--some wretched, second-rate girl,
+evidently--for not even Caroline Miller who, goodness knows, rakes up all
+the odds and ends of society--ever heard of her before!"
+
+It is not to be supposed that a letter undertaken under such auspices
+could be in any way conciliatory or pleasant in its tone. Such as it was,
+Vera put it straight into the fire directly she had read it; no one ever
+saw it but herself.
+
+"I have heard from your mother," she said to Sir John.
+
+"Yes? I am very glad. She wrote everything that was kind, no doubt."
+
+"I dare say she meant to be kind," said Vera; which was not true, because
+she knew perfectly that there had been no kindness intended. But she
+pursued the subject no further.
+
+"I hope you will like Maurice," said Sir John, presently; "he is a
+good-hearted boy, though he has been sadly extravagant, and given me
+a good deal of trouble."
+
+"I shall be glad to know your brother," said Vera, quietly. "Is he coming
+to Kynaston?"
+
+"Yes, eventually; but you will meet him first at Shadonake when you go
+to stay there: they have asked a large party for that week, I hear, and
+Maurice will be there."
+
+Now, by this time Vera knew that the photograph she had once found in the
+old writing-table drawer at Kynaston was that of her lover's brother
+Maurice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+A MEETING ON THE STAIRS.
+
+ Since first I saw your face
+ I resolved to honour and renown you;
+ If now I be disdained,
+ I wish my heart had never known you.
+
+ The Sun whose beams most glorious are
+ Rejecteth no beholder,
+ And your sweet beauty past compare
+ Made my poor eyes the bolder.
+
+Thomas Ford.
+
+
+I have often wondered why, in the ordering of human destinies,
+some special Providence, some guardian spirit who is gifted with
+foreknowledge, is not mercifully told off to each of us so to order the
+trifles of our lives that they may combine to the working together of our
+weal, instead of conspiring, as they too often and too evidently do, for
+our woe.
+
+Look back upon your own life, and upon the lives of those whose story you
+have known the most intimately, and see what straws, what nonentities,
+what absurd trivialities have brought about the most important events of
+existence. Recollect how, and in what manner, those people whom it would
+have been well for you never to have known came across you. How those
+whose influence over you is for good were kept out of your way at the
+very crisis of your life. Think what a different life you would have led;
+I do not mean only happier, but how much better and purer, if some absurd
+trifle had not seemed to play into the hands, as it were, of your
+destiny, and to set you in a path whereof no one could at the time
+foresee the end.
+
+Some one had looked out their train in last month's Bradshaw, unwitting
+of the autumn alterations, and was kept from you till the next day. You
+took the left instead of the right side of the square on your way home,
+or you stood for a minute gossiping at your neighbour's door, and there
+came by some one who ultimately altered and embittered your whole life,
+and who, but for that accidental meeting, you would, probably, never have
+seen again; or some evil adviser was at hand, whilst one whose opinion
+you revered, and whose timely help would have saved you from taking that
+false step you ever after regretted, was kept to the house, by Heaven
+knows what ridiculous trifle--a cold in the head, or finger-ache--and
+did not see you to warn and to keep you back from your own folly until it
+was too late.
+
+People say these things are ordered for us. I do not know; it may be so,
+but sometimes it seems rather as if we were irresponsible puppets, tossed
+and buffeted about, blindly and helplessly, upon life's river, as
+fluttering dead leaves are danced wildly along the swift current of a
+Highland stream. Such a trifle might have saved us! yet there was no
+pitying hand put forth to avert that which, in our human blindness,
+appeared to us to be as unimportant as any other incident of our lives.
+
+Life is an unsolvable problem. Shall we ever, in some other world,
+I wonder, read its riddles aright?
+
+All these moral dissertations have been called forth because Vera Nevill
+went to stay for a week at Shadonake. If she had known--what we none of
+us know--the future, she doubtless would have stayed away. Fate--a
+beneficent fate, indeed--made, I am bound to confess, a valiant effort in
+her behalf. Little Minnie fell ill the day before her departure; and the
+symptoms were such that everybody in the house believed that she was
+sickening for scarlet fever. The doctor, however, having been hastily
+summoned, pronounced the disease to be an infantile complaint of a
+harmless and innocuous nature, which he dignified by the delusively
+poetical name of "Rosalia."
+
+"It is not infectious, Mr. Smee, I hope?" asked Marion, anxiously.
+"Nothing to prevent my sister going to stay at the Millers' to morrow?"
+
+"Not in the least infectious, Mrs. Daintree, and anybody in the house can
+go wherever they like, except the child herself, who must be kept in a
+warm room for two days, when she will probably be quite well again."
+
+"I am glad, dear, there is nothing to put a stop to your visit; it would
+have been such a pity," said Marion, in her blindness, to her sister
+afterwards.
+
+So the fates had a game of pitch and toss with Vera's future, and settled
+it amongst them to their own satisfaction, probably, but not, it will be
+seen, for Vera's own good or ultimate happiness.
+
+On the afternoon of the 3rd day of January, therefore, Eustace
+Daintree drove his sister-in-law over to Shadonake in the open
+basket pony-carriage, and deposited her and her box safely at the
+stone-colonnaded door of that most imposing mansion, which she entered
+exactly ten minutes before the dressing-bell rang, and was conducted
+almost immediately upstairs to her own room.
+
+Some twenty minutes later there are still two ladies sitting on in the
+small tea-room, where it is the fashion at Shadonake to linger between
+the hours of five and seven, who alone have not yet moved to obey the
+mandate of the dressing-bell.
+
+"What _is_ the good of waiting?" says Beatrice, impatiently; "the train
+is often late, and, besides, he may not come till the nine o'clock
+train."
+
+"That is just what I want to wait for," answers Helen Romer. "I want
+just to hear if the carriage has come back, and then I shall know for
+certain."
+
+"Well, you know how frightfully punctual papa is, and how angry it makes
+him if anybody is late."
+
+"Just two minutes more, Beatrice; I can dress very quickly when once
+I set to work," pleads Helen.
+
+Beatrice sits down again on the arm of the sofa, and resigns herself to
+her fate; but she looks rather annoyed and vexed about it.
+
+Mrs. Romer paces the room feverishly and impatiently.
+
+"What did you think of Miss Nevill?" asks Beatrice.
+
+"I could hardly see her in her hat and that thick veil; but she looked as
+if she were handsome."
+
+"She is _beautiful_!" says Beatrice, emphatically, "and uncle Tom
+says----"
+
+"Hush!" interrupts Helen, hurriedly. "Is not that the sound of
+wheels?--Yes, it is the carriage."
+
+She flies to the door.
+
+"Take care, Helen," says Beatrice, anxiously; "don't open the door
+wide, don't let the servants think we have been waiting, it looks so
+bad--so--so unlady-like."
+
+But Helen Romer does not even hear her; she is listening intently to the
+approaching sounds, with the half-opened door in her hand.
+
+The tea-room door opens into a large inner hall, out of which leads the
+principal staircase; the outer or entrance-hall is beyond; and presently
+the stopping of the carriage, the opening and shutting of doors from the
+servants' departments, and all the usual bustle of an arrival are heard.
+
+The two girls stand close together listening, Beatrice hidden in the
+shadow of the room.
+
+"There are _two_ voices!" cries Helen, in a disappointed tone; "he is not
+alone!"
+
+"I suppose it is Mr. Pryme--mamma said he might come by this train,"
+answers Beatrice, so quietly that no one could ever have guessed how her
+heart was beating.
+
+"Helen, _do_ let us run upstairs; I really cannot stay. Let _me_ go, at
+all events!" she adds, with a sudden agony of entreaty as the guests were
+heard advancing towards the door of the inner hall. And as Helen made not
+the slightest sign of moving, Beatrice slipped past her and ran lightly
+and swiftly across the hall upstairs, and disappeared along the landing
+above just as Captain Kynaston and Mr. Herbert Pryme appeared upon the
+scene below.
+
+No such scruples of modesty troubled Mrs. Romer. As the young men entered
+the inner hall preceded by the butler, who was taking them up to their
+rooms, and followed by two footmen who were bearing their portmanteaus,
+Helen stepped boldly forward out of the shelter of the tea-room, and held
+out her hand to Captain Kynaston.
+
+"How do you do? How late your train is."
+
+Maurice looked distinctly annoyed, but of course he shook hands with her.
+
+"How are you, Mrs. Romer? I did not expect you to be here till to-morrow.
+Yes, we are late," consulting his watch; "only twenty minutes to dress
+in--I must look sharp."
+
+Meanwhile the stranger, Mr. Pryme, was following the butler upstairs.
+
+Helen lowered her voice.
+
+"I _must_ speak to you a minute, Maurice; it is six weeks since we have
+met, and to meet in public would be too trying. Please dress as quickly
+as ever you can; I know you can dress quickly if you choose; and wait for
+me here at the bottom of the stairs--we might get just three minutes
+together before dinner."
+
+There were the footmen and the portmanteaus within six yards of them, and
+Mr. Pryme and the butler still within earshot. What was Maurice to do? He
+could not really listen to a whole succession of prayers, and entreaties,
+and piteous appeals. There was neither the time, nor was it the place,
+for either discussion or remonstrance. All he could do was to nod a hasty
+assent to her request.
+
+"Then I must make haste," he said, and ran quickly upstairs in the wake
+of the other guest.
+
+The staircase at Shadonake was very wide and very handsome, and
+thoroughly in keeping with the spacious character of the house. It
+consisted of one wide flight of shallow steps, with a richly-carved
+balustrade on either side of it, leading straight down from a large
+square landing above. Both landing and steps were carpeted with thick
+velvet-pile carpet, so that no jarring footfall was ever heard upon them.
+The hall into which the staircase led was paved in coloured mosaic tiles,
+and was half covered over with rich Persian rugs. A great many doors,
+nearly all the sitting-rooms of the house, in fact, opened into it,
+and the blank spaces of the wall were filled in with banks of large
+handsome plants, palms and giant ferns, and azaleas in full bloom, which
+were daily rearranged by the gardeners in every available corner.
+
+At the foot of the staircase, and with his back to it, leaning against
+the balustrade, stood Captain Kynaston, exactly four minutes before the
+dinner was announced.
+
+Most people were in the habit of calling Maurice a good-looking man, but
+if anybody had seen him now for the first time it is doubtful whether
+they would have endorsed that favourable opinion upon his personal
+appearance. A thoroughly ill-tempered expression of face seldom enhances
+any one's good looks, and if ever a man looked in a bad temper, Maurice
+Kynaston did so at the present moment.
+
+He stood with his hands in his trousers pockets, and his eyes fixed upon
+his own boots, and he looked as savage as it was well possible for a man
+to look.
+
+He was waiting here for Helen, because he had told her that he would do
+so, and when Captain Kynaston promised anything to a lady he always kept
+his word.
+
+But to say that he hated being there is but a mild term for the rage and
+disgust he experienced.
+
+To be waylaid and attacked thus, directly he had set foot in the house,
+with a stranger and three servants looking on so as to render him
+absolutely helpless; to be uncomfortably hurried over his toilet, and
+inveigled into a sort of rendezvous at the foot of a public staircase,
+where a number of people might at any minute enter from any one of the
+six or eight surrounding doors, was enough of itself to try his temper;
+but when he came to consider how Helen, in thus appropriating him and
+making him obey her caprices, was virtually breaking her side of the
+treaty between them; that she was exacting from him the full amount of
+servitude and devotion which an open engagement would demand, and yet she
+had agreed to deny any such engagement between them openly--it was, he
+felt, more than he could continue to bear with meekness.
+
+Meekness, indeed, was in no way Maurice Kynaston's distinguishing
+characteristic. He was masterful and imperious by nature; to be the slave
+of any woman was neither pleasant nor profitable to him. Honour, indeed,
+had bound him to Helen, and had he loved her she might have led him. Her
+position gave her a certain hold over him, and she knew how to appeal to
+his heart; but he loved her not, and to control his will and his spirit
+was beyond her power.
+
+Maurice said to himself that he would put a stop to this system of
+persecution once and for all--that this interview, which she herself had
+contrived, should be made the opportunity of a few forcible words, that
+should frighten her into submission.
+
+So he stood fretting, and fuming, and raging, waiting for her at the foot
+of the stairs.
+
+There was a soft rustle, as of a woman's dress, behind him. He turned
+sharply round.
+
+Halfway down the stairs came a woman whom he had never seen before.
+A black velvet dress, made high in the throat, with a wide collar of
+heavy lace upon her shoulders, hung clingingly about the outlines of her
+tall and perfect figure; her hands, with some lace ruffles falling about
+her wrists, were simply crossed before her. The light of a distant
+hanging-lamp shone down upon her, just catching one diamond star that
+glittered among the thick coils of her hair--she wore no other ornament.
+She came down the stairs slowly, almost lingeringly, with a certain
+grace in her movements, and without a shadow of embarrassment or
+self-consciousness.
+
+Maurice drew aside to let her pass him--looking at her--for how could he
+choose but look? But when she reached the bottom of the steps, she turned
+her face towards him.
+
+"You are Maurice--are you not?" she said, and put forth both her hands
+towards him.
+
+An utter bewilderment as to who she was made him speechless; his mind had
+been full of Helen and his own troubles; everything else had gone out of
+his head. She coloured a little, still holding out her hands to him.
+
+"I am Vera," she said, simply, and there was a little deprecating appeal
+in the words as though she would have added, "Be my friend."
+
+He took the hands--soft slender hands that trembled a very little in his
+grasp--within his own, and some nameless charm in their gentle touch
+brought a sudden flush into his face, but no appropriate words concerning
+his pleasure at meeting her, or his gratification at their future
+relations, fell from Maurice Kynaston's lips. He only held her thus by
+her hands, and looked at her--looked at her as if he could never look at
+her enough--from her head to her feet, and from her feet up again to her
+head, till a sudden wave of colour flooded her face at the earnestness
+of his scrutiny.
+
+"Vera--_Vera Nevill_!" was all he said; and then below his breath, as
+though his absolute amazement were utterly irrepressible: "_By Jove!_"
+And Vera laughed softly at the thoroughly British character of the
+exclamation.
+
+"How like an Englishman!" she said. "An Italian would have paid me fifty
+pretty compliments in half the time you have taken just to stare at me!"
+
+"What a charming _tableau vivant_!" exclaims a voice above them as Mrs.
+Romer comes down the staircase. "You really look like a scene in a play!
+Pray don't let me disturb you."
+
+"I am making friends with my sister-in-law that is to be, Mrs. Romer,"
+says Maurice, who has dropped Vera's hands with a guilty suddenness, and
+now endeavours to look completely at his ease--an effort in which he
+signally fails.
+
+"Were you? Dear me! I thought you and Miss Nevill were practising the
+pose of the 'Huguenots'!"
+
+Now the whole armoury of feminine weapons--impertinence, spite, and bad
+manners, born of jealousy--is utterly beneath the contempt of such a
+woman as Vera; but she is no untried, inexperienced country girl such as
+Mrs. Romer imagines her to be disconcerted or stricken dumb by such an
+attack. She knew instantly that she had been attacked, and in what
+manner, and she was perfectly capable of taking care of herself.
+
+"I have never seen that picture, the 'Huguenots,' Mrs. Romer," she
+said, quietly; "do you think there is a photograph or a print of it
+at Kynaston, Maurice? If so, you or John must show it to me."
+
+And how Mrs. Romer hated her then and there, from that very minute until
+her life's end, it would not be easy to set forth!
+
+The utter _insouciance_, the lady-like ignoring of Helen's impertinence,
+the quiet assumption of what she knew her own position in the Kynaston
+family to be, down to the sisterly "Maurice," whereby she addressed the
+man whom in public, at least, Mrs. Romer was forced to call by a more
+formal name--all proved to that astute little woman that Vera Nevill was
+no ordinary antagonist, no village maiden to be snubbed or patronised at
+her pleasure, but a woman of the world, who understood how to fight her
+own battles, and was likely, as she was forced to own to herself, to
+"give back as good as she got."
+
+Not another single word was spoken between them, for at that very minute
+a door was thrown open, and the whole of the party in the house came
+trooping forth in pairs from the drawing-room in a long procession on
+their way to the dining-room.
+
+First came Mr. Miller with old Mrs. Macpherson on his arm. Then Mr. Pryme
+and Miss Sophy Macpherson; her sister behind with Guy Miller; Beatrice,
+looking melancholy, with the curate in charge; and her mother last with
+Sir John, who had come over from Kynaston to dinner. Edwin Miller, the
+second son, by himself brought up the rear.
+
+There was some laughter at the expense of the three defaulters, who, of
+course, were supposed to have only just hurried downstairs.
+
+"Aha! just saved your soup, ladies!" cried Mr. Miller, laughingly. "Fall
+in, fall in, as best you can!"
+
+Mrs. Miller came to the rescue, and, by a rapid stroke of generalship,
+marshalled them into their places.
+
+Miss Nevill, of course, was a stranger; Helen had been on intimate terms
+with them all for years; Vera, besides, was standing close to Maurice.
+
+"Please take in Miss Nevill, Captain Kynaston; and Edwin, my dear, give
+your arm to Mrs. Romer."
+
+Edwin, who was a pleasant-looking boy, with plenty to say for himself,
+hurried forward with alacrity; and Helen had to accept her fate with the
+best grace she could.
+
+"Well, how did you get on with Vera, and how did you like her?" asked Sir
+John, coming round to his brother's side of the table when the ladies had
+left the room. He had noted with pleasure that Vera and Maurice had
+talked incessantly throughout the dinner.
+
+"My dear fellow!" cried Maurice, heartily, "she is the handsomest woman I
+ever met in my life! I give you my word that, when she introduced herself
+to me coming downstairs, I was so surprised, she was so utterly different
+to what I and the mother have been imagining, that upon my life I
+couldn't speak a word--I could do nothing but stare at her!"
+
+"You like her, then?" said his brother, smiling, well pleased at his
+openly expressed admiration.
+
+"I think you are a very lucky fellow, old man! Like her! of course I do;
+she's a downright good sort!"
+
+And if Sir John was slightly shocked at the irreverence of alluding to so
+perfect and pure a woman as his adored Vera by so familiar a phrase as "a
+good sort," he was, at all events, too pleased by Maurice's genuine
+approval of her to find any fault with his method of expressing it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AN IDLE MORNING.
+
+ We loved, sir; used to meet;
+ How sad, and bad, and mad it was;
+ But then, how it was sweet!
+
+ Browning.
+
+
+Leaning against a window-frame at the end of a long corridor on the
+second floor, and idly looking out over the view of the wide lawns and
+empty flower-beds which it commands, stands Mr. Herbert Pryme, on the
+second morning after his arrival at Shadonake House.
+
+It is after breakfast, and most of the gentlemen of the house have
+dispersed; that is to say, Mr. Miller has gone off to survey his new
+pigsties, and his sons and a Mr. Nethercliff, who arrived last night,
+have ridden to a meet some fifteen miles distant, which the ladies had
+voted to be too far off to attend.
+
+Mr. Pryme, however, is evidently not a keen sports-man; he has declined
+the offer of a mount which Guy Miller has hospitably pressed upon him,
+and he has also declined to avail himself of his host's offer of the
+services of the gamekeeper. Curiously enough, another guest at Shadonake,
+whose zeal for hunting has never yet been impeached, has followed his
+example.
+
+"What on earth do they meet at Fretly for!" Maurice Kynaston had
+exclaimed last night to young Guy, as the morrow's plans had been
+discussed in the smoking-room; "it's the worst country I ever was in, all
+plough and woodlands, and never a fox to be found. Your uncle ought to
+know better than to go there. I certainly shan't take the trouble to get
+up early to go to that place."
+
+"Not go?" repeated Guy, aghast; "you don't mean to say you won't go,
+Kynaston?"
+
+"That's just what I do mean, though."
+
+"What the deuce will you do with yourself all day?"
+
+"Lie in bed," answered Maurice, between the puffs of his pipe; "we've
+had a precious hard day's shooting to-day, and I mean to take it easy
+to-morrow."
+
+And Captain Kynaston was as good as his word. He did not appear in the
+breakfast-room the next morning until the men who were bound for Fretly
+had all ridden off and were well out of sight of the house. What he had
+stayed for he would have been somewhat puzzled to explain. He was not the
+kind of man who, as a rule, cared to dawdle about all day with women when
+there was any kind of sport to be had from hunting down to ratting; more
+especially was he disinclined for any such dawdling when Helen Romer was
+amongst the number of the ladies so left to be danced attendance upon.
+And yet he distinctly told himself that he meant to be devoted for this
+one day to the fair sex. All yesterday he had been crossed and put out;
+the men had been out shooting from breakfast till dinner; some of the
+ladies had joined them with the Irish-stew at lunch time; Helen had been
+amongst them, but not Miss Nevill. Maurice, in spite of the pheasants
+having been plentiful and the sport satisfactory, had been in a decidedly
+bad temper all the afternoon in consequence. In the evening the party at
+dinner had been enlarged by an influx of country neighbours; Vera had
+been hopelessly divided from him and absorbed by other people the whole
+evening; he had not exchanged a single word with her all day.
+
+Captain Kynaston was seized with an insatiable desire to improve his
+acquaintance with his sister-in-law to be. It was his duty, he told
+himself, to make friends with her; his brother would be hurt, he argued,
+and his mother would be annoyed if he neglected to pay a proper attention
+to the future Lady Kynaston. There could be no doubt that it was his
+duty; that it was also his pleasure did not strike him so forcibly as it
+should have done, considering the fact that a man is only very keen to
+create duties for himself when they are proportionately mingled with that
+which is pleasant and agreeable. The exigencies of his position, with
+regard to his elder brother's bride having been forcibly borne in upon
+him--combined possibly with the certain knowledge that the elder brother
+himself would be hunting all day--compelled him to stop at home and
+devote himself to Vera. Mr. Herbert Pryme, however, had no such excuse,
+real or imaginary, and yet he stands idly by the corridor window, idly,
+yet perfectly patiently--relieving the tedium of his position by the
+unexciting entertainment of softly whistling the popular airs from the
+"Cloches de Corneville" below his breath.
+
+Herbert Pryme is a good-looking young fellow of about six-and-twenty; he
+looks his profession all over, and is a good type of the average young
+barrister of the present day. He has fair hair, and small, close-cropped
+whiskers; his face is retrieved from boyishness by strongly-marked
+and rather heavy features; he studiously affects a solemn and imposing
+gravity of face and manner, and a severe and elderly style of dress,
+which he hopes may produce a favourable effect upon the non-legal minds
+of his somewhat imaginary clients.
+
+It is doubtful, however, whether Mr. Pryme has not found a shorter and
+pleasanter road to fortune than that slow and toilsome route along which
+the legal muse leads her patient votaries.
+
+Ten, fifteen, twenty minutes elapse, and still Mr. Pryme looks patiently
+out of the window, and still he whistles the Song of the Bells. The only
+sign of weariness he gives is to take out his watch, which, by the way,
+is suspended by a broad black ribbon, and lives, not in his waistcoat
+pocket, but in a "fob," and is further decorated by a very large and
+old-fashioned seal. Having consulted a time piece which for size and
+thickness might have belonged to his great-grandfather, he returns it to
+his fob, and resumes his whistling.
+
+Presently a door at the further end of the corridor softly opens and
+shuts, and Mr. Pryme looks up quickly.
+
+Beatrice Miller, looking about her a little guiltily, comes swiftly
+towards him along the passage.
+
+"Mamma kept me such ages!" she says, breathlessly; "I thought I should
+never get away."
+
+"Never mind, so long as you are here," he answers, holding her by
+both hands. "My darling, I must have a kiss; I hungered for one all
+yesterday."
+
+He looks into her face eagerly and lovingly. To most people Beatrice is a
+plain girl, but to this man she is beautiful; his own love for her has
+invested her with a charm and a fascination that no one else has seen in
+her.
+
+Oh! divine passion, that can thus glorify its object. It is like a dash
+of sunshine over a winter landscape, which transforms it into the
+loveliness of spring; or the magic brush of the painter, which can turn a
+ploughed field and a barren common into the golden glories of a Cuyp or a
+Turner.
+
+Thus it was with Herbert Pryme. He looked at Beatrice with the blinding
+glamour of his own love in his eyes, and she was beautiful to him. Truth
+to say, Beatrice was a woman whom to love once was to love always. There
+was so much that was charming and loveable in her character, so great a
+freshness of mind and soul about her, that, although from lack of beauty
+she had hitherto failed to attract love, having once secured it, she
+possessed that rare and valuable faculty of being able to retain it,
+which many women, even those who are the most beautiful, are incapable
+of.
+
+"It is just as I imagined about Mr. Nethercliff," says Beatrice,
+laughing; "he has been asked here for my benefit. Mamma has just been
+telling me about him; he is Lord Garford's nephew and his heir. Lord
+Garford's place, you know, is quite the other side of the county; he is
+poor, so I suppose I might do for him," with a little grimace. "At all
+events, I am to sit next to him at dinner to-night, and make myself
+civil. You see, I am to be offered to all the county magnates in
+succession."
+
+Herbert Pryme still holds her hands, and looks down with grave vexation
+into her face.
+
+"And how do you suppose I shall feel whilst Mr. Nethercliff is making
+love to you?"
+
+"You may make your mind quite easy; it is impossible that there should be
+another man foolish enough in all England to want to make love to such an
+'ugly duckling' as I am!"
+
+"Don't be silly, child, and don't fish for compliments," he answers,
+fondly, stroking her short dark hair, which he thinks so characteristic
+of herself.
+
+Beatrice looks up happily at him. A woman is always at her very best when
+she is alone with the man she loves. Unconsciously, all the charms she
+possesses are displayed in her glistening eyes, and in the colour which
+comes and goes in her contented face. There is no philtre which beauty
+can use, there is neither cosmetic nor rouge that can give that tender,
+lovely glow with which successful love transforms even a plain face into
+radiance and fascination.
+
+"I wish, Beatrice, you would let me speak to your father," continued
+Herbert; "I cannot bear to be here under false pretences. Why will you
+not let me deal fairly and openly with your parents?"
+
+"And be sent about your business by the evening train. No, thank you!
+My dear boy, speaking to papa would be as much use as speaking to the
+butler; they would both of them refer you instantly to mamma; and with
+an equally lamentable result. Please leave things to me. When mamma has
+offered me ineffectually to every marriageable man in Meadowshire, she
+will get quite sick of it, and, I dare say, I shall be allowed to do as
+I like then without any more fuss."
+
+"And how long is this process to last?"
+
+"About a year; by which time Geraldine will be nearly eighteen, and ready
+to step into my shoes. Mamma will be glad enough to be rid of me then,
+and to try her hand upon her instead. Geraldine is meek and tractable,
+and will be quite willing to do as she is told."
+
+"And, meanwhile, what am I to do?"
+
+"You! You are to make love to Sophy Macpherson. Do you not know that she
+is the excuse for your having been asked here at all?"
+
+"I don't like it, Beatrice," repeats her lover, gravely--not, however,
+alluding to the duties relating to Miss Macpherson, which she had been
+urging upon him. "Upon my life, I don't." He looks away moodily out of
+the window. "I hate doing things on the sly. And, besides, I am a poor
+man, and your parents are rich. I could not afford to support a wife at
+present on my own income."
+
+"All the more reason that we should wait," she interrupts, quickly.
+
+"Yes; but I ought not to have spoken to you; I'd no business to steal
+your heart."
+
+"You did not steal it," she says, nestling up to his side. "I presented
+it to you, free, gratis."
+
+Where is the man who could resist such an appeal! Away went duty,
+prudence, and every other laudable consideration to the winds; and
+Herbert Pryme straightway became insanely and blissfully oblivious of his
+own poverty, of Mr. Miller's wealth, and of everything else upon earth
+and under the sun that was not entirely and idiotically delightful and
+ecstatic.
+
+"You will do as I tell you?" whispers Beatrice.
+
+"Of course I will," answers her lover. And then there is a complete
+stagnation of the power of speech on both sides for the space of five
+minutes, during which the clock ticking steadily on at the far end of the
+corridor has things entirely its own way.
+
+"There is another couple who are happy," says Herbert Pryme, breaking the
+charmed silence at length, and indicating, by a sign, two people who are
+wandering slowly down the garden. Beatrice Miller, following the
+direction of his eyes, sees Maurice Kynaston and Vera.
+
+"Those two?" she exclaims. "Oh dear, no! They are not happy--not in our
+way. Miss Nevill is engaged to his brother, you know."
+
+"Umph! if I were Sir John Kynaston, I would look after my brother then."
+
+"Herbert! what _can_ you mean?" cries Beatrice, opening her eyes in
+astonishment. "Why, Captain Kynaston is supposed to be engaged to Mrs.
+Romer; at any rate, she is desperately in love with him."
+
+"Yes, everybody knows that: but is he in love with her?"
+
+"Herbert, I am sure you must be mistaken!" persists Beatrice, eagerly.
+
+"Perhaps I am. Never mind, little woman," kissing her lightly; "I only
+said they looked happy. If you will take the trouble to remark them
+through the day, you will, perhaps, be struck by the same blissful aspect
+that I have noticed. If they are happy, it won't last long. Why should
+not one be glad to see other people enjoying themselves? Let them be
+happy whilst they can."
+
+Herbert Pryme was right. Maurice and Vera wandering side by side along
+the broad gravel walks in the wintry gardens were happy--without so much
+as venturing to wonder what it was that made them so.
+
+"I did not want to hunt to-day," Maurice is saying; "I thought I would
+stop at home and talk to you."
+
+"That was kind of you," answers Vera, with a smile.
+
+If she had known him better, she would have been more sensible of the
+compliment implied. To give up a day's hunting for a woman's sake is what
+very few keen sports-men have been known to do; the attraction must be
+great indeed.
+
+"You will go out, of course, on Monday, the day the hounds meet here?
+I should like to see you on a horse."
+
+"I shall at all events put on a habit and get up on the mare John has
+given me. But I know very little of English hunting; I have only ridden
+in Italy. We used to go out in winter over the Campagna--that is very
+different to England."
+
+"You must look very well in a habit." He turned to look at her as he
+spoke. There was no reticence in his undisguised admiration of her.
+
+Vera laughed a little. "You shall look at me if you like when I have it
+on," she said, blushing faintly under his scrutiny.
+
+"I am grateful to you for the permission; but I am bound to confess that
+I should look all the same had you forbidden me to do so."
+
+Vera was pleased. She felt glad that he admired her. Was it not quite
+right and most desirable that her husband's brother should appreciate her
+beauty and ratify his good taste?
+
+"When does your mother come?" she said, changing the subject quietly, but
+without effort.
+
+"Only the very night of the ball, I am afraid. Tuesday, is it not?"
+
+"Have you written to her about me? She does not like me, I fear."
+
+"No; I will not write. She shall see you and judge for herself. I am not
+the least afraid of her not liking you when she knows you; and you will
+love her."
+
+By this time they had wandered away from the house through the belt of
+shrubbery, and had emerged beyond upon the margin of the pool of water.
+
+Vera stood still, suddenly struck with the sight.
+
+"Is this Shadonake Bath?" she asked, below her breath.
+
+"Yes; have you never seen it before?" he answered, in some surprise.
+
+"Never. I have not lived in Meadowshire long, you know, and the Millers
+were moving into the house and furnishing it all last summer. I have
+never been in the gardens till to-day. How strangely sad the place looks!
+Let us walk round it."
+
+They went round to the further side.
+
+The pool of water lay dark and silent within its stone steps; not a
+ripple disturbed its surface; not a dead leaf rested on its bosom. Only
+the motionless water looked up everlastingly at the gray winter skies
+above, and reflected them back blackly and gloomily upon its solemn face.
+
+Vera stood still and looked at it. Something in its aspect--she could not
+have told what--affected her powerfully. She went down two or three steps
+towards the water, and stooped over it intently.
+
+Maurice, watching her curiously, saw, to his surprise, that she trembled.
+She turned round to him.
+
+"Does it not look dark and deep? Is it very deep?"
+
+"I believe it is. There are all sorts of stories about it. Come up, Vera;
+why do you tremble so?"
+
+"How dreadful to be drowned here!" she said, below her breath, and she
+shuddered.
+
+He stretched out his hand to her.
+
+"Do not say such horrid things! Give me your hand--the steps are
+slippery. What has put drowning into your head? And--why, how pale you
+are; what has frightened you?"
+
+She took his hand and came back again to where he stood.
+
+"Do you believe in presentiments?" she said, slowly, with her eyes fixed
+still, as though by some fascination, upon the dark waters beneath them.
+
+"Not in the very least," he answered, cheerily; "do not think of such
+things. John would be the first to scold you--and to scold me for
+bringing you here."
+
+He stood, holding her hand, looking at her kindly and compassionately;
+suddenly she looked at him, and as their eyes met once more, she trembled
+from head to foot.
+
+"Vera, you are frightened; tell me what it is!"
+
+"I don't know! I don't know!" she cried, with a sudden wail, like a
+person in pain; "only--oh! I wish I had not seen it for the first time
+with _you_!"
+
+Before he could answer her, some one, _beckoning_ to them from the
+further side of the pool, caused them both to turn suddenly round.
+
+It was not only Herbert Pryme who had seen them wander away down the
+garden from the house. Mrs. Romer, too, had been at another window and
+had noticed them. To run lightly upstairs, put on her hat and jacket, and
+to follow them, had been the work of but a very few minutes. Helen was
+not minded to allow Maurice to wander about all the morning with Vera.
+
+"Are you going for a walk?" she called out to them across the water.
+"Wait for me; I am coming with you."
+
+Vera turned quickly to her companion.
+
+"Is it true that you are engaged to her?" she asked him rapidly, in a low
+voice.
+
+Maurice hesitated. Morally speaking, he was engaged to her; but, then, it
+had been agreed between them that he was to deny any such engagement. He
+felt singularly disinclined to let Vera know what was the truth.
+
+"People say you are," she said, once more. "Will you tell me if it is
+true?"
+
+"No; there is no engagement between us," he answered, gravely.
+
+"I am very glad," she answered, earnestly. He coloured, but he had no
+time to ask her why she was glad--for Helen came up to them.
+
+"How interested you look in each other's conversation!" she said, looking
+suspiciously at them both. "May I not hear what you have been talking
+about?"
+
+"Anybody might hear," answered Vera, carelessly, "were it worth one's
+while to take the trouble of repeating it."
+
+Maurice said nothing. He was angry with Helen for having interrupted
+them, and angry with himself for having denied his semi-engagement. He
+stood looking away from them both, prodding his stick into the gravel
+walk.
+
+For half a minute they stood silently together.
+
+"Let us go on," said Vera, and they began to walk.
+
+Once again in the days that were to come those three stood side by side
+upon the margin of Shadonake Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE MEET AT SHADONAKE.
+
+ The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow,
+ The devotion to something afar.
+
+ Shelley.
+
+
+Mrs. Macpherson had brought up her daughters with one fixed and
+predominant idea in her mind. Each of them was to excel in some one taste
+or accomplishment, by virtue of which they might be enabled to shine in
+society. They were taught to do one thing well. Thus, Sophy, the eldest,
+played the piano remarkably, whilst Jessie painted in water-colours with
+charming exactitude and neatness. They had both had first-rate masters,
+and no pains had been spared to make each of them proficient in the
+accomplishment that had been selected for her. But, as neither of these
+young ladies had any natural talent, the result was hardly so
+satisfactory as their fond mother could have desired. They did exactly
+what they had been taught to do with precision and conscientiousness; no
+less and no more; and the further result of their entire devotion to one
+kind of study was, that they could do nothing else.
+
+Mrs. Macpherson began to realize that her system of education had
+possibly left something to be desired on the Monday morning that Mr.
+Esterworth brought up his hounds to Shadonake House. It was provoking
+to see all the other ladies attired in their habits, whilst her own
+daughters had to come down to breakfast in their ordinary morning
+dresses, because they had never been taught to ride.
+
+"Are you not going to ride?" she heard Guy Miller ask of Sophy, who was
+decidedly the best looking and the pleasantest of the sisters.
+
+"No, we have never ridden at all; mamma never thought we had the time for
+it," answers Sophy.
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Macpherson, turning to her hostess, "that I shall
+pursue a different course with my younger girls. I feel sorry now that
+Sophy and Jessie do not ride. Music and painting are, of course, the most
+charming accomplishments that a woman can have; but still it is not at
+all times that they are useful."
+
+"No, you cannot be always painting and playing."
+
+"Neither can you be always riding," said Mrs. Macpherson, with some
+asperity, for there was a little natural jealousy between these ladies on
+the subject of their girls; "but still----"
+
+"But still, you will acknowledge that I have done right in letting
+Beatrice hunt. You may be quite sure that there is no accomplishment
+which brings a girl so much into notice in the country. Look at her now."
+
+Mrs. Macpherson looked and saw Beatrice in her habit at the far end of
+the dining-room surrounded by a group of men in pink, and she also saw
+her own daughters sitting neglected by themselves on the other side of
+the room. She made no observation upon the contrast, for it would hardly
+have been polite to have done so; but she made a mental note of the fact
+that Mrs. Miller was a very clever woman, and that, if you want an ugly
+daughter to marry, you had better let her learn how to ride across
+country. And she furthermore decided that her third daughter, Alice, who
+was not blessed with the gift of beauty, should forthwith abandon the
+cultivation of a very feeble and uncertain vocal organ and be sent to the
+nearest riding-school the very instant she returned to her home.
+
+Beatrice Miller rode very well indeed; it was the secret of her uncle's
+affection for her, and many a good day's sport had the two enjoyed side
+by side across the flat fields and the strong fences and wide ditches of
+their native country. Her brothers, Guy and Edwin, were fond of hunting
+too, but they rode clumsily and awkwardly, floundering across country in
+what their uncle called, contemptuously, a thoroughly "provincial style."
+But Beatrice had the true Esterworth seat and hand; she looked as if she
+were born to her saddle, and, in truth, she was never so happy as when
+she was in it. It was a proof of how great and real was her love to
+Herbert Pryme that she fully recognized that, in becoming his wife, she
+would have to live in London entirely and to give up her beloved hunting
+for his sake.
+
+A woman who rides, as did Beatrice, is sure to be popular on a hunting
+morning; and, with the consciousness of her lover's hands resting upon
+the back of her chair, with her favourite uncle by her side, and with
+several truly ardent admirers of her good riding about her, Miss Miller
+was evidently enjoying herself thoroughly.
+
+The scene, indeed, was animated to the last degree. The long dining-room
+was filled with guests, the table was covered with good things, a repast,
+half breakfast, half luncheon, being laid out upon it. Everybody helped
+themselves, with much chattering and laughter, and there was a pleasant
+sense of haste and excitement, and a charming informality about the
+proceedings, which made the Shadonake Hunt breakfast, which Tom
+Esterworth had been prevailed upon by his niece's entreaties to allow,
+a thorough and decided success.
+
+Outside there were the hounds, drawn up in patient expectation on the
+grass beyond the gravel sweep, the bright coats and velvet caps of the
+men, and the gray horses--on which it was the Meadowshire tradition that
+they should be always mounted--standing out well against the dark
+background of the leafless woods behind. Then there were a goodly company
+who had not dismounted, and to whom glasses of sherry were being handed
+by the servants, and who also were chattering to each other, or to those
+on foot, whilst before the door, an object of interest to those within as
+to those without, Sir John Kynaston was putting Miss Nevill upon her
+horse.
+
+There was not a man present who did not express his admiration for her
+beauty and her grace; hardly a woman who did not instantly make some
+depreciatory remark. The latter fact spoke perhaps more convincingly for
+the undoubted success she had created than did the former.
+
+Maurice was standing by one of the dining-room windows, Mrs. Romer, as
+usual, by his side. He alone, perhaps, of all the men who saw her vault
+lightly into her saddle, made no audible remark, but perhaps his
+admiration was all too plainly written in his eyes, for it called
+forth a contemptuous remark from his companion--
+
+"She is a great deal too tall to look well on a horse; those big women
+should never ride."
+
+"What! not with a figure so perfect as hers?"
+
+"Yes, that is the third time you have spoken about her figure to-day,"
+said Helen, irritably. "What on earth can you see in it?" for Mrs. Romer,
+who was slight almost to angularity, was, as all thin women are, openly
+indignant at the masculine foible for more flowing outlines, which was
+displayed with greater candour than discretion by her quasi-lover.
+
+"What do I see in it?" repeated Maurice, who was dimly conscious of her
+jealousy, and was injudicious enough to lose his temper slightly over its
+exhibition. "I see in it the beauty of a goddess, and the perfection of
+a woman!"
+
+"Really!" with a sarcastic laugh; "how wonderfully enthusiastic and
+poetical you become over Miss Nevill's charms; it is something quite new
+in you, Maurice. Your interest in this 'goddess-like' young lady strikes
+me as singularly warmly expressed; it is more lover-like than fraternal."
+
+"What do you mean?" he said, looking at her coldly and angrily. Helen had
+seen that look of hard contempt in his face before; she quailed a little
+before it, and was frightened at what she had said.
+
+"Of course," she said, reddening, "I know it's all right; but it does
+really sound peculiar, your admiring her so much; and--and--it is hardly
+flattering to me."
+
+"I don't see that it has anything to do with you," and he turned shortly
+away from her.
+
+She made a step or two after him. "You will ride with me, will you not,
+Maurice? You know I can't go very hard; you might give me a lead or two,
+and keep near me."
+
+"You must not ask me to make any promises," he said, politely, but
+coldly. "Guy Miller says there is a groom told off to look after you
+ladies. Of course, if I can be of any use to you, I shall be happy, but
+it is no use making rash engagements as to what one will do in a run."
+
+"Come, come, it's time we were off," cries out Tom Esterworth at the
+further end of the room, and his stalwart figure makes its way in the
+direction of the door.
+
+In a very few minutes the order "to horse" has gone forth, and the whole
+company have sallied forth and are busy mounting their horses in front of
+the house.
+
+Off goes the master, well in front, at a sharp trot, towards the woods on
+the further slope of the hill, and off go the hounds and the whips, and
+the riders, in a long and gay procession after him, down the wide avenue.
+
+"Promise me you will not stop out long, Vera," says Sir John to her as
+they go side by side down the drive. "You look white and tired as it is.
+Have you got a headache?"
+
+"Yes, a little," confesses Vera, with a blush. "I did not sleep well."
+
+"This sitting up late night after night is not good for you," says her
+lover, anxiously; "and there is the ball to-morrow night."
+
+"Yes; and I want to look my best for your mother," she said, smiling. "I
+will take care of myself, John; I will go home early in time for lunch."
+
+"You are always so ready to do what I ask you. Oh, Vera, how good you
+are! how little I deserve such a treasure!"
+
+"Don't," she answers, almost sharply, whilst an expression of pain
+contracts her brow for an instant. "Don't say such things to me, John;
+don't call me good."
+
+John Kynaston looks at her fondly. "I will not call you anything you
+don't wish," he says, gently, "but I am free to think it, Vera!"
+
+The first covert is successfully drawn without much delay. A fox is
+found, and breaks away across the open, and a short but sharp burst of
+fifteen or twenty minutes follows. The field is an unusually large one,
+and there are many out who are not in it at all. Beatrice, however, is
+well up, and so is Herbert Pryme, who is not likely to be far from her
+side. Close behind them follows Sir John Kynaston, and Mrs. Romer, who is
+well mounted upon one of Edwin Miller's horses, keeps well up with the
+rest.
+
+Vera never quite knew how it was that somehow or other she got thrown out
+of that short but exciting run. She was on the wrong side of the covert
+to begin with; several men were near her, but they were all strangers,
+and at the time "Gone away!" was shouted, there was no one to tell her
+which way to take. Two men took the left side of the copse, three others
+turned to the right. Vera followed the latter, and found that the hounds
+must have gone in the opposite direction, for when she got round the wood
+not a trace of them was to be seen.
+
+She did not know the country well, and she hardly knew which way to turn.
+It seemed to her, however, that by striking across a small field to the
+left of her she would cut off a corner, and eventually come up with the
+hounds again.
+
+She turned her mare short round, and put her at a big straggling hedge
+which she had no fears of her being unable to compass. There was,
+however, more of a drop on the further side than she had counted upon,
+and in some way, as the mare landed, floundering on the further side,
+something gave way, and she found that her stirrup-leather had broken.
+
+Vera pulled up and looked about her helplessly. She found herself in
+a small spinney of young birch-trees, filling up the extremity of a
+triangular field into which she had come. Not a sign of the hounds, or,
+indeed, of any living creature was to be seen in any direction. She did
+not feel inclined to go on--or even to go back home with her broken
+stirrup-leather. It occurred to her that she would get off and see what
+she could do towards patching it together herself.
+
+With some little difficulty, her mare being fidgety, and refusing to
+stand still, she managed to dismount; but in doing so her wrist caught
+against the pommel of her saddle, and was so severely wrenched backwards,
+as she sprang to the ground, that she turned quite sick with the pain.
+
+It seemed to her that her wrist must be sprained; at all events, her
+right hand was, for the minute, perfectly powerless. The mare, perceiving
+that nothing further was expected of her, amused herself by cropping the
+short grass at her feet, whilst Vera stood by her side in dire perplexity
+as to what she was to do next. Just then she heard the welcome sound of a
+horse's hoofs in the adjoining field, and in another minute a hat and
+black coat, followed by a horse's head and forelegs appeared on the top
+of the fence, and a man dropped over into the spinney just ten yards in
+front of her.
+
+Vera took it to be her lover, for the brothers both hunted in black, and
+there was a certain family resemblance between their broad shoulders and
+the square set of their heads. She called out eagerly,
+
+"Oh, John! how glad I am to see you! I have come to grief!"
+
+"So I see; but I am not John. I hope, however, I may do as well. What is
+the matter?"
+
+"It is you, Maurice? Oh, yes, you will do quite as well. I have broken my
+stirrup-leather, and I am afraid I have sprained my wrist."
+
+"That sounds bad--let me see."
+
+In an instant he had sprung from his horse to help her.
+
+She looked up at him as he came, pushing the tall brushwood away as
+he stepped through it. It struck her suddenly how like he was to the
+photograph she had found of him at Kynaston long ago, and what a
+well-made man he was, and how brave and handsome he looked in his
+hunting gear.
+
+"How have you managed to hurt your wrist? Let me see it."
+
+"I wrenched it somehow in jumping down; but I don't think that it can be
+sprained, for I find I can move it now a little; it is only bruised, but
+it hurts me horribly."
+
+She turned back her cuff and held out the injured hand to him. Maurice
+stooped over it. There was a moment's silence, the two horses stood
+waiting patiently by, the solitary fields lay bare and lifeless on every
+side of them, the little birch-trees rustled mysteriously overhead, the
+leaden sky, with its chill curtain of unbroken gray cloud, spread
+monotonously above them; there was no living thing in all the winter
+landscape besides to listen or to watch them.
+
+Suddenly Maurice Kynaston caught the hand that he held to his lips, and
+pressed half a dozen passionate kisses upon its outstretched palm.
+
+It was the work of half a minute, and in the next Maurice felt as if he
+should die of shame and remorse.
+
+"For God's sake, forgive me!" he cried, brokenly. "I am a brute--I forgot
+myself--I must be mad, I think; for Heaven's sake tell me that I have not
+offended you past forgiveness, Vera!"
+
+His pulses were beating wildly, his face was flushed, the hands that
+still held hers shook with a nameless emotion; he looked imploringly into
+her face, as if to read his sentence in her eyes, but what he saw there
+arrested the torrent of repentance and regret that was upon his lips.
+
+Upon Vera's face there was no flush either of shame or anger. No storm
+of indignation, no passion of insulted feeling; only eyes wide open and
+terror-stricken, that met his with the unspeakable horror that one sees
+sometimes in those of a hunted animal. She was pale as death. Then
+suddenly the colour flushed hotly back into her face; she averted her
+eyes.
+
+"Let me go home," she said, in a faint voice; "help me to get on to my
+horse, Maurice."
+
+There was neither resentment nor anger in her voice, only a great
+weariness.
+
+He obeyed her in silence. Possibly he felt that he had stood for one
+instant upon the verge of a precipice, and that miraculously her face had
+saved him, he knew not how, where words would only have dragged him down
+to unutterable ruin.
+
+What had it been that had thus saved him? What was the meaning of that
+terror that had been written in her lovely eyes? Since she was not angry,
+what had she feared?
+
+Maurice asked himself these questions vainly all the way home. Not a word
+was spoken between them; they rode in absolute silence side by side until
+they reached the house.
+
+Then, as he lifted her off her horse at the hall-door, he whispered,
+
+"Have you forgiven me?"
+
+"There was nothing to forgive," she answered, in a low, strained voice.
+She spoke wearily, as one who is suffering physical pain. But, as she
+spoke, the hand that he still held seemed almost, to his fancy, to linger
+for a second with a gentle fluttering pressure within his grasp.
+
+Miss Nevill went into the house, having utterly forgotten that she had
+sprained her wrist; a fact which proves indisputably, I suppose, that the
+injury could not have been of a very serious nature.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+PEACOCK'S FEATHERS.
+
+ That practised falsehood under saintly show,
+ Deep malice to conceal, couched with revenge.
+
+ Milton, "Paradise Lost."
+
+
+Old Lady Kynaston arrived at Shadonake in the worst possible temper. Her
+butler and factotum, who always made every arrangement for her when she
+was about to travel, had for once been unequal to cope with Bradshaw;
+he had looked out the wrong train, and had sent off his lady and her maid
+half-an-hour too late from Walpole Lodge.
+
+The consequence was that, instead of reaching Shadonake comfortably at
+half-past six in the afternoon, Lady Kynaston had to wait for the next
+train. She ate her dinner alone, in London, at the Midland Railway Hotel,
+and never reached her destination till half-past nine on the night of the
+ball.
+
+Before she had half completed her toilette the guests were beginning to
+arrive.
+
+"I am afraid I must go down and receive these people, dear Lady
+Kynaston," said Mrs. Miller, who had remained in her guest's room full
+of regret and sympathy at the _contretemps_ of her journey.
+
+"Oh, dear me! yes, Caroline--pray go down. I shall be all the quicker for
+being left alone. Not _that_ cap, West; the one with the Spanish point,
+of course. Dear me, how I do hate all this hurry and confusion!"
+
+"I am so afraid you will be tired," murmured Mrs. Miller, soothingly.
+"Would you like me to send Miss Nevill up to your room? It might be
+pleasanter for you than to meet her downstairs."
+
+"Good gracious, no!" exclaimed the elder lady, testily. "What on earth
+should I be in such a hurry for! I shall see quite as much of her as I
+want by-and-by, I have no doubt."
+
+Mrs. Miller retired, and the old lady was left undisturbed to finish
+her toilette, during which it may fairly be assumed that that dignified
+personage, Mrs. West, had a hard time of it.
+
+When she issued forth from her room, dressed, like a little fairy
+godmother, in point lace and diamonds, the dancing downstairs was in
+full swing.
+
+Lady Kynaston paused for a minute at the top of the broad staircase to
+look down upon the bright scene below. The hall was full of people. Girls
+in many-coloured dresses passed backwards and forwards from the ball-room
+to the refreshment-room, laughing and chatting to their partners; elderly
+people were congregated about the doorways gossiping and shaking hands
+with new-comers, or watching their daughters with pleased or anxious
+faces, according to the circumstances of their lot. Everybody was talking
+at once. There came up a pleasant confusion of sound--happy voices
+mingling with the measured strains of the dance-music. In a sheltered
+corner behind the staircase, Beatrice and Herbert Pryme had settled
+themselves down comfortably for a chat. Lady Kynaston saw them.
+
+"Caroline is a fool!" she muttered to herself. "All the balls in the
+world won't get that girl married as she wishes. She has set her heart
+upon that briefless barrister. I saw it as plain as daylight last season.
+As to entertaining all this _cohue_ of aborigines, Caroline might spare
+her trouble and her money, as far as the girl is concerned."
+
+And then, coming slowly down the staircase, Lady Kynaston saw something
+which restored her to good temper at once.
+
+The something was her younger son. She had caught sight of him through an
+open doorway in the conservatory. His back was turned to her, and he was
+bending over a lady who was sitting down, and whose face was concealed
+behind him.
+
+Lady Kynaston stood still with that sudden _serrement de coeur_ which
+comes to us all when we see the creature we love best on earth. He did
+not see her, and she could not see his face, because it was turned away
+from her; but she knew, by his very attitude, the way he bent down over
+his companion, by the eager manner in which he was talking to her, and by
+the way in which he was evidently entirely engrossed and absorbed in what
+he was saying--that he was enjoying himself, and that he was happy.
+
+The mother's heart all went out towards him; the mother's eyes moistened
+as she looked.
+
+The couple in the conservatory were alone. A Chinese lantern, swung high
+up above, shed down a soft radiance upon them. Tall camellia bushes,
+covered with waxen blossoms and cool shiny leaves, were behind them;
+banks of long-fronded, feathery ferns framed them in like a picture.
+Maurice's handsome figure stood up tall and strong amongst the greenery;
+the dress of the woman he was with lay in soft diaphanous folds upon the
+ground beyond him. One white arm rested on her lap, one tiny foot peeped
+out from below the laces of her skirt. But Lady Kynaston could not see
+her face.
+
+"I wonder who she is," she said to herself. "It is not Helen. She has
+peacock's feathers on her dress--bad luck, I believe! Dear boy, he looks
+thoroughly happy. I will not disturb him now."
+
+And she passed on through the hall into the large drawing-room, where the
+dancing was going on.
+
+The first person she caught sight of there was her eldest son. He was
+dancing a quadrille, and his partner was a short young lady in a
+strawberry-coloured tulle dress, covered with trails of spinach-green
+fern leaves. This young person had a round, chubby face, with bright
+apple-hued cheeks, a dark, bullet-shaped head, and round, bead-like eyes
+that glanced about her rapidly like those of a frightened dickey-bird.
+Her dress was cut very low, and the charms she exhibited were not
+captivating. Her arms were very red, and her shoulders were mottled: the
+latter is considered to be a healthy sign in a baby, but is hardly a
+beautiful characteristic in a grown woman.
+
+"_That_ is my daughter-in-law," said Lady Kynaston to herself, and she
+almost groaned aloud. "She is _worse_ even than I thought! Countrified
+and common to the last degree; there will be no licking that face or that
+figure into shape--they are hopeless! Elise and Worth combined could do
+nothing with her! John must be mad. No wonder she is good, poor thing,"
+added the naughty little old lady, cynically. "A woman with _that_
+appearance can never be tempted to be anything else!"
+
+The quadrille came to an end, and Sir John, after depositing his partner
+at the further side of the room, came up to his mother.
+
+"My dear mother, how are you? I am so sorry about your journey; you must
+be dead beat. What a fool Bates was to make such a mistake." He was
+looking about the room as he spoke. "I must introduce you to Vera."
+
+"Yes, introduce me to her at once," said his mother, in a resigned and
+depressed tone of voice. She would like to have added, "And pray get it
+over as soon as you can." What she did say was only, "Bring her up to me
+now. The young lady you have just been dancing with, I suppose!"
+
+"What!" cried Sir John, and burst out laughing. "Good Heavens, mother!
+that was Miss Smiles, the daughter of the parson of Lutterton. You don't
+mean to say you thought a little ugly chit like _that_ was my Vera!"
+
+His mother suddenly laid her hand upon his arm.
+
+"Who is that lovely woman who has just come in with Maurice?" she
+exclaimed.
+
+Her son followed the direction of her eyes, and beheld Vera standing in
+the doorway that led from the conservatory by his brother's side.
+
+Without a word he passed his mother's hand through his arm and led her
+across the room.
+
+"Vera, this is my mother," he said. And Lady Kynaston owned afterwards
+that she never felt so taken aback and so utterly struck dumb with
+astonishment in her life.
+
+Her two sons looked at her with amusement and some triumph. The little
+surprise had been so thoroughly carried out; the contrast of the truth to
+what they knew she had expected was too good a joke not to be enjoyed.
+
+"Not much what you expected, little mother, is it?" said Maurice,
+laughingly. But to Vera, who knew nothing, it was no laughing matter.
+
+She put both her hands out tremblingly and hesitatingly--with a pretty
+pleading look of deprecating deference in her eyes--and the little old
+lady, who valued beauty and grace and talent so much that she could
+barely tolerate goodness itself without them, was melted at once.
+
+"My dear," she said, "you are beautiful, and I am going to love you; but
+these naughty boys made me think you were something like little Miss
+Smiles."
+
+"Nay, mother, it was your own diseased imagination," laughed Maurice;
+"but come, Vera, I am not going to be cheated of this waltz--if John does
+not want you to dance with him, that is to say."
+
+John nodded pleasantly to them, and the two whirled away together into
+the midst of the throng of dancers.
+
+"Well, mother?"
+
+"My dear, she is a very beautiful creature, and I have been a silly,
+prejudiced old woman."
+
+"And you forgive her for being poor, and for living in a vicarage instead
+of a castle?"
+
+"She would be a queen if she were a beggar and lived in a mud hovel!"
+answered his mother, heartily, and Sir John was satisfied.
+
+Lady Kynaston's eyes were following the couple as they danced: for all
+her admiration and her enthusiasm, there was a little anxiety in their
+gaze. She had not forgotten the little picture she had caught a glimpse
+of in the conservatory, nor had her woman's eyes failed to notice that
+Vera's dress was trimmed with peacock's feathers.
+
+Where was Helen? Lady Kynaston said to herself; and why was Maurice
+devoting himself to his future sister-in-law instead of to her?
+
+Mrs. Romer, you may be sure, had not been far off. Her sharp eyes had
+seen Vera and Maurice disappear together into the conservatory. She could
+have told to a second how long they had remained there; and again, when
+they came out, she had watched the little family scene that had taken
+place at the door. She had seen the look of delighted surprise on Lady
+Kynaston's face; she had noted how pleased and how proud of Vera the
+brothers had looked, and then how happily Maurice and Vera had gone off
+again together.
+
+"What does it mean?" Helen asked herself, bitterly. "Is Sir John a fool
+or blind that he does not see what is going on under his nose? She has
+got him, and his money, and his place; what does she want with Maurice
+too? Why can't she let him alone--she is taking him from me."
+
+She watched them eagerly and feverishly. They stood still for a moment
+near her; she could not hear what they said, but she could see the look
+in Maurice's eyes as he bent towards his partner.
+
+Can a woman who has known what love is ever be mistaken about that?
+
+Vera, all wondering and puzzled, might be but dimly conscious of the
+meaning in the eyes that met hers; her own drooped, half troubled, half
+confused, before them. But to Helen, who knew what love's signals were,
+there was no mystery whatever in the passion in his down-bent glance.
+
+"He loves her!" she said to herself, whilst a sharp pang, almost of
+physical pain, shot through her heart. "She shall never get him!--never!
+never! Not though one of us die for it! They are false, both of them. I
+swear they shall never be happy together!"
+
+"Why are you not dancing, Mrs. Romer?" said a voice at her elbow.
+
+"I will dance with you, Sir John, if you will ask me," answers Helen,
+smiling.
+
+Sir John responds, as in duty bound, by passing his arm around her waist.
+
+"When are you going to be married, Sir John?" she asks him, when the
+first pause in the dance gives her the opportunity of speech.
+
+Sir John looks rather confused. "Well, to tell you the truth, I have
+not spoken to Vera yet. I have not liked to hurry her--I thought,
+perhaps----"
+
+"Why don't you speak to her? A woman never thinks any better of a man
+for being diffident in such matters."
+
+"You think not? But you see Vera is----"
+
+"Vera is very much like all other women, I suppose; and you are not
+versed in the ways of the sex."
+
+Sir John demurred in his own mind as to the first part of her speech.
+Vera was certainly not like other women; but then he acknowledged the
+truth of Mrs. Romer's last remark thoroughly.
+
+"No, I dare say I don't know much about women's ways," he admitted; "and
+you think----"
+
+"I think that Vera would be glad enough to be married as soon as she can.
+An engagement is a trying ordeal. One is glad enough to get settled down.
+What is the use of waiting when once everything is arranged?"
+
+Sir John flushed a little. The prospect of a speedy marriage was pleasant
+to him. It was what he had been secretly longing for--only that, in his
+slow way, he had not yet been able to suggest it.
+
+"Do you really think she would like it?" he asked, earnestly.
+
+"Of course she would; any woman would."
+
+"And how long do you think the preparations would take?"
+
+"Oh, a month or three weeks is ample time to get clothes in."
+
+His pulses beat hotly at the bare possibility of such a thing. To possess
+his Vera in so short a time seemed something too great and too wonderful
+to be true.
+
+"Do not lose any more time," continued Helen, following up the impression
+she saw she had made upon him. "Speak to her this evening; get her to fix
+your wedding-day within the month; believe me, a man gets no advantage by
+putting things off too long; and there are dangers, too, in your case."
+
+"Dangers! How do you mean?" he said, quickly.
+
+"Oh, nothing particular--only she is very handsome, and she is young, and
+not accustomed, I dare say, to admiration. Other men may admire her as
+well as you."
+
+"If they did, it could do her no harm," he answered, stiffly.
+
+"Oh, no, of course not; but you can't keep other men from looking at
+her. When once she is your wife you will have her more completely to
+yourself."
+
+Sir John made no particular answer to this; but when he had done dancing
+with Mrs. Romer, he led her back to her seat and thanked her gravely and
+courteously for her suggestions.
+
+"You have done me a great service, Mrs. Romer, and I am infinitely
+obliged to you," he said, and then went his way to find Vera.
+
+He was not jealous; but there was a certain uneasiness in his mind. It
+might be, indeed, true that others would admire and love Vera; others
+more worthy of her, more equally mated with her youth and loveliness; and
+he, he said to himself in his humility with regard to her, he had so
+little to offer her--nothing but his love. He knew himself to be grave
+and quiet; there was nothing about him to enchain her to him. He lacked
+brilliancy in manner and conversation; he was dull; he was, perhaps,
+even prosy. He knew it very well himself; but suppose Vera should find it
+out, and find that she had made a mistake! The bare thought of it was
+enough to make him shudder.
+
+No; Mrs. Romer was a clever, well-intentioned little woman. She had meant
+to give him a hint in all kindness, and he would not be slow to take it.
+What she had meant to say was, "Take her yourself quickly, or some one
+else will take her from you."
+
+And Sir John said to himself that he would so take her, and that as
+quickly as possible.
+
+Standing talking to her younger son, later on that evening, Lady Kynaston
+said to him, suddenly,
+
+"Why does Vera wear peacock's feathers?"
+
+"Why should she not?"
+
+"They are bad luck."
+
+Maurice laughed. "I never knew you to be superstitious before, mother."
+
+"I am not so really; but from choice I would avoid anything that bears an
+unlucky interpretation. I saw her with you in the conservatory as I came
+downstairs."
+
+Maurice turned suddenly red. "Did you?" he asked, a little anxiously.
+
+"Yes. I did not know it was her, of course. I did not see her face, only
+her dress, and I noticed that it was trimmed with peacock's feathers;
+that was what made me recognize her afterwards."
+
+"That was bad luck, at all events," said Maurice, almost involuntarily.
+
+"Why?" asked Lady Kynaston, looking up at him sharply. But Maurice would
+not tell her why.
+
+Lady Kynaston asked no more questions; but she pondered, and she watched.
+Captain Kynaston did not dance again with Vera that night, and he did
+dance several times with Mrs. Romer; it did not escape her notice,
+however, that he seemed absent and abstracted, and that his face bore its
+hardest and sternest aspect throughout the remainder of the evening.
+
+So the ball at Shadonake came to an end, as balls do, with the first
+gleams of daylight; and nothing was left of all the gay crowd who had so
+lately filled the brilliant rooms but several sleepy people creeping up
+slowly to bed, and a great _chiffonade_ of tattered laces, and flowers,
+and coloured scraps littered all over the polished floor of the
+ball-room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HER WEDDING DRESS.
+
+ Those obstinate questionings
+ Of sense and outward things,
+ Fallings from us, vanishings,
+ Blank misgivings--
+ High instincts before which our moral nature
+ Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised.
+
+ Wordsworth.
+
+
+"Vera, are you not coming to look at it?"
+
+"Presently."
+
+"It is all laid out on your bed, and you ought to try it on; it might
+want alterations."
+
+"Oh, there is plenty of time!"
+
+"It is downright affectation!" says old Mrs. Daintree, angrily, to her
+daughter-in-law, as she and Marion leave the room together; "no girl can
+really be indifferent to a wedding dress covered with yards of lovely
+Brussels lace flounces; she ought to be ashamed of herself for her
+ingratitude to Lady Kynaston for such a present; she must really want
+to see it, only she likes playing the fine lady beforehand!"
+
+"I don't think it is that," says Marion, gently; "I don't believe Vera is
+well."
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" snorts her mother-in-law. "A woman who is going to marry
+ten thousand a year within ten days is bound to be well."
+
+Vera sits alone; she leans her head against the window, her hands lie
+idle in her lap, her eyes mechanically follow the rough, gray clouds that
+rack across the winter sky. In little more than a week she will be Vera
+Nevill no longer; she will have gained all that she desired and tried
+for--wealth, position, Kynaston--and Sir John! She should be well
+content, seeing that it has been her own doing all along. No one has
+forced or persuaded her into this engagement, no one has urged her on to
+a course contrary to her own inclination, or her own judgment. It has
+been her own act throughout. And yet, as she sits alone in the twilight,
+and counts over on her fingers the few short days that intervene between
+to-day and her bridal morning, hot miserable tears rise to her eyes,
+and fall slowly down, one by one, upon her clasped hands. She does not
+ask herself why she weeps; possibly she dares not. Only her thoughts
+somehow--by that strange connection of ideas which links something in
+our present to some other thing in our past, and which apparently is in
+no way dependent upon it--go back instinctively, as it were, to her dead
+sister, the Princess Marinari.
+
+"Oh, my poor darling Theodora!" she murmurs, half aloud; "if you had
+lived, you would have taken care of your Vera; if you had not died, I
+should never have come here, nor ever have known--any of them."
+
+And then she hears Marion's voice calling to her from the top of the
+stairs.
+
+"Vera! Vera! do come up and see it before it gets quite dark."
+
+She rises hastily and dashes away her tears.
+
+"What is the matter with me to-day!" she says to herself, impatiently.
+"Have I not everything in the world I wish for? I am happy--of course
+I am happy. I am coming, Marion, instantly."
+
+Upstairs her wedding dress, a soft cloud of rich silk and fleecy lace,
+relieved with knots of flowers, dark-leaved myrtle, and waxen orange
+blossoms, lies spread out upon her bed. Marion stands contemplating it,
+wrapt in ecstatic admiration; old Mrs. Daintree has gone away.
+
+"It is perfectly lovely! I am so glad you had silk instead of satin;
+nothing could show off Lady Kynaston's lace so well: is it not beautiful?
+you ought to try it on. Why, Vera! what is the matter? I believe you have
+been crying."
+
+"I was thinking of Theodora," she murmurs.
+
+"Ah! poor dear Theodora!" assents Marion, with a compassionate sigh; "how
+she would have liked to have known of your marriage; how pleased she
+would have been."
+
+Vera looks at her sister. "Marion," she says, in a low earnest voice;
+"if--if I should break it off, what would you say?"
+
+"Break it off!" cries her sister, horror-struck. "Good heavens, Vera!
+what can you mean? Have you gone suddenly mad? What is the matter with
+you? Break off a match like this at the last minute? You must be
+demented!"
+
+"Oh, of course," with a sudden change of manner; "of course I did not
+mean it, it only came into my head for a minute; of course, as you say,
+it is a splendid match for me. What should I want to break it off for?
+What should I gain? what, indeed?" She spoke feverishly and excitedly,
+laughing a little harshly as she spoke.
+
+Marion looked at her anxiously. "I hope to goodness you will never say
+such horrid things to anybody else; it sounds dreadful, Vera, as if
+Eustace and I were forcing you into it; as if you did not want to marry
+Sir John yourself."
+
+"Of course I want to marry him!" interrupted Vera, with unreasonable
+sharpness.
+
+"Then, pray don't make a fool of yourself, my dear, by talking about
+breaking it off."
+
+"It was only a joke. Break it off! how could I? The best match in the
+county, as you say. I am not going to make a fool of myself; don't be
+afraid, Marion. It would be so inconvenient, too; the trousseau all
+bought, the breakfast ordered, the guests invited; even the wedding dress
+here, all finished and ready to put on, and ten thousand a year waiting
+for me! Oh, no, I am not going to be such an utter fool!"
+
+She laughed; but her laughter was almost more sad than her tears, and her
+sister left her, saddened and puzzled by her manner.
+
+It was now nearly two months since the ball at Shadonake; and, soon after
+that eventful visit, Vera had begun to be employed in preparing for her
+wedding-day, which had been fixed for the 27th of February; for Sir John
+had taken Mrs. Romer's hint, and had pressed an early marriage upon her.
+Vera had made no objection; what objection, indeed, could she have found
+to make? She had acquiesced readily in her lover's suggestions, and had
+set to work to prepare herself for her marriage.
+
+All this time Captain Kynaston had not been in Meadowshire at all; he had
+declined his brother's hospitality, and had gone to spend his leave
+amongst other friends in Somersetshire, where he had started a couple of
+hunters, and wrote word to Sir John that the sport was of such a very
+superior nature that he was unable to tear himself away.
+
+Within a fortnight, however, of Sir John's wedding, Maurice did yield at
+last to his brother's pressing request, and came up from Somersetshire to
+Kynaston. Last Sunday he had suddenly appeared in the Kynaston pew in
+Sutton Church by Sir John's side, and had shaken hands with Vera and her
+relations on coming out of church, and had walked across the vicarage
+garden by the side of Mrs. Daintree, Vera having gone on in front with
+Tommy and Minnie. And it was from that moment that Vera had as suddenly
+discovered that she was utterly and thoroughly wretched, and that she
+dreaded her wedding-day with a strange and unaccountable terror.
+
+She told herself that she was out of health, that the excitement and
+bustle of the necessary preparations had over-tried her, that her nerves
+were upset, her spirits depressed by reason of the solemnity a woman
+naturally feels at the approach of so important a change in her life.
+She assured herself aloud, day after day, that she was perfectly happy
+and content, that she was the very luckiest and most fortunate of women,
+and that she would sooner be Sir John's wife than the wife of any one
+else in the world. And she told it to herself so often and so
+emphatically, that there were whole hours, and even whole days together,
+when she believed in these self-assurances implicitly and thoroughly.
+
+All this time she saw next to nothing of Maurice Kynaston; the weather
+was mild and open, and he went out hunting every day. Sir John, on the
+other hand, was much with her; a constant necessity for his presence
+seemed to possess her. She was never thoroughly content but when he was
+with her; ever restless and ill at ease in his absence.
+
+No one could be more thoroughly convinced than Vera of the entire wisdom
+of the marriage she was about to make. It was, she felt persuaded, the
+best and the happiest thing she could have done with her life. Wealth,
+position, affection, were all laid at her feet; and her husband,
+moreover, would be a man whose goodness and whose devotion to her could
+never fail to command her respect. What more could a woman who, like
+herself, was fully alive to the importance of the good things of this
+world desire? Surely nothing more. Vera, when she was left alone with
+the glories of her wedding garment, took herself to task for her foolish
+words to her sister.
+
+"I am a fool!" she said to herself, half angrily, as she bundled all the
+white silk and the rich lace unceremoniously away into an empty drawer of
+her wardrobe. "I am a fool to say such things even to Marion. It looks,
+as she says, as if I were being forced into a rich marriage by my
+friends. I am very fond of John; I shall make him a most exemplary wife,
+and I shall look remarkably well in the family diamonds, and that is all
+that can possibly be required of me."
+
+Having thus settled things comfortably in her own mind, she went
+downstairs again, and was in such good spirits, and so radiant with
+smiles for the rest of the evening, that Mr. Daintree remarked to his
+wife, when they had retired into their conjugal chamber, that he had
+never seen Vera look so well or so happy.
+
+"Dear child," he said, "it is a great comfort to me to see it, for just
+at first I feared that she had been influenced by the money and the
+position, and that her heart was not in it; but now she has evidently
+become much attached to Sir John, and is perfectly happy; and he is a
+most excellent man, and in every way worthy of her. Did I tell you,
+Marion, that he told me the chancel should be begun immediately after the
+wedding? It is a pity it could not have been done before; but we shall
+just get it finished by Easter."
+
+"I am glad of that. We must fill the church with flowers for the 27th,
+and then its appalling ugliness will not be too visible. Of course, the
+building could hardly have been begun in the middle of winter."
+
+But if Mrs. Eustace Daintree differed at all from her husband upon the
+subject of her sister's serene and perfect happiness, she, like a wise
+woman, kept her doubts to herself, and spoke no word of them to destroy
+the worthy vicar's peace of mind upon the subject.
+
+The next morning Sir John came down from the Hall to the vicarage with
+a cloud upon his brow, and requested Vera to grant him a few minutes'
+private conversation. Vera put on her sable cloak and hat, and went out
+with him into the garden.
+
+"What is the matter?"
+
+"I am exceedingly vexed with my brother," he answered.
+
+"What has Maurice done?"
+
+"He tells me this morning that he will not stop for the wedding, nor be
+my best man. He talks of going away to-morrow."
+
+Vera glanced at him. He looked excessively annoyed; his face, usually so
+kind and placid, was ruffled and angry; he flicked the grass impatiently
+with his stick.
+
+"I have been talking to him for an hour, and cannot get him to change his
+mind, or even to tell me why he will not stay; in fact, he has no good
+reason for going. He _must_ stay."
+
+"Does it matter very much?" she asked, gently.
+
+"Of course it matters. My mother is not able to be present; it would not
+be prudent after her late attack of bronchitis. My only brother surely
+might make a point of being at my wedding."
+
+"But if he has other engagements----"
+
+"He has no other engagement!" he interrupted, angrily; "He cannot find
+any but the most paltry excuses. It is behaving with great unkindness to
+myself, but that is a small matter. What I do mind and will not submit to
+is, that it is a deliberate insult to you."
+
+"An insult to me! Oh! John, how can that be?" she said, in some surprise;
+and then, suddenly, she flushed hotly. She knew what he meant. There had
+been plenty of people to say that Sir John Kynaston was marrying beneath
+himself--a nobody who was unworthy of him: these murmurs had reached
+Vera's ears, but she had not heeded them since Lady Kynaston had been on
+her side. She saw, however, that Sir John feared that the absence of his
+mother and his brother at his wedding might be misconstrued into a sign
+that they also disapproved of his bride.
+
+"I don't think Maurice would wish to slight me," she said, gently.
+
+"No; but, then, he must not behave as though he did. I assure you, Vera,
+if he perseveres in his determination, I shall be most deeply hurt. I
+have always endeavoured to be a kind brother to him, and, if he cannot do
+this small thing to please me, I shall consider him most ungrateful."
+
+"That I am sure he is not," she answered, earnestly; "little as I know
+him, I can assure you that he never loses an occasion of saying how much
+he feels your goodness and generosity to him."
+
+"Then he must prove it. Look here, Vera, will you go up to the Hall now
+and talk to him? He is not hunting to-day; you will find him in the
+library."
+
+"I?" she cried, looking half frightened; "what can I do? You had much
+better ask him yourself."
+
+"I have asked him over and over again, till I am sick of asking! If you
+were to put it as a personal request from yourself, I am sure he would
+see how important to us both it is that he should be present at our
+wedding."
+
+"Pray don't ask me to do such a thing; I really cannot," she said,
+hastily.
+
+Sir John looked at her in some surprise; there was an amount of distress
+in her face that struck him as inadequate to the small thing he had asked
+of her.
+
+"Why, Vera! have you grown shy? Surely you will not mind doing so small a
+thing to please me? You need not stay long, and you have your hat on all
+ready. I have to speak to your brother-in-law about the chancel; I have a
+letter from the architect this morning; and everything must be settled
+about it before we go. If you will go up and speak to Maurice now, I will
+join you--say in twenty minutes from now," consulting his watch, "at the
+lodge gates. You will go, won't you, dear, just to please me?"
+
+She did not know how to refuse; she had no excuse to give, no reason that
+she could put into words why she should shrink with such a dreadful
+terror from this interview with his brother which he was forcing upon
+her. She told him that she would go, and Sir John, leaving her, went into
+the house well satisfied to do his business with the vicar.
+
+And Vera went slowly up the lane alone towards the Hall. She did not know
+what she was going to say to Maurice; she hardly knew, indeed, what it
+was she had been commissioned to ask of him; nor in what words her
+request was to be made. She thought no longer of her wedding-day, nor of
+the lover who had just parted with her. Only before her eyes there came
+again the little wintry copse of birch-trees; the horses standing by, the
+bare fields stretching around, and back into her heart there flashed the
+memory of those quick, hot kisses pressed upon her outstretched hand; the
+one short--and alas! all too perilous--glimpse that had been revealed to
+her of the inner life and soul of the man whose lightest touch she had
+learnt that day to fear as she feared no other living thing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+VERA'S MESSAGE.
+
+ Alas! how easily things go wrong,
+ A word too much, or a sigh too long;
+ And there comes a mist and a driving rain,
+ And life is never the same again.
+
+
+The library at Kynaston was the room which Sir John had used as his only
+sitting-room since he had come down to stay in his own house. When his
+wedding with Miss Nevill had been definitely fixed, there had come down
+from town a whole army of decorators and painters and upholsterers, who
+had set to work to renovate and adorn the rest of the house for the
+advent of the bride, who was so soon to be brought home to it.
+
+They had altered things in various ways, they had improved a few, and
+they had spoiled a good many more; they had, at all events, introduced a
+wholesome and thorough system of cleansing and cleaning throughout the
+house, that had been very welcome to the soul of Mrs. Eccles; but into
+the library they had not penetrated. The old bookshelves remained
+untouched; the old books, in their musty brown calf bindings, were
+undesecrated by profaning hands. All sorts of quaint chairs and bureaus,
+gathered together out of every other room in the house, had congregated
+here. The space over the mantelpiece was adorned by a splendid portrait
+by Vandyke, flanked irreverently on either side by a series of old
+sporting prints, representing the whole beginning, continuation, and
+end of a steeple-chase course, and which, it is melancholy to state, were
+far more highly appreciated by Sir John than the beautiful and valuable
+picture which they surrounded. Below these, and on the mantelpiece
+itself, were gathered together a heterogeneous collection of pipes,
+spurs, horse-shoes, bits, and other implements, which the superintending
+hands of any lady would have straightway relegated to the stables.
+
+In this library Sir John and his brother fed, smoked, wrote and read,
+and lived, in fact, entirely in full and disorderly enjoyment of their
+bachelorhood and its privileges. The room, consequently, was in a
+condition of untidiness and confusion, which was the despair of Mrs.
+Eccles and the delight of the two men themselves, who had even forbidden
+the entrance of any housemaid into it upon pain of instant dismissal.
+Mrs. Eccles submitted herself with resignation to the inevitable, and
+comforted herself with the reflection that the time of unchecked
+masculine dominion was well-nigh over, and that the days were very near
+at hand when "Miss Vera" was coming to alter all this.
+
+"Ah, well, it won't last long, poor gentleman!" the worthy lady said to
+herself, in allusion to Sir John's uninvaded sanctum; "let him enjoy his
+pigstye while he can. When his wife comes she will soon have the place
+swept clean out for him."
+
+So the papers, and the books, and the pipes, and the tobacco-tins were
+left heaped up all over the tables and chairs, and the fox-terriers sat
+in high places on the sofa cushions; and the brothers smoked their pipes
+after their meals, emptied their ashes on to the tables, threw their
+empty soda-water bottles into a corner of the room, wore their slippers
+at all hours, and lapsed, in fact, into all those delightful methods of
+living at ease practised by the vicious nature inherent in man when he is
+unchecked by female influence; whilst Mrs. Eccles groaned in silence, but
+possessed her soul in patience by reason of that change which she knew to
+be coming over the internal economy of Kynaston Hall.
+
+Maurice Kynaston reclines at ease in the most comfortable arm-chair in
+the room, his feet reposing upon a second chair; his pipe is in his
+mouth, and his hands in his trouser pockets; he wears a loose, gray
+shooting-jacket, and Sir John's favourite terrier, Vic, has curled
+herself into a little round white ball upon his outstretched legs.
+Maurice has just been reading his morning's correspondence, and a letter
+from Helen, announcing that her grandfather is ill and confined to his
+room by bronchitis, is still in his hand. He looks gloomily and
+abstractedly into the red logs of the wood fire. The door opens.
+
+"Any orders for the stable, Captain?"
+
+"None to-day, Mrs. Eccles."
+
+"You are not going out hunting?"
+
+"No, I am going to take a rest. By the way, Mrs. Eccles, I shall be
+leaving to-morrow, so you can see about packing my things."
+
+"Dear me! sir, I hope we shall see you again, at the wedding."
+
+"Very unlikely; I don't like weddings, Mrs. Eccles; the only one I ever
+mean to dance at is yours. When you get married, you let me know."
+
+"Law! sir, how you do go on!" said the old lady, laughing; not
+ill-pleased at the imputation. "Dear me," she went on, looking round the
+room uneasily, "did I ever see such a mess in all my born days. Now Sir
+John is out, sir, I suppose you couldn't let me----"
+
+"_Certainly not_--if you mean bring in a broom and a dust-pan! Just let
+me catch you at it, that's all!"
+
+The housekeeper shook her head with a resigned sigh.
+
+"Ah, well! it can't last long; when Miss Vera comes she'll turn the whole
+place inside-out, and all them nasty pipes, and dogs and things will be
+cleared away."
+
+"Do you think so?" suddenly sitting upright in his chair. "Wait a bit,
+Mrs. Eccles; don't go yet. Do you think Miss Vera will have things her
+own way with my brother?"
+
+"Oh! sir, what do you ask me for?" she answered, with discreet
+evasiveness. "Surely you must know more about Miss Vera than I can tell
+you."
+
+Mrs. Eccles went away, and Maurice got up and leant against the
+mantelpiece looking down gloomingly, into the fire. Vic, dislodged from
+his knee, sat up beside him, resting her little white paws on the edge of
+the fender, warming her nose.
+
+"What a fool I am!" said Maurice, aloud to himself. "I can't even hear
+her name mentioned by a servant without wanting to talk about her. Yes,
+it's clear he loves her--but does she love him? Will she be happy? Yes,
+of course, she will get her own way. Will that be enough for her? Ah!"
+turning suddenly round and taking half-a-dozen steps across the room. "It
+is high time I went. I am a coward and a traitor to linger on here; I
+will go. Why did I say to-morrow--why have I not settled to go this very
+day? If I were not so weak and so irresolute, I should be gone by this
+time. I ought never, knowing what I do know of myself--I ought never to
+have come back at all." He went back to the fire and sat down again,
+lifting the little dog back on to his knee. "I shall get over it, I
+suppose," he murmured. "Men don't die of this sort of thing; she will
+marry, and she will think me unkind because I shall never come near her;
+but even if she knew the truth, it would never make any difference to
+her; and by-and-by I too, I suppose, shall marry." The soliloquy died
+away into silence. Maurice stroked the dog and looked at the fire
+dreamily and somewhat drearily.
+
+Some one tapped at the door.
+
+"Come in! What is it, Mrs. Eccles?" he cried, rousing himself.
+
+The door softly opened and there entered, not Mrs. Eccles, but Vera
+Nevill.
+
+Captain Kynaston sprang hastily to his feet. "Oh, Vera! I beg your
+pardon--how do you do? I suppose you have come for John? You must have
+missed him; he started for the vicarage half-an-hour ago."
+
+"No, I have seen him. I have come to see you, Maurice, if you don't
+mind." She spoke rather timidly, not looking at him.
+
+"I am delighted, of course," he answered, a little constrainedly.
+
+Vera stood up on the hearth divesting herself of her long fur cloak; she
+flung it over the back of a chair, and then took off her hat and gloves.
+Maurice was strangely unlike himself this morning, for he never offered
+to help her in these operations, he only stood leaning against the corner
+of the mantelpiece opposite her, looking at her.
+
+Vera stooped down and stroked the little fox-terrier; when she had done
+so, she raised her head and met his eyes.
+
+Did she see, ere he hastily averted them, all the hunger and all the
+longing that filled them as he watched her? He, in his turn, stooped and
+replenished the fire.
+
+"John sent me to talk to you, Maurice," began Vera, hurriedly, like one
+repeating a lesson; "he tells me you will not be with us on the 27th; is
+that so?"
+
+"I am sorry, but I am obliged to go away," he answered.
+
+"John is dreadfully hurt, Maurice. I hope you will alter your mind."
+
+"Is it John for whom you are speaking, or for yourself?" he asked,
+looking at her.
+
+"For both of us. Of course it will be a great disappointment if you are
+not there. You are his only brother, and he will feel it deeply."
+
+"And you; will you feel it?" he persisted. She coloured a little.
+
+"Yes, I shall be very sorry," she answered, nervously. "I should not like
+John to be vexed on his wedding-day; he has been a kind brother to you,
+Maurice, and it seems hard that you cannot do this little thing to show
+your sense of it."
+
+"Believe me, I show my gratitude to my brother just as well in staying
+away as in remaining," he answered, earnestly. "Do not urge me any
+further, Vera; I would do anything in the world to please John, but
+I cannot be present at your wedding."
+
+There was a moment's silence; the fire flickered up merrily between them;
+a red-hot cinder fell out noisily from the grate; the clock ticked
+steadily on the chimney-piece; the little terrier sniffed at the edge
+of Vera's dress.
+
+Suddenly there came into her heart a wild desire _to know_, to eat for
+once of that forbidden fruit of the tree of Eden, whence the flaming
+swords in vain beckoned her back; to eat, and afterwards, perchance, to
+perish of the poisonous food.
+
+A wild conflict of thought thronged into her soul. Prudence, wisdom, her
+very heart itself counselled her to be still and to go. But something
+stronger than all else was within her too; and something that was new and
+strange, and perilously sweet to her; a something that won the day.
+
+She turned to him, stretching out her hands; the warm glow of the fire
+lit up her lovely face and her eloquent pleading eyes, and flickered over
+the graceful and beautiful figure, whose perfect outlines haunted his
+fancy for ever.
+
+"Stay, for my sake, because I ask you!" she cried, with a sudden passion;
+"or else tell me why you must go."
+
+There came no answering flash into his eyes, only he lowered them beneath
+hers; he sat down suddenly, as though he was weary, on the chair whence
+he had risen at her entrance, so that she stood before him, looking down
+at him.
+
+There was a certain repression in his face which made him look stern and
+cold, as one who struggles with a mortal temptation. He stooped over the
+little dog, and became seemingly engrossed in stroking it.
+
+"I cannot stop," he said, in a cold, measured voice; "it is an
+impossibility. But, since you ask me, I will tell you why. It can make no
+possible difference to you to know; it may, indeed, excite your interest
+or your pity for a few moments whilst you listen to me; but when it is
+over and you go away you will forget it again. I do not ask you to
+remember it or me; it is, in fact, all I ask, that you should forget.
+This is what it is. Your wedding-day is very near; it is bringing you
+happiness and love. I can rejoice in your happiness. I am not so selfish
+as to lament it; but you will not wish me to be there to see it when I
+tell you that I have been fool enough to dare to love you myself. It is
+the folly of a madman, is it not? since I have never had the slightest
+hope or entertained the faintest wish to alter the conditions of your
+life; nor have I even asked myself what effect such a confession as this
+that you have wrung from me can have upon you. Whether it excites your
+pity or your contempt, or even your amusement, it cannot in any case make
+any difference to me. My folly, at all events, cannot hurt you or my
+brother; it can hurt no one but myself: it cannot even signify to you.
+It is only for my own sake that I am going, because one cannot bear more
+than a certain amount, can one? I thought I might have been strong
+enough, but I find that it would be too much; that is all. You will not
+ask me to stay any more, will you?"
+
+Not once had he looked at her; not by a single sign or token had he
+betrayed the slightest emotion or agitation. His voice had been steady
+and unbroken; he spoke in a low and somewhat monotonous manner; it was
+as though he had been relating something that in no way concerned
+himself--some story that was of some other, and that other of no great
+interest either to him who told it or to her who listened to the tale.
+Any one suddenly coming into the room would have guessed him to be
+entirely engrossed in the contemplation of the little dog between his
+hands; that he was relating the story of his own heart would not have
+been imagined for an instant.
+
+When he had done speaking there was an absolute silence in the room. What
+he had spoken seemed to admit of no answer of any sort or kind from his
+listener. He had asked for nothing; he had pleaded neither for her
+sympathy nor her forgiveness, far less for any definite expression of the
+effect of his words upon her. He had not, seemingly, cared to know how
+they affected her. He had simply told his own story--that was all; it
+concerned no one but himself. She might pity him, she might even be
+amused at him, as he had said: anyhow, it made no difference to him;
+he had chosen to present a picture of his inner life to her as a
+doctor might have described some complicated disease to a chance
+acquaintance--it was a physiological study, if she cared to look upon it
+as such; if not, it did not matter. There was no possible answer that she
+could make to him; no form of words by which she could even acknowledge
+that she had heard him speak.
+
+She stood perfectly silent for the space of some two or three seconds;
+she scarcely breathed, her very heart seemed to have ceased to beat; it
+was as if she had been turned to stone. She knew not what she felt; it
+was neither pain, nor joy, nor regret; it was only a sort of dull apathy
+that oppressed her very being.
+
+Presently she put forth her hands, almost mechanically, and reached her
+cloak and hat from the chair behind her.
+
+The soft rustle of her dress upon the carpet struck his ear; he looked up
+with a start, like one waking out of a painful dream.
+
+"You are going!" he said, in his usual voice.
+
+"Yes; I am going."
+
+He stood up, facing her.
+
+"There is nothing more to be said, is there?" He said it not as though he
+asked her a question, but as one asserting a fact.
+
+"Nothing, I suppose," she answered, rather wearily, not looking at him as
+she spoke.
+
+"I shall not see you again, as I leave to-morrow morning by the early
+train. You will, at least, wish me good-bye?"
+
+"Good-bye, Maurice."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera; God bless you."
+
+She opened the door softly and went out. She went slowly away down the
+avenue, wrapping her cloak closely around her; the wind blew cold and
+chill, and she shivered a little as she walked. Presently she struck
+aside along a narrow pathway through the grass that led her homewards by
+a shorter cut. She had forgotten that Sir John was to wait for her at the
+lodge-gates.
+
+She had forgotten his very existence. For she _knew_. She had eaten of
+the tree of knowledge, and the scales had fallen for ever from her eyes.
+
+She knew that Maurice loved her--and, alas! for her--she knew also that
+she loved him. And between them a great gulf was fixed; deep, and wide,
+and impassable as the waters of Lethe.
+
+Out of the calm, unconscious lethargy of her maidenhood's untroubled
+dreams the soul of Vera had awakened at length to the realization of the
+strong, passionate woman's heart that was within her.
+
+She loved! It had come to her at last; this thing that she had scorned
+and disbelieved in, and yet that, possibly, she had secretly longed for.
+She had deemed herself too cold, too wise, too much set upon the good
+things of earth, to be touched by that scorching fire; but now she was no
+colder than any other love-sick maiden, no wiser than every other foolish
+woman who had been ready to wreck her life for love in the world's
+history.
+
+Surely no girl ever learnt the secret of her own heart with such dire
+dismay as did Vera Nevill. There was neither joy nor gladness within her,
+only a great anger against herself and her fate, and even against him
+who, as he had said, had dared to love her. She had courted the avowal
+from his lips, and yet she resented the words she had wrung from him.
+But, more than all, she resented the treachery of the heart that was
+within her.
+
+"Why did I ever see him?" she cried aloud in her bitterness, striking her
+hands wildly against each other. "What evil fate brought us together?
+What fool's madness induced me to go near him to-day? I was happy enough;
+I had all I wanted; I was content with my fate--and now--now!" Her
+passionate words died away into a wail. In her haste and her abstraction
+her foot caught against a long, withered bramble trail that lay across
+her path; she half stumbled. It was sufficient to arrest her steps. She
+stood still, and leant against the smooth, whitened trunk of a beech
+tree. Her hands locked themselves tightly together; her face, white and
+miserable, lifted itself despairingly towards the pitiless winter sky
+above her.
+
+"How am I to live out my life?" she asked herself, in her anguish.
+
+It had not entered into her head that she could alter it. It did not
+occur to her to imagine that she could give up anything to which she now
+stood pledged. To be John Kynaston's wife, and to love his brother, that
+was what struck upon her with horror; no other possible contingency had
+as yet suggested itself to her.
+
+Presently, as she moved slowly onwards, still absorbed in her new-found
+misfortune, a fresh train of thought came into her mind. She thought no
+longer about herself, but about him.
+
+"How cruel I was to leave him like that," she said to herself,
+reproachfully; "without a word, or so much as a look, of
+consolation--for, if I suffer, has not he suffered too!"
+
+She forgot that he had asked her for nothing; she only knew that, little
+enough as she had to give him, she had withheld that little from him.
+
+"What must he think of me?" she repeated to herself, in dismay. "How
+heartless and how cold I must be in his eyes to have parted from him thus
+without one single kind word. I might, at least, have told him that I was
+grateful for the love I cannot take. I wonder," she continued, half aloud
+to herself, "I wonder what it is like to be loved by Maurice----" She
+paused again, this time leaning against the wicket-gate that led out of
+the park into the high road.
+
+A little smile played for one instant about her lips, a soft, far-away
+look lingered in her dreaming eyes for just a moment--just the space of
+time it might take you to count twenty; she let her fancy carry her
+away--_where_?
+
+Ah, sweet and perilous reverie! too dear and too dangerous to be safely
+indulged in. Vera roused herself with a start, passing her hand across
+her brow as though to brush away the thoughts that would fain have
+lingered there.
+
+"Impossible!" she said aloud to herself, moving on again rapidly. "I must
+be a fool to stand here dreaming--I, whose fate is irrevocably fixed; and
+I would sooner die than alter it. The best match in the county, it is
+called. Well, so it is; and nothing less would satisfy me. But--but--I
+think I will see him once again, and wish him good-bye more kindly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+"POOR WISDOM."
+
+ No; vain, alas! the endeavour
+ From bonds so sweet to sever,
+ Poor Wisdom's chance against a glance
+ Is now as weak as ever!
+
+ Thos. Moore.
+
+
+The station at Sutton stood perched up above the village on a high
+embankment, upon which the railway crossed the valley from the hills that
+lay to the north to those that lay to the south of it. Up at the station
+it was always draughty and generally cold. To-day, this very early
+morning, about ten minutes before the first up train is due, it is not
+only cold and draughty, but it is also wet and foggy. A damp, white mist
+fills the valley below, and curls up the bare hill sides above; it hangs
+chillingly about the narrow, open shed on the up side of the station,
+covering the wooden bench within it with thick beads of moisture, so that
+no man dare safely sit down on it, and clinging coldly and penetratingly
+to the garments of a tall young lady in a long ulster and a thick veil,
+who is slowly walking up and down the platform.
+
+The solitary porter on duty eyes her inquiringly. "Going by the up train,
+Miss?" he says, touching his hat respectfully as he passes her.
+
+"No," says Vera, blushing hotly under the thick shelter of her veil, and
+then adds with that readiness of explanation to which persons who have a
+guilty conscience are prone, "I am only waiting to see somebody off." An
+uncalled-for piece of information which has only the effect of setting
+the bucolic mind of the local porter agog with curiosity and wonderment.
+
+Presently the few passengers for the early train begin to arrive; a
+couple of farmers going into the market town, a village girl in a smart
+bonnet, an old woman in a dirty red shawl, carrying a bundle; that is
+all. Maurice is very late. Vera remembers that he always puts off
+starting to catch a train till the very last minute. She stands waiting
+for him at the further end of the platform, as far away as she can from
+the knot of rustic passengers, with a beating heart and a fever of
+impatience within her.
+
+The train is signalled, and at that very minute the dog-cart from
+Kynaston drives up at last! Even then he has to get his ticket, and to
+convey himself and his portmanteau across from the other side of the
+line. Their good-bye will be short indeed!
+
+The train steams up, and Maurice hurries forward followed by the porter
+bearing his rugs and sticks; he does not even see her, standing a little
+back, as she does, so as not to attract more attention than need be. But
+when all his things are put into the carriage, and the porter has been
+duly tipped and has departed, Captain Kynaston hears a soft voice behind
+him.
+
+"I have come to wish you good-bye again." He turns, flushing at the sound
+of the sweet familiar voice, and sees Vera in her long ulster, and her
+face hidden behind her veil, by his side.
+
+"Good Heavens, Vera! _you_--out on such a morning?"
+
+"I could not let you go away without--without--one kind word," she
+begins, stammering painfully, her voice shaking so, as she speaks, that
+he cannot fail to divine her agitation, even though he cannot see the
+lovely troubled face that has been so carefully screened from his gaze.
+
+"This is too good of you," he begins. That very minute a brougham dashes
+rapidly up to the station.
+
+"It is the Shadonake carriage!" cried Vera, casting a terrified glance
+behind her. "Who can it be? they will see me."
+
+"Jump into the train," he answers, hurriedly, and, without a thought
+beyond an instinct of self-preservation for the moment, she obeys him.
+Maurice follows her quickly, closing the carriage door behind him.
+"Nobody can have seen you," he says. "I daresay it is only some visitors
+going away; they could not have noticed you. Oh! Vera," turning with
+sudden earnestness to her; "how am I ever to thank you for this great
+kindness to me?"
+
+"It is nothing; only a five minutes' walk before breakfast. It is no
+trouble to me; and I did not want you to think me unfeeling, or unkind
+to you."
+
+Before she could speak another word the carriage door was violently
+slammed to, and the guard's sharp shrill whistle heralded the departure
+of the train. With a cry, Vera sprang towards the door; before she could
+reach it, Maurice, who had perceived instantly what had happened, had let
+down the window and was shouting to the porter. It was too late. The
+train was off.
+
+Vera sank back hopelessly upon the seat; and Maurice, according to the
+manners and customs of infuriated Britons, gave utterance to a very
+laconic word of bad import below his breath.
+
+"I wouldn't have had this happen for ten thousand pounds!" he said, after
+a minute, looking at her in blank despair.
+
+Vera was taking off her veil mechanically; when he could see her face, he
+perceived that she was very white.
+
+"Never mind," she said, with a faint smile; "there is no real harm done.
+It is unfortunate, that is all. The train stops at Tripton. I can get out
+there and walk home."
+
+"Five miles! and it is I who have got you into this scrape! What a
+confounded fool I was to make you get into the carriage! I ought to have
+remembered how late it was. How are you to walk all that way?"
+
+"Pray don't reproach yourself, Maurice; I shall not mind the walk a bit.
+I shall have to confess my escapade to Marion, and tell her why I am late
+for breakfast--that is all; as it is, I can, at all events, finish what I
+wanted to say to you."
+
+And then she was silent, looking away from him out of the further window.
+The train, gradually accelerating its pace, sped quickly on through the
+fog-blotted landscape. Hills, villages, church spires, all that made the
+country familiar, were hidden in the mist; only here and there, in the
+nearer hedge-rows, an occasional tree stood out bleak and black against
+the white veil beyond like a sentinel alone on a limitless plain.
+Absolute silence--only the train rushing on faster and faster through
+the white, wet world without.
+
+Then, at last, it was Maurice, not Vera, that spoke.
+
+"I blame myself bitterly for this, Vera," he said in a low, pained voice.
+"Had it not been for my foolish, unthinking words to you yesterday, you
+would not have been tempted to do this rash act of kindness. I spoke to
+you in a way that I had no right to speak, believing that my words would
+make no impression upon you beyond the fact of showing you that it was
+impossible for me to stay for your wedding. I never dreamt that your
+kindly interest in me would lead you to waste another thought upon me.
+I did not know how good and pitying your nature is, nor give you credit
+for so much generosity."
+
+She turned round to him sharply and suddenly. "What are you saying?" she
+cried, with a harsh pain in her voice. "What words are you using to me?
+_Kindness, pity, generosity_!--have they any place here between you
+and me?"
+
+There was a moment in which neither of them spoke, only their eyes met,
+and the secret that was hidden in their souls lay suddenly revealed to
+each of them.
+
+In another instant Vera had sunk upon her knees before him.
+
+"While you live," she cried, passionately, lifting her beautiful dark
+eyes, that were filled with a new light and a new glory, to his--"while
+you live I will never be another man's wife!"
+
+And there was no other word spoken. Only a shower of close, hot kisses
+upon her lips, and two strong arms that drew her nearer and tighter to
+the beating heart against which she rested, for he was only human after
+all.
+
+Oh, swift and divine moment of joy, that comes but once in a man's life,
+when he holds the woman he loves for the first time to his heart! Once,
+and once only, he tastes of heaven and forgets life itself in the short
+and delirious draught. What envious deity shall grudge him those moments
+of rapture, all too sweet, and, alas! all too short!
+
+To Vera and Maurice, locked in each other's arms, time had no shore, and
+life was not. It might have been ten seconds, it might have been an
+eternity--they could not have told--no pang entered that serene haven
+where their souls were lapped in perfect happiness; no serpent entered
+into Eden; no harsh note struck upon their enchanted ears, nor jarring
+sight upon their sun-dazzled vision. Where in that moment was the duty
+and the honour that was a part of the man's very self? What to Vera was
+the rich marriage and the life of affluence, and all the glitter and
+tinsel which it had been her soul's desire to attain? She remembered it
+not; like a house of cards, it had fallen shattered to the ground.
+
+They loved, and they were together. There was neither duty, nor faith,
+nor this world's wisdom between them; nothing but that great joy which on
+earth has no equal, and which Heaven itself cannot exceed.
+
+But brief are the moments whilst joy, with bated breath and folded wings,
+pauses on his flight; too soon, alas! is the divine elixir dashed away
+from our lingering lips.
+
+Already, for Maurice and for Vera, it is over, and they have awakened to
+earth once more.
+
+It is the man who is the first to remember. "Good God, Vera!" he cries,
+pushing her back from him, "what terrible misfortune is this? Can it be
+true that you must suffer too, that you love me?"
+
+"Why not?" she answered, looking at him; happy still, but troubled too;
+for already for her also Paradise is over. "Is it so hard to believe? And
+yet many women must have loved you. But I--I have never loved before.
+Listen, Maurice: when I accepted your brother, I liked him, I thought I
+could be very happy with him; and--and--do not think ill of me--I wanted
+so much to be rich; it was so miserable being poor and dependent, and I
+knew life so well, and how hard the struggle is for those who are poor.
+I was so determined I would do well for myself; and he was good, and I
+liked him."
+
+At the mention of the brother, whom he had wronged, Maurice hid his face
+in his hands and groaned aloud.
+
+She laid her hand softly upon his knee; she had half raised herself upon
+the seat by his side, and her head, from which her hat had fallen,
+pillowed itself with a natural caressing action against his shoulder.
+
+At the soft touch he shivered.
+
+"It was dreadful, was it not? But then, I am not perfect, and I liked the
+idea of being rich, and I had never loved--I did not even know what it
+meant. And then I met you--long ago your photograph had arrested my
+fancy; and do you remember that evening at Shadonake when I first saw
+you?"
+
+Could he ever forget one single detail of that meeting?
+
+"You stood at the foot of the staircase, waiting, and I came down softly
+behind you. You did not see me till I was close to you, and then you
+turned, and you took my hands, and you looked and looked at me till my
+eyes could no longer meet yours. There came a vague trouble into my
+heart; I had never felt anything like it before. Maurice, from that
+instant I must have loved you."
+
+"For God's sake, Vera!" he cried out wildly, as though the gentle words
+gave him positive pain, "do not speak of it. Do you not see the abyss
+which lies between us--which must part us for ever?"
+
+"Loving you, I will never marry your brother!" she answered, earnestly.
+
+"And I will never rob my brother of his bride. Darling, darling, do not
+tempt me too far, or God knows what I may say and do! To reach you, love,
+would be to dip my hands in dishonour and basest treachery. Not even for
+you can I do this vile thing. Kiss me once more, sweet, and let me go out
+of your life for ever; believe me, it is better so; best for us both. In
+time you will forget, you will be happy. He will be good to you, and you
+will be glad that you were not tempted to betray him."
+
+"You do not know what you ask of me," she cried, lifting her face, all
+wet with tears, to his. "Leave me, if you will--go your way--forget
+me--it is all the same to me; henceforth there is no other man on earth
+to me but you. I will never swear vows at God's altar that I cannot keep,
+or commit the frightful sin of marrying one man whilst I know that I love
+another. Yes, yes; I know it is a horrible, dreadful misfortune. Have I
+sought it, or gone out of my way to find it? Have I not struggled to
+keep it away from me? striven to blind my eyes to it and to go on as I
+was, and never to acknowledge it to myself? Do I not love wealth above
+all things; do I not know that he is rich, and you poor? And yet I cannot
+help loving you!"
+
+He took her clasped, trembling hands within his own, and held them
+tightly. In that moment the woman was weak, and the man was her master.
+
+"Listen," he said. "Yes, you are right, I am poor; but that is not all.
+Vera, for Heaven's sake, reflect, and pause before you wreck your whole
+life. I cannot marry you--not only because I am poor, but also, alas!
+because I am bound to another woman."
+
+"Helen Romer!" she murmured, faintly; "and you love _her_?" A sick, cold
+misery rushed into her heart. She strove to withdraw her hands from his;
+but he only held them the tighter.
+
+"No; by the God above us, I love you, and only you," he answered her,
+almost roughly; "but I am bound to her. I cannot afford to marry her--we
+have neither of us any money; but I am bound all the same. Only one thing
+can set me free; if, in five years, we are, neither of us, better off
+than now, she has told me that I may go free. Under no other conditions
+can I ever marry any one else. That is my secret, Vera. At any moment she
+can claim me, and for five years I must wait for her."
+
+"Then I will wait for you five years too," she cried, passionately. "Is
+my love less strong, less constant, than hers, do you think? Can I not
+wait patiently too?" She wound her arms about his neck, and drew his face
+down to hers.
+
+"Five years," she murmured; "it is but a small slice out of one's life
+after all; and when it is over, it seems such a little space to look back
+upon. Dearest, some day we shall remember how miserable, and yet how
+happy too, we have been this morning; and we shall smile, as we remember
+it all, out of the fulness of our content."
+
+How was he to gainsay so sweet a prophet? Already the train was
+slackening, and the moment when they must part drew near. The beautiful
+head lay upon his breast; the deep, shadowy eyes, which love for the
+first time had softened into the perfection of their own loveliness,
+mirrored themselves in his; the flower-shaped, trembling lips were close
+up to his. How could he resist their gentle pleading? There was no time
+for more words, for more struggles between love and duty.
+
+"So be it, then," he murmured, and caught her in one last, passionate
+embrace to his heart.
+
+Five minutes later a tall young lady, deeply veiled as when she had
+entered the train, got out of it and walked swiftly away from Tripton
+station down the hill towards the high road. So absorbed was she in her
+own reflections that she utterly failed to notice another figure, also
+female and also veiled, who, preceding her through the mist, went on
+swiftly before her down the road. Nor did she pay the slightest attention
+to the fact until a turn in the road brought her suddenly face to face
+with two persons who stood deep in conversation under the shelter of
+the tall, misty hedge-row.
+
+As Vera approached these two persons sprang apart with a guilty
+suddenness, and revealed to her astonished eyes--Beatrice Miller and Mr.
+Herbert Pryme.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+AN UNLUCKY LOVE-LETTER.
+
+ Heaven first taught letters for some wretch's aid,
+ Some banished lover, or some captive maid.
+
+ Pope, "Eloisa and Abelard."
+
+
+To ascertain rightly how Mr. Pryme and Miss Miller came to be found in
+the parish of Tripton at nine o'clock in the morning, standing together
+under a wet hedge-row, it will be necessary to take a slight retrospect
+of what had taken place in the history of these two people since the time
+when the young barrister had spent that memorable week at Shadonake.
+
+The visit had come to an end uneventfully for either of them; but two
+days after his departure from the house Mr. Pryme had been guilty of a
+gross piece of indiscretion. He had forgotten to observe a golden rule
+which should be strongly impressed upon every man and woman. The maxim
+should be inculcated upon the young with at least as much earnestness as
+the Catechism or the Ten Commandments. In homely language, it runs
+something in this fashion: "Say what you like, but never commit yourself
+to paper."
+
+Mr. Pryme had observed the first portion of this maxim religiously, but
+he had failed to pay equal regard to the latter. He _had_ committed
+himself to paper in the shape of a very bulky and very passionate
+love-letter, which was duly delivered by the morning postman and laid at
+the side of Miss Miller's plate upon the breakfast-table.
+
+Now, Miss Miller, as it happened on that particular morning, had a
+very heavy influenza cold, and had stayed in bed for breakfast. When,
+therefore, Mrs. Miller prepared to send a small tray up to her daughter's
+bedroom with her breakfast, she took up her letters also from the table
+to put upon it with her tea and toast. The very thick envelope of one
+of them first attracted her notice; then the masculine nature of the
+handwriting; and when, upon turning it over, she furthermore perceived a
+very large-sized monogram of the letters "H. P." upon the envelope, her
+mind underwent a sudden revolution as to the sending of her daughter's
+correspondence upstairs.
+
+"There, that will do," she said to the lady's maid, "you can take up
+the tray; I will bring Miss Miller's letters up to her myself after
+breakfast."
+
+After which, without more ado, she walked to the window and opened the
+letter. Some people might have had scruples as to such a strong measure.
+Mrs. Miller had none at all. Her children, she argued, were her own
+property and under her own care; as long as they lived under her roof,
+they had no right over anything that they possessed independently of
+their mother.
+
+Under ordinary circumstances she would not have opened a letter addressed
+to any of her children; but if there was anything of a suspicious nature
+in their correspondence, she certainly reserved to herself the perfect
+right of dealing with it as she thought fit.
+
+She opened the letter and read the first line; it ran thus:--
+
+"My dearest darling Beatrice." She then turned to the end of it and read
+the last; it was this: "Your own most devoted and loving Herbert."
+
+That was quite enough for Mrs. Miller; she did not want to read any more
+of it. She slipped the letter into her pocket, and went back to the
+breakfast-table and poured out the tea and coffee for her husband and her
+sons.
+
+But when the family meal was over, it was with a very angry aspect that
+Mrs. Miller went upstairs and stood by her eldest daughter's bedside.
+
+"Beatrice, here is a letter which has come for you this morning, of which
+I must ask you an explanation."
+
+"You have read it, mamma!" flushing angrily, as she took it from her
+mother's hand.
+
+"I have read the first line and the last. I certainly should not take the
+trouble to wade all through such contemptible trash!" Which was an
+unprovoked insult to poor Beatrice's feelings.
+
+She snatched the letter from her mother's hand, and crumpled it jealously
+under her pillow.
+
+"How can you call it trash, then, if you have not read it?"
+
+It was hard, certainly; to have her letter opened was bad enough, but to
+have it called names was worse still. The letter, which to Beatrice would
+be so full of sacred charm and delight--such a poem on love and its
+sweetness--was nothing more to her mother than "contemptible trash!"
+
+But where in the whole world has a love-letter been indited, however
+delightful and perfect it may be to the writer and the receiver of it,
+that is nothing but an object of ridicule or contempt to the whole world
+beside? Love is divine as Heaven itself to the two people who are
+concerned in its ever new delights; but to us lookers-on its murmurs are
+but fooleries, its sighs are ludicrous, and its written words absolute
+imbecilities; and never a memory of our own lost lives can make the
+spectacle of it in others anything but an irritating and idiotic
+exhibition.
+
+"I have read quite enough," continued Mrs. Miller, sternly, "to
+understand the nature of it. It is from Mr. Pryme, I imagine?"
+
+"Yes, mamma."
+
+"And by what right, may I ask, does Mr. Pryme commence a letter to you in
+the warm terms of affection which I have had the pleasure of reading?"
+
+"By the right which I myself have given him," she answered, boldly.
+
+Regardless of her cold, she sat upright in her bed; a flush of defiance
+in her face, her short dark hair flung back from her brow in wild
+confusion. She understood at once that all had been discovered, and she
+was going to do battle for her lover.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me, Beatrice, that you have engaged yourself to this
+Mr. Pryme?"
+
+"Certainly I have."
+
+"You know very well that your father and I will never consent to it."
+
+"Never is a long day, mamma."
+
+"Don't take up my words like that. I consider, Beatrice, that you have
+deceived me shamefully. You persuaded me to ask that young man to the
+house because you said that Sophy Macpherson was fond of him."
+
+"So she is."
+
+"Beatrice, how can you be so wicked and tell such lies in the face of
+that letter to yourself?"
+
+"I never said he was fond of her," she answered, with just the vestige of
+a twinkle in her eyes.
+
+"If I had known, I would never have asked him to come," continued her
+mother.
+
+"No; I am sure you would not. But I did not tell you, mamma."
+
+"I have other views for you. You must write to this young man and tell
+him you will give him up."
+
+"I certainly shall not do that."
+
+"I shall not give my consent to your engagement."
+
+"I never imagined that you would, mamma, and that is why I did not ask
+for it."
+
+And then Mrs. Miller got very angry indeed.
+
+"What on earth do you intend to do, you ungrateful, disobedient,
+rebellious child?"
+
+"I mean to marry Herbert some day because I love him," answered her
+daughter, coolly; "but I will not run away with him unless you force me
+to it; and I hope, by-and-by, when Geraldine is grown up and can take my
+place, that you will give us your consent and your blessing. I am quite
+willing to wait a reasonable time for the chance of it."
+
+"Is it likely that I shall give my consent to your marrying a young man
+picked up nobody knows where--out of the gutter, most likely? Who are his
+people, I should like to know?"
+
+"I daresay his father is as well connected as mine," answered Beatrice,
+who knew all about her mother's having married a _parvenu_.
+
+"Beatrice, I am ashamed of you, sneering at your own father!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, mamma; I did not mean to sneer, but you say very
+trying things; and Mr. Pryme is a gentleman, and every bit as good as we
+are!"
+
+"And where is the money to be found for this precious marriage, I should
+like to know? Do you suppose Mr. Pryme can support you?"
+
+"Oh dear, no; but I know papa will not let me starve."
+
+And Mrs. Miller knew it too. However angry she might be, and however
+unsuitably Beatrice might choose to marry, Mr. Miller would never allow
+his daughter to be insufficiently provided for. Beatrice's marriage
+portion would be a small fortune to a poor young man.
+
+"It is your money he is after!" she said, angrily.
+
+"I don't think so, mamma; and of course of that I am the best judge."
+
+"He shall never set foot here again. I shall write to him myself and
+forbid him the house."
+
+"That, of course, you may do as you like about, mamma; I cannot prevent
+your doing so, but it will not make me give him up, because I shall never
+marry any one else."
+
+And there Mrs. Miller was, perforce, obliged to let the matter rest. She
+went her way angry and vexed beyond measure, and somewhat baffled too.
+How is a mother to deal with a daughter who is so determined and so
+defiant as was Beatrice Miller? There is no known method in civilized
+life of reducing a young lady of twenty to submission in matters of the
+heart. She could not whip her, or put her on bread and water, nor could
+she shut her up in a dark cupboard, as she might have done had she been
+ten years old.
+
+All she could do was to write a very indignant letter to Mr. Pryme,
+forbidding him ever to enter her doors, or address himself in any way to
+her daughter again. Having sent this to the post, she was at the end of
+her resources. She did, indeed, confide the situation with very strong
+and one-sided colouring to her husband; but Mr. Miller had not the strong
+instincts of caste which were inherent in his wife. She could not make
+him see what dreadful deed of iniquity Herbert Pryme and his daughter
+had perpetrated between them.
+
+"What's wrong with the young fellow?" he asked, looking up from the pile
+of parliamentary blue-books on the library table before him.
+
+"Nothing is wrong, Andrew; but he isn't a suitable husband for Beatrice."
+
+"Why? you asked him here, Caroline. I suppose, if he was good enough to
+stay in the house, he is no different to the boys, or anybody else who
+was here."
+
+"It is one thing to stay here, and quite another thing to want to marry
+your daughter."
+
+"Well, if he's an honest man, and the girl loves him, I don't see the
+good of making a fuss about it; she had better do as she likes."
+
+"But, Andrew, the man hasn't a penny; he has made nothing at the bar
+yet." It was no use appealing to his exclusiveness, for he had none; it
+was a better move to make him look at the money-point of the question.
+
+"Oh, well, he will get on some day, I daresay, and meanwhile I shall give
+Beatrice quite enough for them both when she marries."
+
+"You don't understand, Andrew."
+
+"No, my dear," very humbly, "perhaps I don't; but there, do as you think
+best, of course; I am sure I don't wish to interfere about the children;
+you always manage all these kind of things; and if you wouldn't mind, my
+dear, I am so very busy just now. You know there is to be this attack
+upon the Government as soon as the House meets, and I have the whole of
+the papers upon the Patagonian and Bolivian question to look up, and most
+fraudulent misstatements of the truth I believe them to be; although, as
+far as I've gone, I haven't been able to make it quite out yet, but I
+shall come to it--no doubt I shall come to it. I am going to speak upon
+this question, my dear, and I mean to tell the House that a grosser
+misrepresentation of facts was never yet promulgated from the Ministerial
+benches, nor flaunted in the faces of an all too leniently credulous
+Opposition; that will warm 'em up a bit, I flatter myself; those fellows
+in office will hang their heads in shame at the word Patagonia for weeks
+after."
+
+"But who cares about Patagonia?"
+
+"Oh, nobody much, I suppose. But there's bound to be an agitation against
+the Government, and that does as well as anything else. We can't afford
+to neglect a single chance of kicking them out. I have planned my speech
+pretty well right through; it will be very effective--withering, I
+fancy--but it's just these plaguy blue-books that won't quite tally with
+what I've got to say. I must go through them again though----"
+
+"You had better have read the papers first, and settled your speech
+afterwards," suggested his wife.
+
+"Oh dear, no! that wouldn't do at all; after all, you know, between you
+and me, the facts don't go for much; all we want is, to denounce them;
+any line of argument, if it is ingenious enough, will do; lay on the big
+words thickly--that's what your constituents like. Law bless you! _they_
+don't read the blue books; they'll take my word for granted if I say they
+are full of lies; it would be a comfort, however, if I could find a few.
+Of course, my dear, this is only between you and me."
+
+A man is not always heroic to the wife of his bosom. Mrs. Miller went
+her way and left him to his righteous struggle among the Patagonian
+blue-books. After all, she said to herself, it had been her duty to
+inform him of his daughter's conduct, but it was needless to discuss
+the question further with him. He was incapable of approaching it from
+her own point of view. It would be better for her now to go her own way
+independently of him. She had always been accustomed to manage things her
+own way. It was nothing new to her.
+
+Later in the day she attempted to wrest a promise from Beatrice that
+she would hold no further communication with the prohibited lover. But
+Beatrice would give no such promise.
+
+"Is it likely that I should promise such a thing?" she asked her mother,
+indignantly.
+
+"You would do so if you knew what your duty to your mother was."
+
+"I have other duties besides those to you, mamma; when one has promised
+to marry a man, one is surely bound to consider him a little. If I have
+the chance of meeting him, I shall certainly take it."
+
+"I shall take very good care that you have no such chances, Beatrice."
+
+"Very well, mamma; you will, of course, do as you think best."
+
+It was in consequence of these and sundry subsequent stormy conversations
+that Mr. Herbert Pryme suddenly discovered that he had a very high regard
+and affection for Mr. Albert Gisburne, the vicar of Tripton, the same
+to whom once Vera's relations had wished to unite her.
+
+The connection between Mr. Gisburne and Herbert Pryme was a slender one;
+he had been at college with an elder brother of his, who had died in his
+(Herbert's) childhood. He did not indeed very clearly recollect what this
+elder brother had been like; but having suddenly called to mind that,
+during the course of his short visit to Shadonake, he had discovered the
+fact of the college friendship, of which, indeed, Mr. Gisburne had
+informed him, he now was unaccountably inflamed by a desire to cultivate
+the acquaintance of the valued companion of his deceased brother's youth.
+
+He opened negotiations by the gift of a barrel of oysters, sent down
+from Wilton's, with an appropriate and graceful accompanying note. Mr.
+Gisburne was surprised, but not naturally otherwise than pleased by the
+attention. Next came a box of cigars, which again were shortly followed
+by two brace of pheasants purporting to be of Herbert's own shooting, but
+which, as a matter of fact, he had purchased in Vigo Street.
+
+This munificent succession of gifts reaped at length the harvest for
+which they had been sown. In his third letter of grateful acknowledgment
+for his young friend's kind remembrance of him, Mr. Gisburne, with some
+diffidence, for Tripton Rectory was neither lively nor remarkably
+commodious, suggested how great the pleasure would be were his friend to
+run down to him for a couple of days or so; he had nothing, in truth, to
+offer him but a bachelor's quarters and a hearty welcome; there was next
+to no attraction beyond a pretty rural village and a choral daily
+service; but still, if he cared to come, Mr. Gisburne need not say how
+delighted he would be, etc., etc.
+
+It is not too much to say that the friend jumped at it. On the shortest
+possible notice he arrived, bag and baggage, professing himself charmed
+with the bachelor's quarters; and, burning with an insatiable desire to
+behold the rurality of the village, to listen to the beauty and the
+harmony of the daily choral performances, he took up his abode in the
+clergyman's establishment; and the very next morning he sent a rural
+villager over to Shadonake with a half-crown for himself and a note to be
+given to Miss Miller the very first time she walked or rode out alone.
+This note was duly delivered, and that same afternoon Beatrice met her
+lover by appointment in an empty lime-kiln up among the chalk hills. This
+romantic rendezvous was, however, discontinued shortly, owing to the fact
+of Mrs. Miller having become suspicious of her daughter's frequent and
+solitary walks, and insisting on sending out Geraldine and her governess
+with her.
+
+A few mornings later a golden chance presented itself. Mr. and Mrs.
+Miller went away for the night to dine and sleep at a distant country
+house. Beatrice had not been invited to go with them. She did not venture
+to ask her lover to the house he had been forbidden to enter, but she
+ordered the carriage for herself, caught the early train to Tripton, met
+Herbert, by appointment, outside the station, and stood talking to him in
+the fog by the wayside, where Vera suddenly burst upon their astonished
+gaze.
+
+There was nothing for it but to take Vera into their confidence; and they
+were so much engrossed in their affairs that they entirely failed to
+notice how mechanically she answered, and how apathetically she appeared
+for the first few minutes to listen to their story. Presently, however,
+she roused herself into a semblance of interest. She promised not to
+betray the fact of the stolen interview, all the more readily because it
+did not strike either of them to inquire what she herself was doing in
+the Tripton road.
+
+In the end Vera walked on slowly by herself, and the Shadonake carriage,
+ordered to go along at a foot's pace from Sutton station towards Tripton,
+picked both girls up and conveyed them safely, each to their respective
+homes.
+
+"You will never tell of me, will you, Vera?" said Beatrice to her, for
+the twentieth time, ere they parted.
+
+"Of course not; indeed, I would gladly help you if I could," she
+answered, heartily.
+
+"You will certainly be able to help us both very materially some day,"
+said Beatrice, who had visions of being asked to stay at Kynaston, to
+meet Herbert.
+
+"I am afraid not," answered Vera, with a sigh. Already there was regret
+in her mind for the good things of life which she had elected to
+relinquish. "Put me down at this corner, Beatrice; I don't want to drive
+up to the vicarage. Good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera--and--and you won't mind my saying it--but I like you so
+much."
+
+Vera smiled, and, with a kiss, the girls parted; and Mrs. Daintree never
+heard after all the story of her sister's early visit to Tripton, for she
+returned so soon that she had not yet been missed. The vicar and his
+family had but just gathered round the breakfast-table, when, after
+having divested herself of her walking garments, she came in quietly and
+took her vacant place amongst them unnoticed and unquestioned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+LADY KYNASTON'S PLANS.
+
+ Swift as a shadow, short as any dream,
+ Brief as the lightning in the collied night.
+
+ And ere a man hath power to say, "Behold!"
+ The jaws of darkness do devour it up:
+ So quick bright things come to confusion.
+
+ "Midsummer Night's Dream."
+
+
+Sir John Kynaston sat alone in his old-bachelor rooms in London. They
+were dark, dingy rooms, such as are to be found in countless numbers
+among the narrow streets that encompass St. James's Street. They were
+cheerless and comfortless, and, withal, high-rented, and possessed of
+no other known advantage than that of their undeniably central situation.
+They were not rooms that one would suppose any man would care to linger
+in in broad daylight; and yet Sir John remained in them now a days
+almost from morning till night.
+
+He sat for the most part as he is sitting now--in a shabby, leathern
+arm-chair, stooping a little forward, and doing nothing. Sometimes he
+wrote a few necessary letters, sometimes he made a feint of reading the
+paper; but oftenest he did nothing, only sat still, staring before him
+with a hopeless misery in his face.
+
+For in these days Sir John Kynaston was a very unhappy man. He had
+received a blow such as strikes at the very root and spring of a man's
+life--a blow which a younger man often battles through and is none the
+worse in the end for, but under which a man of his age is apt to be
+crushed and to succumb. Within a week of his wedding-day Vera Nevill
+had broken her engagement to him. It had been a nine days' wonder in
+Meadowshire--the county had rung with the news--everybody had marvelled
+and speculated, but no one had got any nearer to the truth than that Vera
+was supposed to have "mistaken her feelings." The women had cried shame
+upon her for such capriciousness, and had voted her a fool into the
+bargain for throwing over such a match; and if a male voice, somewhat
+less timid than the rest, had here and there uplifted itself in her
+defence and had ventured to hint that she might have had sufficient and
+praiseworthy motives for her conduct, a chorus of feminine indignation
+had smothered the kindly suggestion in a whole whirl-wind of abuse and
+reviling.
+
+As to Sir John, he blamed her not, and yet he knew no more about it than
+any of them; he, too, could only have told you that Vera had mistaken her
+feelings--he knew no more than that--for it was but half the truth that
+she had told him. But it had been more than enough to convince him that
+she was perfectly right. When, after telling him plainly that she found
+she did not love him enough, that there had been other and extraneous
+reasons that had blinded her to the fact at the time she had accepted
+him, but that she had found it out later on; when, after saying this she
+had asked him plainly whether he would wish to have a wife who valued his
+name, and his wealth, and his fine old house at least as much as he did
+himself, Sir John had been able to give her but one answer. No, he would
+not have a wife who loved him in such a fashion. And he had thought well
+of her for telling him the truth beforehand instead of leaving him to
+find it out for himself later. If there had been a little, a very little,
+falling of his idol from the high pillar upon which he had set her up, in
+that she should at any time have been guided by mercenary and worldly
+motives; there had been at the same time a very great amount of respect
+for her brave and straightforward confession of her error at a time when
+most women would have found themselves unequal to the task of drawing
+back from the false position into which they had drifted. No, he could
+not blame her in any way.
+
+But, all the same, it was hard to bear. He said to himself that he was
+a doomed and fated man; twice had love and joy and domestic peace been
+within his grasp, and twice they had been wrested from his arms; these
+things, it was plain, were not for him. He was too old, he told himself,
+ever to make a further effort. No, there was nothing before him now but
+to live out his loveless life alone, to sink into a peevish, selfish old
+bachelor, and to make a will in Maurice's favour, and get himself out of
+the world that wanted him not with as much expedition as might be.
+
+And he loved Vera still. She was still to him the most pure and perfect
+of women--good as she was beautiful. Her loveliness haunted him by day
+and by night, till the bitter thought of what might have been and the
+contrast of the miserable reality drove him half wild with longings
+which he did not know how to repress. He sat at home in his rooms and
+moped; there were more streaks of white in his hair than of old, and
+there were new lines of care upon his brow--he looked almost an old man
+now. He sat indoors and did nothing. It was April by this time, and the
+London season was beginning; invitations of all kinds poured in upon him,
+but he refused them all; he would go nowhere. Now and then his mother
+came to see him and attempted to cheer and to rouse him; she had even
+asked him to come down to Walpole Lodge, but he had declined her request
+almost ungraciously.
+
+He never had much in common with his mother, and he felt no desire now
+for her sympathy; besides, the first time she had come she had been
+angry, and had called Vera a jilt, and that had offended him bitterly; he
+had rebuked her sternly, and she had been too wise to repeat the offence;
+but he had not forgotten it. Maurice, indeed, he would have been glad to
+see, but Maurice did not come near him. His regiment had lately moved to
+Manchester, and either he could not or would not get leave; and yet he
+had been idle enough at one time, and glad to run up to town upon the
+smallest pretext. Now he never came. It added a little to his irritation,
+but scarcely to his misery. On this particular afternoon, as he sat as
+usual brooding over the past, there came the sudden clatter of carriage
+wheels over the flagged roadway of the little back street, followed by a
+sharp ring at his door. It was his mother, of course; no other woman came
+to see him; he heard the rustle of her soft silken skirts up the narrow
+staircase, and her pleasant little chatter to the fat old landlady who
+was ushering her up, and presently the door opened and she came in.
+
+"Good morning, John. Dear me, how hot and stuffy this room is," holding
+up her soft old face to her son.
+
+He just touched her cheek. "I am sorry you find it so--shall I open the
+window?"
+
+"Oh!" sinking down in a chair, and throwing back her cloak; "how can you
+stand a fire in the room, it is quite mild and spring-like out. Have you
+not been out, John? it would do you good to get a little fresh air."
+
+"I shall go round to the club presently, I daresay," he answered,
+abstractedly, sitting down in his arm-chair again; all the pleasant
+flutter that the bright old lady brought with her, the atmosphere of life
+and variety that surrounded her, only vexed and wearied him, and jarred
+upon his nerves. She was always telling him to go somewhere or to do
+something; why couldn't she let him alone? he thought, irritably.
+
+"To your club? No further than that? Why, you might as well stay at home.
+Really, my dear, it's a great pity you don't go about and see some of
+your old friends; you can't mean to shut yourself up like a dormouse for
+ever, I suppose!"
+
+"I haven't the least idea what I mean to do," he answered, not
+graciously; she was his mother, and so he could not very well put her out
+at the door, but that was what he would have liked to do.
+
+"I don't see," continued Lady Kynaston, with unwonted courage, "I don't
+at all see why you should let this unfortunate affair weigh on you for
+ever; there is really no reason why you should not console yourself and
+marry some nice girl; there is Lady Mary Hendrie and plenty more only too
+ready to have you if you will only take that trouble----"
+
+"Mother, I wish you would not talk to me like that," he said,
+interrupting suddenly the easy flow of her consoling suggestions, and
+there was a look of real pain upon his face that smote her somewhat.
+"Never speak to me of marrying again. I shall never marry any one." He
+looked away from her, stern and angry, stooping again over the red ashes
+in the grate; if he had only given her one plea for her pity--if he had
+only added, "I have suffered too much, I love her still"--all her
+mother's heart must have gone out to him who, though he was not her
+favourite, was her first born after all; but he did not want her pity,
+he only wanted her to go away.
+
+"It is a great pity," she answered, stiffly, "because of Kynaston."
+
+"I shall never set foot at Kynaston again."
+
+Her colour rose a little--after all, she was a cunning little old lady.
+The little fox-terrier lay on the rug between them; she stooped down and
+patted it. "Good dog, good little Vic," she said, a little nervously;
+then, with a sudden courage, she looked up at her son again. "John, it
+is a sad thing that Kynaston must be left empty to go to rack and ruin;
+though I have never cared to live there myself, I have always hoped that
+you would. It would have grieved your poor father sadly to have thought
+that the old place was always to lie empty."
+
+"I cannot help it," he answered, moodily, wishing more than ever that she
+would go.
+
+"John;" she fidgeted with her bonnet strings, and her voice trembled a
+little; "John, if you are quite sure you will never live there yourself,
+why should not Maurice have it?"
+
+"Maurice! Has he told you to ask for it?" He sat bolt upright in
+his chair; he was attentive enough now; the idea that Maurice had
+commissioned his mother to ask for something he had not ventured to ask
+for himself was not pleasant to him. "Is it Maurice who has sent you?"
+
+"No, no, my dear John; certainly not; why, I haven't seen Maurice for
+weeks and weeks; he never comes to town now. But I'll tell you why the
+idea came to me. I called just now in Princes Gate; poor old Mr. Harlowe
+has had a stroke--it is certain he cannot live long now, after the severe
+attack he had of bronchitis, too, two months ago. I just saw Helen for a
+minute, she reported him to be unconscious. If he dies, he must surely
+leave Helen something; it may not be all, but it will be at least a
+competency; and I was thinking, John, that if you did not want Kynaston,
+and would let them live there, the marriage might come off at last; they
+have been attached to each other a long time, and to live rent free would
+be a great thing."
+
+"How are they to keep it up? Kynaston is an expensive place."
+
+"Well, I thought, John, perhaps, if Maurice looks after the property, you
+might consider him as your agent, and allow him something, and that and
+her money----"
+
+"Yes, yes, I understand; well, I will see; wait, at all events, till Mr.
+Harlowe is dead. I will think it over. No, I don't see any reason why
+they should not live there if they like;" he sighed, wearily, and his
+mother went away, feeling that she had reason to be satisfied with her
+morning's work.
+
+She was in such a hurry to install her darling there--to see him viceroy
+in the place where now it was certain he must eventually be king. Why
+should he be doomed to wait till Kynaston came to him in the course of
+nature; why should he not enter upon his kingdom at once, since Sir John,
+by his own confession, would never marry or live there himself?
+
+Lady Kynaston was very far from wishing evil to her eldest son, but for
+years she had hoped that he would remain unmarried; for a short time she
+had been forced to lay her dreams aside, and she had striven to forget
+them and to throw herself with interest into her eldest son's engagement;
+but now that the marriage was broken off, all her old schemes and plans
+came back to her again. She was working and planning again for Maurice's
+happiness and aggrandisement. She wanted to see him in his father's
+house, "Kynaston of Kynaston," before she died, and to know that his
+future was safe. To see him married to Helen and living at Kynaston
+appeared to her to be the very best that she could desire for him. In
+time, of course, the title and the money would be his too; meanwhile,
+with old Mr. Harlowe's fortune, an ample allowance from his brother, and
+all the prestige of his old name and his old house, she should live to
+see him take his own rightful place among the magnates of his native
+county. That would be far better than to be a captain in a line regiment,
+barely able to live upon his income. That was all she coveted for him,
+and she said to herself that her ambition was not unreasonable, and that
+it would be hard indeed if it might not be gratified.
+
+As she drove homewards to Walpole Lodge she felt that her schemes were in
+a fair way for success. She was not going to let Maurice know of them too
+soon; by-and-by, when all was settled, she would tell him; she would keep
+it till then as a pleasant surprise.
+
+All the same, she had been unable to refrain from telling Helen Romer
+something of what was in her mind.
+
+"If John does not marry, he might perhaps make Maurice his agent and let
+him live at Kynaston," she had said to her a few days ago when they had
+been speaking of old Mr. Harlowe's illness.
+
+"How would Maurice like to leave the army?" Helen had asked.
+
+"If he marries, he must do so," his mother had replied, significantly;
+and Helen's heart had beat high with hope and triumph.
+
+Again to-day, on her way to her eldest son's rooms, she had stopped at
+Princes Gate and had alluded to it.
+
+"I am on my way to see Sir John; I shall sound him about his intentions
+with regard to Kynaston, but, of course, I must go to work cautiously;"
+and Helen had perfectly understood that she herself had entered into the
+old lady's scheme for her younger son's future.
+
+Sitting alone in the hushed house, where the doctors are coming and
+going in the darkened room above, Helen feels that at last the reward
+of all her long waiting may be at hand. Love and wealth at last seemed
+to beckon to her. Her grandfather dead; his fortune hers; and this offer
+of a home at Kynaston, which Maurice himself would be sure to like so
+much--everything good seemed coming to her at last.
+
+And there was something about the idea of living at Kynaston that
+gratified her particularly. Helen had not forgotten the week at
+Shadonake. Too surely had her woman's instinct told her that Maurice and
+Vera had been drawn to each other by a strong and mutual attraction. The
+wildest jealousy and hatred against Vera burnt fiercely in her lawless,
+untutored heart. She hated her, for she knew that Maurice loved her. To
+live thus under her very eyes as Maurice's wife, in the very house her
+rival herself had once been on the point of inhabiting, was a notion that
+commended itself to her with all the sweetness of gratified revenge, with
+all the charm of flaunting her success and triumph in the face of the
+other woman's failure which is dear to such a nature as Helen's.
+
+She alone, of all those who had heard of Vera's broken engagement, had
+divined its true cause. She loved Maurice--that was plain to Helen; that
+was why she had thrown over Sir John, and at her heart Helen despised her
+for it. A woman must be a fool indeed to wreck herself at the last moment
+for a merely sentimental reason. There was much, however, that was
+incomprehensible to Helen Romer in the situation of things, which she
+only half understood.
+
+If Maurice loved Vera, why was it that he was in Manchester whilst she
+was still in Meadowshire? that was what Helen could not understand. A
+sure instinct told her that Maurice must know better than any one why his
+brother's marriage had been broken off. But, if so, then why were he and
+Vera apart? It did not strike her that his honour to his brother and his
+promises to herself were what kept him away. Helen said to herself,
+scornfully, that they were both of them timid and cowardly, and did not
+half know how to play out life's game.
+
+"In her place, with her cards in my hand, I would have married him by
+this," she said to herself, as she sat alone in her grandfather's
+drawing-room, while her busy fingers ran swiftly through the meshes of
+her knitting, and the doctor and the hired nurse paced about the room
+overhead. "But she has not the pluck for it; his heart may be hers, but,
+for all that, I shall win him; and how bitterly she will repent that she
+ever interfered with him when she sees him daily there--my husband! And
+in time he will forget her and learn to love me; Maurice will never be
+false to a woman when once she is his wife; I am not afraid of that. How
+dared she meddle with him?--_my_ Maurice!"
+
+The door softly opened, and one of the doctors stepped in on tip-toe.
+Helen rose and composed her face into a decorous expression of mournful
+anxiety.
+
+"I am happy to tell you, Mrs. Romer," began the doctor. Helen's heart
+sank down chill and cold within her.
+
+"Is he better?" she faltered, striving to conceal the dismay which she
+felt.
+
+"He has rallied. Consciousness has returned, and partial use of the
+limbs. We may be able to pull your grandfather through this time, I
+trust."
+
+Put off again! How wretched and how guilty she felt herself to be! It was
+almost a crime to wish for any one's death so much.
+
+She sank down again pale and spiritless upon her chair as the doctor left
+the room.
+
+"Never mind," she said to herself, presently; "it can't last for ever. It
+must be soon now, and I shall be Maurice's wife in the end."
+
+But all this time she had forgotten Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet, whom
+she had not seen again since the night she had driven him home from
+Walpole Lodge.
+
+He had left England, she knew. Helen privately hoped he had left this
+earth. Any way, he had not troubled her, and she had forgotten him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+WHAT SHE WAITED FOR.
+
+ Go, forget me; why should sorrow
+ O'er that brow a shadow fling?
+ Go, forget me, and to-morrow
+ Brightly smile and sweetly sing.
+ Smile--though I shall not be near thee;
+ Sing--though I shall never hear thee.
+
+ Chas. Wolfe.
+
+
+All this time what of Vera? Would any one of them at the vicarage ever
+forget that morning when she had come in after her walk with Sir John
+Kynaston, and had stood before them all and, pale as a ghost, had said to
+them,
+
+"I am not going to be married; I have broken it off."
+
+It had been a great blow to them, but neither the prayers of her weeping
+sister, nor the angry indignation of old Mrs. Daintree, nor even the
+gentle remonstrances of her brother-in-law could serve to alter her
+determination, nor would she enter into any explanation concerning her
+conduct.
+
+It was not pleasant, of course, to be reviled and scolded, to be
+questioned and marvelled at, to be treated like a naughty child in
+disgrace; and then, whenever she went out, to feel herself tabooed by her
+acquaintances as a young woman who had behaved very disgracefully; or
+else to be stared at as a natural curiosity by persons whom she hardly
+knew.
+
+But she lived through all this bravely. There was a certain amount of
+unnatural excitement which kept up her courage and enabled her to face
+it. It was no more than what she had expected. The glow of her love and
+her impulse of self-sacrifice were still upon her; her nerves had been
+strung to the uttermost, and she felt strong in the knowledge of the
+justice and the right of her own conduct.
+
+But by-and-by all this died away. Sir John left the neighbourhood;
+people got tired of talking about her broken-off marriage; there was no
+longer any occasion for her to be brave and steadfast. Life began to
+resume for her its normal aspect, the aspect which it had worn in the old
+days before Sir John had ever come down to Kynaston, or ever found her
+day-dreaming in the churchyard upon Farmer Crupps' family sarcophagus.
+The tongue of the sour-tempered old lady, snapping and snarling at her
+with more than the bitterness of old, and the suppressed sighs and
+mournful demeanour of her sister, whose sympathy and companionship she
+had now completely forfeited, and who went about the house with a face
+of resigned woe and the censure of an ever implied rebuke in her voice
+and manner.
+
+Only the vicar took her part somewhat. "Let her alone," he said,
+sometimes, to his wife and mother; "she must have had a better reason
+than we any of us know of; the girl is suffering quite enough--leave her
+alone."
+
+And she was suffering. The life that she had doomed herself to was almost
+unbearable to her. The everlasting round of parish work and parish talk,
+the poor people and the coal-clubs--it was what she had come back to. She
+had been lifted for a short time out of it all, and a new life, congenial
+to her tastes and to her nature, had opened out before her; and yet with
+her own hands she had shut the door upon this brighter prospect, and had
+left herself out in the darkness, to go back to that life of dull
+monotony which she hated.
+
+And what had she gained by it? What single advantage had she reaped
+out of her sacrificed life? Was Maurice any nearer to her--was he not
+hopelessly divided from her--helplessly out of her reach? She knew
+nothing of him, no word concerning him reached her ears: a great blank
+was before her. When she went over the past again and again in her mind,
+she could not well see what good thing could ever come to her from what
+she had done. There were moments indeed when the whole story of her
+broken engagement seemed to her like the wild delusion of madness. She
+had had no intention of acknowledging her love to Maurice when she had
+gone up to the station to see him off; she had only meant to see him
+once more, to hold his hand for one instant, to speak a few kind words;
+to wish him God speed. She asked herself now what had possessed her that
+she had not been able to preserve the self-control of affectionate
+friendship when the unfortunate accident of her being taken on in the
+train with him had left her entirely alone in his society. She did not
+go the length of regretting what she had done for his sake; but she did
+acknowledge to herself that she had been led away by the magnetism of his
+presence and by the strange and unexpected chance which had thus left her
+alone with him into saying and doing things which in a calmer moment she
+would not have been betrayed into.
+
+For a few kisses--for the joy of telling him that his love was
+returned--for a short moment of delirious and transient happiness, and
+alas! for nothing more--she had thrown away her life!
+
+She had behaved hardly and cruelly to a good man who loved her, and whose
+heart she had half broken, and she had lost a great many very excellent
+and satisfactory things.
+
+And Maurice was no nearer to her. With his own lips he had told her
+that he could not marry her. There had been mention, indeed, of that
+problematical term of five years, in which he had bound himself to await
+Mrs. Romer's pleasure--but, even had Mrs. Romer not existed, it was plain
+that Maurice was the last man in the world to take advantage of a woman's
+weakness in order to supplant his brother in her heart.
+
+Instinctively Vera felt that Maurice must be no less miserable than
+herself; that his regret for what had happened between them must be as
+great as her own, and his remorse far greater. They were, indeed, neither
+of them blameless in the matter; for, if it was Maurice who had first
+spoken of his love to his brother's promised wife, it was Vera who had
+made that irrevocable step along the road of her destiny from which no
+going back was now possible.
+
+It was a time of utter misery to her. If she sat indoors there was
+the persecution of Mrs. Daintree's ill-natured remarks, and Marion's
+depression of spirits and half-uttered regrets; and there was also the
+scaffolding rising round the chancel walls to be seen from the windows,
+and the sound of the sawing of the masonry in the churchyard, as a
+perpetual, reproachful reminder of the friend whose kindness and
+affection she had so ill requited. If she went out, she could not go up
+the lane without passing the gates of Kynaston, or towards the village
+without catching sight of the venerable old house among its terraced
+gardens, which, so lately, she had thought would be her home. Sometimes
+she met her old friend, Mrs. Eccles, in her wanderings, but she did not
+venture to speak to her; the cold disapproval in the housekeeper's
+passing salutation made her shrink, like a guilty creature, in her
+presence; and she would hurry by with scarcely an answering sign, with
+downcast eyes and heightened colour.
+
+Somehow, it came to pass in these days that Vera drifted into a degree
+of intimacy with Beatrice Miller that would, possibly, never have come
+about had the circumstances of her life been different. Ever since her
+accidental meeting with the lovers outside Tripton station Vera had,
+perforce, become a confidant of their hopes and fears; and Beatrice was
+glad enough to have found a friend to whom she could talk about her
+lover, for where is the woman who can completely hold her tongue
+concerning her own secrets?
+
+Against all the long category of female virtues, as advantageously
+displayed in contradistinction to masculine vices, there is still this
+one peculiarity which, of itself, marks out the woman as the inferior
+animal.
+
+A man, to be worthy of the name, holds his tongue and keeps the
+secret of his heart to himself, enjoying it and delighting in it the
+more, possibly, for his reticence. A woman may occasionally--very
+occasionally--be silent respecting her neighbour, but concerning herself
+she is bound to have at least one confidant to whom she will rashly tell
+the long story of her loves and her sorrows; and not a consideration
+either of prudence or of worldly wisdom will suffice to restrain her too
+ready tongue.
+
+Beatrice Miller was a clever girl, with a fair knowledge of the world;
+yet she was in no way dismayed that Vera should have discovered her
+secret; on the contrary, she was overjoyed that she had now found some
+one to talk to about it.
+
+Vera became her friend, but Beatrice was not Vera's friend--the
+confidences were not mutual. Over and over again Beatrice was on the
+point of questioning her concerning the story that had been on every
+one's lips for a time; of asking her what, indeed, was the truth about
+her broken engagement; but always the proud, still face restrained her
+curiosity, and the words died away unspoken upon her lips.
+
+Vera's story, indeed, was not one that could be easily revealed. There
+was too much of bitter regret, too great an element of burning shame at
+her heart, for its secrets to be laid bare to a stranger's eye.
+
+Nevertheless, Beatrice's society amused and distracted her mind, and kept
+her from brooding over her own troubles. She was glad enough to go over
+to Shadonake; even to sit alone with Beatrice and her mother was better
+than the eternal monotony of the vicarage, where she felt like a prisoner
+waiting for his sentence.
+
+Yes, she was waiting. Waiting for some sign from the man she loved.
+Sooner or later, whether it was for good or for evil, she knew it must
+come to her; some token that he remembered her existence; some indication
+as to what he would have her do with the life that she had laid at his
+feet. For, after all, when a woman loves a man, she virtually makes him
+the ruler of her destiny; she leaves the responsibility of her fate in
+his hands. For the nonce, Maurice Kynaston held the skein of Vera's life
+in his grasp; it was for him to do what he pleased with it. Some day,
+doubtless, he would tell her what she had to do: meanwhile, she waited.
+
+What else, indeed, can a woman do but wait? To sit still with folded
+hands and bated breath, to possess her soul in patience as best she may,
+to still the wild beatings of her all too eager spirit--that is what a
+woman has to do, and does often enough. God help her, all too badly.
+
+It is so easy when one is old, and the pulses are sluggish, and the hot
+passions of youth are quelled, it is so easy then to learn that lesson
+of waiting; but when we are young, and our best days slipping away, and
+life's hopes all before us, and life's burdens well-nigh unbearable; then
+it is that it is hard, that waiting in itself becomes terrible--more
+terrible almost than the worst of our woes.
+
+So wearily, feverishly, impatiently enough, Vera waited.
+
+Winter died away into spring. The rough wind of March, worn out with its
+own boisterous passions, sobbed itself to rest like a tired child, and
+little green buds came cropping up sparsely and timidly out of the brown
+bosom of the earth; and, presently, all the glory of the golden crocuses
+unfolded itself in long golden lines in the vicarage garden; and there
+were twittering of birds and flutterings of soft breezes among the
+tree-tops, and a voice seemed to go forth over the face of the earth.
+The winter is over, and summer is nigh at hand.
+
+And then it came to her at last. An envelope by the side of her plate
+at breakfast; a few scrawled words in a handwriting she had never seen
+before, and yet identified with an unfailing instinct, ere even she broke
+the seal. One minute of wild hope, to be followed by a sick, chill
+numbness, and the story of her love and its longings shrank away into
+the despair of impossibility.
+
+How small a thing to make so great a misery! What a few words to make a
+wilderness of a human life!
+
+_"Her grandfather is dead, and she has claimed me. Good-bye; forget me
+and forgive me."_
+
+That was all; nothing more. No passionate regrets, no unavailing
+self-pity; nothing to tell her what it cost him to resign her; no word to
+comfort her for the hopelessness of his desertion; nothing but those two
+lines.
+
+There was a chattering going on at the table around her. Tommy was
+clamouring for bread and butter; the vicar was reading out the telegrams
+from the seat of war; Marion was complaining that the butter was not
+good; the maid-servant was bringing in the hot bacon and eggs--it all
+went on like a dream around her; presently, like a voice out of a fog,
+somebody spoke to her:
+
+"Vera, are you not feeling well? You look as if you were going to faint."
+
+And then she crunched the letter in her hand and recalled herself to
+life.
+
+"I am quite well, thanks," and busied herself with attending to the wants
+of the children.
+
+The vicar glanced up over his spectacles. "No bad news, I hope, my dear."
+
+Oh! why could they not let her alone? But somehow she sat through the
+breakfast, and answered all their questions, and bore herself bravely;
+and when it was over and she was free to go away by herself with her
+trouble, then by that time the worst of it was over.
+
+There are some people whom sorrow softens and touches, but Vera was not
+one of them. Her whole soul revolted and rebelled against her fate. She
+said to herself that for once she had let her heart guide her; she had
+cast aside the crust of worldliness and self-indulgence in which she had
+been brought up. She had listened to the softer whisperings of the better
+nature within her--she had been true to herself--and lo! what had come of
+it?
+
+But now she had learnt her lesson; there were to be no more dreams of
+pure and unsullied happiness for her,--no more cravings after what was
+good and true and lovely; henceforth she would go back to the teachings
+of her youth, to the experience which had told her that a handsome woman
+can always command her life as she pleases, and that wealth, which is a
+tangible reality, is better worth striving after than the vain shadow
+called love, which all talk about and so few make any practical
+sacrifices for. Well, she, Vera Nevill, had tried it, and had made her
+sacrifices; and what remained to her? Only the fixed determination to
+crush it down again within her as if it had never been, and to carve out
+her fortunes afresh. Only that she started again at a disadvantage--for
+now she knew to her cost that she possessed the fatal power of
+loving--the knowledge of good and evil, of which she had eaten
+the poisoned fruit.
+
+There were no tears in Vera's eyes as she wandered slowly up and down the
+garden paths between the straight yellow lines of the crocus heads.
+
+Her lover had forsaken her. Well, let him go. She told herself that, had
+he loved her truly, no power on earth would have been great enough to
+keep him from her. She said to herself scornfully--she, Vera Nevill, who
+was prepared to sell herself to the highest bidder--that it was Mrs.
+Romer's money that kept him from her. Well, let him go to her, then? but
+for herself life must begin afresh.
+
+And then she set to work to think about what she could do. To remain here
+at Sutton any longer was impossible. It was absolutely necessary that she
+should get away from it all, from the family upon whose hands she was
+nothing now but a beautiful, helpless burden, and still more from the
+haunting memories of Kynaston and all the unfortunate things that had
+happened to her here.
+
+Suddenly, out of the memories of her girlhood, she recollected the
+existence of a woman who had been her friend once in the old happy days,
+when she had lived with her sister Theodora. It was one of those passing
+friendships which come and go for a month or two in one's life.
+
+A pretty, spoilt girl, married four, perhaps five, years ago to a rich
+man, a banker; who had taken a fancy to Vera, and had pleased herself by
+decking her out in a quaint costume to figure at a carnival party; who
+had kissed her rapturously at parting, swearing eternal friendship,
+giving her her address in London, and making her promise never to be in
+England without going to see her. And then she had gone her way, and had
+never come back again the next winter, as she had promised to do; a
+letter or two had passed between them, and afterwards Vera had forgotten
+her. But somewhere upstairs she must have got her direction still.
+
+It was to this friend she would go; and, turning her back for a time
+at least upon Meadowshire and its memories, she would see whether, in
+the whirl of London life, she could not crush out the pain at her heart,
+and live down the fatal weakness that had led her astray from all the
+traditions of her youth, and from that cold and prudent wisdom which had
+stood her in good stead for so many years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+A MORNING WALK.
+
+ And e'en while fashion's brightest arts decoy,
+ The heart, distrusting, asks if this be joy.
+
+ Goldsmith.
+
+
+A bright May morning, cold, it is true, and with a biting wind from the
+east--as indeed our English May mornings generally are--but sunny and
+cloudless as the heart can desire. On such a morning people do their best
+to pretend that it is summer. Crowds turn out into the park, and sit
+about recklessly on the iron chairs, or lounge idly by the railings; and
+the women-folk, with that fine disregard of what is, when it is
+antagonistic of what they wish it to be, don their white cottons and
+muslins, and put up their parasols against the sun's rays, and, shivering
+inwardly, poor things, openly brave the terrors of rheumatism and
+lumbago, and make up their minds that it _shall_ be summer.
+
+The sunblinds are drawn all along the front windows of a house in Park
+Lane, and though the gay geraniums and calceolarias in the flower-boxes,
+which were planted only yesterday, look already nipped and shrivelled up
+with the cold, the house, nevertheless, presents from the exterior a
+bright and well-cared-for appearance.
+
+Within the drawing-room are two ladies. One, the mistress of the house,
+is seated at the writing-table with her back to the room, scribbling off
+invitations for dear life, cards for an afternoon "at-home," at the rate
+of six per minute; the other sits idle in a low basket-chair doing
+nothing.
+
+There is no sound but the scratching of the quill pen as it flies over
+the paper, and the chirping of a bullfinch in a cage in the bow-window.
+
+"What time is it, Vera?"
+
+"A quarter to twelve."
+
+"Almost time to dress; I've only ten more cards to fill up. What are you
+going to wear--white?"
+
+Vera shivers. "Look how the dust is flying--it must be dreadfully cold
+out--I should like to put on a fur jacket."
+
+"_Do_," says the elder lady, energetically. "It will be original, and
+attract attention. Not that you could well be more stared at than you
+are."
+
+Vera smiles, and does not answer.
+
+Mrs. Hazeldine goes on with her task.
+
+"There! that's done!" she cries, at last, getting up from the table, and
+piling her notes up in a heap on one side of it. "Now, I am at your
+orders."
+
+She comes forward into the room--a pretty, dark-eyed, oval-faced woman,
+with a figure in which her dressmaker has understood how to supplement
+all that nature has but imperfectly carried out. A woman with restless
+movements and an ever-ready tongue--a thorough daughter of the London
+world she lives in.
+
+Vera leans her head back in her chair, and looks at her. "Cissy," she
+says, "I must really go home, I have been with you a month to-day."
+
+"Go home! certainly not, my dear. Don't you know that I have sworn to
+find you a husband before the season is out? I must really get you
+married, Vera. I have half a mind," she adds, reflectively, as she
+smooths down her shining brown hair at the glass, and contemplates, not
+ill satisfied, her image there--"I have really half a mind to let you
+have the boy if I could manage to spare him."
+
+"Do you think he would make a devoted husband?" asks Vera, with a lazy
+smile.
+
+"My dear child, don't be a fool. What is the use of devotion in a
+husband? All one wants is a good fellow, who will let one alone. After
+all, the boy might not answer. I am afraid, Vera," turning round suddenly
+upon her, "I am very much afraid that boy is in love with you; it's
+horrid of you to take him from me, because he is so useful, and I really
+can't well do without him. I am going to pay him out to-night though: he
+is to sit opposite you at dinner; he will only be able to gaze at you."
+
+"That is hard upon us both."
+
+"Pooh! don't waste your time upon him. I shall do better than that for
+you; he is an eldest son, it is true, but Sir Charles looks as young as
+his son, and is quite as likely to live as long. It is only married women
+who can afford the luxury of ineligibles. Go and dress, child."
+
+Half-an-hour later Mrs. Hazeldine and Miss Nevill are to be found upon
+two chairs on the broad and shady side of the Row, where a small crowd of
+men is already gathered around them.
+
+Vera, coming up a stranger, and self-invited to the house of her old
+acquaintance a few weeks ago, had already created a sensation in London.
+Her rare beauty, the strange charm of her quiet, listless manner, the
+shade of melancholy which had of late imperceptibly crept over her,
+aroused a keen admiration and interest in her, even in that city, which
+more than all others is satiated with its manifold types of beautiful
+women.
+
+There was a rush to get introduced to her; a _furore_ to see her. As she
+went through a crowd people whispered her name and made way for her to
+pass, staring at her after a fashion which is totally modern and
+detestably ill-bred; and yet which, sad token of the _decadence_ of
+things in these later days, is not beneath the dignity or the manners
+of persons whose breeding is supposed to be beyond dispute.
+
+Already the "new beauty" had been favourably contrasted with the
+well-known reigning favourites; and it was the loudly expressed opinion
+of more than one-half of the _jeunesse doree_ of the day that not one of
+the others could "hold a candle to her, by Jove!"
+
+Mrs. Hazeldine was delighted. It was she to whom belonged the honour of
+bringing this new star into notice; the credit of launching her upon
+London society was her own. She found herself courted and flattered and
+made up to in a wholly new and delightful manner. The men besieged her
+for invitations to her house; the women pressed her to come to theirs. It
+was all for Miss Nevill's sake, of course, but, even so, it was very
+pleasant, and Mrs. Hazeldine dearly loved the importance of her position.
+
+It came to pass that, whereas she had been somewhat put out at the letter
+of her old Roman acquaintance, offering to come and stay with her, and
+had been disposed to resent the advent of her self-invited guest as an
+infliction, which a few needlessly gushing words in the past had brought
+upon herself, she had, in a very short time, discovered that she could
+not possibly exist without her darling Vera, and that she would not and
+could not let her go back again to her country vicarage.
+
+It was, possibly, what Vera had counted upon. It was pretty certain to
+have been either one thing or the other. Either her beauty would arouse
+Mrs. Hazeldine's jealousy, and she would be glad to be rid of her as
+quickly as possible, or else she would be proud of her, and wish to
+retain her as an attraction to her house. Fortunately for Vera, Cissy
+Hazeldine, worldly, frivolous, pleasure-loving as she was, was,
+nevertheless, utterly devoid of the mean and petty spitefulness which
+goes far to disfigure many a better woman's character. She was not
+jealous of Vera; on the contrary, she was as unfeignedly proud of her as
+though she had created her. Besides, as she said to herself, "Our style
+is so different, we are not likely to clash."
+
+When she found that in a month's time Vera's beauty had made her house
+the most popular one in London, and that people struggled for her
+invitation-cards and prayed to be introduced to her, Mrs. Hazeldine was
+at the zenith of her delight and self-importance. If only Vera herself
+had been a little more practicable!
+
+"I don't despair of getting you introduced to royalty before the season
+is out," she would say, triumphantly.
+
+"I don't want to be introduced to royalty," Vera would answer
+indifferently.
+
+"Oh! Vera, how can you be so disloyal? And it's quite wicked too; almost
+against Scripture. Honour the King, you know it says somewhere; of course
+that means the Prince of Wales too."
+
+"I can honour him very well without being introduced to him," said Vera,
+who, however, let me assure you, was filled with feelings of profound
+loyalty towards the reigning family.
+
+"But only think what a triumph it would be over those other horrid women
+who think themselves at the top of the tree!" Mrs. Hazeldine would urge,
+with a curious conglomeration of ideas, sacred and profane.
+
+But Vera was indifferent to the honour of becoming acquainted with his
+Royal Highness.
+
+Another of Mrs. Hazeldine's troubles was that she absolutely refused to
+be photographed.
+
+"Your portrait might be in every shop window if you chose!" Mrs.
+Hazeldine would exclaim, despairingly.
+
+"I may be very depraved, Cissy," Vera would answer, indignantly, "but I
+have not yet sunk so low as to desire that every draper's assistant may
+have the privilege of buying my likeness for a shilling to stick up on
+his mantelshelf, with a tight-rope dancer on one side, and a burlesque
+actress on the other!"
+
+"My dear, it is done by every one; and women who are beautiful as you are
+ought not to mind being admired."
+
+"But I prefer being admired by my friends only, and by those of my own
+class. I have no ambition to expose myself, even in effigy, in a shop
+window for the edification of street boys and city clerks."
+
+"Well, you can't help your name having been in _Vanity Fair_ this week!"
+
+"No, and I only wish I could get hold of the man who put it there!" cried
+Miss Nevill, viciously; and it is certain that unfortunate literary
+person would not have relished the interview.
+
+A "beauty" with such strange and unnatural views was, it must be
+confessed, as much of a trial as a triumph to an anxious chaperon.
+
+There was a certain amount of fashionable routine, the daily treadmill
+of pleasure, to which, however, Vera submitted readily enough, and even
+extracted a good deal of enjoyment out of it. There was the morning
+saunter into the Row, the afternoons spent at garden parties or
+"at-homes," the evenings filled up with dinner parties, to be followed
+almost invariably by balls lasting late into the night. All these things
+repeat themselves year after year: they are utter weariness to some of
+us, but to her they were still new, and Vera entered into the daily whirl
+of the London season with an amount of zest which was almost a surprise
+to herself.
+
+Just at first there had been a daily terror upon her, that of meeting Sir
+John Kynaston or his brother; but London is a large place, and you may go
+out to different houses for many nights running without ever coming
+across the friend or the foe whom you desire or dread most to encounter.
+
+After a little while, she forgot to glance hurriedly and fearfully around
+her every time she entered a ball-room, or to look up shudderingly each
+time the door was opened and a fresh guest announced at a dinner-party.
+She never met either of them, nor did the name of Kynaston ever strike
+upon her ear.
+
+She told herself that she had forgotten the two brothers, whose fate had
+seemed at one time so intimately bound up with her own--the one as well
+as the other. They were nothing more to her now--they had passed away out
+of her life. Henceforth she had entered upon a new course, in which her
+beauty and her mother wit were to exact their full value, but in which
+her heart was to count for nothing more. It was to be smothered up within
+her. That, together with all the best, and sweetest, and truest part of
+her, once awakened for a brief space by the magic touch of love, was now
+to be extinguished within her as though they had never been.
+
+Meanwhile Vera enjoys herself.
+
+She looks happy enough now as she sits by her friend's side in the park,
+with a little knot of admirers about her; not taking very much trouble to
+talk to them, indeed, but smiling serenely from one to the other, letting
+herself be talked to and amused, with just a word here and there, to show
+them she is listening to what they say. It is, perhaps, the secret of her
+success that she is so thoroughly indifferent to it all. It matters so
+little to her whether they come or go; there is so little eagerness about
+her, so perfect an _insouciance_ of manner. Other women lay themselves
+out to attract and to be admired; Vera only sits still, and waits with a
+certain queenliness of manner for the worship that is laid at her feet,
+and which she receives as her due.
+
+Behind her, with his hand on the back of her chair, stands a young fellow
+of about two or three and twenty; he does not speak to her much, nor join
+in the merry, empty chatter that is going on around her; but it is easy
+to see by the way he looks down at her, by the fashion in which he
+watches her slightest movement, that Vera exercises no ordinary influence
+over him.
+
+He is a tall, slight-figured boy, with very fair yellow hair and delicate
+features; his blue eyes are frank and pleasant, but his mouth is a trifle
+weak and vacillating, and the lips are too sensitively cut for strength
+of character, whilst his chest is too narrow for strength of body. He is
+carefully dressed, and wears a white, heavy-scented flower in his coat,
+a flower which, five minutes ago, he had ineffectually attempted to
+transfer to Miss Nevill's dress; but Vera had only gently pushed back his
+hand. "My dear boy, pray keep your gardenia; a flower in one's dress is
+such a nuisance, it is always tumbling out."
+
+Denis Wilde, "the boy," as Mrs. Hazeldine called him with a flush on his
+fair face, had put it back quietly in his button-hole, too well bred to
+show the pain he felt by flinging it, as he would have liked to do, over
+the railing, to be trampled under the feet of the horses.
+
+The little group kept its place for some time, the two well-dressed and
+good-looking women sitting down, the two or three idlers who stood in
+front of them gossiping about nothing at all--last night's ball, to-day's
+plans, a little bit of scandal about one passer-by, somebody's rumoured
+engagement, somebody else's reported elopement. Denis Wilde stood behind
+Vera's chair and listened to it all, the well-known familiar chatter
+of a knot of London idlers. There was nothing new or interesting or
+entertaining about it. Only a string of names, some of which were strange
+to him, but most of which were familiar; and always some little story,
+ill-natured or harmless as the case might be, about each name that was
+mentioned. And Vera listened, smiling, assenting, but only half
+attentive, with her eyes dreamily fixed upon the long procession of
+riders passing ever ceaselessly to and fro along the ride.
+
+Suddenly Denis Wilde felt a sudden movement of the chair beneath his
+hand. Vera had started violently.
+
+"Here comes Sir John Kynaston," the man before her was saying to his
+companion. "What a time it is since he has shown himself; he looks as if
+he had had a bad illness."
+
+"Some woman jilted him, I've heard," answered the other man: "some girl
+down in the country. People say, Miss Nevill, he is going to die of that
+old-fashioned complaint, which you certainly will not believe in, a
+broken heart! Poor old boy, he looks as if he had been buried, and had
+come up again for a breath of air!"
+
+Vera followed the direction of their eyes. Sir John was walking slowly
+towards them; he was thin and careworn; he looked aged beyond all belief.
+He walked slowly, as though it were an effort to him, with his eyes upon
+the ground. He had not seen her yet; in another minute he would be within
+a couple of yards of her. It was next to impossible that he could avoid
+seeing her, the centre, as she was, of that noisy, chattering group.
+
+A sort of despair seized her. How was she to meet him--this man whom she
+had so cruelly treated? She could _not_ meet him; she felt that it was an
+impossibility. Like an imprisoned bird that seeks to escape, she looked
+about instinctively from side to side. What possible excuse could she
+frame? In what direction could she fly to avoid the glance of reproach
+that would smite her to the heart.
+
+Suddenly Denis Wilde bent down over her.
+
+"Miss Nevill, there goes a _Dachshund_, exactly like the one you wanted;
+come quickly, and we shall catch him up. He ran away down here."
+
+She sprang up and turned after him; a path leading away from the crowded
+Row, towards the comparatively empty park at the back, opened out
+immediately behind her chair.
+
+Young Wilde strode rapidly along it before her, and Vera followed him
+blindly and thankfully.
+
+After a few minutes he stopped and turned round.
+
+"Where is--the dog--wasn't it a dog, you said? Where is it?" She was
+white and trembling.
+
+"There is no dog," he answered, not looking at her. "I--I saw you wanted
+to get away for a minute. You will forgive me, won't you?"
+
+Vera looked at him with a sudden earnestness. The watchfulness which had
+seen her distress, the ready tact which had guessed at her desire to
+escape, and had so promptly suggested the manner of it, touched her
+suddenly. She put forth her hand gently and almost timidly.
+
+"Thank you," she said, simply. "I did not imagine you were so clever--or
+so kind."
+
+The boy blushed deeply with pleasure. He did not know her trouble, but
+the keen eye of love had guessed at its existence. It had been easy for
+him who watched her every look, who knew every shade and every line of
+her face, to tell that she was in distress, to interpret her pallor and
+her trembling terror aright.
+
+"You don't want to go back?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, no, I cannot go back! Besides, I am tired; it is time to go home."
+
+"Stay here, then, and I will call Mrs. Hazeldine."
+
+He left her standing alone upon the grass, and went back to the crowded
+path. Presently he returned with her friend.
+
+"My dear Vera, what is the matter? The boy says you have such a headache!
+I am so sorry, and I wouldn't let any of those chattering fools come back
+to lunch. Why, you look quite pale, child! Will it be too much for you to
+have the boy, because we will send him away, too, if you like?"
+
+But Vera turned round and smiled upon the boy.
+
+"Oh, no, let him come, certainly; but let us go home, all three of us at
+once, if you don't mind."
+
+The thoughtfulness that had kept her secret for her, even from the eyes
+of the woman who was supposed to be her intimate friend, surely deserved
+its reward.
+
+They walked home slowly together across the park, and, when Vera came
+down to luncheon, a white gardenia had somehow or other found its way to
+the bosom of her dress.
+
+That was Denis Wilde's reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+MAURICE'S INTERCESSION.
+
+ Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret.
+
+ B. Disraeli, "Coningsby."
+
+
+Two or three days later the east wind was still blowing, and the chilled
+sunshine still feebly shining down upon the nipped lilac and laburnum
+blossoms. The garden at Walpole Lodge was shorn of half its customary
+beauty, yet to Helen Romer, pacing slowly up and down its gravel walks,
+it had never possibly presented a fairer appearance. For Mrs. Romer had
+won her battle. All that she had waited for so long and striven for so
+hard was at length within her grasp. Her grandfather was dead, his money
+had been all left to her, her engagement to Captain Kynaston was an
+acknowledged fact, and she herself was staying as an honoured and welcome
+guest in her future mother-in-law's house. Everything in the present and
+the future seemed to smile upon her, and yet there were drawbacks--as are
+there not in most earthly delights?--to the full enjoyment of her
+happiness.
+
+For instance, there was that unreasonable and unaccountable codicil to
+her grandfather's will, of which no one had been able to discern either
+the sense or the meaning, and which stated that, should his beloved
+grand-daughter, Helen Romer, be still unmarried within two months of the
+date of his death, the whole of the previous bequests and legacies were
+to be revoked and cancelled, and, with the exception of five thousand
+pounds which she would retain, the whole bulk of his fortune was to
+devolve upon the Crown, for the special use of the pensioners of
+Greenwich and Chelsea Hospitals.
+
+Why such an extraordinary clause had been added to the old man's will it
+was difficult to say. Possibly he feared that his grand-daughter might be
+tempted to remain unmarried, in order that she might the more freely
+squander her newly-acquired fortune in selfish pleasures; possibly he
+desired to ensure her future by the speedy shelter and support of a
+husband's name and authority, or perhaps he only hoped at his heart that
+she would be unable to fulfil his condition; and, whilst his memory would
+be left free from blame towards his daughter's orphaned child, his money
+might go away from her by her own fault, and enrich the institutions of
+his country at the expense of the grand-daughter, whom he had always
+disliked.
+
+Be that as it may, it was sufficient to place Helen in a very awkward and
+uncomfortable position. She had not only to claim Maurice's promised
+troth to her, but she had also to urge on him an almost immediate
+marriage; the task was a thankless and most unpleasant one.
+
+Besides that, there was the existence of a certain little French vicomte
+which caused Mrs. Romer not a little anxiety. Now, if ever, was the time
+when she had reason to dread his re-appearance with those fatal letters
+with which he had once threatened to spoil her life should she ever
+attempt to marry again.
+
+But her grandfather had died and had left her his money, and her
+engagement and approaching marriage to another man was no secret, yet
+still Monsieur Le Vicomte D'Arblet made no sign, and gave forth no token
+of his promised vengeance.
+
+Helen dared not flatter herself that he was dead, but she did hope,
+and hoped rightly, that he was not in England, and had not heard of
+the change in her fortunes. She had been afraid to make any inquiries
+concerning him; such a step might only excite suspicion, and defeat her
+own object of remaining hidden from him. If only she could be safely
+married before he heard of her again--all, she thought, might yet be well
+with her. Of what use, then, would be his vengeance? for she did not
+think it likely he could be so cruel as to wreak an idle and profitless
+revenge upon her after she herself and her fortune were beyond his power.
+
+Perhaps, had she known that her enemy had been on a distant journey to
+Constantinople, from which he was now returning, and that every hour she
+lived brought him nearer and nearer to her, she would have been less easy
+in her mind concerning him. As it was, she consoled herself by thinking
+in how short a time her marriage would put her out of his power, and
+hoped, for the rest, that things would all turn out right for her.
+Nevertheless, strive how she would, she could not quite put away the
+dread of it out of her mind--it was an anxiety.
+
+And then there was Maurice himself. She had known, of course, for long,
+how slight was her hold upon her lover's heart, but never had he appeared
+so cold, so unloving, so full of apathetic indifference towards her as he
+had seemed to be during the few days since he had arrived at his mother's
+house. His every word and look, the very change in his voice when he
+turned from his mother to her, told her, as plainly as though he had
+spoken it, that she was forcing him into a marriage that was hateful and
+repulsive to him, and which duty alone made him submit to. However little
+pride a woman may retain, such a position must always bring a certain
+amount of bitterness with it.
+
+To Helen it was gall and wormwood, yet she was all the more determined
+upon keeping him. She said to herself that she had toiled, and waited,
+and striven for him for too long to relinquish him now that the victory
+was hers at length.
+
+Poor Helen, with all her good looks, and all her many attractions, she
+had been so unfortunate with this one man whom she loved! She had always
+gone the wrong way to work with him.
+
+Even now she could not let him alone; she was foolishly jealous and
+suspicious.
+
+He had come to her, all smarting and bleeding still with the sacrifice
+he had made of his heart to his duty. He had shut the woman he loved
+determinedly out of his thoughts, and had set his face resolutely to do
+his duty to the woman whom he seemed destined to marry. Even now a little
+softness, a little womanly gentleness and sympathy, and, above all, a
+wise forbearance from probing into his still open wounds, might have won
+a certain amount of gratitude and affection from him. But Helen was
+unequal to this. She only drove him wild with causeless and senseless
+jealousy, and goaded him almost to madness by endless suspicions and
+irritating cross-questioning.
+
+It is difficult to know what she expected more of him. He slept under
+the same roof with her, he dined at his mother's table, and spent the
+evenings religiously in her society. She could not well expect to keep
+him also at her side all day long; and yet his daily visits to town,
+amounting usually to between three and four hours of absence, were a
+constant source of annoyance and disquiet to her. Where did he go? What
+did he do with himself? Whom did he see in these diurnal expeditions into
+London? She wore herself into a fever with her perpetual effort to fathom
+these things.
+
+Even now she is fretting and fuming because he has promised to be home to
+luncheon, and he is twenty minutes late.
+
+She paces impatiently up and down the garden. Lady Kynaston opens the
+French window and calls to her from the house:
+
+"Come, my dear, lunch is on the table; are you not coming in?"
+
+"I had rather wait for Maurice, please; do sit down without me," she
+answers, with the irritation of a spoilt child. Lady Kynaston closes the
+window. "Oh, these lovers!" she groans to herself, somewhat impatiently,
+as she sits down alone to the well-furnished luncheon-table; but she
+bears it pretty composedly because Helen has her grandfather's money, and
+is to bring her son wealth as well as love, and Lady Kynaston is not at
+all above being glad of it. One can stand little faults of manner and
+temper from a daughter-in-law, who is an heiress, which one would be
+justly indignant at were she a pauper.
+
+A sound of wheels turning in at the lodge-gates--it is Maurice's hansom.
+
+Helen hurries forward to meet him in the hall; Captain Kynaston is
+handing a lady out of the hansom; Helen peers at her suspiciously.
+
+"I am bringing you ladies a friend to lunch," says Maurice, gaily, and
+Mrs. Romer's face clears when she sees that it is Beatrice Miller.
+
+"Oh, Beatrice, it is you! I am delighted to see you! Go in to the
+dining-room, you will find Lady Kynaston. Maurice," drawing him back a
+minute, "how late you are again! What have you been doing?"
+
+"I waited whilst Miss Miller put her bonnet on."
+
+"Why, where did you meet her?"
+
+"I met her at her mother's, where I went to call. Have you any
+objection?" He looked at her almost defiantly as he answered her
+questions; it was intolerable to him that she should put him through
+such a catechism.
+
+"You can't have been there all the morning," she continued, suspiciously;
+unable or unwilling, perhaps, to notice his rising displeasure. "Where
+did you go first?"
+
+Maurice bit his lip, but controlled himself with an effort.
+
+"My dear child," he said, lightly, "one can't sell out of the army, or
+prepare for the holy estate of matrimony, without a certain amount of
+business on one's hands. Suppose now we go in to lunch." She stepped
+aside and let him pass her into the dining-room.
+
+"He is shuffling again," she said to herself, angrily; "that was no
+answer to my question. Is it possible that he sees _her_? But no, what
+folly; if she is at Sutton, how can he get at her?"
+
+"Oh, Helen," cried out Beatrice to her from the table as she entered,
+"you and Lady Kynaston are positively out of the world this season. You
+know none of the gossip."
+
+"I go nowhere, of course, now; my grandfather's death is so recent. I
+have so many preparations to make just now; and dear Lady Kynaston is
+good enough to shut herself up on my account."
+
+"Exactly; you are a couple of recluses," cried Beatrice. "Now, I daresay
+you will never guess who is the new beauty whom all the world is talking
+about; no other than our friend Vera Nevill. She is creating a perfect
+sensation!"
+
+"Indeed!" politely, but with frigid unconcern, from Lady Kynaston.
+
+"Yes; I assure you there is a regular rage about her. Oh, how stupid I
+am! Perhaps I ought not to have mentioned her, Lady Kynaston, for of
+course she did not behave very well to Sir John, as we all know; but now
+that is all over, isn't it? and everybody is wild about her beauty."
+
+"I am glad to hear that Miss Nevill is prospering in any way," said her
+ladyship, stiffly. "I owe her no ill-will, poor girl."
+
+Helen Romer is looking at Maurice Kynaston; he has not said one single
+word, nor has he raised his eyes once from his plate; but a deep flush
+has overspread his handsome face at the sound of Vera's name.
+
+"_That_ is where he goes," said Helen, to herself. "I knew it; he has
+seen her, and he loves her still."
+
+The conversation drifted on to other matters. Beatrice passed all the
+gossip and scandal of the town under review for Lady Kynaston's benefit;
+presently Maurice roused himself, and joined in the talk. But Mrs. Romer
+uttered not a word; she sat in her place with a thunder-cloud upon her
+brow until the luncheon was over; then, as they rose from the table, she
+called her lover to her side.
+
+"I want to speak to you," she said, and detained him until the others had
+left the room.
+
+"You knew that Vera Nevill was in town, and you have seen her!" she burst
+forth impetuously.
+
+"If I had seen her, I do not know that it would signify, would it?" he
+answered, calmly.
+
+"Not signify? when you knew that it was for _your_ sake that she threw
+over John, because----"
+
+"Be silent, Helen, you have no right to say that, and no authority for
+such a statement," he said, interrupting her hotly.
+
+"Do you suppose you can deceive me? Did not everybody see that she could
+not keep her eyes off you? What is the use of denying it? You have seen
+her probably; you have been with her to-day."
+
+"As it happens, I have _not_ been with her either to-day or any day; nor
+did I know she was in town until Beatrice Miller told us so just now."
+
+"You have not seen her?"
+
+"No, I have not."
+
+"I don't believe you!" she answered, angrily. Now, no man likes to be
+given the lie direct even by a lady; and Maurice was a man who was
+scrupulously truthful, and proud of his veracity; he lost his temper
+fairly.
+
+"I have never told you a lie yet," he began furiously; "and if you think
+so, it is time----"
+
+"Maurice! Maurice!" she cried, frantically, stopping the outspoken words
+upon his lips, and seeing in one minute that she had gone too far. "My
+darling, forgive me; I did not mean to say it. Yes, of course, I believe
+you; don't say anything unkind to me, for pity's sake. You know how much
+I love you; kiss me, darling. No, Maurice, I won't let you go till you
+kiss me, and say you forgive your foolish, jealous little Helen!"
+
+It was the old story over again; angry reproaches--bitter words--insults
+upon her side; to be succeeded, the minute he turned round upon her, by
+wild cries of regret and entreaties for forgiveness, and by the pleading
+of that love which he valued so little.
+
+She drove him wild with anger and indignation; but she never would let
+him go--no, never, however much he might strain against the chain by
+which she held him.
+
+The quarrel was patched up again; he stooped and kissed her. A man must
+kiss a lady when she asks him. How, indeed, is he to refuse to do so? A
+woman's kisses are the roses of life--altogether sweet, and lovely, and
+precious. No man can say he dislikes a rose, nor refuse so harmless and
+charming a gift when it is freely offered to him without absolute
+churlishness. Maurice could not well deny her the embrace for which her
+upturned lips had pleaded. He kissed her, indeed; but it will be easily
+understood that there was very little spontaneity of affection in that
+kiss.
+
+"Now let me go," he said, putting her from him gently but coldly; "I want
+to speak to my mother."
+
+The two younger ladies wandered out into the garden, whilst Maurice
+sought his mother's room.
+
+"Mother, I have been to see John this morning. I am afraid he is really
+very ill," he said, gravely.
+
+Lady Kynaston shrugged her shoulders. "He is like a baby over that
+foolish affair," she said, impatiently. "He does not seem able to get
+over it; why does he shut himself up in his rooms? If he were to go out
+a little more----"
+
+"He has been out; it is that that has made him ill. He went out a few
+mornings ago--the wind was very cold; he says it is that which gave him a
+chill. But, from what he says, I fancy he saw, or he thinks he saw, Miss
+Nevill."
+
+Lady Kynaston sat at her davenport with all the litter of her daily
+correspondence before her; her son stood up by the mantelpiece, leaning
+his back against it, and looked away out of window at the figures of
+Beatrice and his future wife sauntering up and down the garden walks. She
+could not well see his face as he spoke these last words.
+
+"Tiresome woman!" cried Lady Kynaston, angrily; "there is no end to the
+trouble she causes. John ought to be thankful he is well rid of her. Did
+you hear what Beatrice Miller said at lunch about her? I call it shocking
+bad taste, her coming up to town and flirting and flaunting about under
+poor John's nose--heartless coquette! Creating 'a sensation,' indeed!
+That is one of those horrible American expressions that are the fashion
+just now!"
+
+"It is no wonder she is admired," said Maurice, dreamily: "she is very
+beautiful."
+
+"I wish to goodness she would keep out of John's way. Where did he see
+her?"
+
+"It was in the Row, I think, and, from what he said, he only fancied he
+saw her back, walking away. I told him, of course, it could not be her,
+because I thought she was down at Sutton; but, after what Beatrice told
+us at lunch, I make no doubt that it was her, and that John really did
+see her."
+
+"I should have thought that your brother would have had more spirit than
+to sit down and whine over a woman in that way," said her ladyship,
+sharply; "it is really contemptible."
+
+"But if he is ill in body as well as in mind, poor fellow?"
+
+"Pooh! fiddlesticks! I am quite sure, if Helen jilted you, you would bear
+it a great deal better--losing the money and all--than he does."
+
+Maurice smiled.
+
+"That is very possible; but a man can't help his disposition, and John
+has been utterly shattered by it."
+
+"Well, I am sorry for him, of course; but I confess that I don't see that
+anybody can do anything for him."
+
+And then Maurice was silent for a minute. God only knew what passed
+through his soul at that minute--what agonies of self-renunciation, what
+martyrdom of all that makes life pleasant and dear to a man! It is
+certain his mother did not know it.
+
+"I think," he said, after a minute, and only a slight harshness in his
+voice marked the internal struggle that the words were to cost him--"I
+think, mother, _you_ might do a great deal for him. Miss Nevill is in
+town. Could you not see her?"
+
+"I see her! What on earth for?"
+
+"If you were to tell her how ill John is, how desperately he feels her
+treatment of him--how----"
+
+"Stop, stop, my dear! You cannot possibly suppose that I am going down
+upon my knees to entreat Miss Nevill to marry my son after she has thrown
+him over!"
+
+"It is no question of going on your knees, mother. A few words would
+suffice to show her the misery she is causing to John, and if those few
+words would restore his lost happiness----"
+
+"How can I tell that anything I can say would influence her? I suppose
+she had good reasons for throwing him over. She cared for some one else,
+I suppose, or, at all events, she did not care for him."
+
+"I am quite certain, on the contrary, that she had a very sincere
+affection for my brother; and, as to the some one else, I do not think
+that will prevent her returning to him. Oh, mother!" he cried, with a
+sudden passion, "the world is full of miserable misunderstandings and
+mistakes. For God's sake, let us try to put some of its blunders right!
+Do not let any poor, mean feelings of false pride stand in our way if we
+can make one single life happy!"
+
+She looked up at him, wondering a little at his earnestness. It did not
+strike her at the minute that his interest in Vera was unusual, but only
+that his affection for his brother was stronger than she imagined it to
+be. "You know," she said, "I do not want things to come right in that
+way. I do not want John to marry. I want the old place to come to you and
+your children; and now that John has agreed to let you and Helen live
+there----"
+
+He waved his hand impatiently. "And you know, mother dear, that such
+desires are unlawful. John is the eldest, and I will never move a step to
+take his birthright from him. To stand in the way of his marriage for
+such a cause would be a crime. Is it not better that I should speak
+plainly to you, dear? As to my living at Kynaston, I think it highly
+unlikely that I should do so in any case, much as you and Helen seem to
+wish it. But that has nothing to do with John's affairs. Promise me,
+little mother, that you will try and set that right by seeing Miss
+Nevill?"
+
+"I do not suppose I should do any good," she answered, with visible
+reluctance.
+
+"Never mind; you can but try."
+
+"You can't expect me to go and call upon her for such a purpose, nor
+speak to her, without John's authority."
+
+"You might ask her to come here, or go to some house where you will meet
+her naturally in public."
+
+"Yes, that would be best; perhaps she will be at Lady Cloverdale's ball
+next week."
+
+"It is easy, at all events, to ensure her an invitation to it; ask
+Beatrice Miller to get her one."
+
+"Oh, yes; that is easy enough. Oh, dear me, Maurice, you always manage to
+get your own way with me; but you have given me a dreadfully hard task
+this time."
+
+"As if a woman of your known tact and _savoir faire_ was not capable of
+any hard and impossible task!" answered her son, smiling, as he bent and
+kissed her soft white face.
+
+The gentle flattery pleased her. The old lady sat smiling happily to
+herself, with her hands idle before her, for some minutes after he had
+left her.
+
+How dear he was to her, how good, how upright, how thoroughly generous
+too, and unselfish to think so much of his brother's troubles just now,
+in the midst of all his own happiness.
+
+She got up and went to the window, and watched him as he strolled across
+the garden to join the ladies, smiling and kissing her hand to him when
+he looked back and saw her.
+
+"Dear fellow, I hope he will be happy!" she said to herself, turning away
+with a half sigh. And then suddenly something brought back the ball at
+Shadonake to her recollection. There flashed back into her memory a
+certain scene in a cool, dimly-lit conservatory: two people whispering
+together under a high-swung Chinese lamp, and a background of dark-leaved
+shrubs behind them.
+
+She had been puzzled that night. There had been something going on that
+she had not quite understood. And now again that feeling of unsatisfied
+comprehension came back to her. For the first time it struck her
+painfully that the son whom she idolized so much--whose life and
+character had been her one study and her one delight ever since the day
+of his birth--was nevertheless a riddle to her. That the secret of his
+inner self was as much hidden from her--his mother--as though she had
+been the merest stranger; that the life she had striven so closely to
+entwine with her own was nothing after all but a separate existence, in
+the story of whose soul she herself had no part. He was a man struggling
+single-handed in all the heat and turmoil of the battle of life, and she,
+nothing but a poor, weak old woman, standing feebly aside, powerless to
+help or even to understand the creature to whom she had given birth.
+
+There fell a tear or two down upon her wrinkled little hands as she
+thought of it. She could not understand him; there was something in his
+life she could not fathom. Oh, what did it all mean?
+
+Alas, sooner or later, is not that what comes to every mother concerning
+the child she loves best?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIL.
+
+MR. PRYME'S VISITORS.
+
+ For courage mounteth with occasion.
+
+ Shakespeare, "King John."
+
+
+Mr. Herbert Pryme stood by a much ink-stained and littered table in his
+chambers in the Temple, with his hands in his trousers pockets, whistling
+a slow and melancholy tune.
+
+It was Mr. Pryme's habit to whistle when he was dejected or perplexed;
+and the whistling generally partook of the mournful condition of his
+feelings. Indeed, everything that this young man did was of a ponderous
+and solemn nature; there was always the inner consciousness of the
+dignity of the Bar vested in his own person, to be discerned in his outer
+bearing. Even in the strictest seclusion of the, alas! seldom invaded
+privacy of his chambers Mr. Pryme never forgot that he was a
+barrister-at-law.
+
+But when this young gentleman was ill at ease within himself he was in
+the habit of whistling. He also was given to the thrusting of his hands
+into his pockets. The more unhappy he was, the more he whistled, and the
+deeper he stuffed in his hands.
+
+Just now, to all appearances, he was very unhappy indeed.
+
+The air he had selected for his musical self-refreshment was the lively
+and slightly vulgar one of "Tommy make Room for your Uncle;" but let
+anybody just try to whistle that same vivacious tune to the time of the
+Dead March in "Saul," and with a lingering and plaintive emphasis upon
+each note, with "linked sweetness long drawn out," and then say whether
+the gloomiest of dirges would not be festive indeed in comparison.
+
+Thus did Herbert Pryme whistle it as he looked down upon the piles of
+legal documents heaped up together upon his table.
+
+All of them meant work, but none of them meant money. For Herbert was
+fain to accept the humble position of "devil" to a great legal light who
+occupied the floor below him, and who considered, and perhaps rightly,
+that he was doing the young man above him, who had been sent up from the
+country with a letter of introduction to him from a second cousin, a
+sufficient and inestimable benefit in allowing him to do his dirty work
+gratis.
+
+It was all very useful to him, doubtless, but it was not remunerative;
+and Herbert wanted money badly.
+
+"Oh, if I could only reckon upon a couple of hundred a year," he sighed,
+half aloud to himself, "I might have a chance of winning her! It seems
+hard that heaps of these fellows can make hundreds a week by a short
+speech, or a few strokes of the pen, that cost them no labour and little
+forethought, whilst I, with all my hard work, can make nothing! What
+uphill work it is! Not that the Bar is not a fine profession; quite the
+finest there is," for not even to himself would Herbert Pryme decry the
+legal muse whom he worshipped; "but, I suppose, like every other
+profession, it is overstocked; there are too many struggling for the same
+prizes. The fact is, that England is over-populated. Now, if a law were
+to be passed compelling one-half of the adult males in this country to
+remain in a state of celibacy for the space of fifteen years----" but
+here he stopped short in his soliloquy and smiled; for was not the one
+desire of his life at present to marry Beatrice Miller immediately? And
+how was the extra population to be stayed if every one of the doomed
+quota of marriageable males were of the same mind as himself?
+
+Presently Mr. Pryme sauntered idly to the window, and stood looking
+drearily out of it, still whistling, of course.
+
+The prospect was not a lively one. His chambers looked out upon a little
+square, stone-flagged court, with a melancholy-looking pump in the centre
+of it. There was an arched passage leading away to one side, down which a
+distant footstep echoed drearily now and then, and a side glimpse of the
+empty road at the other end, beyond the corner of the opposite houses.
+Now and then some member of the learned profession passed rapidly across
+the small open space with the pre-occupied air of a man who has not a
+minute to spare, or a clerk, bearing the official red bag, ran hastily
+along the passage; for the rest, the London sparrows had it pretty much
+to themselves. As things were, Mr. Pryme envied the sparrows, who were
+ready clothed by Providence, and had no rates and taxes to pay, as well
+as the clerks, who, at all events, had plenty to do and no time to
+soliloquize upon the hardness and hollowness of life. To have plenty of
+brains, and an indefinite amount of spare time to use them in; to desire
+ardently to hasten along the road towards fortune and happiness, and to
+be forced to sit idly by whilst others, duller-witted, perchance, and
+with less capacity for work, are amassing wealth under your very
+nose--when this is achieved by sheer luck, or good interest, or any other
+of those inadequate causes which get people on in life independent of
+talent and industry--that is what makes a radical of a man. This is what
+causes him to dream unwholesome dreams about equality and liberty, about
+a republic, where there shall be no more principalities and powers, where
+plutocracy, as well as aristocracy, shall be unregarded, and where every
+good man and true shall rise on his own merits, and on none other.
+
+Oh, happy and impossible Arcadia! You must wait for the millennium, my
+friend, before your aspirations shall come to pass. Wait till jealousy,
+and selfishness, and snobbism--that last and unconquerable dragon--shall
+be destroyed out of the British heart, then, and only then, when jobbery,
+and interest, and mammon-worship shall be abolished; then will men be
+honoured for what they are, and not for what they seem to be.
+
+Something of all this passed through our friend's jaundiced mind as he
+contemplated those homely and familiar little birds, born and bred and
+smoke-dried in all the turmoil of the City's heart, who ruffled their
+feathers and plumed their wings with contented chirpings upon the dusty
+flags of the little courtyard.
+
+Things were exceptionally bad with Herbert Pryme just now. His exchequer
+was low--had never been lower--and his sweetheart was far removed out of
+his reach. Beatrice had duly come up with her parents to the family
+mansion in Eaton Square for the London season, but although he had, it is
+true, the satisfaction, such as it was, of breathing the same air as she
+did, she was far more out of his reach in town than she had been in the
+country. As long as she was at Shadonake Mr. Pryme had always been able
+to run down to his excellent friend, the parson of Tripton, and once
+there, it had been easy to negotiate a surreptitious meeting with
+Beatrice. The fields and the lanes are everybody's property. If Tom and
+Maria are caught love-making at the stile out of the wood, and they both
+swear that the meeting was purely accidental, I don't see how any one is
+to prove that it was premeditated; nor can any parents, now that it is no
+longer the fashion to keep grown women under lock and key, prevent their
+daughters from going out in the country occasionally unattended, nor
+forbid strange young men from walking along the Queen's highway in the
+same direction.
+
+But remove your daughter to London, and the case is altered at once. To
+keep a girl who goes out a great deal in the whirl of London society out
+of the way of a man who goes out very little, who is not in the inner
+circle of town life, and is not in the same set as herself, is the
+easiest thing in the world.
+
+So Mrs. Miller found it. She kept Beatrice hard at work at the routine of
+dissipation. Not an hour of her time was unoccupied, not a minute of her
+day unaccounted for; and, of course, she was never alone--it is not yet
+the fashion for young girls to dance about London by themselves--her
+mother, as a matter of course, was always with her.
+
+As a natural sequence, the lovers had a hard time of it. Beatrice had
+been six weeks in London, and Herbert, beyond catching sight of her once
+or twice as she was driven past in her mother's carriage down Bond
+Street, or through the crowd in the Park, had never seen her at all.
+
+Mrs. Miller was congratulating herself upon the success of her tactics;
+she flattered herself that her daughter was completely getting over that
+unlucky fancy for the penniless and briefless barrister. Beatrice gave no
+sign; she appeared perfectly satisfied and contented, and seemed to be
+enjoying herself thoroughly, and to be troubled by no love-sick
+hankerings after her absent swain.
+
+"She has forgotten him," said Mrs. Miller, to herself.
+
+But the mother did not take into account that indomitable spirit and
+stubborn determination in her own character which had served to carry out
+successfully all the schemes of her life, and which she had probably
+transmitted to her child.
+
+In Beatrice's head, under its short thick thatch of dark rough hair, and
+in her sturdily-built little frame, there lurked the tenacity of a
+bulldog. Once she had taken an idea firmly into her mind, Beatrice Miller
+would never relinquish it until she had got her own way. Herbert, in
+the dingy solitude of his untempting chambers, might despair and look
+upon life and its aims as a hopeless enigma. Beatrice did not despair at
+all. She only bided her time.
+
+One day, if she waited for it patiently, the opportunity would come to
+her, and when it came she would not be slow to make use of it. It came to
+her in the shape of a morning visit from Captain Maurice Kynaston.
+
+"Come down and see my mother," Maurice had said to her; "she has not seen
+you for a long while. I am just going back to Walpole Lodge to lunch."
+
+"I should like to come very much. You have no objection, I suppose,
+mamma?"
+
+No; Mrs. Miller could have no possible objection. Lady Kynaston was
+amongst her oldest and most respected friends; under whose house could
+Beatrice be safer? And even Maurice, as an escort, engaged to be married
+so shortly as he was known to be, was perfectly unobjectionable.
+
+Beatrice went, and, as we have seen, lunched at Walpole Lodge. She had
+told her mother not to expect her till late in the afternoon, as, in all
+probability, Lady Kynaston would drive her into town and would drop her
+in Eaton Square at the end of her drive. Mrs. Miller, to whose watchful
+maternal mind the Temple and Kew appeared to be in such totally different
+directions that they presented no connecting suggestions, agreed,
+unsuspiciously, not to expect her daughter back until after six o'clock.
+
+In this way Beatrice secured the whole afternoon to herself to do what
+she liked with it. She was not slow to make use of it. There was all
+the pluck of the Esterworths in her veins, together with all the
+determination and energy which had raised her father's family from
+a race of shopkeepers to take their place amongst gentlemen.
+
+As soon as Captain Kynaston joined the two ladies in the garden at
+Walpole Lodge after luncheon Beatrice requested him to order a hansom to
+be fetched for her.
+
+"Why should you hurry away?" said Maurice, politely. "My mother will take
+you back to town in the carriage if you will wait."
+
+Helen was stooping over the flower-beds, gathering some violets. Beatrice
+stepped closer to Maurice.
+
+"Don't say a word, there's a good fellow, but get me the
+hansom--and--and--please don't mention it at home."
+
+Then Maurice, who was no tyro in such matters, understood that it was
+expected of him that he should ask no questions, but do what he was told
+and hold his tongue.
+
+The sequence of which proceedings was, that a hansom cab drew up at the
+far corner of the little stone-flagged court in the Temple between four
+and five that afternoon.
+
+Mr. Pryme was no longer by the window when it did so, so that he was
+totally unprepared for the visitor, whose trembling and twice-repeated
+tap at his door he answered somewhat impatiently--
+
+"Come in, and be d----d to you, and don't stand rapping at that door all
+day."
+
+The people, as a rule, who solicited admittance to his chambers were
+either the boy from the legal light below, who came to ask whether the
+papers were ready that had been sent up this morning, or else they were
+smiling and sleek-faced tradesmen who washed their hands insinuatingly
+whilst they requested that Mr. Pryme would be kind enough to settle that
+little outstanding account.
+
+Either of these visitors were equally unwelcome, which must be some
+excuse for the roughness of Mr. Pryme's language.
+
+The door was softly pushed ajar.
+
+"Now, then--come in, can't you; who the deuce are you--_Beatrice_!"
+
+Enter Miss Miller, smiling.
+
+"Oh, fie, Herbert! what naughty words, sir."
+
+"Beatrice, is it possible that it is you! Where is your mother? Are you
+alone?" looking nervously round at the door, whilst he caught her
+outstretched hand.
+
+"Yes, I am quite alone; don't be very shocked. I know I am a horrid, bold
+girl to come all by myself to a man's chambers; it's dreadful, isn't it!
+Oh, what would people say of it if they knew--why, even _you_ look
+horrified! But oh, Herbert, I did want to see you so. I was determined to
+get at you somehow--and now I am here for a whole hour; I have managed it
+beautifully--no one will ever find out where I have been. Mamma thinks I
+am driving with Lady Kynaston!"
+
+And then she sat down and took off her veil, and told him all about it.
+
+She had got at her lover, and she felt perfectly happy and secure,
+sitting there with his arm round her waist and her hand in his. Not so
+Herbert. He was pleased, of course, to see her, and called her by a
+thousand fond names, and he admired her courage and her spirit for
+breaking through the conventional trammels of her life in order to come
+to him; but he was horribly nervous all the same. Supposing that boy were
+to come in from below, or the smiling tradesman, or, still worse, if the
+great Q.C. were to catch a glimpse of her as she went out, and recognize
+her from having met her in society, where would Miss Miller's reputation
+be then?
+
+"It is very imprudent of you--most rash and foolish," he kept on
+repeating; but he was glad to see her all the same, and kissed her
+between every other word.
+
+"Now, don't waste any more time spooning," says Beatrice, with decision,
+drawing herself a little farther from him on the hard leather sofa. "An
+hour soon goes, and I have plenty to say to you. Herbert," with great
+solemnity, "_I mean to elope with you!_"
+
+Herbert gives an irrepressible start.
+
+"_Now!_ this minute?" he exclaims, in some dismay, and reflects swiftly
+that, just now he possesses exactly three pounds seven and sixpence in
+ready money.
+
+"No; don't be a goose; not now, because I haven't any clothes." Herbert
+breathes more freely. "But some day, very soon, before the end of the
+season."
+
+"But, my pet, you are not of age," objects her lover; whilst sundry
+clauses in the laws concerning the marriages of minors without the
+consent of their parents pass hurriedly through his brain.
+
+"What do I care about my age?" says Beatrice, with the recklessness of an
+impetuous woman bent upon having her own way. "Of course, I don't wish to
+do anything disreputable, or to make a scandal, but mamma is driving me
+to it by never allowing me to see you, and forbidding you to come to the
+house, and by encouraging all sorts of men whom she wants me to marry."
+
+"Ah! And these men, do they make love to you?" The instinct of the lover
+rises instantly superior to the instinct of legal prudence within him.
+"That is hard for me to bear."
+
+"Now, Herbert, don't be a fool!" cries Beatrice, jumping up and making a
+grimace at herself in the dusty glass over his mantelpiece. "Do I look
+like a girl whom men would make love to? Am I not too positively hideous?
+Oh, you needn't shake your head and look indignant. Of course I am ugly,
+everybody but you thinks so. Of course it's not me, myself, but because
+papa is rich, and they think I shall have money. Oh, what a curse this
+money is!"
+
+"I think the want of it a far greater one," says Herbert, ruefully.
+
+"At any rate," continues Beatrice, "I am determined to put an end to this
+state of things; we must take the law into our own hands."
+
+"Am I to wait for you in a carriage and pair at the corner of Eaton
+Square in the middle of the night?" inquires Herbert, grimly.
+
+"No; don't be foolish; people don't do things now-a-days in the way our
+grandmothers did. I shall go to morning service one day at some out
+of-the-way church, where you will meet me with a licence in your pocket;
+it will be the simplest thing in the world."
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+"Afterwards I shall go home to lunch."
+
+"And what am I to do?"
+
+"Oh! you will come back here, I suppose."
+
+"I don't think that will be very amusing," objects the bridegroom elect,
+dubiously.
+
+"No; but then we shall be really married, and when we know that no one
+can part us, we shan't mind waiting; and then, some day, after about six
+months or so, I shall confess to papa, and there will be a terrible
+scene, ending in tears on my part, and in forgiveness on the part of my
+parents. Once the deed is done, you see, they will be forced to make the
+best of it; and, of course, they will not allow us to starve. I think it
+is a very ingenious plan. What do you think of it, Herbert? You don't
+look very much delighted at the idea."
+
+"I don't think that I should play a very noble part in such a scheme as
+that. Dearly as I love you, Beatrice, I do not think I could consent to
+steal you away in such a pitiful and cowardly manner."
+
+"Pooh! you would have nothing to do with it; it is all my doing, of
+course. Hush! is not that somebody coming up the stairs?"
+
+They were silent for half a minute, listening to the sound of advancing
+steps upon the wooden staircase.
+
+"It is nothing--only somebody to see the man above me. By Jove, though,
+it _is_ for me!" as somebody suddenly stopped outside and knocked at the
+door. "Wait one minute, sir! Good heavens, Beatrice, what am I to do with
+you?"
+
+Herbert looked frightened out of his life. Beatrice, on the contrary,
+could hardly smother her laughter.
+
+"I must hide!" she said, in a choked whisper. "Oh, Herbert, it is like
+a scene out of a naughty French play! I shall die of laughter!"
+
+Without a moment's thought, she fled into the inner room, the door of
+which stood ajar, and which was none other than Mr. Pryme's bed-chamber!
+There was no time to think of any better expedient. Beatrice turned the
+key upon herself, and Herbert called out "Come in!" to the intruder.
+Neither of them had noticed that Beatrice's little white lace sunshade
+lay upon the table with her gloves and veil beside it.
+
+If Mr. Pryme had been alarmed at the bare fact of an unknown and possibly
+unimportant visitor, it may be left to the imagination to describe the
+state of his feelings when the door, upon being opened, disclosed the
+Member for North Meadowshire standing without!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+A WHITE SUNSHADE.
+
+ For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove
+ An unrelenting foe to love,
+ And when we meet a mutual heart,
+ Come in between, and bid us part?
+
+
+"Well, Mr. Pryme, how d'ye do?" said Mr. Miller, in his rough, hearty
+voice, holding out his hand. "I dare say you are surprised to see me
+here. I haven't met you since you were staying down with us at Christmas
+time. Well, and how goes the world with you, young man?"
+
+Herbert, who at first had thought nothing less than that Mr. Miller had
+tracked his daughter to his rooms, and that he was about to have the
+righteous wrath of an infuriated and exasperated parent to deal with, by
+this time began to perceive that, to whatever extraordinary cause his
+visit was owing, Beatrice, at all events, had nothing to do with it. He
+recovered himself sufficiently to murmur, in answer to his visitor's
+greeting, that the world went pretty well with him, and to request his
+guest to be seated.
+
+And then, as he pushed an arm-chair forward for him, his eye fell upon
+Beatrice's things upon the table, and his heart literally stood still
+within him. What was he to do? They lay so close to the father's elbow
+that, to move them without attracting attention was impossible, and to
+attract attention to them was to risk their being recognized.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Miller had put on his spectacles, and was drawing some
+voluminous papers out of his breast coat-pocket.
+
+"Now, I dare say, young man, you are wondering what brings me to see you?
+Well, the fact is, there is a little matter about which I am going to
+law. I'm going to bring an action for libel against a newspaper; it is
+that rascally paper the _Cat o' Nine Tails_. They had an infamous
+paragraph three weeks ago concerning my early life, which, let me tell
+you, sir, was highly respectable in every way, sir--in every way."
+
+"I am quite sure of that, Mr. Miller."
+
+"I've brought the paragraph with me. Oh, here it is. Well, I've had a
+good deal of correspondence with the editor, and he refuses to publish an
+apology, and so I'm tired of the whole matter, and have placed it in the
+hands of my solicitors. I'm going to prosecute them, sir, and I don't
+care what it costs me to do it; and I'll expose the whole system of these
+trumped-up fabrications, that contain, as a rule, one grain of truth to a
+hundredweight of lies. Well, now, Mr. Pryme, I want a clever barrister to
+take up this case, and I have instructed Messrs. Grainge, my solicitors,
+to retain you."
+
+"I am sure, sir, you are very kind; I hardly know how to thank you,"
+faltered poor Herbert. Never in the whole course of his life had he felt
+so overcome with shame and confusion! Here was this man come to do him a
+really great and substantial benefit, whilst his own daughter was hidden
+away in a shameful fashion in the next room! Herbert would sooner that
+Mr. Miller had pointed a pistol at his head and threatened to shoot him.
+The deception that he was practising towards this kind-hearted and
+excellent gentleman struck him to the heart with a sense of guilty
+remorse.
+
+But what on earth was he to do? He could not reveal the truth to the
+unconscious father, nor open the door and disclose Beatrice hiding in his
+bedroom, without absolutely risking the reputation of the girl he loved.
+There was nothing for it but to go on with the serio-comedy as best he
+could, and to try and get Mr. Miller off the premises as speedily as
+possible.
+
+He made an effort to decline the proffered employment.
+
+"It is most kind, most generous of you to have thought of me, but I must
+tell you that there are many better men, even amongst the juniors, who
+would do your case more justice than I should."
+
+"Oh! I believe you have plenty of talent, Mr. Pryme. I've been making
+inquiries about you. You only want an opportunity, and I like giving a
+young fellow a chance. One must hold out a helping hand to the young ones
+now and then."
+
+"Of course, sir, I would do my very best for you, but I really think you
+are risking your own case by giving it to me."
+
+"Nonsense--take it and do what you can for me; if you fail, I shall not
+blame you;" and here suddenly Mr. Miller's eyes rested upon the sunshade
+and the gloves upon the table half-a-yard behind his arm. Now, had it
+been Miss Miller's mother who, in the place of her father, had been
+seated in Herbert's wooden arm-chair, the secret of her proximity would
+have been revealed the very instant the maternal eyes had been set upon
+that sunshade and those gloves. Mrs. Miller could have sworn to that
+little white lace, ivory-handled toy, with its coquettish pink ribbon
+bows, had she seen it amongst a hundred others, nor would it have been
+easy to have deceived the mother's eyes in the matter of the gray _peau
+de suede_ gloves and the dainty little veil, such as her daughter was in
+the habit of wearing. But a father's perceptions in these matters are not
+accurate. Mr. Miller had not the remotest idea what his child's sunshade
+was like, nor, indeed, whether she had any sunshade at all. Nevertheless,
+as his eyes alighted upon these indications of a feminine presence which
+lay upon the young barrister's table, they remained fixed there with
+distinct disapproval. These obnoxious articles of female attire of course
+conveyed clearly to the elder man's perceptions, in a broad and general
+sense, the fatal word "woman," and woman in this case meant "vice."
+
+Mr. Miller strove to re-direct his attention to his case and the papers
+in his hand. Herbert made a faint and ineffectual attempt to remove the
+offending objects from the table. Mr. Miller only looked back at them
+with an ever-increasing gloom upon his face, and Herbert's hand, morally
+paralyzed by the glance, sank powerlessly down by his side. He imagined,
+of course, that the father had recognized his daughter's property.
+
+"Well, to continue the subject," said Mr. Miller, looking away with
+an effort, and turning over the papers he had brought with him; "there
+are several points in the case I should like to mention to you." He
+paused for a minute, apparently to collect his thoughts, and to
+Herbert's sensitive ears there was a sudden coldness and constraint
+in his voice and manner. "You will, of course, take instructions in
+the main from Grainge and Co.; but what I wished to point out to you
+was--ahem----" here his voice unaccountably faltered, and his eyes, as
+though drawn by a magnet, returned once more with ominous displeasure to
+that little heap of feminine finery that lay between them. Mr. Miller
+flung down his papers, and turning round in his chair, rested both elbows
+upon the table.
+
+"Mr. Pryme," he said, with decision, "I think it is best that I should be
+frank with you!" He looked the young barrister full in the face.
+
+"Certainly, certainly, if you please, Mr. Miller," said Herbert, not
+quite knowing what he had to fear, and turning hot and cold alternately
+under his visitor's scrutinizing gaze.
+
+"Well, then, let me tell you fairly that I came to seek you to-day with
+the friendliest motives."
+
+"I am sure you did, and you are most kind to me, sir," murmured Herbert,
+playing nervously with an ivory paper-cutter that lay on the table.
+
+Mr. Miller waved his hand, as though to dispense with his grateful
+acknowledgments.
+
+"The fact is," he continued, "I had understood from Mrs. Miller that you
+were a suitor for my daughter's hand. Well, sir, Mrs. Miller, as you
+know, disapproves of your suit. My daughter will be well off, Mr. Pryme,
+and you, I understand, have no income at all. You have no other resource
+than a profession, at which, as yet, you have made nothing. There is some
+reason in Mrs. Miller's objection to you. Nor should I be willing to let
+my daughter marry an idle man who will live upon her money. Then, on the
+other hand, Mr. Pryme, I find that my girl is fond of you, and, if this
+is the case, I am unwilling to make her unhappy. I said to myself that I
+would give you an opening in this case of mine, and if you will work hard
+and make yourself known and respected in your profession, I should not
+object, in the course of time, to your being engaged to her, and I would
+endeavour to induce her mother to agree to it. I came here to-day, Mr.
+Pryme, to give you a fair chance of winning her."
+
+"You are too good, Mr. Miller," cried Herbert, with effusion, stretching
+forth his hand. "I do not know how to thank you enough, nor how to assure
+you of my grateful acceptance of your terms."
+
+But Mr. Miller drew back from the young man's proffered hand.
+
+"Wait, there is no occasion to thank me;" and again his eyes fell sternly
+upon that unlucky little heap of lace and ribbon. "I am sorry to tell you
+that, since I have come here, my friendly and pleasant intentions towards
+you have undergone a complete change."
+
+"Sir!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pryme; I came here prepared to treat you--well, I may as well
+confess it--as a son, under the belief that you were an upright and
+honourable man, and were sincerely and honestly attached to my daughter."
+
+"Mr. Miller, is it possible that you can doubt it?"
+
+The elder man pointed with contemptuous significance to the sunshade
+before him.
+
+"I find upon your table, young man, the evidences of the recent presence
+of some wretched woman in your rooms, and your confusion of manner shows
+me too plainly that you are not the kind of husband to which a man may
+safely entrust his daughter's happiness."
+
+"Mr. Miller, I assure you you are mistaken; it is not so."
+
+"Every man in this country has a right to justify himself when he is
+accused. If I am mistaken, Mr. Pryme, explain to me the meaning of
+_that_," and the heavy forefinger was again levelled at the offending
+objects before him.
+
+Not one single word could Herbert utter. In vain ingenious fabrications
+concerning imaginary sisters, maiden aunts, or aged lady clients rushed
+rapidly through his brain; the natural answer on Mr. Miller's part to all
+such inventions would have been, "Then, where is she?"
+
+Mr. Miller must know as well as he did himself that the lady, whoever she
+might be, must still be in his rooms, else why should her belongings be
+left on his table; and if in the rooms, then, as there was no other
+egress on the staircase than the one by which he had entered, clearly,
+she must be secreted in his bedroom. Mr. Miller was not a young man, and
+his perceptions in matters of intrigue and adventure might no longer be
+very acute, but it was plain to Herbert that he probably knew quite as
+well as he did himself that the owner of the gloves and sunshade was in
+the adjoining room.
+
+"Have you any satisfactory explanation to give me?" asked Mr. Miller,
+once more, after a solemn silence, during which he glared in a stern and
+inquisitorial manner over his spectacles at the young man.
+
+"I have nothing to say," was the answer, given in a low and dejected
+voice.
+
+Mr. Miller sprang to his feet and hurriedly gathered up his papers.
+
+"Then, sir," he said, furiously, "I shall wish you good afternoon; and
+let me assure you, most emphatically, that you must relinquish all claim
+to my daughter's hand. I will never consent to her union with a man whose
+private life will not bear investigation; and should she disobey me in
+this matter, she shall never have one single shilling of my money."
+
+There was a moment's silence. Mr. Miller was buttoning-up his coat with
+the air of a man who buttons up his heart within it at the same time. He
+regarded the young man fiercely, and yet there was a lingering
+wistfulness, too, in his gaze. He would have given a good deal to hear,
+from his lips, a satisfactory explanation of the circumstances which told
+so suspiciously against him. He liked the young barrister personally, and
+he was fond enough of his daughter to wish that she might be happy in her
+own way. He spoke one word more to the young man.
+
+"Have you nothing to say; Mr. Pryme?"
+
+Herbert shook his head, with his eyes gloomily downcast.
+
+"I can only tell you, sir, that you are mistaken in what you imagine. If
+you will not believe my word, I can say nothing more."
+
+"And what of _these_, Mr. Pryme--what of _these_?" pointing furiously
+downwards to Beatrice's property.
+
+"I cannot explain it any further to you, Mr. Miller. I can only ask you
+to believe me."
+
+"Then, I do not believe you, sir--I do not believe you. Would any man in
+his senses believe that you haven't got a woman hidden in the next room?
+Do you suppose I'm a fool? I have the honour of wishing you good day,
+sir, and I am sorry I ever took the trouble of calling upon you. It is,
+of course, unnecessary for you to trouble yourself concerning my case, in
+these altered circumstances, Mr. Pryme; I beg to decline the benefit of
+your legal assistance. Good afternoon."
+
+The door closed upon him, and the sound of his retreating footsteps
+echoed noisily down the stairs. Herbert sank into a chair and covered his
+face with his hands. So lately hope and fortune seemed to have smiled
+upon him for one short, blissful moment, only to withdraw the sunshine
+of their faces again from him more completely, and to leave him more
+utterly in the dark than ever. Was ever man so unfortunate, and so
+unlucky?
+
+But for the _contretemps_ concerning that wretched sunshade, he would now
+have been a hopeful, and almost a triumphant, lover. Now life was all
+altered for him!
+
+The door between the two rooms opened softly, and Beatrice, no longer
+brave, and defiant, and laughing as she had been when she went in, but
+white, and scared, and trembling, crept hesitatingly forth, and knelt
+down by her lover's side.
+
+"Oh, Herbert! what has happened? It was papa--I heard his voice; but I
+could not hear what you talked about, only I heard that he was angry at
+the last, when he went away. Oh! tell me, dearest, what has happened?"
+
+Herbert pointed bitterly to her belongings on the table.
+
+"What fatality made me overlook those wretched things?" he cried,
+miserably; "they have ruined us!"
+
+Beatrice uttered an exclamation of dismay.
+
+"Papa saw them--he recognized them!"
+
+"Not as _yours_, thank God!"
+
+"What then?"
+
+"He thinks me unworthy of you," answered the lover, in a low voice, and
+Beatrice understood. "He has forbidden me ever to think of you now; and
+he will leave you penniless if you disobey him; it is a terrible
+misfortune, my darling; but still, thank God that your good name is
+safe!"
+
+"Yes, at the expense of yours, Herbert!" cried the girl, frantically; "I
+see it all now, and, if I dared, I would confess to papa the truth."
+
+"Do not think of it!"
+
+"I dare not; but, Herbert, don't despair; I see now how wicked and how
+foolish I was to come here to-day, and what a terrible risk I have run,
+for if papa knew that it was I who was in the next room, he would never
+forgive me; we can do nothing now but wait until brighter and happier
+days; believe me, Herbert, if you will be true to me, I will be true to
+you, and I will wait for you till I am old and grey."
+
+He strained her passionately to his heart.
+
+"I will never forget what you have done for me to-day, never!" said the
+girl, as she clung to his neck.
+
+And then she put on her gloves and veil, and took up the sunshade that
+had been the cause of such a direful ending to her escapade, and went her
+way. And after she was gone, Mr. Pryme, with his hands in his pockets,
+began once more to whistle, as though the events of the afternoon had
+never taken place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+HER SON'S SECRET.
+
+ But love is such a mystery,
+ I cannot find it out,
+ For when I think I'm best resolved,
+ I then am most in doubt."
+
+ Sir J. Suckling.
+
+
+Lady Kynaston sat alone in her little morning-room; as far as she knew,
+she was alone in the house; Mrs. Romer had driven into London, on the
+cares of her trousseau intent, and she believed that Maurice had gone
+with her; at all events, she had heard him state his intention of going,
+and the departing carriage had, some time since, driven away from the
+door.
+
+The morning-room looked on to the garden side of the house, and the
+windows were wide open; the east wind had departed, and summer had set in
+at last. Real summer, coming in with a rush when it did come, with warm
+whiffs of flower-scented wind, with flutterings of lime blossoms from the
+trees along the high brick wall, with brown bees and saffron butterflies
+hovering over the reviving flower-borders, and dragon-flies darting out
+of the shadows into the hot blinding sunshine. Summer at last; and oh,
+how welcome when it comes upon our rain-drenched and winter-pinched land.
+
+The gardener was bedding out the geraniums along the straight ribbon
+border. Lady Kynaston went out once to superintend his operations,
+holding up a newspaper in her hand to shield her head from the rays of
+the sun. But it was hot, and old McCloud, the Scotch gardener, was
+intelligent enough to be safely left to his own devices, so she did not
+stop out long.
+
+She came in again, and sat down in a low basket-chair by the window, and
+thought how wise she had been to settle herself down in the old house
+with its velvet lawns and its wide shadowy trees, instead of in the heat
+and turmoil of a London home.
+
+She looked a little anxious and worried to-day--she was not happy about
+her eldest son--somebody had told her last night that he was talking
+about going to Australia, and turning sheep farmer. Lady Kynaston was
+annoyed at the report; it did not strike her as seemly or right that the
+head of the Kynaston family should become a sheep farmer. Moreover, she
+knew very well that he only wanted to get himself away out of the country
+where no one would know of his story, or remind him of his trouble again.
+The man's heart was broken. He did not want to farm sheep, or to take to
+any other rational or healthful employment; he only wanted, like a sick
+animal, to creep away and hide his hurt. Little as Lady Kynaston had in
+common with her eldest son, she was sorry for him. She would have done
+what she could to help him had she known how. She had written to him only
+yesterday, begging him to come to her, but he had not replied to her
+letter.
+
+The Cloverdales' ball had come and gone, and Lady Kynaston had taken
+pains to ensure that an invitation might be sent to Mrs. Hazeldine and
+Miss Nevill. She had also put herself to some inconvenience in order to
+be present at it herself, but all to no purpose--Vera was not there.
+Perhaps she had had another engagement that evening.
+
+The old lady's promise to her youngest son was still unfulfilled. She
+half repented now that she had given him any such promise. What good was
+she to do by interceding between her son and Miss Nevill? and why was she
+to lay herself open to the chance of a rebuff from that young lady? It
+had been a senseless and quixotic idea on Maurice's part altogether.
+Young women do not take back a jilted lover because the man's mother
+advises them to do so; nor is a broken-off marriage likely to get itself
+re-settled in consequence of the interference of a third person.
+
+The old lady had taken out her fancy-work, a piece of crewel work such as
+is the fashion of the day. But she was not fond of work; the leaves of
+muddy-shaded greens grew but slowly under her fingers, and, truth to say,
+the occupation bored her. It was artistic, certainly, and it was
+fashionable; but Lady Kynaston would have been happier over a pair of
+cross-stitch slippers for her son, or a knitted woollen petticoat for the
+old woman at her lodge gate. All the same, she took out her crewels and
+put in a few stitches; but the afternoon was warm, there was a humming of
+insects in the summer air, a click-clicking from the gardener as he
+dropped one empty red flower-pot into the other along the edge of the
+ribbon border, a cawing of rooks from the elms over the wall, a very
+harmony of soft soothing sounds, just enough to lull worry to rest, not
+enough to scare drowsiness from one's brain.
+
+By degrees, it all became mixed up in a delicious confusion. The rooks,
+and the bees, and the gardener made one continuous murmur to her, like
+the swishing of summer waves upon a sandy shore, or the moaning of soft
+winds in the tree tops.
+
+Then the crewel work slipped off her lap, and Lady Kynaston slept.
+
+How long she was asleep she could not rightly have said: it might have
+been an hour, it might have been but twenty minutes; but suddenly she
+awoke with a start.
+
+The rustle of a woman's dress was beside her, and somebody spoke her
+name.
+
+"Lady Kynaston! Oh, I am so sorry I have disturbed you; I did not see you
+were asleep."
+
+The old lady opened her eyes wide, and came back suddenly from dreamland.
+Vera Nevill stood before her.
+
+"Vera, is it _you_? Good gracious! how did you get in? I never even heard
+the door open."
+
+"I came in by the front-door quite correctly," said Vera, smiling and
+reaching out her hand for a chair, "and was duly announced by the
+footman; but I had no idea you were asleep."
+
+"Only dozing. Sit down, my dear, sit down; I am glad to see you." And,
+somehow, all the awkwardness of the meeting between the two vanished. It
+was as though they had parted only yesterday on the most friendly terms.
+In Vera's absence, Lady Kynaston had thought hard things of her, and had
+spoken condemning words concerning her; but in her presence all this
+seemed to be altered.
+
+There was something so unspeakably refreshing and soothing about Vera;
+there was a certain quiet dignity in her movements, a calm serenity in
+her manner, which made it difficult to associate blame and displeasure
+with her. Faults she might have, but they could never be mean or ignoble
+ones; there was nothing base or contemptible about her. The pure, proud
+profile, the broad grave brow, the eyes that, if a trifle cold, were as
+true withal as the soul that looked out, sometimes earnestly, sometimes
+wistfully, from their shadowy depths; everything about her bade one judge
+her, not so much by her actions, which were sometimes incomprehensible,
+but by a certain standard that she herself created in the minds of
+all who knew her.
+
+Lady Kynaston had called her a jilt and a heartless coquette; she had
+made no secret of saying, right and left, how badly she had behaved: what
+shameful and discreditable deductions might be drawn from her conduct
+towards Sir John. Yet, the very instant she set eyes upon her, she felt
+sorry for the hard things she had said of her, and ashamed of herself
+that she should have spoken them.
+
+Vera drew forward a chair, and sat down near her. The dress she wore was
+white, of some clear and delicate material, softened with creamy lace; it
+had been one of kind-hearted Cissy Hazeldine's many presents to her.
+Looking at her, Lady Kynaston thought what a lovely vision of youth and
+beauty she made in the sombre quiet of the little room.
+
+"They tell me half the men in London have gone mad over you," were her
+first words following the train of her own thoughts, and she liked her
+visitor none the less, that world-loving little old woman, because she
+could not but acknowledge the reasonableness of the madness of which
+she accused her of being the object.
+
+"I care very little for the men in London, Lady Kynaston," answered Vera,
+quietly.
+
+"My dear, what _do_ you care for?" asked her ladyship, with earnestness,
+and Vera understood that she was expected to state her business.
+
+"Lady Kynaston, I have come to ask you about your son," she answered,
+simply.
+
+"About John?"
+
+"Of course, it is Sir John I mean," she said, quickly, a hot flush
+rising for one instant to her face, and dying away rapidly again, to
+leave her a trifle paler than before. "I know," she continued, with a
+little hesitation--"I know that I have no right to inquire--but I cannot
+forget all that is past--all his goodness and generosity to me. I shall
+never forget it; and oh, I hear such dreadful things of him, that he is
+ill--that he is talking of going to Australia. Oh, Lady Kynaston, is it
+all true?"
+
+She had clasped her hands together, and bent a little forward towards
+the old lady in her earnestness; she looked at her piteously, almost
+entreatingly.
+
+"Does she love him after all?" thought Lady Kynaston, as she watched her;
+and the meaning of the whole story of her son's love seemed more
+unfathomable than ever.
+
+"John is neither well nor happy," she said, aloud. "I think, Vera, you
+must know the reason of it better than any of us."
+
+"It is my fault--my doing," cried the girl, with a ring of deep regret in
+her voice. "Yes," she added, looking away sadly out of the open window;
+"that is why I have come. Do you know that I saw him once? I don't think
+he saw me--it was in the Park one morning. He looked so aged, so
+saddened, I realized then what I had done--his face haunts me."
+
+"Vera, you could alter all that if you chose," said the old lady,
+earnestly.
+
+A sudden flush sprang to her face; she looked startled.
+
+"You don't suppose I came here to say _that_, Lady
+Kynaston?"
+
+"No, my dear; but I have decided to say it to you. Vera, I entreat you to
+tell me the truth. What is it that stands between you and John?"
+
+She was silent, looking down upon her hands that lay crossed one over the
+other upon her knee.
+
+"I cannot tell you, Lady Kynaston," she answered, at length, in a low
+voice.
+
+Lady Kynaston sighed; she was a little disappointed.
+
+"And you cannot, marry him?"
+
+Vera shook her head.
+
+"No, it would not be right."
+
+The old lady bent forward and laid her hand upon her visitor's arm.
+
+"Forgive me for asking you. Do you love some one else? is it that?"
+
+She bent her head silently.
+
+"Have you any hopes of marrying the man you love?"
+
+"Oh no, none--not the slightest," she said, hurriedly; "I shall never
+marry."
+
+"Then, Vera, will you listen to an old woman's advice?"
+
+"Yes, dear Lady Kynaston."
+
+"My dear, if you cannot marry the man you love, put him out of your
+mind."
+
+"I must do that in any case," she said, wearily.
+
+"Listen to me, my dear. Don't sacrifice your own life and the life of a
+man who is good and loves you dearly to a caprice of your heart. Hush!
+don't interrupt me; I dare say you don't think it a caprice; you think it
+is to last for ever. But there is no 'for ever' in these matters; the
+thing comes to us like an ordinary disease; some of us take it strongly,
+and it half kills us; some of us are only a very little ill; but we all
+get over it. There is a pain that goes right through one's heart: it is
+worse to bear than any physical suffering: but, thank God, that pain
+always wears itself out. My dear, I, who speak to you, have felt it, and
+I tell you that no man is worth it. You can cure yourself of it if you
+will; and the remedy is work and change of the conditions of your life.
+You don't think I look very much like a blighted being, do you? and yet I
+did not marry the man I loved. I could not; he was poor, and my parents
+would not allow it. I thought I should die, but you see I did not. I took
+up my life bravely, and I married a most estimable man; I lived an active
+and healthy life, so that by degrees it became a happy one. Now, Vera,
+why should you not do the same? Your people have a right to expect that
+you should marry; they cannot afford to support you for always. Because
+you are disappointed in one thing, why are you not to make the best you
+can of your life?"
+
+"I do mean to marry--in time," said Vera, brokenly, with tears in her
+eyes.
+
+"Then why not marry John?"
+
+There was a minute's silence. Was it possible that Lady Kynaston did not
+know? Vera asked herself. Was it possible that she could, in cold blood,
+advise her to marry one son whilst the other one loved her! That was what
+was so terrible to her mind. To marry was simple enough, but to marry Sir
+John Kynaston! She thought of what such an action might bring upon them
+all. The daily meetings, the struggles with temptation, the awful
+tampering with deadly sin. Could any one so constituted as she was walk
+deliberately and with open eyes into such a situation?
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"I cannot do it," she said, wringing her hands together; "don't ask me;
+I cannot do it!"
+
+Lady Kynaston got up, and went and stood by her chair.
+
+"Vera, I entreat you not to let any false pride stand in the way of
+this. Do not imagine that I ask you to do anything that would wound your
+vanity, or humble you in your own eyes. It would be so easy for me to
+arrange a meeting between you and John; it shall all come about simply
+and naturally. As soon as he sees you again, he will speak to you."
+
+"It is not that, it is not that!" she murmured, distractedly; but Lady
+Kynaston went on as if she had not heard her.
+
+"You must know that I should not plead like this with you if I were not
+deeply concerned. For myself, I had sooner that John remained unmarried.
+I had sooner that Maurice's children came into Kynaston. It is wrong, I
+know, but it is the case, because Maurice is my favourite. But when we
+hear of John shutting himself up, of his refusing to see any of his
+friends, and of his talking of going to Australia, why, then we all feel
+that it is you only who can help us; that is why I have promised Maurice
+to plead with you."
+
+She looked up quickly.
+
+"You promised Maurice! It is _Maurice_ who wants me to marry his
+brother." She turned very pale.
+
+"Certainly he does. You don't suppose Maurice likes to see his brother so
+unhappy."
+
+The darkened room, the spindle-legged furniture, Lady Kynaston's little
+figure, in her black dress and soft white tulle cap, the bright garden
+outside, the belt of trees beyond the lawn, all swam together before her
+eyes.
+
+She drew a long breath; then she rose slowly from her place, a little
+unsteadily, perhaps, and walked across the Persian rug to the empty
+fireplace. She stood there half a minute leaning with both hands upon the
+mantelshelf, her head bent forwards.
+
+_Maurice wished it!_ To him, then, there were no fears, and no dangers.
+He could look forward calmly to meeting her constantly as his brother's
+wife; it would be nothing to him, that temptation that she dreaded so
+much; nothing that an abyss which death itself could never bridge over
+would be between them to all eternity!
+
+And then the woman's pride, without which, God help us, so many of us
+would break our hearts and die, came to her aid.
+
+Very well, then, if he was strong, she would learn to be strong too;
+if the danger to him was so slight that he could contemplate it with
+calmness and with indifference, then she, too, would show him that it was
+nothing to her. Only, then, what a poor thing was this love of his! And
+surely the man she had loved so fatally was not Maurice Kynaston at all,
+but only some creature of her own imagination, whom she had invested with
+things that the man himself had not lost because he had never possessed
+them.
+
+If this was so, then why, indeed, listen to the voice of her heart when
+everything urged her to stifle it? Why not make Sir John Kynaston happy
+and herself prosperous and rich, as everybody round her seemed to
+consider it her duty to do?
+
+It passed rapidly through her mind what a fine place Kynaston was; how
+dear everything that wealth can bring had always been to her, what a wise
+and prudent match it was in every way for her, and what a good indulgent
+husband Sir John would be.
+
+Who in the wide world would blame her for going back to him? Would not
+everybody, on the contrary, praise her for reconsidering her folly, and
+for becoming Lady Kynaston, of Kynaston? The errors of the successful
+in this world's race are leniently treated; it is only when we are
+unfortunate and our lives become failures that our friends turn their
+backs upon our misdeeds in righteous condemnation.
+
+"So long as thou doest well unto thyself men will speak good of thee."
+
+Surely, surely, it was the best and the wisest thing she could do. And
+yet even at that moment Eustace Daintree's pale, earnest face came for
+one instant before her. What side in all this would he take--he of the
+pure heart, of the stainless life? If he knew all, what would he say?
+
+Pooh! he was a dreamer--an idealist, a man of impossible aims; his
+theories, indeed, were beautiful, but impracticable. Vera knew that he
+expected better things of her; but she had striven to be what he would
+have desired, and if she had failed, was it her fault? was it not rather
+the fault of the world and the generation in which her life had been
+cast?
+
+She had struggled, and she had failed; henceforth let her life be as fate
+should ordain for her.
+
+"What is it you wish me to say, Lady Kynaston?" she asked, turning
+suddenly towards Maurice's mother.
+
+"My dear child, I only want you to say that if John asks you again to be
+his wife, you will consent, or say only, if you like it better, that you
+will agree to meet him here. There shall be nothing unpleasant for you; I
+will write to him and settle everything."
+
+"If you write to him, I will come," she said, briefly, and then Lady
+Kynaston came up to her and kissed her, taking her hands within her own,
+and drawing her to her with motherly tenderness. "My dear, everybody will
+think well of you for this."
+
+And the words ran so nearly in the current of her own bitter thoughts
+that Vera laughed, shortly and disdainfully, a low laugh of scorn at the
+world, whose mandates she was prepared to obey, even though she despised
+herself for doing so.
+
+"You will be glad by-and-by that you were so sensible and so reasonable,"
+said Lady Kynaston.
+
+"Yes--I dare say I shall be glad by-and-by; and now I am going, dear Lady
+Kynaston; I have a hansom waiting all this time, and Mrs. Hazeldine will
+be wondering what has become of me."
+
+At this moment they both heard the sound of a carriage driving up to the
+door.
+
+"It must be some visitors," said Lady Kynaston; "wait a minute, or you
+will meet them in the hall. Oh, stay, go through this door into the
+dining-room, and you can get through the dining-room window by the garden
+round to the front of the house; I dare say you would rather not meet
+anybody--you might know them."
+
+"Thank you--yes, I should much prefer to get away quickly and quietly--I
+will go through the dining-room; do not come with me, I can easily find
+my way."
+
+She gathered up her gloves and her veil and opened the door which
+communicated between the morning-room and the dining-room. She heard the
+chatter of women's voices and the fluttering of women's garments in the
+hall; it seemed as though they were about to be ushered into the room she
+was leaving.
+
+She did not want to be seen; besides, she wanted to get away quickly and
+return to London. She closed the morning-room door behind her, and took a
+couple of steps across the dining-room towards the windows.
+
+Then she stopped suddenly short; Maurice sat before her at the table. He
+lifted his eyes and looked at her; he did not seem surprised to see her,
+but there was a whole world of grief and despair in his face. It was as
+though he had lived through half a lifetime since she had last seen him.
+
+Pride, anger, wounded affection, all died away within her--only the woman
+was left, the woman who loved him. Little by little she saw him only
+through the blinding mist of her own tears.
+
+Not one single word was spoken between them. What was there that they
+could say to each other? Then suddenly she turned away, and went swiftly
+back into the room she had just left, closing the door behind her.
+
+It was empty. Lady Kynaston was gone. Vera stooped over the
+writing-table, and, taking up a sheet of paper, she wrote in pencil:--
+
+"Do not write to Sir John--it is beyond my strength--forgive me and
+forget me. Vera." And then she went out through the other door,
+and got herself away from the place in her hansom.
+
+Twenty minutes later, when her bevy of chattering visitors had left her,
+Lady Kynaston came back into her morning-room and found the little pencil
+note left upon her writing-table. Wondering, perplexed and puzzled beyond
+measure, she turned it over and over in her fingers.
+
+What had happened? Why had Vera so suddenly altered her mind again? What
+had influenced her? Half by accident, half, perhaps, with an instinct of
+what was the truth, she softly opened the door of communication between
+the morning-room and the dining-room, opened it for one instant, and then
+drew back again, scared and shocked, closing it quickly and noiselessly.
+What she had seen in the room was this--
+
+Maurice, half stretched across the table, his face downwards upon his
+arm, whilst those tearless, voiceless sobs, which are so terrible to
+witness in a man, sobs which are the gasps of a despairing heart, shook
+the strong broad shoulders and the down-bent head that was hidden from
+her sight.
+
+And then the mother knew at last the secret of her son's heart. It was
+Vera whom Maurice loved.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+ST. PAUL'S, KNIGHTSBRIDGE.
+
+ Hide in thy bosom, poor unfortunate,
+ That love which is thy torture and thy crime,
+ Or cry aloud to those departed hosts
+ Of ghostly lovers! can they be more deaf
+ To thy disaster than the living world?
+ Who, with a careless smile, will note the pain
+ Caused by thy foolish, self-inflicted wound.
+
+ Violet Fane, "Denzil Place."
+
+
+Upon the steps of the Charing Cross Hotel stood, one morning in June, a
+little French gentleman buttoning his lavender gloves. He wore a glossy
+new hat, a frock-coat, and a flower in his button-hole; he had altogether
+a smart and jaunty appearance.
+
+He hailed a passing hansom and jumped into it, taking care as he did so
+to avoid brushing against the muddy wheel, lest he should tarnish the
+glories of his light-coloured trousers. Monsieur D'Arblet was more than
+usually particular about his appearance this morning. He said to himself,
+with a chuckle, as he was driven west-ward, that he was on his way to win
+a bride, and a rich bride, too. It behoved him to be careful of his outer
+man on such an occasion.
+
+He had heard of Mr. Harlowe's death and of his grand-daughter's good
+fortune when he was at Constantinople, for he had friends in London who
+kept him _au courant_ with the gossip of society, and he had straightway
+made his preparations to return to England. He had not hurried himself,
+however, for what he had not heard of was that clause in the old man's
+will which made his grand-daughter's marriage within two months the _sine
+qua non_ of her inheriting his fortune. Such an idea as that had never
+come into Monsieur D'Arblet's head; he had no conception but that he
+should be in plenty of time.
+
+When he got to the house in Princes Gate he found it shut up. This,
+however, did not disconcert him, it was no more than he expected. After
+a considerable amount of ringing at both bells, there was a grating sound
+within as of the unfastening of bolts and chains, and an elderly woman,
+evidently fresh from her labours over the scouring of the kitchen grate,
+appeared at the door, opening it just a couple of inches, as though she
+dreaded the invasion of a gang of housebreakers.
+
+"Will you please tell me where Mrs. Romer is now living?"
+
+The woman grinned. "She has been living at Walpole Lodge, at Kew--Lady
+Kynaston's, sir."
+
+"Oh, thank you;" and he was preparing to re-enter his hansom.
+
+"But I don't think you will see her to-day, sir."
+
+"Why not?" turning half-round again.
+
+"It is Mrs. Romer's wedding-day."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+That elderly female, who had been at one time a housemaid in Mr.
+Harlowe's household, confided afterwards to her intimate friend, the
+kitchenmaid next door, that she was so frightened at the way that
+foreign-looking gentleman shouted at her, that she felt as if she should
+have dropped. "Indeed, my dear, I was forced to go down and get a drop of
+whisky the very instant he was gone, I felt so fluttered, like."
+
+Monsieur Le Vicomte turned round to her, with his foot midway between the
+pavement and the step of the hansom, and shouted at her again.
+
+"_What_ did you say it was, woman?"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Romer's wedding-day, to be sure, sir; and no such wonder after
+all, I should say; and a lovely morning for the wedding it be, too."
+
+Lucien D'Arblet put his hand vaguely up to his head, as though he had
+received a blow; she had escaped him, then, after all.
+
+"So soon after the old man's death," he murmured, half aloud; "who could
+have expected it?"
+
+"Well, sir, and soon it is, as you say," replied the ancient
+ex-housemaid, who had caught the remark; "but people do say as how Mr.
+Harlowe, my late master, wished it so, and of course Mrs. Romer, she were
+quite ready, so to speak, for the Captain had been a-courting her for
+ever so long, as we who lived in the house could have told."
+
+The vicomte was fumbling at his breast-coat pocket, his face was as
+yellow as the rose in his button-hole.
+
+"Where was the wedding to be? At Kew?"
+
+"No, sir; at Saint Paul's church, in Wilton Crescent. Mrs. Romer would
+have it so, because that's the place of worship she used to go to when
+she lived here. You'd be in time to see them married now, sir, if you was
+to look sharp; it was to be at half-past eleven, and it's not that yet;
+my niece and a young friend has just started a-foot to go there. I let
+her go, because she'd never seen a grand wedding. I'd like to have gone
+myself, but, in course, we couldn't both be out of the house----"
+
+The gentleman was listening no longer; he had sprung into his hansom.
+
+"Drive to Saint Paul's, Knightsbridge, as fast as your horse can go," he
+called out to the cabman. "I might even now be in time; it would be a
+_coup d'etat_," he muttered.
+
+Round the door of Saint Paul's church a crowd had gathered, waiting to
+see the bridal party come out; there was a strip of red cloth across the
+pavement, and a great many carriages were standing down the street; big
+footmen were lounging about, chatting amicably together; a knot of
+decently-dressed women were pressing up as close to the porch as the
+official personage, with a red collar on his coat and gold lace on his
+hat, would allow them to go; and an indiscriminate collection of those
+chance passers-by who never seem to be in any hurry, or to have anything
+better to do than to stand and stare at any excitement, great or small,
+that they may meet on their road, were blocking up the pavement on either
+side of the red cloth carpeting.
+
+Two ladies came walking along from the direction of the Park.
+
+"There's a wedding going on; do let us go in and see it, Vera."
+
+"My dear Cissy, I detest looking at people being married; it always makes
+me low-spirited."
+
+"And I love it. I always get such hints for dresses from a wedding. I'd
+go anywhere to see anybody married. I've been to the Jewish synagogue, to
+Spurgeon's tabernacle, and to the pro-cathedral, all in one week, before
+now just to see weddings."
+
+"There must be a sameness about the performances. Don't you get sick of
+them?"
+
+"Never. I wonder whose wedding it is; there must be thirty carriages
+waiting. I'll ask one of these big footmen. Whose wedding is it?"
+
+"Captain Kynaston's, ma'am."
+
+"Oh, I used to know him once; he is such a handsome fellow. Come along,
+Vera."
+
+"Cissy, I _cannot_ come."
+
+"Nonsense, Vera; don't be so foolish; make haste, or we shan't get in."
+
+Somebody just then dashed up in a hansom, and came hurrying up behind
+them. Somehow or other, what with Mrs. Hazeldine dragging her by the arm,
+and an excited-looking gentleman pushing his way through the crowd behind
+her, Vera got swept on into the church.
+
+"You are very late, ladies," whispered the pew-opener, who supposed them
+to belong to the wedding guests; "it is nearly over. You had better take
+these seats in this pew; you will see them come out well from here." And
+she evidently considered them to be all one party, for she ushered them
+all three into a pew; first, Mrs. Hazeldine, then Vera, and next to her
+the little foreign-looking gentleman who had bustled up so hurriedly.
+
+It was an awful thing to have happened to Vera that she should have been
+thus entrapped by a mere accident into being present at Maurice's
+wedding; and yet, when she was once inside the church, she felt not
+altogether sorry for it.
+
+"I can at least see the last of him, and pray that he may be happy," she
+said to herself, as she sank on her knees in the shelter of the pew, and
+buried her face in her hands.
+
+The church was crowded, and yet the wedding itself was not a particularly
+attractive one, for, owing to the fact that the bride was a widow, there
+was, of course, no bevy of bridesmaids in attendance in diaphanous
+raiment. Instead of these, however, there was a great concourse of the
+best-dressed women in London, all standing in rows round the upper end of
+the nave; and there was a little old lady, in brown satin and point lace,
+who stood out conspicuously detached from the other groups, who bent her
+head solemnly over the great bouquet of exotics in her hands, and prayed
+within herself, with a passionate fervour such as no other soul present
+could pray, save only the pale, beautiful girl on her knees, far away
+down at the further end of the church. Surely, if God ever gave happiness
+to one of his creatures because another prayed for it, Maurice Kynaston,
+with the prayers of those two women being offered up for him, would have
+been a happy man.
+
+And the mother, by this time, knew that it was all a mistake--a mistake,
+alas, which she, in her blindness, had fostered.
+
+No wonder that she trembled as she prayed.
+
+The service, that portion of it which makes two people man and wife,
+was over; the clergyman was reading the final exhortation to the
+newly-married pair.
+
+They stood together close to the altar rails. The bride was in a pale
+lavender satin, covered with lace, which spread far away behind her
+across the tesselated pavement. The bridegroom stood by her side, erect
+and handsome, but pale and stern, and with a far-away look in his eyes
+that would have made any one fancy, had any one been near enough or
+attentive enough to remark it, that he was only an indifferent spectator
+of the scene, in no way interested in what was going on. He looked as if
+he were thinking of something else.
+
+He was thinking of something else. He was thinking of a railway carriage,
+of a train rushing onwards through a fog-blotted landscape, and of two
+arms, warm and soft, cast up round his neck, and a trembling, passionate
+voice, ever crying in his ears--
+
+"While you live I will never marry another man."
+
+That was what the bridegroom was thinking about.
+
+As to the bride, she was debating to herself whether she should have the
+body of her wedding-dress cut V or square when she left it with her
+dressmaker to be altered into a dinner-dress.
+
+Meanwhile the clergyman, who mumbled his words slightly, and whose
+glasses kept on tumbling off his nose, waded through the several duties
+of husbands towards their wives, and of wives towards their husbands, as
+expounded by Scripture, in a monotonous undertone, until, to the great
+relief of the weary guests, the ceremony at last came to an end.
+
+Then the best man, Sir John, who stood behind his brother, looking, if
+possible, more like a mute at a funeral even than the bridegroom himself,
+stepped forward out of the shadow. The new-married couple went into the
+vestry, followed by Sir John, his mother, and a select few, upon which
+the door was closed. All the rest of the company then began to chatter
+in audible whispers together; they fidgeted backwards and forwards,
+from one pew to the other. There were jokes, and smiles, and nods, and
+hand-shakings between the different members of the wedding party. All in
+a low and decorous undertone, of course, but still there was a distinct
+impression upon every one that all the religious part of the business
+being well got over, they were free to be jolly about it now, and to
+enjoy themselves as much as circumstances would admit of.
+
+All at once there was a sudden hush, everybody scuffled back into their
+places. The best man put his nose out of the vestry door, and the
+"Wedding March" struck up. Then came a procession of chorister boys down
+the church, each bearing a small bouquet of fern and white flowers. They
+ranged themselves on either side of the porch, and the bride and
+bridegroom came down the aisle alone.
+
+Then it was that Monsieur D'Arblet, leaning forward with the rest to see
+them pass, caught sight of the face of the girl who stood by his side.
+
+She was pale as death; a look as of the horror of despair was in her
+eyes, her teeth were set, her hands were clenched together as one who has
+to impose a terrible and dreadful task upon herself. Nobody in all that
+gaily-dressed chattering crowd noticed her, for were not all eyes fixed
+upon the bride, the queen of the day? Nobody save the man who stood by
+her side. Only he saw that fixed white look of despair, only he heard the
+long shuddering sigh that burst from her pale lips as the bridegroom
+went by. Monsieur D'Arblet said, to himself:
+
+"This woman loves Monsieur le Capitaine! _Bon!_ Two are better than one;
+we will avenge ourselves together, my beautiful incognita."
+
+And then he looked sharply at her companion, and found that her face was
+familiar to him. Surely he had dined at that woman's house once. Oh, yes!
+to be sure, it was that insufferable little chatterbox, Mrs. Hazeldine.
+He remembered all about her now.
+
+There was a good deal of pushing and cramming at the doorway. By the time
+Vera could get out of the stifling heat of the crowded church most of the
+wedding party had driven off, and the rest were clamouring wildly for
+their carriages; she herself had got separated from her companion, and
+when she could rejoin her in the little gravelled yard outside, she found
+her shaking hands with effusion with the foreign-looking gentleman who
+had sat next her in the church, but whom, truth to say, she had hardly
+noticed.
+
+"Let me present to you my friend," said Cissy. "Miss Nevill, Monsieur
+D'Arblet--you will walk with us as far as the park, won't you?"
+
+"I shall be enchanted, Mrs. Hazeldine."
+
+"And wasn't it a pretty wedding," continued Mrs. Hazeldine, rapturously,
+as they all three walked away together down the shady side of the street;
+"so remarkably pretty considering that there were no bridesmaids; but
+Mrs. Romer is so graceful, and dresses so well. I don't visit her myself,
+you know; but of course I know her by sight. One knows everybody by sight
+in London; it's rather embarrassing sometimes, because one is tempted to
+bow to people one doesn't visit, or else one fancies one ought not to bow
+to somebody one does. I've made some dreadfully stupid mistakes myself
+sometimes. Did you notice the rose point on that old lady's brown satin,
+Vera?"
+
+"That was Lady Kynaston."
+
+"Oh, was it? By the way, of course, you must know some of the Kynastons,
+as they come from your part of the world. I wonder they didn't ask you to
+the wedding."
+
+Vera murmured something unintelligible. Monsieur D'Arblet looked at her
+sharply. He saw that she had in no way recovered her agitation yet, and
+that she could hardly bear her companion's brainless chatter over this
+wedding.
+
+"That has been no ordinary love affair," said this astute Frenchman to
+himself. "I must decidedly cultivate this young lady's acquaintance, for
+I mean to pay you out well yet, ma belle Helene."
+
+"How fortunate it was we happened to be passing just as it was going on.
+I wouldn't have missed seeing that lovely lavender satin the bride wore
+for worlds; did you notice the cut of the jacket front, Vera; it was
+something new; she looked as happy as possible too. I daresay her first
+marriage was a _coup manque_; they generally are when women marry again."
+
+"Suppose we take these three chairs in the shade," suggested Monsieur
+D'Arblet, cutting short, unceremoniously the string of her remarks, which
+apparently were no more soothing to himself than to Miss Nevill.
+
+They sat down, and for the space of half an hour Monsieur D'Arblet
+proceeded to make himself politely agreeable to Miss Nevill, and he
+succeeded so well in amusing her by his conversation, that by the time
+they all got up to go the natural bloom had returned to her cheeks, and
+she was talking to him quite easily and pleasantly, as though no
+catastrophe in her life had happened but an hour ago.
+
+"You will come back with us to lunch, Monsieur D'Arblet?"
+
+"I shall be delighted, madame."
+
+"If you will excuse me, Cissy, I am not going to lunch with you to-day,"
+said Vera.
+
+"My dear! where are you going, then?"
+
+"I have a visit to pay--an engagement, I mean--in--in Cadogan Place. I
+will be home very soon, in time for your drive, if you don't mind my
+leaving you."
+
+"Oh, of course, do as you like, dear."
+
+Lucien D'Arblet was annoyed at her defection, but, of course, having
+accepted Mrs. Hazeldine's invitation, there was nothing for it but to go
+on with her; so he swallowed his discomfiture as best he could, and
+proceeded to make himself agreeable to his hostess.
+
+As to Vera, she turned away and retraced her steps slowly towards St.
+Paul's Church. It was a foolish romantic fancy, she could not tell what
+impelled her to it, but she felt as though she must go back there once
+more.
+
+The church was not closed. She pushed open the swing-door and went in. It
+was all hushed and silent and empty. Where so lately the gay throng of
+well-dressed men and women had passed in and out, chattering, smiling,
+nodding--displaying their radiant toilettes one against the other, there
+were only now the dark, empty rows of pews, and the bent figure of one
+shabbily-dressed old woman gathering together the prayer-books and
+hymn-books that had been tumbled out of their places in the scuffle, and
+picking up morsels of torn finery that had dropped about along the nave.
+
+Vera passed by her and went up into the chancel. She stood where Maurice
+had stood by the altar rails. A soft, subdued light came streaming in
+through the coloured glass window; a bird was chirping high up somewhere
+among the oak rafters of the roof, the roar of the street without was
+muffled and deadened; the old woman slammed-to the door of a pew, the
+echo rang with a hollow sound through the empty building, and her
+departing footsteps shuffled away down the aisle into silence.
+
+Vera lifted her eyes; great tears welled down slowly, one by one, over
+her cheeks--burning, blistering tears, such as, thank God, one sheds but
+once or twice in a lifetime--that seem to rend our very hearts as they
+rise.
+
+Presently she sank down upon her knees and prayed--prayed for him, that
+he might be happy and forget her, but most of all for herself, that she
+might school her rebellious heart to patience, and her wild passion of
+misery into peace and submission.
+
+And by degrees the tempest within her was hushed. Then, ere she rose from
+her knees, something lying on the ground, within a yard of where she
+knelt, caught her eye. It was a little Russia-leather letter-case. She
+recognized it instantly; she had often seen Maurice take it out of his
+pocket.
+
+She caught at it hungrily and eagerly, as a miser clutches a
+treasure-trove, pressing it wildly to her bosom, and covering it with
+passionate kisses. Dear little shabby case, that had been so near his
+heart; that his hand, perchance, only on hour ago had touched. Could
+anything on earth be more priceless to her than this worn and faded
+object!
+
+It seemed to be quite empty. It had fallen evidently from his pocket
+during the service. If he ever missed it, there was nothing in it to
+lose; and now it was hers, hers by every right; she would never part with
+it, never. It was all she had of him; the one single thing he had touched
+which she possessed.
+
+She rose hurriedly. She was in haste now to be gone with her treasure,
+lest any one should wrest it from her. She carried it down the church
+with a guilty delight, kissing it more than once as she went. And then,
+as she opened the church door, some one ran up the steps outside, and she
+stood face to face with Sir John Kynaston.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE RUSSIA-LEATHER CASE.
+
+ "Never again," so speaketh one forsaken,
+ In the blank desolate passion of despair:
+ Never again shall the bright dream I cherished
+ Delude my heart, for bitter truth is there:
+ The Angel Hope shall still my cruel pain;
+ Never again, my heart--never again!
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+"Vera!"
+
+Sir John Kynaston fell back a step or two and turned very white.
+
+"How do you do?" said Vera, quietly, and put out her hand.
+
+They stood in the open air. There was a carriage passing, some idle
+cabmen on the stand with nothing to do but to stare at them, a gaping
+nursery-maid and her charges at the gate. Whatever people may feel on
+suddenly running against each other after a deadly quarrel, or a
+heart-rending separation, or after a long interval of heart-burnings and
+misunderstandings, there are always the externals of life to be observed.
+It is difficult to rush into the tragedy of one's existence at a gulp; it
+is safer to shake hands and say, "How do you do?"
+
+That is what Vera felt, and that was what these two people did. Sir John
+took her proffered hand, and responded to her stereotyped greeting. By
+the time he had done so he had recovered his presence of mind.
+
+"What an odd thing to meet you at the door of this church," he said,
+rather nervously. "Do you know that my brother was married here this
+morning?"
+
+"Yes; I was in the church."
+
+"Were you? How glad I am I did not know it," almost involuntarily.
+
+There was a little pause; then Vera asked him if he was going to Walpole
+Lodge.
+
+"Eventually; but I have come back here to look for something. My brother
+has lost a little Russia-leather case; he thinks he may have dropped it
+in the church; there were two ten-pound notes in it. I am going in to
+look for it. Why, what is that in your hand? I believe that is the very
+thing."
+
+"I--I--just picked it up," stammered Vera. She began searching in the
+pockets of the case. "I did not think there was anything in it. Yes, here
+are the notes, quite safe."
+
+She took them out and gave them to him. He held out his hand mechanically
+for the case also.
+
+"Thank you; you have saved me the trouble of looking for it. I will take
+it back to him at once."
+
+But she could not part with her treasure; it was all she had got of him.
+
+"The letter-case is very shabby," she said, crimsoning with a painful
+confusion. "I do not think he can want it at all; it is quite worn out."
+
+Sir John looked at her with a slight surprise.
+
+"It can be very little use to him. One likes sometimes to have a little
+remembrance of those--of people--one has known; he would not mind my
+keeping it, I think. Tell him--tell him I asked for it." The tears were
+very near her voice; she could scarcely keep them back out of her eyes.
+
+John Kynaston dropped his hand, and Vera slipped the little case quickly
+into her pocket.
+
+"Would you mind walking a little way with me, Vera?" he said, gently and
+very gravely.
+
+She drew down her veil, and went with him in silence. They had walked
+half-way down Wilton Crescent before he spoke to her again; then he
+turned towards her, and looked at her earnestly and sadly.
+
+"Why did you go back again into the church, Vera?"
+
+"I wanted to think quietly a little," she murmured. There was another
+pause.
+
+"So _that_ is what parted us!" he exclaimed, with a sudden bitterness, at
+length.
+
+She looked up, startled and pale.
+
+"What do you mean?" she stammered.
+
+"Oh, child! I see it all now. How blind I have been. Ah, why did you not
+trust me, love? Why did you fear to tell me your secret? Do you not think
+that I, who would have laid down my life for you to make you happy, do
+you not suppose I would have striven to make your path smooth for you?"
+
+She could not answer him; the kind words, the tender voice, were too much
+for her. Her tears fell fast and silently.
+
+"Tell me," he said, turning to her almost roughly, "tell me the truth.
+Has he ill-treated you, this brother of mine, who stole you from me, and
+then has left you desolate?"
+
+"No, no; do not say that; it was never his fault at all, only mine; and
+he was always bound to her. He has been everything that is good and loyal
+and true to you and to her; it has been only a miserable mistake, and now
+it is over. Yes, thank God, it is over; never speak of it again. He was
+never false to you; only I was false. But it is ended."
+
+They were walking round Belgrave Square by this time, not near the
+houses, but round the square garden in the middle. All recollection of
+his brother's marriage, of the wedding breakfast at Walpole Lodge, of the
+speech the best man would be expected to make, had gone clean out of his
+head; he thought of nothing but Vera and of the revelation concerning her
+that had just come to him. It was the quiet hour of the day; there were
+very few people about; everybody was indoors eating heavy luncheons,
+with sunblinds drawn down to keep out the heat. They were almost as much
+alone as in a country lane in Meadowshire.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself?" he said to her, presently.
+"What use are you going to make of your life?"
+
+"I don't know," she answered, drearily; "I suppose I shall go back to
+Sutton. Perhaps I shall marry."
+
+"But not me?"
+
+She looked up at him piteously.
+
+"Listen, child," he said, eagerly. "If I were to go away for a year, and
+then come back to you, how would it be? Oh, my darling! I love you so
+deeply that I could even be content to do with but half your heart, so
+that I could win your sweet self. I would exact nothing from you, love,
+no more than what you could give me freely. But I would love you so well,
+and make your life so sweet and pleasant to you, that in time, perhaps,
+you would forget the old sorrow, and learn to be happy, with a quiet kind
+of happiness, with me; I would ask for no more. Look, child, I have
+grieved sorely for you; I have sat down and wept, and mourned for you as
+though I had no strength or life left in me. But now I am ashamed of my
+weakness, for it is unworthy of _you_. I am going away abroad, across the
+world, I care not where, so long as I can be up and doing, and forget the
+pain at my heart. Vera, tell me that I may come back to you in a year.
+Think with what fresh life and courage I should go if I had but that hope
+before my eyes. In a year's time your pain will be less; you will have
+forgotten many things; you will be content, perhaps, to come to me,
+knowing that I will never reproach you with the past, nor expect more
+than you can give me in the future. Vera, let me come back and claim you
+in a year!"
+
+How strange it was that the chance of marrying this man was perpetually
+being presented to her. Never, perhaps, had the temptation been stronger
+to her than it was now. He had divined her secret; there would be no
+concealment between them; he would ask her for no love it was not in her
+power to give; he would be content with her as she was, and he would love
+her, and worship her, and surround her with everything that could make
+her life pleasant and easy for her. Could a man offer more? Oh! why could
+she not take him at his word, and give him the hope he craved for?
+
+Alas! for Vera; she had eaten too deeply of the knowledge of good and
+evil--that worldly wisdom in whose strength she had started in life's
+race, and in the possession of which she had once deemed herself so
+strong--so absolutely invulnerable to the things that pierce and wound
+weaker woman--this was gone from her. The baser part of her nature,
+wherewith she would so gladly have been content, was uppermost no longer;
+her heart had triumphed over her head, and, with a woman of strong
+character, this is generally only done at the expense of her happiness.
+
+To marry Sir John Kynaston, to be lapped in luxury, to receive all the
+good things of this world at his hands, and all the while to love his
+brother with a guilty love, this was no longer possible to Vera Nevill.
+
+"I cannot do it; do not ask me," she said, distractedly. "Your goodness
+to me half breaks my heart; but it cannot be."
+
+"Why not, child? In a year so much may be altered."
+
+"I shall not alter."
+
+"No; but, even so, you might learn to be happy with me."
+
+"It is not that; you do not understand. I daresay I could be happy
+enough; that is not why I cannot marry you."
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"_I dare not_," she said, in a low voice.
+
+He drew in his breath. "Ah!" he said, between his teeth, "is it so bad
+with you as that?"
+
+She bent her head in silent assent.
+
+"That is hard," he said, almost to himself, looking gloomily before him.
+Presently he spoke again. "Thank you, Vera," he said, rather brokenly.
+"You are a brave woman and a true one. Many would have taken my all,
+and given me back only deception and falseness. But you are incapable of
+that, and--and you fear your own strength; is that it?"
+
+"Whilst he lives," she said, with a sudden burst of passion, "I can know
+no safety. Never to see his face again can be my only safeguard, and with
+you I could never be safe. Why, even to bear your name would be to scorch
+my heart every time I was addressed by it. Forgive me, John," turning to
+him with a sudden penitence, "I should not have pained you by saying
+these things; you who have been so infinitely good to me. Go your way
+across the world, and forget me. Ah! have I not been a curse to every one
+who bears the name of Kynaston?"
+
+He was silent from very pity. Vera was no longer to him the goddess of
+his imagination; the one pure and peerless woman, above all other women,
+such as he had once fancied her to be. But surely she was dearer to him
+now, in all her weakness and her suffering, than she had ever been on
+that lofty pedestal of perfection upon which he had once lifted her.
+
+He pitied her so much, and yet he could not help her; her malady was past
+remedy. And, as she had told him, it was no one's fault--it was only a
+miserable mistake. He had never had her heart--he saw it plainly now.
+Many little things in the past, which he had scarcely remembered at the
+time, came back to his memory--little details of that week at Shadonake,
+when Maurice had lived in the same house with her, whilst he had only
+gone over daily to see her. Always, in those days, Maurice had been by
+her side, and Vera had been dreamily happy, with that fixed look of
+content with which the presence of the man she loves best beautifies and
+poetises a woman's face. Sir John was not a very observant man; but now,
+after it was all over, these things came back to him. The night of the
+ball, Mrs. Romer's mysterious hints, and his own vague disquietude at her
+words; later on Maurice's reasonless refusal to be present at his
+wedding, and Vera's startled face of dismay when he had asked her to go
+and plead with him to stay for it.
+
+They had struggled against their hearts, it was clear, these poor lovers,
+whose lives were both tied up and bound before ever they had met each
+other. But nature had been too strong for them; and the woman, at least,
+had torn herself free from the chains that had become insupportable to
+her.
+
+They walked on silently, side by side, round the square. Some girls were
+playing at lawn-tennis within the garden. There was an occasional shout
+or a ringing laugh from their fresh young voices. A footman was walking
+along the pavement opposite, with two fat pugs and a white Spitz in the
+last stage of obesity in tow, which it was his melancholy duty to parade
+daily up and down for their mid-day airing. An occasional hansom dashing
+quickly by broke the stillness of the "empty" hour. Years and years
+afterwards every detail of the scene came back to his memory with the
+distinctness of a photograph when he passed once more through the square.
+
+"You have been no curse to me, Vera," he said, presently, breaking the
+silence. "Do not reproach yourself; it is I who was a madman to deem that
+I could win your love. Child, we are both sufferers; but time heals most
+things, and we must learn to wait and be patient. Will you ever marry,
+Vera?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps I may be obliged to. It might be better for me. I
+cannot say. Don't speak of it. Why, is there nothing else for a woman to
+do but to marry? John, it must be late. Ought you not to go back--to--to
+your mother's?"
+
+Insensibly, she resumed a lighter manner. On that other subject there was
+nothing left to be said. She had had her last chance of becoming John
+Kynaston's wife. After what she had said to him, she knew he would never
+ask her again. That chapter in her life was closed for ever.
+
+They parted, unromantically enough, in front of St. George's Hospital. He
+called a hansom for her, and stood holding her hand, one moment longer,
+possibly, than was strictly necessary, looking intently into her face as
+he did so.
+
+"Will you think of me sometimes?"
+
+"Yes, surely."
+
+"Good-bye, Vera."
+
+"Good-bye, John. God bless you wherever you may go."
+
+She got into her hansom, and he told the cabman where to drive her; then
+he lifted his hat to her with grave politeness, and walked away in the
+opposite direction. It was a common-place enough parting, and yet these
+two never saw each other's faces again in this world.
+
+So it is with our lives. Some one or other who has been a part of our
+very existence for a space goes his way one day, and we see him no more.
+For a little while our hearts ache, and we shed tears in secret for him
+who is gone, but by-and-by we get to understand that he is part of our
+past, never, to be recalled, and after a while we get used to his
+absence; we think of him less and less, and the death of him, who was
+once bound up in our very lives, strikes us only with a mild surprise,
+hardly even tinged with a passing melancholy.
+
+"Poor old so-and-so, he is dead," we say. "What a time it is since we
+met," and then we go our way and think of him no more.
+
+But Vera knew that, in all human probability, she would never see him
+again, this man, who had once so nearly been her husband. It was another
+link of her past life severed. It saddened her, but she knew it was
+inevitable.
+
+The little letter-case, at all events, was safely hers; and for many a
+night Vera slept with it under her pillow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+DINNER AT RANELAGH.
+
+ Here is the whole set, a character dead at every word.
+
+ Sheridan.
+
+
+It was the fag end of the London season; people were talking about
+Goodwood and the Ryde week, about grouse and about salmon-fishing.
+Members of Parliament went about, like martyrs at the stake, groaning
+over the interminable nature of every debate, and shaking their heads
+over the prospect of getting away. Women in society knew all their own
+and their neighbours' dresses by heart, and were dead sick of them all;
+and even the very gossip and scandal that is always afloat to keep up the
+spirits of the idlers and the chatterers had lost all the zest, all the
+charm of novelty that gave flavour and piquancy to every _canard_ that
+was started two months ago.
+
+It was all stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+
+What was the use of constantly asserting, on the very best authority,
+that Lady So-and-so was on the eve of running away with that handsome
+young actor, whose eyes had taken the female population by storm, when
+Lady So-and-so persisted in walking about arm-in-arm with her husband day
+after day, with a child on either side of them, in the most provoking
+way, as though to prove the utter fallacy of the report, and her own
+incontestable domestic felicity? Or, what merit had a man any longer who
+had stated in May that the heiress _par excellence_ of the season was
+about to sell herself and her gold to that debauched and drunken marquis,
+who had evidently not six months of life left in him in which to enjoy
+his bargain, when the heiress herself gave the lie to the _on dit_ in
+July by talking calmly about going to Norway with her papa for a month's
+retirement and rest after the fatigues of the season?
+
+What a number of lies are there not propounded during the months of May
+and June by the inventive Londoner, and how many of them are there not
+proved to be so during the latter end of July!
+
+Heaven only knows how and where the voice of scandal is first raised. Is
+it at the five o'clock tea-tables? Or, is it in the smoking-rooms of the
+clubs that things are first spoken of, and the noxious breath of slander
+started upon its career? Or, are there evil-minded persons, both men and
+women, prowling about, like unclean animals, at the skirts of that
+society into whose inner recesses they would fain gain admittance,
+picking up greedily, here and there, in their eaves-dropping career,
+some scrap or morsel of truth out of which they weave a well-varnished
+tale wherewith to delight the ears of the vulgar and the coarse-minded?
+There are such men and such women; God forgive them for their wickedness!
+
+Do any of these scandal-mongers ever call to mind, I wonder, an ancient
+and, seemingly, a well-nigh forgotten injunction?
+
+"Thou shalt not bear false witness," said the same Voice who has also
+said, "Thou shalt do no murder."
+
+And which is the worst--to kill a man's body, or to slay a man's honour,
+or a woman's reputation?
+
+In truth, there seems to me to be but little difference between the two;
+and the man or the woman who will do the one might very possibly be
+guilty of the other--but for the hanging!
+
+We should all do a great many more wicked things than we do if there were
+no consequences.
+
+It is a very trite observation, which is, nevertheless, never spoken with
+more justice or more truth than at or about Hyde Park Corner between May
+and July, that the world we live in is a very wicked one.
+
+Well, the season, as I have said, was well-nigh over, and all the scandal
+had run dry, and the gossip, for the most part, been proved to be
+incorrect, and there was nobody in all London who excited so much
+irritation among the talkers as the new beauty, Vera Nevill.
+
+For Vera was Miss Nevill still, and there was every prospect of her
+remaining so. What on earth possessed the girl that she would not marry?
+Had not men dangled at her elbow all the season? Could she not have had
+such and such elder sons, or such and such wealthy commoner? What was she
+waiting for? A girl without a penny, who came nobody knew from where,
+ushered in under Mrs. Hazeldine's wings, with not a decent connection
+in the world to her name! What did she want--this girl who had only her
+beauty to depend upon? and everybody knows how fleeting _that_ is!
+
+And then, presently, the women who were envious of her began to whisper
+amongst themselves. There was something against her; she was not what she
+seemed to be. The men flirted, of course--men will always flirt! but
+they were careful not to commit themselves! And even that mysterious word
+"adventuress," which has an ugly sound, but of which no one exactly knows
+the precise meaning, began to be bruited about.
+
+"There was an unpleasant story about her, somebody told me once," said
+one prettily-dressed nonentity to another, as they wandered slowly up and
+down the velvet lawns at Ranelagh. "She was mixed up in some way with the
+Kynaston family. Sir John was to have married her, and then something
+dreadful came out, and he threw her over."
+
+"Oh, I thought she jilted him."
+
+"I daresay it was one or the other; at all events, there was some fracas
+or other. I believe her mother was--hum, hum--you understand--she
+couldn't be swallowed by the Kynastons at any price; they must have been
+thankful to get out of it."
+
+"It looks very bad, her not marrying any one, with all the fuss there has
+been made over her."
+
+"Yes; even Cissy Hazeldine told me, in confidence, yesterday, she could
+not try her again next season. It wouldn't do, you know; it would look
+too much as if she had some object of her own in getting her married.
+Cissy must find something else for another year. Of course, with a
+husband, she could sail her own course and make her own way; but a girl
+can't go on attracting attention with impunity--she gets herself talked
+about--it is only we married women can do as we like."
+
+"Exactly. Do you suppose _that_ will come to anything?" casting a glance
+towards the further end of the lawn, where Vera Nevill sat in a low
+basket-chair, under the shadow of a spreading tulip-tree, whilst a slight
+boyish figure, stretched at her feet, alternately chewed blades of grass
+and looked up worshippingly into her face.
+
+"_That!_" following the direction of her companion's eyes. "Oh dear, no!
+Denis Wilde is too wideawake to be caught, though he is such a boy! They
+say she is crazy to get him; everybody else has slipped through her
+fingers, you see, and he would be better than nothing. Now we are in the
+last week in July, I daresay she is getting desperate; but young Wilde
+knows pretty well what he is about, I expect!"
+
+"He seems to admire her."
+
+"Oh, yes, I daresay; those large kind of women do get admired; men look
+upon them as fine animals. _I_ should not care to be admired in that way,
+would you?"
+
+"No, indeed! it is disgusting," replied the other, who was fain to
+conceal the bony corners of her angular figure with a multiplicity of
+lace ruchings and puffings.
+
+"As to Miss Nevill, she is nothing else. A most material type; why, her
+waist must be twenty-two inches round!"
+
+"Quite that, dear," with sweetness, from the owner of a nineteen-inch
+article, which two maids struggled with daily in order to reduce it to
+the required measurement.
+
+"Well, I never could--between you and me--see much to admire in her."
+
+"Neither could I, although, of course, it has been the fashion to rave
+over her."
+
+And, with that, these two amiable young women fell at it tooth and nail,
+and proceeded to cry down their victim's personal appearance in the most
+unmeasured and sweeping terms.
+
+After the taking away of a fellow-woman's character, comes as a natural
+sequence the condemnation of her face and figure, and it is doubtful
+which indictment is the most grave in eyes feminine. Meanwhile the
+object of all this animadversion sat tranquilly unconscious under her
+tulip-tree, whilst Denis Wilde, that astute young gentleman, whom they
+had declared to be too well aware of what he was about to be entrapped
+into matrimony, was engaged in proposing to her for the fourth time.
+
+"I thought we had settled this subject long ago, Mr. Wilde," says Vera,
+tranquilly unfolding her large, black, feather fan--for it is hot--and
+slowly folding it up again.
+
+"It will never be settled for me, Vera; never, so long as you are
+unmarried."
+
+"What a dreadful mistake life is!" sighs Vera, wearily, more to herself
+than to the boy at her feet. Was anybody ever happy in this world? she
+began to wonder.
+
+"I know very well," resumed Denis Wilde, "that I am not good enough for
+you; but, then, who is? My prospects, such as they are, are very distant,
+and your friends, I daresay, expect you to marry well."
+
+"How often must I tell you that that has nothing to do with it," cries
+Vera, impatiently. "If I loved a beggar, I should marry him."
+
+Young Wilde plucked at the grass again, and chewed a daisy up almost
+viciously. There was a supreme selfishness in the way she had of
+perpetually harping upon her lack of love for him.
+
+"There is always some fellow or other hanging about you," grumbles the
+young man, irritably; "you are an inveterate flirt!"
+
+"No woman is worthy of the name who is not!" retorts Vera, laughing.
+
+"I _hate_ a flirt," angrily.
+
+"This is very amusing when you know that your flirtation with Mrs.
+Hazeldine is a chronic disease of two years' standing!"
+
+"Pooh!--mere child's play on both sides, and you know it is! You are very
+different; you lead a fellow on till he doesn't know whether his very
+soul is his own, and then you turn round and snap your fingers in his
+face and send him to the devil."
+
+"What an awful accusation! Pray give me an instance of a victim to this
+shocking conduct."
+
+"Why, there's that wretched little Frenchman whom you are playing the
+same game with that you have already done with me; he follows you like
+a shadow."
+
+"Poor Monsieur D'Arblet!" laughed Vera, and then grew suddenly serious.
+"But do you know, Mr. Wilde, it is a very singular thing about that
+man--I can't think why he follows me about so."
+
+"_Can't_ you!" very grimly.
+
+"I assure you the man is in no more love with me than--than----"
+
+"_I_ am! I suppose you will say next."
+
+"Oh dear, no, you are utterly incorrigible and quite in earnest; but
+Monsieur D'Arblet is _pretending_ to be in love with me."
+
+"He makes a very good pretence of it, at all events. Here he comes,
+confound him! If I had known Mrs. Hazeldine had asked _him_, I would
+never have come."
+
+At which Vera, who had heard these outbursts of indignant jealousy
+before, and knew how little poor Denis meant the terrible threats he
+uttered, only laughed with the pitiless amusement of a woman who knows
+her own power.
+
+Lucien D'Arblet came towards her smiling, and sank down into a vacant
+basket-chair by her side with the air of a man who knows himself to be
+welcome.
+
+He had been paying a great deal of attention latterly to the beautiful
+Miss Nevill; he had followed her about everywhere, and had made it patent
+in every public place where he had met her that she alone was the sole
+aim and object of his thoughts. And yet, with it all, Monsieur Le Vicomte
+was only playing a part, and not only that, but he was pretty certain
+that she knew it to be so. He gazed rapturously into her beautiful face,
+he lowered his voice tenderly in speaking to her, he pressed her hand
+when she gave it to him, and even on occasions he raised it furtively to
+his lips; but, with all this, he knew perfectly well that she was not one
+whit deceived by him. She no more believed him to be in love with her
+than he believed it of himself. She was clever and beautiful, and he
+admired and even liked her, but in the beginning of their acquaintance
+Monsieur D'Arblet had had no thought of making her the object of any
+sentimental attentions. He had been driven to it by a discovery that he
+had made concerning her character.
+
+Miss Nevill had a good heart. She was no enraged, injured woman,
+thirsting for revenge upon the woman who had stolen her lover from
+her--such as he had desired to find in her; she was only a true-hearted
+and unhappy girl, who was not in any case likely to develop into the
+instrument of vengeance which he sought for.
+
+It was a disappointment to him, but he was not completely disheartened.
+It was through her that he desired to punish Helen for daring to brave
+him, and he swore to himself that he would do it still; only he must now
+set about it in a different way, so he began to make love to Miss Nevill.
+
+And Vera was shrewd enough to perceive that he was only playing a part.
+Nevertheless, there were times when she felt so completely puzzled by his
+persistent adoration, that she could hardly tell what to make of it. Was
+he trying to make some other woman jealous? It even came into her head,
+once or twice, to suspect that Cissy Hazeldine was the real object of his
+devotion, so utterly incomprehensible did his conduct appear to her.
+
+If she had been told that Lucien D'Arblet's real quest was not love, but
+revenge, she would have laughed. An Englishman does not spend his time
+nor his energies in plotting a desperate retaliation on a lady who has
+disregarded his threats and evaded his persecution; it is not in the
+nature of any Briton, however irascible, to do so; but a Frenchman is
+differently constituted. There is something delightfully refreshing to
+him in an atmosphere of plotting and intrigue. There is the same instinct
+of the chase in both nationalities, but it is more amusing to the
+Frenchman to hunt down his fellow-creatures than to pursue unhappy little
+beasts of the field; and he understands himself in the pursuit of the
+larger game infinitely better.
+
+Nevertheless, Monsieur D'Arblet had no intention of getting himself into
+trouble, nor of risking the just fury of an indignant British husband,
+who stood six feet in his stockings, nor did he desire, by any anonymous
+libel, to bring himself in any way under the arm of the law. All he meant
+to do was to dig his trench and to lay his mine, to place the fuse in
+Vera Nevill's hands--leave her to set fire to it--and then retire
+himself, covered with satisfaction at his cleverness, to his own side
+of the Channel.
+
+Who could possibly grudge him so harmless an entertainment?
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet, as he sat down by her side under the tulip-tree, began
+by paying Miss Nevill a prettily turned compliment upon her fresh white
+toilette; as he did so Vera smiled and bent her head; she had seen him
+before to-day.
+
+"Fine evening, Mr. Wilde," said the Frenchman, turning civilly, but with
+no evident _empressement_, towards the gentleman he addressed.
+
+Denis only answered by a sulky grunt.
+
+Then began that process between the two men which is known in polite
+society as the endeavour to sit each other out.
+
+Monsieur D'Arblet discoursed upon the weather and the beauty of the
+gardens, with long and expressive pauses between each insignificant
+remark, and the air of a man who wishes to say, "I could talk about much
+more interesting things if that other fellow was out of the way."
+
+Denis Wilde simply reversed himself, that is to say, he lay on his
+back instead of his face, stared up at the sky, and chewed grass
+perseveringly. He had evidently no intention of being driven off the
+field.
+
+"I had something of great importance to say to you this evening,"
+murmured Monsieur D'Arblet, at length, looking fixedly at his enemy's
+upturned face.
+
+"All right, go ahead, don't mind me," says the young gentleman, amiably.
+"I'm never in the way, am I, Miss Nevill?"
+
+"Never, Mr. Wilde," answers Vera, sweetly. Like a true woman, she quite
+appreciates the fun of the situation, and thoroughly enjoys it; "pray
+tell me what you have to say, monsieur."
+
+"Ah! Ces choses-la ne se disent qu'a deux!" murmurs he Frenchman, with a
+sentimental sigh.
+
+"It is no use your saying it in French," says Denis, with a chuckle,
+twisting himself round again upon his chest, "because I have the good
+fortune, D'Arblet, to understand your charming language like a native,
+absolutely like a native."
+
+"You have a useful proverb in English, which says, that two is company,
+and three is none," retorts D'Arblet, with a smile.
+
+"I'm awfully sorry, old fellow; but I am so exceedingly comfortable, I
+really can't get up; if I could oblige you in any other way, I certainly
+would."
+
+"Come to dinner!" cries out Mrs. Hazeldine, coming towards them from the
+garden side of the lawn; "we are all here now."
+
+The two men sprang simultaneously to their feet. This is, of course, the
+moment that they have both been waiting for. Each offers an arm to Miss
+Nevill; Monsieur D'Arblet bends blandly and smilingly forward; Denis
+Wilde has a thunder-cloud upon his face, and holds out his arm as though
+he were ready to knock somebody down with it.
+
+"What am I to do?" cries Vera, laughing, and looking with feigned
+indecision from one to the other.
+
+"Make haste and decide, my dear," says Mrs. Hazeldine; "for whichever of
+you two gentlemen does _not_ take in Miss Nevill must go and take that
+eldest Miss Frampton for me."
+
+The eldest Miss Frampton is thirty-five if she is a day; she is large and
+bony, much given to beads and bangles, and to talking about the military
+men she has known, and whom she usually calls by their surnames alone,
+like a man. She goes familiarly amongst her acquaintance by the name of
+the Dragoon.
+
+A cold shiver passes visibly down Mr. Wilde's back; unfortunately Miss
+Nevill perceives it, and makes up her mind instantly.
+
+"I would not deprive you of so charming a companion," she says, smiling
+sweetly at him, and passes her arm through that of the French vicomte.
+
+At dinner, poor Denis Wilde curses Monsieur D'Arblet; Miss Frampton, and
+his own fate, indiscriminately and ineffectually. He is sitting exactly
+opposite to his divinity, but he cannot even enjoy the felicity of
+staring at her, for Miss Frampton will not let him alone. She chatters
+unceasingly and gushingly. At an early period of the repast the string of
+her amber-bead necklace suddenly gives way with a snap. The beads trickle
+slowly down, one by one; half a dozen of them drop with a cracking noise,
+like little marbles, upon the polished floor, where there is a general
+scramble of waiters and gentlemen under the table together after them;
+two fall into her own soup, three more on to Denis Wilde's table-napkin;
+as fast as the truants are picked up others are shed down in their wake
+from the four apparently inexhaustible rows that garnish her neck.
+
+Miss Frampton bears it all with serene and smiling good temper.
+
+"Dear me, I am really very sorry to give so much trouble. It doesn't
+signify in the least, Mr. Wilde--thanks, that is one more. Oh, there goes
+another into the sweet-breads; but I really don't mind if they are lost.
+Jameson, of the 17th, gave them to me. Do you know Jameson? cousin of
+Jameson, in the 9th; he brought them from Italy, or Turkey, or somewhere.
+I am sure I don't remember where amber comes from; do you, Mr. Wilde?"
+
+Mr. Wilde, if he is vague as to where it comes from, is quite decided
+as to where he would desire it to go. At this moment he had crunched a
+tender tooth down upon one of these infernal beads, having helped himself
+to it unconsciously out of the sweetbread dish.
+
+Is he doomed to swallow amber beads for the remainder of the repast? he
+asks himself.
+
+"Did you ever meet Archdale, the man who was in the 16th?" continues Miss
+Frampton, glibly, unconscious of his agonies; "he exchanged afterwards
+into the 4th--he is such a nice fellow. I lunched every day at Ascot this
+year on the 16th's drag. The first day I met Lester--that's the major,
+you know--and Lester is _such_ a pet! He told me to come every day to
+lunch, and bring any of my friends with me; so, of course, I did, and
+there wasn't a better lunch on the course; and, on the cup-day, Archdale
+came up and talked to me--he abused the champagne-cup, though; he said
+there was more soda-water than champagne in it--the more he drank of it
+the more dreadfully sober he got. However, I am invited to lunch with the
+4th at Goodwood. They are going to have a spread under the trees, so I
+shall be able to compare notes about the champagne-cup. I know two other
+men in the 4th; Hopkins and Lambert; do you know them?" and so on, until
+pretty well half the army list and all the luncheon-giving regiments in
+the service had been passed under review.
+
+And there, straight opposite to him, was Vera, laughing at his
+discomfiture, he was sure, but also listening to the flattering rubbish
+which that odious little Frenchman was pouring into her ears.
+
+Did ever young man sit through such a detestable and abominable repast?
+
+If Denis Wilde had been rash enough to nourish insane hopes with regard
+to moonlight wanderings in the pleasant garden after dinner, these hopes
+were destined to be blighted.
+
+They were a party of twelve; the waiting was bad, and the courses
+numerous; the dinner was a lengthy affair altogether. By the time it was
+over, and coffee had been discussed on the terrace outside the house, the
+carriages came round to the door, and the ladies of the party voted that
+it was time to go home.
+
+Soon everybody stood clothed in summer ulsters or white dust-cloaks,
+waiting in the hall. The coach started from the door with much noise
+and confusion, with a good deal of plunging from the leaders, and some
+jibbing from the wheelers, accompanied by a very feeble performance on
+that much-abused instrument, the horn, by an amateur who occupied a back
+seat; and after it had departed, a humble train of neat broughams and
+victorias came trooping up in its wake.
+
+"You will see," said nonentity number one, in her friend's ear; "you will
+see that Nevill girl will go back in some man's brougham--that is what
+she has been waiting for; otherwise, she would have perched herself up on
+the box-seat of the coach, in the most conspicuous place she could find."
+
+"What a disgraceful creature she must be!" is the indignantly virtuous
+reply.
+
+The "Nevill girl," however, disappointed the expectations of both these
+charitable ladies by quietly taking her place in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+brougham, by her friend's side, amid a shower of "Good-nights" from the
+remainder of the party.
+
+"Ah!" said the nonentity, with a vicious gasp, "you may be sure she has
+some disreputable supper of men, and cigars, and brandies and sodas
+waiting for her up in town, or she would never go off so meekly as that
+in Mrs. Hazeldine's brougham. Still waters run deep, my dear!"
+
+"She is a horrid, disreputable girl, I am quite sure of that," is the
+answer. "I am very thankful, indeed, that I haven't the misfortune of
+knowing her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+MRS. HAZELDINE'S "LONG ELIZA."
+
+ Now will I show myself to have more of the serpent than the
+ dove; that is, more knave than fool.
+
+ Christopher Marlowe.
+
+
+ For every inch that is not fool is rogue.
+
+ Dryden.
+
+
+The scene is Mrs. Hazeldine's drawing-room, in Park Lane, the hour is
+four o'clock in the afternoon, and the _dramatis personae_ are Miss
+Nevill, very red in the face, standing in a corner, behind an oblong
+velvet table covered with china ornaments, and Monsieur Le Vicomte
+D'Arblet, also red in the face, gesticulating violently on the further
+side of it.
+
+Miss Nevill, having retired behind the oblong table, purely from
+prudential motives of personal safety, is devoured with anxiety
+concerning the too imminent fate of her hostess' china. There is a little
+Lowestoft tea-service that was picked up only last week at Christie and
+Manson's, a turquoise blue crackle jar that is supposed to be priceless,
+and a pair of "Long Eliza" vases, which her hostess loves as much as she
+does her toy terrier, and far better than she loves her husband.
+
+What will become of her, Vera Nevill, if Mrs. Hazeldine comes in
+presently and finds these treasures lying in a thousand pieces upon the
+floor? And yet this is what she is looking forward to, as only too
+probable a catastrophe.
+
+Vera feels much as must have felt the owner of the proverbial bull
+in the crockery shop--terror mingled with an overpowering sense of
+responsibility. All personal considerations are well-nigh merged in
+the realization of the danger which menaces her hostess' property.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, I must implore you to calm yourself," she says,
+desperately.
+
+"And how, mademoiselle, I ask you, am I to be calm when you speak of
+shattering the hopes of my life?" cries the vicomte, who is dancing about
+frantically backwards and forwards, in a clear space of three square
+yards, between the different pieces of furniture by which he is
+surrounded, all equally fragile, and equally loaded with destructible
+objects.
+
+"_Pray_ be careful, Monsieur D'Arblet, your sleeve nearly caught then in
+the handle of that Chelsea basket," cries Vera, in anguish.
+
+"And what to me are Chelsea baskets, or china, or trash of that kind,
+when you, cruel one, are determined to scorn me?"
+
+"Oh, if you would only come outside and have it out on the staircase,"
+murmurs Vera, piteously.
+
+"No, I will never leave this room, never, mademoiselle, until you give
+me hope; never will I cease to importune you until your heart relents
+towards the _miserable_ who adores you!"
+
+Here Monsieur D'Arblet made an attempt to get at his charmer by coming
+round the end of the velvet table.
+
+Vera felt distracted. To allow him to execute his maneuver was to run
+the chance of being clasped in his arms; to struggle to get free was the
+almost certainty of upsetting the table.
+
+She cast a despairing glance across the room at the bell-handle, which
+was utterly beyond her reach. There was no hope in that direction.
+Apparently, moral persuasion was her only chance.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet, I _forbid_ you to advance a step nearer to me!"
+
+He fell back with a profound sigh.
+
+"Mademoiselle, I love you to distraction. I am unable to disobey your
+commands."
+
+"Very well, then, listen to me. I cannot understand this violent outburst
+of emotion. You have done me the honour to propose to marry me, and I
+have, with many thanks for your most flattering distinction, declined
+your offer. Surely, between a lady and a gentleman, there can be nothing
+further to say; it is not incumbent upon you to persecute me in this
+fashion."
+
+"Miss Nevill, you have treated me with a terrible cruelty. You have
+encouraged my ardent passion for you until you did lift me up to Heaven."
+Here Monsieur D'Arblet stretched up both his arms with a suddenness which
+endangered the branches of the tall Dresden candelabra on the high
+mantelpiece behind him. "After which you do reject me and cast me down
+to hell!" and down came both hands heavily upon the velvet table between
+them. The blue crackle jar, the two "Long Eliza" vases, and all the
+Lowestoft cups and saucers, literally jumped upon their foundations.
+
+"For Heaven's sake!" cried Vera.
+
+"Ah!" in a tone of deep reproach, "do not plead with me, mademoiselle;
+you have broken my heart."
+
+"And you have nearly broken the china," murmured Vera.
+
+"What is this miserable china that you talk about in comparison with my
+happiness?" and the vicomte made as though he would tear his hair out
+with both hands.
+
+The comedy of the situation began to be too much for Vera's self-control;
+another ten minutes of it, and she felt that she should become
+hysterical; all the more so because she knew very well that the whole
+thing was nothing but a piece of acting; with what object, however, she
+was at a loss to imagine.
+
+"For goodness sake, do be reasonable, Monsieur D'Arblet; you know
+perfectly well that I never encouraged you, as you call it, for the very
+good reason that there has never been anything to encourage. We have been
+very good friends, but never anything more."
+
+"Mademoiselle, you do me injustice."
+
+"On the contrary, I give you credit for a great deal more common sense,
+as a rule, than you seem disposed to evince to-day. I am quite certain
+that you have never entertained any warmer feeling towards me than
+friendship."
+
+This was an injudicious statement. Monsieur D'Arblet felt that his
+reputation as a _galant homme_ and an adorer of the fair sex was
+impugned; he instantly flew into the most violent passion, and jumped
+about amongst the gipsy tables and the _etageres_, and the dainty little
+spindle-legged cabinets more vehemently than ever.
+
+"_I_, not love you! Lucien D'Arblet profess a sentiment which he does not
+experience! _Ah! par exemple, Mademoiselle, c'est trop fort!_ Next you
+will say that I am a _menteur_, a _fripon_, a _lache_! You will tell me
+that I have no honour, and no sense of the generosity due to a woman;
+that I am a brute and an imbecile," and at every epithet he dashed his
+hands violently out in front of him, or thrust them wildly through his
+disordered locks. The whole room shook, every ornament on every table
+shivered with the strength of his agitation.
+
+"Oh, I will say any single thing you like," cried Vera, "if only you will
+keep still----"
+
+"Do not insult me by denying my affection!"
+
+"I will deny nothing," said poor Vera, at her wits' ends. "If what I have
+said has pained you, I am sincerely sorry for it; but for Heaven's sake
+control yourself, and--and--_do_ go away!"
+
+Then Monsieur D'Arblet stood still and looked at her fixedly and
+mournfully; his hands had dropped feebly by his side, there was an air
+of profound melancholy in his aspect; he regarded her with a searching
+intensity. He was asking himself whether his agitation and his despair
+had produced the very slightest effect upon her; and he came to the
+conclusion they had not.
+
+"_Peste soit de cette femme!_" he said to himself. "She is the first I
+ever came across who refused to believe in vows of eternal love. As a
+rule, women never fail to give them credit, if they are spoken often
+enough and shouted out loud enough the more one despairs and declares
+that one is about to expire, the more the dear creatures are impressed,
+and the more firmly they are convinced of the power of their own charms.
+But this woman does not believe in me one little bit. Love, despair,
+rage--it is all the same to her--I might as well talk to the winds! She
+only wants to get rid of me before her friend comes in, and before I
+break her accursed china. Ah it is these miserable little pots and jugs
+that she is thinking about! Very well, then, it is by them that I will do
+what I want. A great genius can bend to small things as well as soar to
+large ones--Voyons done, ma belle, which of us will be the victor!"
+
+All this time he was gazing at her fixedly and dejectedly.
+
+"Miss Nevill," he said, gloomily, "I will accept your rejection;
+to-morrow I will say good-bye to this country for ever!"
+
+"We are all going away this week," said Vera, cheerfully: "this is the
+end of July. You will come back again next year, and enjoy your season as
+much as ever."
+
+"Never--never. Lucien D'Arblet will visit this country no more. The words
+that I am about to speak to you now--the request that I am about to make
+of you are like the words of a dying man; like the parting desire of one
+who expires. Mademoiselle, I have a request to make of you."
+
+"I am sure," began Vera, politely, "if there is anything I can do
+for you----" She breathed more freely now he talked about going away
+and dying; it would be much better that he should so go away, and so
+die, than remain interminably on the rampage in Mrs. Hazeldine's
+drawing-room. Vera had stood siege for close upon an hour. The moment of
+her deliverance was apparently drawing near; in the hour of victory she
+felt that she could afford to be generous; any little thing that he liked
+to ask of her she would be glad enough to do with a view to expediting
+his departure. Perhaps he wanted her photograph, or a lock of her hair;
+to either he would be perfectly welcome.
+
+"There is something I am forced to go away from England without having
+done; a solemn duty I have to leave unperformed. Miss Nevill, will you
+undertake to do it for me?"
+
+"Really, Monsieur D'Arblet, you are very mysterious; it depends, of
+course, upon what this duty is--if it is very difficult, or very
+unpleasant."
+
+"It is neither difficult nor unpleasant. It is only to give a small
+parcel to a gentleman who is not now in England; to give it him yourself,
+with your own hands."
+
+"That does not sound difficult, certainly," said Vera, smiling; after
+all, she was glad he had not asked for a photograph, or a lock of hair;
+"but how am I to find this friend of yours?"
+
+"Miss Nevill, do you know a man called Kynaston? Captain Maurice
+Kynaston?" He was watching her keenly now.
+
+Vera turned suddenly very white: then controlling herself with an effort,
+she answered quietly.
+
+"Yes, I know him. Why?"
+
+"Because that is the man I want you to give my parcel to." He drew
+something out of his breast coat-pocket, and handed it to her across the
+oblong table that was still between them. She took it in her hands, and
+turned it over doubtfully and uneasily. It was a small square parcel,
+done up in brown paper, fastened round with string, and sealed at both
+ends.
+
+It might have been a small book; it probably was. She had no reason to
+give why she should not do his commission for him, and yet she felt a
+strange and unaccountable reluctance to undertake it.
+
+"I had very much rather that you asked somebody else to do this for you,
+Monsieur D'Arblet," she said, handing the packet back to him. He did not
+attempt to take it from her.
+
+"It concerns the most sacred emotions of my heart, mademoiselle," he
+said, sensationally. "I could not entrust it to an indifferent person.
+You, who have plunged me into such an abyss of despair by your cruel
+rejection of my affection, cannot surely refuse to do so small a thing
+for me."
+
+Miss Nevill was again looking at the small parcel in her hands.
+
+"Will it hurt or injure Captain Kynaston in any way?" she asked.
+
+"Far from it; it will probably be of great service to him. Come, Miss
+Nevill, promise me that you will give it to him; any time will do before
+the end of the year, any time that you happen to see him, or to be near
+enough to visit him; I only want to be sure that it reaches him. All you
+have to do is to give it him into his hands when no one else is near.
+After all, it is a very small favour I ask you."
+
+"And it is precisely because it is so small, Monsieur D'Arblet," said
+Vera, decidedly, "that I cannot imagine why you should make such a point
+of a trifle like this; and as I don't like being mixed up in things I
+don't understand, I must, I think, decline to have anything to do with
+it."
+
+"_Allons donc!_" said the vicomte to himself. "I am reduced to the
+china."
+
+He took an excited turn up and down the room, then came back again to
+where she stood.
+
+"Miss Nevill!" he cried, with rising anger, "you seem determined to wound
+my feelings and to insult my self-respect. You reject my offers, you
+sneer at my professions of affection; and now you appear to me to throw
+sinister doubts upon the meaning of the small thing I have asked you to
+do for me." At each of these accusations he waved his arm up and down to
+emphasize his remarks; and now, as if unconsciously, his hand suddenly
+fell upon the neck of one of the "Long Eliza" vases on the table before
+him. He lifted it up in the air.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, Monsieur D'Arblet, take care--please put down that
+vase," cried Vera; suddenly returning to her former terrors.
+
+He looked at the object in his hand as though it were utterly beneath
+consideration.
+
+"Vase! what is a vase, I ask? Do you not suppose, before relinquishing
+what I ask of you, I would dash a hundred vases such as this into ten
+thousand fragments to the earth?" He raised his arm above his head as
+though on the point of carrying his threat into execution.
+
+Vera uttered a scream.
+
+"Good gracious! What on earth are you doing? It is Mrs. Hazeldine's
+favourite piece of china; she values it more than anything she has got.
+If you were to break it, she would go half out of her mind."
+
+"Never mind this wretched vase. Answer me, Mademoiselle Nevill, will you
+give that parcel to Captain Kynaston?"
+
+"I am not at all likely to meet him; I assure you nothing is so
+improbable. I know him very little. Ah! what are you doing?"
+
+The infuriated Frenchman was whirling the blue-and-white treasure madly
+round in the air.
+
+"You are, then, determined to humiliate and to insult me; and to prove to
+you how great is my just indignation, I will dash----"
+
+"No, no, no!" cried Vera, frantically; "for Heaven's sake, do not be so
+mad. Mrs. Hazeldine will never forgive me. Put it down, I entreat you.
+Yes, yes, I will promise anything you like. I am sure I have no wish to
+insult you."
+
+"Ah, then, you will give that to him?" He paused with the vase still
+uplifted, looking at her.
+
+Vera felt convinced by this time that she had to do with a raving
+lunatic. After all, was it not better to do this small thing for him, and
+to get rid of him. She knew that, sooner or later, down at Sutton, or up
+in London, she and Maurice were likely to meet. It would not be much
+trouble to her to place the small parcel in his hands. Surely, to deliver
+herself from this man--to save Cissy's beloved china, and, perchance,
+her own throat--for what might he not take a fancy to next!--from the
+clutches of this madman, it would be easier to do what he wanted.
+
+"Yes, I will give it to him. I promise you, if you will only put that
+vase down and go away."
+
+"You will promise me faithfully?"
+
+"Faithfully."
+
+"On your word of honour, and as you hope for salvation?"
+
+"Yes, yes. There is no need for oaths; if I have promised, I will do it."
+
+"Very well." He placed the vase back upon the table and walked to the
+door. "Mademoiselle," he said, making her a low bow, "I am infinitely
+obliged to you;" and then, without another word, he opened the door and
+was gone.
+
+Three minutes later Mrs. Hazeldine came in. She was just back from
+her drive. She found Vera lying back exhausted and breathless in an
+arm-chair.
+
+"My dear, what have you done to Monsieur D'Arblet? I met him running out
+of the house like a madman, and laughing to himself like a little fiend.
+He nearly knocked me down. What has happened! Have you accepted him?"
+
+"No, I have refused him," gasped Vera; "but, thank God, I have saved your
+'Long Eliza,' Cissy!"
+
+Early the following morning one of Mrs. Hazeldine's servants was
+despatched in a hansom with a small brown paper parcel and a note to the
+Charing Cross Hotel.
+
+During the night watches Miss Nevill had been seized with misgivings
+concerning the mysterious mission wherewith she had been charged.
+
+But the servant, the parcel, and the note all returned together just as
+they had been sent.
+
+"Monsieur D'Arblet has left town, Miss; he went by the tidal train last
+night on his way to the Continent, and has left no address."
+
+So Vera tore up her own note, and locked up the offending parcel in her
+dressing-case.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+A WEDDING TOUR.
+
+ Thus Grief still treads upon the heels of Pleasure;
+ Married in haste, we may repent at leisure.
+
+ Congreve.
+
+
+We all know that weddings are as old as the world, but who is it
+that invented wedding tours? Owing to what delusion were they first
+instituted?
+
+For a wedding feast there is a reasonable cause, just as there is for
+a funeral luncheon, or a christening dinner. There has been in each
+instance a trying ordeal to be gone through in a public church. It is
+quite right that there should be eating and drinking, and a certain
+amount of jollification afterwards amongst the unoffending guests who
+have been dragged in as spectators on the occasion. But why on earth,
+when the day is over, cannot the unhappy couple be left alone to eat
+a Darby-and-Joan dinner together in the house in which they propose to
+live, and return peacefully on the morrow to the avocation of their
+daily lives? Why must they be sent off amid a shower of rice and
+shabby satin shoes into an enforced banishment from the society of their
+fellow-creatures, and so thrown upon each other that, in nine cases out
+of ten, for want of something better to do, they have learnt the way to
+quarrel, tooth and nail, before the week is out?
+
+I believe that a great many marriages that are as likely as not to turn
+out in the end very happily are utterly prevented from doing so by that
+pernicious and utterly childish custom of keeping up the season known as
+the honeymoon. "Honey," by the way, is very sweet, doubtless; but there
+is nothing on earth which sensible people get sooner tired of. Three days
+of an exclusively saccharine diet is about as much as any grown man or
+woman can be reasonably expected to stand; after that period there comes
+upon the jaded appetite unlawful longings after strong meats and
+anchovies, after turtle-soup and devilled bones, such as no sugar-fed
+couple has the poetic right to indulge in. Nevertheless, like a snake in
+the grass, the insidious desire will creep into the soul of one or other
+of the two. There will be, doubtless, a noble struggle to stifle the
+treacherous thought; a vigorous effort to bring back the wandering mind
+into the path of duty; a conscientious effort to go on enjoying honeycomb
+as though no flavour of richer viands had been wafted to the nostrils of
+the imagination. The sweet and poetical food will be lifted once more
+resolutely to the lips, but only to create a sickening satiety from which
+the nauseated victim finally revolts in desperation. Then come yearnings
+and weariness, loss of appetite, and consequent loss of temper; tears on
+the one side, an oath or two on the other, and the "happy couple" come
+home eventually very much wiser, as a rule, than they started, and
+certainly in a position to understand several unpleasant truths
+concerning each other of which they had not a suspicion before they went
+away.
+
+Now, if this is too often the melancholy finale to a wedding trip, even
+with regard to persons who start forth on it full of hopes of happiness,
+of faith in each other, and of fervent affection on both sides, how much
+worse is not the case when there are small hopes of happiness, no faith
+whatever on one side, and of affection none at all on the other?
+
+This was how it was with Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston on their six
+weeks' wedding trip abroad. They went to a great many places they had
+neither of them seen before. They stayed a week in Paris, where Helen
+bought more dresses and declared herself supremely happy; they visited
+the falls of the Rhine, which Maurice said deafened him; and ran
+through Switzerland, which they both voted detestably uncomfortable and
+dirty--the hotels, _bien entendu_, not the mountains. They stopped a
+night on the St. Gothard, which was too cold for them, and a week or two
+at the Italian lakes, which were too hot. They sauntered through the
+picture-galleries of Milan and Turin, at which places Maurice's yawns
+became prolonged and audible; and they floated through the canals of
+Venice in gondolas, which Helen asserted to be more ragged and full of
+fleas than any London four-wheeler. And then they turned homewards, and
+by the time they neared the shores of the Channel once more they had had
+so many quarrels that they had forgotten to count them, and they had both
+privately discovered that matrimony is an egregious and, alas! an
+irreparable mistake. Such a discovery was possibly inevitable; perhaps
+they would have come in time to the same conclusion had they remained at
+home, but they certainly found it out all the quicker for having gone
+abroad.
+
+Helen, perhaps, was the most to be pitied of the two. For Maurice there
+had been no illusions to dispel, no dreams to be dissipated, no castles
+built upon the sand to fall shattered into atoms; he had known very well
+what he had to expect; he did not love the wife he was marrying, and he
+did love somebody else. It had not, therefore, been a brilliant prospect
+of bliss. Nevertheless, he had certainly hoped, with that vague kind of
+hope in which Englishmen are prone to indulge, that things would "come
+right" in some fashion, and that he and Helen would manage "to get on"
+together. That they did not do so was an annoyance, but hardly a surprise
+to him.
+
+But to Helen there was a good deal of unexpected grief and mortification
+of soul. She, at all events, had loved him; it was her own strength of
+will, the fervour of her own lawless passion for him that had carried the
+day, and had, in the end, made her his wife. And she had said to herself
+that, once married to him, she would make him love her.
+
+Alas, in love there is no such thing as compulsion! The heart that loves,
+loves freely, spontaneously, unreasonably; and, where love is dead, there
+neither entreaties nor prayers, nor yet a whole ocean of tears can serve
+to re-awaken the frail blossom into life.
+
+But Helen had made sure that, once absolutely her own, once irrevocably
+separated from the girl whom instinct had taught her to regard as her
+rival, Maurice would return to the old allegiance, and learn to love her
+once more, as in days now long gone by.
+
+A very short experience served to convince her of the contrary. Maurice
+yawned too openly, was too evidently wearied and bored with her society,
+too utterly indifferent to her sayings and her doings, for her to delude
+herself long with the hope of regaining his affection. It was all the
+same to him whatever she did. If she showered caresses upon him, he
+submitted meekly, it is true, but with so evident a distaste to the
+operation that she learnt to discontinue the kisses he cared for so
+little; if she tried to amuse him with her conversation, he appeared to
+be thinking of other things; if she gave her opinion, he hardly seemed to
+listen to it. Only when they quarrelled did the slightest animation enter
+into their conjugal relations; and it was almost better to quarrel than
+to be at peace on such terms as these.
+
+And then Helen got angry with him; angry and sore, wounded in her heart,
+and hurt in her vanity. She said to herself that she had been ready to
+become the best and most devoted of wives; to study his wishes, to defer
+to his opinion, to surround him with loving attentions; but since he
+would not have it so, then so much the worse for him. She would be no
+model wife; no meek slave, subservient to his caprices. She would go her
+own way, and follow her own will, and make him do what she liked, whether
+it pleased him or not.
+
+Had Maurice cared to struggle with her for the mastery, things might have
+ended differently, but it did not seem worth his while to struggle; as
+long as she let him alone, and did not fret him with her incessant
+jealousies and suspicions, he was content to let her do as she liked.
+
+Even in that matter of living at Kynaston he learnt, in the end, to
+give way to her. Sir John, who had already started for Australia, had
+particularly requested him to occupy the house. Lady Kynaston did nothing
+but urge it in every letter. Helen herself was bent upon it. There was
+no good reason that he could bring forward against so reasonable and
+sensible a plan. The house was all ready, newly decorated, and newly
+furnished; they had nothing to do but to walk into it. It would save
+all trouble in looking out for a country home elsewhere, and would,
+doubtless, be an infinitely pleasanter abode for them than any other
+house could be. It was the natural and rational thing for them to do.
+Maurice knew of only one argument against it, and that one was in his own
+heart, and he could speak of it to no one.
+
+And yet, after all, what did it matter, what difference would it make? A
+little nearer, a little further, how could it alter things for either of
+them? How lessen the impassable gulf between her and him? It was in the
+natural course of things that he must meet her at times; there would be
+the stereotyped greeting, the averted glance, the cold shake of hands
+that could never hope to meet without a pang; these things were almost
+inevitable for them. A little oftener or a little seldomer, would it
+matter very much then?
+
+Maurice did not think it would; bound as he was to the woman whom he had
+made his wife--tied to her by every law of God and of man, of honour, and
+of manly feeling--that there should be any actual danger to be run by the
+near proximity of the woman he had loved, did not even enter into his
+head. If he had known how to do his duty towards Helen before he had
+married her, would he not tenfold know how to do so now? Possibly he
+over-rated his own strength; for, however high are our principles,
+however exalted is our sense of honour--after all, we are but mortals,
+and unspeakably weak at the very best.
+
+It did not in any case occur to him to look at the question from Vera's
+point of view. It is never easy for a man to put himself into a woman's
+place, or to enter into the extra sensitiveness of soul with which she is
+endowed.
+
+So it was that he agreed to go straight back to Kynaston, and to make the
+old house his permanent home according to his wife's wishes.
+
+It was whilst the newly-married couple were passing through Switzerland
+on their homeward journey that they suddenly came across Mr. Herbert
+Pryme, who had been performing a melancholy and solitary pilgrimage in
+the land of tourists.
+
+It was at the table d'hote at Vevay, upon coming down to that lengthy
+and untempting repast, chiefly composed of aged goats and stringy hens,
+which the inventive Swiss waiter exalts, with the effort of a soaring
+imagination, into "Chamois," and "Salmi de Poulet," that Captain and Mrs.
+Kynaston, who had scarcely recovered from a passage of arms in the
+seclusion of their bed-chamber, suddenly descried a familiar face amongst
+the long array of uncongenial people ranged down either side of the
+table.
+
+What the print of a hob-nailed boot must be to the lonely traveller
+across the desert, what the sight of a man from one's own club going down
+Pall Mall is in mid-September, or as a draught of Giesler's '68 to an
+epicure who has been about to perish on ginger-beer--so did Herbert
+Pryme's face shine upon Maurice Kynaston out of the arid waste of that
+Vevay _salle-a-manger_.
+
+In England he had been only an acquaintance--at Vevay he became his most
+intimate friend. The delight of having a man to speak to, and a man who
+knew others of his friends, was almost intoxicating. To think of getting
+one evening--nay, one hour of liberty from that ever-present chain of
+matrimonial intercourse which was galling him so sorely, was a bliss for
+which he could hardly find words to express his gratitude.
+
+Herbert, who could not quite understand the reason of it, was almost
+overpowered by the warmth of Captain Kynaston's greeting. To have his
+place removed next to his own, and to grasp him heartily by both hands,
+wringing them with affectionate fervour, was the work of a few seconds.
+And then, who so lively, so full of anecdote and laughter, so interested
+in all that could be said to him, as Maurice Kynaston during that dinner?
+
+It made Helen angry to hear him. He could be agreeable enough, she
+thought, bitterly, to a chance acquaintance, picked up nobody knew where;
+he could find plenty of conversation for this almost unknown young man;
+it was only when they were alone together that he sat by glumly and
+silently, without a smile and without a word!
+
+She did not take it into account how surfeited the man was with his
+honeycomb. Herbert Pryme, individually, was nothing much to him; but he
+came as the sight of a distant sail is to a shipwrecked mariner. It is
+doubtful, indeed, whether, under the circumstances, Maurice would not
+have been equally delighted to have met his tailor or his bootmaker.
+After dinner was over the two men went out and smoked their cigars
+together. This was a fresh offence to Mrs. Kynaston; usually she enjoyed
+an evening stroll with her husband after dinner, but when he asked her to
+come out with him on this occasion, she refused, shortly and
+ungraciously.
+
+"No, thank you; if you and Mr. Pryme are going to smoke, I could not
+possibly come; you know that I hate smoke."
+
+Poor Herbert was about to protest that nothing would induce him to smoke;
+but Maurice passed his arm hurriedly through his.
+
+"Come along, then, and have a cigar in the garden," he said, with
+scarcely concealed eagerness; he felt like a schoolboy let out of school.
+
+Helen went up to her bedroom, and sat sulkily by her open window, looking
+over the lake on to the mountains. Long after it was dark she could see
+the two red specks of their cigars wandering about like fire-flies in the
+garden, and could hear the crush of the rough gravel under their
+footsteps, and the low murmur of their voices as they talked.
+
+"You are coming into Meadowshire, are you not?" asked Maurice, ere they
+parted.
+
+Herbert shook his head.
+
+"Not to the Millers?"
+
+"No, I am afraid I shall never be asked to Shadonake again," answered the
+younger man, gloomily.
+
+"Why, I thought you and Beatrice--forgive me--but is it not the case?"
+
+"Her parents have stopped all that, Kynaston."
+
+"But I am sure Beatrice herself will never let it stop; I know her too
+well," said Maurice, cheerily.
+
+"There are laws in connection with minors," began Mr. Pryme, solemnly.
+
+"Fiddlesticks!" was Maurice's rejoinder. "There are no laws to prevent
+young women falling in love, or the world would not be in such a
+confounded muddle as it frequently is. Don't be downhearted, Pryme; you
+stick to her, and it will all come right; and look here, if they won't
+ask you to Shadonake, I ask you to Kynaston; drop me a line, and come
+whenever you like--as soon as you get home."
+
+"You are exceedingly kind; I shall be only too delighted."
+
+"When will you be home?"
+
+"I can be home at any time--there is nothing to keep me."
+
+"Well, then, come as soon as you like, the sooner the better. And now
+I must say good-night and good-bye too, I fear, for we are off early
+to-morrow. I shall be glad enough to be home; I'm dead sick of the
+travelling. Good-night, old fellow; it has been a real pleasure to meet
+you."
+
+And, positively, this was the only evening out of his whole wedding-trip
+that Maurice had thoroughly enjoyed.
+
+"What on earth kept you out so late with that solemn young prig?" says
+his wife to him as he opens her door.
+
+"I find him a very pleasant companion, and I have asked him to come to
+Kynaston," answers Maurice, shortly.
+
+"Umph!" grunts Helen, and inwardly determines that his visit shall be a
+short one.
+
+Four days later they were in England again.
+
+It was only when the train had actually stopped at Sutton, and he was
+handing his wife into her own carriage under the arch of greenery across
+the road, and amid the ringing cheers of the rustics, who had gathered
+to see them arrive, that Maurice began to realise how powerfully that
+home-coming was to be tinged in his own mind with thoughts of her who was
+once so nearly going as a bride to the same house where now he was taking
+Helen.
+
+All along the lane, as they drove under the arches of flags and flowers
+that had been put up from the station to the park gates, and as they
+responded to the hearty welcome from the village-folk who lined the road,
+Maurice was asking himself, with a painful anxiety, whether _she_ was at
+Sutton now; whether her eyes had rested upon these rustic decorations,
+whether her steps had passed along under these mottoes of welcome and of
+happiness. And then, as they neared the church, the clang of the bells
+burst forth loudly and jarringly.
+
+Was _she_, perchance, there in the house, kneeling alone, white and
+stricken by her bedside, whilst those joy-bells rang out their deafening
+clamour from the church hard by?
+
+For the life of him, Maurice could not help casting a glance at the
+vicarage as they drove swiftly by it.
+
+The windows were wide open, but no one looked out of them, the muslin
+blinds fluttered in the wind, the Gloire de Dijon roses nodded upon the
+wall, the Virginia creeper hung in crimson festoons over the porch; but
+there was not a living creature to be seen.
+
+He had caught no glimpse of the woman that was ever in his heart; and it
+was a great pity that he had looked for her, because his wife, whose
+sharp eyes nothing ever escaped, had seen him look.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+"IF I COULD DIE!"
+
+ Why cannot I forgo, forget
+ That ever I loved thee, that ever we met?
+ There is not a single link or sign
+ To bind thy life in this world with mine.
+
+ M. W. Praed.
+
+
+But it was not until Captain and Mrs. Maurice Kynaston had been at home
+for more than a fortnight that Vera came back to her brother-in-law's
+house.
+
+She had kept away, poor girl, as long as she could. She had put off the
+evil hour of her return as long as possible. The Hazeldines had gone to
+Scotland, and Vera had, in desperation, accepted an invitation to stay
+with some acquaintances whom she neither knew very well nor liked
+overmuch. It had kept her from Sutton a little longer. But the visit had
+come to an end at last, and what was she to do? She had no other visits
+to prolong her absence, and her sister wrote to her perpetually, urging
+her to return. Her home was at Sutton; she had no other place to go to.
+She had told Sir John that in absence from his brother lay her only hope
+of safety. But where was she to seek that safety? Where find security,
+when he; reckless, or, perchance, heedless of her danger, had come to
+plant himself at her very doors? They should have been far as the poles
+asunder, and a malevolent fate had willed that the same parish should
+contain them.
+
+For whatever Maurice did, Vera in no way underrated the danger. Too well
+she knew her own heart; too surely she estimated the strength of a
+passion which, repressed and thwarted, and half-smothered, as it had been
+within her, yet burnt but the fiercer and the wilder. For that is the way
+with love: if it may not flourish and thrive openly and bravely before
+the eyes of the world, it will eat into the very heart and life, till all
+that is fair and sweet in the garden of the soul is choked and blighted
+and overgrown, till the main-spring of life becomes poisoned, and all
+things that are happy, withered and dried up.
+
+In Vera's love for Maurice there had been nothing of joy, and all of
+pain. There had never been for her that sweet illusion of dawning
+affection--that intangible sense of delight in the consciousness of an
+unspoken sympathy that is the very essence of a happy love. She had no
+memories that were serene and untroubled--no days of calm and delicious
+happiness to recall. His first conscious look had been a terror to her;
+his words of hopeless love had given her a shock that had been almost
+physical; and his few passionate kisses had burnt into her very soul till
+they had seemed to have been printed upon her lips in fire. Vera's love
+had brought her no good thing that she could count. But it had done one
+thing for her: if it had cursed her life, it had purified her soul.
+
+The Vera who had come back to Sutton Vicarage in August was no longer the
+same woman who had stood months ago on the terrace at Kynaston among the
+falling autumn leaves, and who had told herself that it was money
+alone that was worth living for.
+
+She came back to everything that was full of pain, and to much in which
+there was absolute fear.
+
+Five minutes after she had entered the vicarage drawing-room her tortures
+began.
+
+"You have not asked after the bride and bridegroom," says old Mrs.
+Daintree, as she sits in her corner, darning everlastingly at those brown
+worsted socks of her son's. Vera thinks she must have been sitting there
+darning incessantly, day and night, ever since she had been away. "We are
+all full of it down here. Such a pretty welcome home they had--arches
+across the road, and processions with flags, and a band inside the
+lodge-gates. You should have been here to have seen it. Everybody is
+making much of Mrs. Kynaston; she is a very pretty woman, I must say,
+and called here three days ago in the most beautiful Paris gown."
+
+"She seemed very sorry not to see you," says Marion, "and quite disposed
+to be friendly. I do hope you and she will get on, Vera, in spite of the
+awkwardness of her being in your place, as it were."
+
+"What do you mean?" rather sharply.
+
+"Only, of course, dear, that it will be rather painful to you just at
+first to see anybody else the mistress at Kynaston, where you yourself
+might have been----"
+
+"If you had not been a fool," interpolated the old lady, bluntly.
+
+"I don't think I shall mind that much," says Vera, quietly. "Where is
+Eustace?"
+
+"Oh, he will be in presently; he has gone up to the Hall about the
+chancel. The men have made all kinds of mistakes about the tesselated
+pavement; the wrong pattern was sent down from town, and we have had so
+much trouble about it, and there has been nobody to appeal to to set
+things right. Captain Kynaston is all very well, and now he is back, I
+hope we may get things into a little order; but I am sorry to say he
+takes very little interest in the church or the parish; he is not half
+so good a squire as poor dear Sir John." And there was a whole volume of
+unspoken reproach in the sigh with which Marion wound up her remarks.
+
+"Decidedly," said Vera, to herself, as she went slowly upstairs to her
+own little room; "decidedly I must get away from all this. I shall have
+to marry." She leant out of her open window in a frame-work of roses
+and jessamine, and looked out over the lime-trees towards the Hall.
+Now that the trees were in full leaf, she could catch no glimpse of its
+red-stacked chimneys and its terraced gardens; but, by-and-by, when the
+leaves were down and the trees were bare, she knew she should see it.
+Every morning when she got up the sun would be shining full upon it;
+every night when she went to bed she would see the twinkling lights of
+the many windows gleaming through the darkness; she would be in her
+room alone, and _he_ would be out there, happy with his wife.
+
+"I shall not be able to bear it," said Vera, slowly, speaking aloud to
+herself. "I had better marry, and go away; there is nothing else to be
+done. Poor Denis! He is worthy of a better woman; but I think he will be
+good to me."
+
+For it had come to this now, that when Vera thought about marrying, it
+was upon Denis Wilde that she also pondered.
+
+To be at Sutton, and not to come face to face with Maurice, was of course
+an impossibility. Carefully as Vera confined herself to the house and
+garden for the next three days, she could not avoid going to church when
+Sunday came. And at church were Captain and Mrs. Kynaston. During the
+service she only saw his back, erect and broad-shouldered, in the seat in
+front of her, for the pews had been cleared away, and open sittings had
+been substituted all through the church. Maurice looked neither to the
+right nor to the left; he stood, or sat, or knelt, and scarcely turned
+his head an inch, but Helen's butterfly bonnet was twisted in every
+direction throughout the service. It is certain that she very soon knew
+who it was who had come into the vicarage seat behind her.
+
+When Vera came out of church, having purposely lingered as long as she
+could inside, until the rest of the congregation had all gone out, she
+found the bride and bridegroom waiting for her in the churchyard.
+
+Helen stood with her hand twined with easy familiarity round her
+husband's arm; possibly she had studied the attitude with a view to
+impressing Vera with the perfection of her conjugal happiness. She turned
+quite delightedly to greet her.
+
+"Oh, here you are at last, Miss Nevill. We have been waiting for you,
+have we not, Maurice dear? We both felt how pleased we should be to see
+you. I am very glad you have come back; it will make it much more
+pleasant for me at Kynaston; you will come up to see me, won't you?
+I should like you to see my boudoir, it is lovely!"
+
+"You forget that Miss Nevill has seen it all long ago," said Maurice,
+gravely; their hands had just met, but he had not looked at her.
+
+"Oh, yes, to be sure; how stupid I am! Of course, I remember now, it was
+all done up for _you_ by poor dear old John. Doesn't it seem funny that
+I should be going to live in the house? Ah, how d'ye do, Mr. Daintree?"
+as Eustace came out of the vestry door; "here we are, chattering to your
+sister. What a delightful sermon, dear Mr. Daintree, and what a treat to
+be in a Christian church--I mean a Protestant church--again after those
+dreadful Sundays on the Continent."
+
+Vera had turned to Maurice.
+
+"Have you any news of Sir John yet?"
+
+"No; we cannot expect to hear of his arrival till next month. I dare say
+you will like to hear about him. I will let you know as soon as he
+writes."
+
+"Thank you; I should like to know about him very much."
+
+Helen, in the middle of Eustace's polite acknowledgment of her compliment
+to his sermon, was casting furtive glances at her husband; even the two
+or three grave words he had exchanged with Vera were sufficient to make
+her uneasy. She desired to torture Vera with envy and with jealousy; she
+had forgotten to take into account how very easily her own suspicious
+jealousy could be aroused. She interrupted the vicar in the very middle
+of his speech.
+
+"Now, really, we must run away. Come, Maurice, darling, we shall be late
+for lunch; you and Miss Nevill must finish your confidences another day.
+You will come up soon, won't you? Any day at five I am in--good-bye."
+She shook hands with them, and hurried her husband away.
+
+"What an odd thing it is that you and that girl never can meet without
+having all sorts of private things to say to each other," she said,
+angrily, as soon as they were out of earshot.
+
+"Private things! what can you possibly mean, Helen? Miss Nevill was
+asking me if I had heard of John's arrival."
+
+"I wonder she has the face to mention John's name!"
+
+"Why, pray?"
+
+"After her disgraceful conduct to him."
+
+"I think you know very little about Miss Nevill's conduct, Helen."
+
+"No, I dare say not. And _you_ have always known a great deal more about
+it than anybody else. That I have always understood, Maurice."
+
+Maurice looked very black, but he was silent.
+
+"I am very glad I told her about the boudoir," continued Helen,
+spitefully. "How mortified she must feel to think that it has all slipped
+through her fingers and into mine. I do hope she will come up to the
+house. I shall show her all over it; she will wish she had not been
+such a fool!"
+
+Maurice was looking at his wife with a singular expression.
+
+"I begin to think you have a very bad heart, Helen," he said, with
+a contempt in his voice that was very near akin to disgust.
+
+She looked up, a little startled, and put her hand back, caressingly,
+under his arm.
+
+"Oh, don't look at me like that, Maurice; I don't want to vex you. You
+know very well how much I love you--and--and"--looking up with a little
+smile into his face that was meant as a peace offering--"I suppose I am
+jealous!"
+
+"Suppose you wait to be jealous until I give you cause to be so,"
+answered her husband, gravely and coldly, but not altogether unkindly,
+for he meant to do his duty to her, God helping him, as far as he knew
+how.
+
+But all the way home he walked silently by her side, and wondered whether
+the sacrifice he had made of his love to his duty had been, indeed, worth
+it.
+
+It had been hard for him, this first meeting with Vera. He had felt it
+more than he had believed possible. Instinctively he had realized what
+she must have suffered; and that her sufferings were utterly beyond his
+power to console. It began to come into his mind that, meaning to deal
+rightly by Helen, he had dealt cruelly and badly by Vera. He had
+sacrificed the woman he loved to the woman he did not love.
+
+Had it, indeed, been such a right and praiseworthy action on his part?
+Maurice lost himself in speculation as to what would have happened had he
+broken his faith to Helen, and allowed himself to follow the dictates of
+his heart rather than those of his conscience.
+
+That was what Vera had done for his sake; but what he had been unable to
+do for hers.
+
+There was a certain hardness about the man, a rigid sense of honour that
+was almost a fault; for, if it be a virtue to cleave to truth and good
+faith above everything, to swear to one's neighbour and disappoint him
+not--even though it be to one's own hindrance--it is certainly not a fine
+or noble thing to mistake tenderness for a weakness only fit to be
+crushed out of the soul with firm hands and an iron determination.
+
+Guilty once of one irreparable action of weakness, Maurice had set
+himself determinedly ever after to undo the evil that he had done.
+
+To be true to his brother, to keep his faith with Helen, these had been
+the only objects he had steadily kept in view: he had succeeded in his
+efforts, but had scarcely realized that, in doing so, he had not only
+wrecked his own life, but also that of the woman whom he had so
+infinitely wronged.
+
+But when he saw her once again--when he held for an instant the cold hand
+within his own--when he marked, with a pang, the dark circles round the
+averted eyes that spoke so mutely and touchingly of sleepless vigils and
+of many tears--when he noted how the lovely sensitive lips trembled a
+little as she spoke her few common-place words to him--then Maurice began
+to understand what he had done to her; and, for the first time, something
+that was almost remorse, with regard to his own conduct towards her, came
+into his soul.
+
+Such meditations were not, however, safe or profitable to indulge in for
+long. Maurice recalled his wandering thoughts with an effort, and with
+something of repentance for having given them place, turned his attention
+resolutely to his wife's chatter during the remainder of the walk home.
+
+Meanwhile Vera and the vicar are walking back, side by side, to the
+vicarage.
+
+"Something," says Eustace, with solemn displeasure, "something must
+really be done, and that soon, about Ishmael Spriggs; that man will drive
+me into my grave before my time! Anything more fearfully and awfully out
+of tune than the Te Deum I never heard in the whole course of my life. I
+can hear his voice shouting and bellowing above the whole of the rest of
+the choir; he leads all the others wrong. It is not a bit of use to tell
+me that he is the best behaved man in the parish; it is not a matter of
+conduct, as I told Mr. Dale; it is a matter of voice, and if the man
+can't be taught to sing in tune, out of the choir he shall go; it's a
+positive scandal to the Service. Marion says we shall turn him into an
+enemy if we don't let him sing, and that he will go to the dissenting
+chapel, and never come to church any more. Well, I can't help that; I
+must give him up to the dissenters. As to keeping him in the choir, it is
+out of the question after that Te Deum. I shall never forget it. It will
+give me a nightmare to-night, I am convinced. Wasn't it dreadful, Vera?"
+
+"Yes, very likely, Eustace," answered Vera, at random. She has not heard
+one single word he has said.
+
+Eustace Daintree looks round at her sharply. He sees that she is very
+white, and that there are tears upon her cheeks.
+
+"Why, Vera!" he cries, standing still, you have not listened to a word
+I have been saying. "What is the matter, child? Why are you crying?"
+
+They are in the vicarage garden now; among the beds of scarlet geraniums,
+and the tall hollyhocks, and the glaring red gladioli; a whole bank of
+greenery, rhododendrons and lauristinas, conceals them from the windows
+of the house; a garden bench sheltered beneath a nook of the laurel
+bushes is close by.
+
+With a sudden gesture of utter misery Vera sinks down upon it, and bursts
+into a passion of tears.
+
+"My dear child; my poor Vera! What is it? What has happened? What can be
+the reason of this?"
+
+Mr. Daintree is infinitely distressed and puzzled; he bends over her,
+taking her hand between his own. There is something in this wild outburst
+of grief, from one habitually so calm and self-contained as Vera, that is
+an absolute shock to him. He had learnt to love her very dearly; he had
+thought he had understood all the workings of her candid maiden soul; he
+had fancied that the story of her broken engagement was no secret to him,
+that it was but the struggle of a conscientious nature after what was
+true and honest. It had seemed to him that there had been no mystery in
+her conduct, for he could appreciate all her motives. And surely, as she
+had done right, she must be now at peace. He had told himself that the
+pure instincts of a naturally stainless soul had triumphed in Vera over
+the carelessness and worldliness of her early training; and lo, here was
+the passionate weeping of a tempest-tossed woman, whose agony he could
+not fathom, and whose sorrows he knew not how to divine.
+
+"Vera, will you not tell me?" he asked her, in his distress. "Will you
+not make a friend of me? My dear, forget that I am a clergyman; remember
+only that I am your brother, and that I shall know how to feel for
+you--for you, my dear sister."
+
+But she could not tell him. There are some troubles that must be kept for
+ever buried within our own souls; to speak of some things is only to make
+them worse. Only she choked back her sobs, and lifted her face, white
+and tear-stained; there was a look of hunted despair in her eyes, that
+bewildered, and even half-terrified him.
+
+"Tell me," she said, with a sort of anger, "tell me, you that are a
+clergyman--Do you think God has made us only to torment us? You have got
+a daughter, Eustace; pray God, night and morning, that she may have a
+hard heart, and that she may never have one gleam of womanly tenderness
+within her; for only so are women happy!"
+
+He did not answer her wild words. Instinctively he felt that common-place
+speeches of rebuke or of consolation would be trivial and out of place
+before the great anguish of her heart. The man's soul was above the
+narrow limits of his training; he felt, dimly, that here was something
+with which it were best not to intermeddle, some trouble for which he
+could offer no consolation.
+
+She rose and stood before him, holding his hands and gazing earnestly at
+his anxious face.
+
+"It has come to this with me," she said, below her voice, "that there are
+times when there is but one good thing in all the world that I know any
+longer how to desire. God has so ordered my life that there is no road
+open for me that does not lead to sin or to misery. Surely, if He were
+merciful, He would take back the valueless gift."
+
+"Vera! what do you mean?"
+
+"I mean," she exclaimed, wearily, "that if I could die, I should be at
+peace."
+
+She had walked slowly on; her voice, that had trembled at first with a
+passionate wildness, had sunk into the spiritless apathy of despair; her
+head was bent, her hands clasped before her; her dress trailed with a
+soft rustle across the grass, sweeping over a whole wilderness of white
+daisies, that bent their heads beneath its folds as she walked. A gleam
+of sunshine fell upon her hair, and a bird sang loud and shrill in the
+lime trees overhead.
+
+Often and often, in the after days, Eustace Daintree thought of her thus,
+and remembered with a pang the sole sad gift that she had craved at
+Heaven's hands. Often and often the scene came back to him; the sunny
+garden, the scarlet geraniums flaring in the borders, the smooth green
+lawn, speckled with shadows from the trees, the wide open windows of his
+pleasant vicarage beyond, and the beautiful figure of the girl at his
+side, with her bent head, and her low broken voice--the girl who, at
+twenty-three, sighed to be rid of the life that had become too hard for
+her; that precious gift of life which, too often, at three-score years
+and ten, is but hardly resigned!
+
+"If I could die, I should be at peace," she had said. And she was only
+twenty-three!
+
+Eustace Daintree never forgot it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AN EVENTFUL DRIVE.
+
+ Ill blows the wind that profits nobody.
+
+ Shakespeare, "Henry IV."
+
+
+I imagine that the most fretting and wearing of all the pains and
+penalties which it is the lot of humanity to undergo in this troublesome
+and naughty world are those which, by our own folly, our own
+shortsightedness, and our own imprudence, we have brought upon ourselves.
+
+There is a degree of irritation in such troubles which adds a whole
+armoury of small knife-cuts to intensify the agony of the evil from which
+we suffer. It is more dreadful to be moaning over our own mistakes than
+over the inscrutable perversity of an unpropitious fate.
+
+Somebody once has said that most men grieve over the smallest mistake
+more bitterly than over the greatest sin. This is decidedly a perversion
+of the moral nature; nevertheless, there is a good deal of truth in it.
+
+"If only I had not been such a fool! If I could only have foreseen such
+and such results?"
+
+These are more generally the burden of our bitterest self-reproaches.
+
+And this was what Miss Miller was perpetually repeating to herself during
+the months of August and September. Beatrice, in these days, was a
+thoroughly miserable young woman. She was more utterly separated than
+ever from her lover, and that entirely by her own fault. That foolish
+escapade of hers to the Temple had been fatal to her; her father, who
+had been inclined to become her lover's friend, had now peremptorily
+forbidden her ever to mention his name again, and her own lips were
+sealed as to the unlucky incident in which she had played so prominent
+a part.
+
+Beatrice knew that, in going alone and on the sly to her lover's
+chambers, she had undoubtedly compromised her own good name. To confess
+to her own folly and imprudence was almost beyond her power, and to clear
+her lover's name at the expense of her own was what she felt he himself
+would scarcely thank her for.
+
+Mr. Miller had, of course, said something of what he had discovered at
+Mr. Pryme's chambers to the wife of his bosom.
+
+"The young man is not fit for her," he had said; "his private life will
+not bear investigation. You must tell Beatrice to put him out of her
+head."
+
+Mrs. Miller had, of course, been virtuously indignant over Mr. Pryme's
+offences, but she had also been triumphantly elated over her own
+sagacity.
+
+"Did I not tell you he was not a proper husband for her? Another time,
+Andrew, you will, I hope, allow that I am the best judge in these
+matters."
+
+"My dear, you are always right," was the meekly conjugal reply, and then
+Mrs. Miller went her way and talked to Beatrice for half-an-hour over the
+sinful lives which are frequently led by young men of no family residing
+in the Temple, and the shame and disgrace which must necessarily accrue
+to any well-brought-up young woman who, in an ill-advised moment, shall
+allow her affections to rove towards such unsanctified Pariahs of
+society.
+
+And Beatrice, listening to her blushingly, knew what she meant, and yet
+had no words wherewith to clear her lover's character from the defamatory
+evidence furnished against him by her own sunshade and gloves.
+
+"Your father has seen with his own eyes, my dear, that which makes it
+impossible for us ever to consent to your marrying that young man."
+
+How was Beatrice to say to her mother, "It was I--your daughter--who was
+there, shut up in Mr. Pryme's bedroom." She could not speak the words.
+
+The sunshine twinkled in Shadonake's many windows, and flooded its
+velvet lawns. Below, the Bath slumbered darkly in the shadow of its
+ancient steps and its encircling belt of fir-trees; and beyond the
+flower-gardens, half-an-acre of pineries, and vineries, and
+orchard-houses glittered in a dazzling parterre of glass-roofs and white
+paint. Something new--it was an orchard-house--was being built. There was
+always something new, and Mr. Miller was superintending the building of
+it. He stood over the workmen who were laying the foundation, watching
+every brick that was laid down with delighted and absorbed interest. He
+held a trowel himself, and had tucked up his shirt cuffs in order to lend
+a helping hand in the operations. There was nothing that Andrew Miller
+loved so well. Fate and his Caroline had made him a member of Parliament,
+and had placed him in the position of a gentleman, but nature had
+undoubtedly intended him for a bricklayer.
+
+Beatrice came out of the drawing-room windows across the lawn to him. She
+was in her habit, and stood tapping her little boot with her riding whip
+for some minutes by her father's side.
+
+"I am going to see uncle Tom, papa," she said; "have you any message?"
+
+"Going to Lutterton? Ah, that's right; the ride will do you good, my
+dear. No; I have no message."
+
+Beatrice went back into the house; her little bay mare stood at the door.
+She met her mother in the hall.
+
+"I am going to see uncle Tom," she said, to her also.
+
+Mrs. Miller always encouraged her children in their attentions to her
+brother. He was rich, and he was a bachelor; he must have saved a good
+deal one way or another. Who could tell how it would be left? And then
+Beatrice was undoubtedly his favourite. She nodded pleasantly to her
+daughter.
+
+"Tell uncle Tom to come over to lunch on Sunday, and, of course, he must
+come here early for Guy's birthday next week," for there were to be great
+doings on Guy's birthday. "Ride slowly, Beatrice, or you will get so
+hot."
+
+Lutterton Castle was a good six miles off. The house stood well, and even
+imposingly, on a high wooded knoll that overlooked the undulating park,
+and the open valley at its feet. It was a great rambling building with a
+central tower and four smaller ones at each corner. When Mr. Esterworth
+was at home, which was almost always, it was his vanity to keep a red
+flag flying from the centre tower as though he had been royalty. All the
+reception-rooms and more than half the bedrooms were permanently
+shuttered up, and there was a portly and very dignified housekeeper,
+who rattled her keys at her chatelaine, and went through all the unused
+apartments daily, followed by a meek phalanx of housemaids, to see that
+all the rooms were well-aired and well kept in order, so that at any
+minute they might be fit for occupation. Five or six times during the
+hunting season the large rooms were all thrown open, and there was a hunt
+breakfast held in the principal dining-hall; but, with that exception,
+Mr. Esterworth rarely entertained at all.
+
+He occupied three rooms opening out of each other in the small western
+tower. They consisted of a bedroom, a dressing-room, and a small and
+rather inconvenient study, where the huntsman, whips, and other official
+personages connected with the hunt were received at all hours of the day
+and night. The room was consequently pervaded by a faint odour of stables
+and tobacco; there were usually three or four dogs upon the hearthrug,
+and it was a rare thing to find Mr. Esterworth in it unaccompanied by
+some personage in breeches and gaiters, wearing a blue spotted neckcloth
+and a horseshoe pin.
+
+Such an individual was receiving an audience at the moment of Miss
+Miller's arrival, and shuffled awkwardly and hurriedly out of the room by
+one door as she entered it by another.
+
+"All right, William," calls the M.F.H. after his departing satellite.
+"Look in again to-night. I shall have her fired, I think, and throw her
+up till December. Hallo! Pussy, how are you?"
+
+All the four dogs rose from the hearthrug and wagged their tails solemnly
+in respectful greeting to her. Beatrice had a pat and a word for each,
+and a kiss for her uncle, before she sat down on the chair he pulled
+forward for her.
+
+"What brings you, Pussy? What are you riding?"
+
+"Kitty; they have taken her round to the stable. I thought I'd have lunch
+with you, uncle Tom."
+
+"Very well; you won't get anything but a mutton-chop."
+
+"I don't ask for anything better."
+
+Beatrice felt that her heart was beating. She had taken a desperate
+resolution during her six miles' solitary ride; she had determined to
+take her uncle into her confidence. He had always been indulgent and kind
+to her; perhaps he would not view her sin in so heinous a light as her
+mother would; and who knows? perhaps he would help her.
+
+"Uncle Tom, I'm in dreadful trouble, and I want to tell you about it,"
+she began, trembling.
+
+"I'm very sorry, Pussy; what is it?"
+
+"I did a shocking, dreadful thing when I was in London. I went to a young
+man's rooms, and got shut up in his bedroom."
+
+"The deuce you did!" says Tom Esterworth, opening his eyes.
+
+"Yes," continues Beatrice, desperately, and crimson with shame and
+confusion; "and the worse of it is, that I left my sunshade in the
+sitting-room; and papa came in, and, of course, he did not know it was
+mine, and--and--he thinks--he thinks----"
+
+"That's the best joke I ever heard in my life!" cries Mr. Esterworth,
+laying his head back in the chair and laughing aloud.
+
+"Uncle Tom!" Beatrice could hardly believe her ears.
+
+"Good lord, what a situation for a comedy!" cries her uncle, between the
+outbursts of his mirth. "Upon my word, Pussy, you are a good plucked one;
+there isn't much Miller blood in your veins. You are an Esterworth all
+over."
+
+"But, uncle, indeed, it's no laughing matter."
+
+"Well, I don't see much to cry at if your father did not find you out;
+the young man is never likely to talk."
+
+"Oh, but uncle Tom; papa and mamma think so badly of him, and I can't
+tell them that I was there; and they will never let me marry him."
+
+"Oh! so you are in love, Pussy?"
+
+"Yes, uncle."
+
+Tom Esterworth smote his hand against his corduroy thigh.
+
+"What a mistake!" he exclaimed; "a girl who can go across country as you
+do--what on earth do you want to be married for? Is it Mr. Pryme, Pussy?"
+
+Beatrice nodded.
+
+"And he can't go a yard," said her uncle, sorrowfully and reproachfully.
+
+"Oh, I think he goes very well, uncle; his seat is capital; it is only
+his hands that are a bit heavy; but then he has had very little
+practice."
+
+"Tut--tut, don't talk to me, child; he is no horseman. He may be a good
+young man in his way, but what can have made you take a fancy to a fellow
+who can't ride is a mystery to me! Now tell me the whole story, Pussy."
+
+And then Beatrice made a clean breast of it.
+
+"I will see if I can help you," said her uncle, seriously, when she had
+finished her story; "but I can't think how you can have set your heart
+upon a fellow who can't ride!"
+
+This was evidently a far more fatal error in Tom Esterworth's eyes than
+the other matter of her being shut up in Mr. Pryme's rooms. Beatrice
+began to think she had not done anything so very terrible after all.
+
+"I must turn it over in my mind. Now come and eat your mutton-chop,
+Pussy, and when we have finished our lunch, you shall come out with me
+in the dog-cart. I am going to put Clochette into harness for the first
+time."
+
+"Will she go quietly?"
+
+"Like a lamb, I should say. You won't be nervous?"
+
+"Dear, no! I am never nervous; I shall enjoy the fun."
+
+The mutton-chop over, Clochette and the dog-cart came round to the door.
+She was a raking, bright chestnut mare, with a coat like satin. Even as
+she stood at the door she chafed somewhat at her new position between
+the shafts. This, however, was no more than might have been expected. Mr.
+Esterworth declining the company of the groom, helped his niece up and
+took the reins.
+
+"We will go round by Tripton and back by the common," he said, "and talk
+this matter well over, Pussy; we shall enjoy ourselves much better with
+nobody in the back seat. A man sits there with his arms crossed and his
+face like a blank sheet of paper, but one never knows how much they hear,
+and their ears are always cocked, like a terrier's on the scent of a
+rat."
+
+Clochette went off from the door with a bound, but soon settled down into
+a good swinging trot. She kept turning her head nervously from side to
+side, and there was evidently a little uncertainty in her mind as to
+whether she should keep to the drive, or deviate on to the grass by the
+side of it; but, upon the whole, she behaved fairly well, and turned out
+of the lodge gates into the high road with perfect docility and good
+breeding.
+
+There was a whole avalanche of dogs in attendance. A collie, rushing on
+tumultuously in front; a "plum-pudding" dog between the wheels; a couple
+of fox-terriers snapping joyfully at each other in the rear; and there
+was also an ill-conditioned animal--half lurcher, half terrier--who
+killed cats, and murdered fowls, and worried sheep, and flew at the
+heels of unwary strangers; and was given, in short, to every sort of
+canine iniquity, and who possessed but one redeeming feature in his
+character--that of blind adoration to his master.
+
+This animal, who followed uncle Tom whithersoever he went, came skurrying
+out of the stables as the dog-cart drove off, and joined in the general
+scamper.
+
+Perhaps the dogs may have been too much for Clochette's nerves, or
+perhaps the effort of behaving well as far as the park gates with those
+horrible wheels rattling behind her was as much as any hunter born and
+bred could be expected to do, or perhaps uncle Tom was too free with that
+whip with which he caressed her shining flanks; but be that as it may, no
+sooner was Clochette's head well turned along the straight high-road with
+its high-tangled hedge-rows on either side than she began to show symptoms
+of behaving very badly indeed. She bucked and pranced, and stood on her
+hind legs; she whipped suddenly round, pirouetted upon her own axis with
+the dexterity of a circus performer, and demonstrated very plainly that,
+if she only dared, she would like to take to her heels in the reverse
+direction to that which her driver desired her to go.
+
+All this was, however, equally delightful and exciting both to Tom
+Esterworth and his niece. There was no apprehension in Beatrice's mind,
+for her uncle drove as well as he rode, and she felt perfectly secure in
+the strong, supple hands that guided Clochette's erratic movements.
+
+"There is not a kick in her," uncle Tom had said, as they started, and he
+repeated the observation now; and kicking being out of the category of
+Clochette's iniquities, there was nothing else to fear.
+
+No sooner, however, had the words left his lips than a turn of the road
+brought them within sight of a great volume of black smoke rushing slowly
+but surely towards them; whilst a horrible roaring and howling, as of an
+antediluvian monster in its wrath, filled the silence of the summer
+afternoon with a hideous and unholy confusion.
+
+Talk about there being no wild animals in our peaceful land! What
+could have been the Megatherium and the Ichthyosaurus, and all the
+fire-spitting dragons of antiquity compared to the traction engines of
+the nineteenth century?
+
+"It's a steam plough!" ejaculated Beatrice, below her breath.
+
+"D----n!" cried her uncle, not at all below _his_ breath.
+
+As to Clochette, she stood for an instant stock still, with her ears
+pricked and her head well up, facing the horrors of her situation; next
+she gave an angry snort as though to say, "No! _this_ is too much!" Then
+she turned short round and began a series of peculiar bounds and plunges,
+accompanied by an ominous uplifting of her hind quarters, which had
+plainly but one object in view--the correct conjugation of the verb
+active "to kick."
+
+There was a crunching of woodwork, a cracking as of iron hoofs against
+the splash-board. Beatrice instinctively put up her hands before her
+face, but she did not utter a sound.
+
+"Do you think you could get down, Pussy, and go to her head?"
+
+"Shall I hold the reins, uncle?"
+
+"No, you couldn't hold her; she'll be over the hedge if I let go of her.
+Get down if you can."
+
+It was not easy. Beatrice was in her habit, and to jump from the
+vacillating height of a dog-cart to the earth is no easy matter even to
+a man unencumbered with petticoats.
+
+"Try and get over the back," said her uncle, who was in momentary terror
+lest the mare's heels should be dashed into her face. And Beatrice, with
+that finest trait of a woman's courage in danger, which consists in doing
+exactly what she is told, began to scramble over the back of her seat.
+
+The situation was critical in the extreme; the traction engine came on
+apace, the man with the red flag having paused at a public-house round
+the corner, was only now running back into his place. Uncle Tom shouted
+vainly to him; his voice was drowned in the deafening roar of the
+advancing monster.
+
+But already help was at hand, unheard and unperceived by either uncle or
+niece; a horseman had come rapidly trotting up the road behind them. To
+spring from his horse, who was apparently accustomed to traction engines,
+and stood quietly by, to rush to the plunging, struggling mare, and to
+seize her by the head was the work of a moment.
+
+"All right, Mr. Esterworth," shouted the new comer. "I can hold her if
+you can get down; we can lead her into the field; there is a gate ten
+yards back."
+
+Uncle Tom threw the reins to his niece and slipped to the ground; between
+them the two men contrived to quiet the terrified Clochette, and to lead
+her towards the gate.
+
+In another three minutes they were all safely within the shelter of the
+hedge. The traction engine passed, snorting forth fire and smoke, on its
+devastating way; and Clochette stood by, panting, trembling, and covered
+with foam. Beatrice, safely on the ground, was examining ruefully the
+amount of damage done to the dog-cart, and Mr. Esterworth was shaking
+hands with his deliverer.
+
+It was Herbert Pryme.
+
+"That's the last time I ever take a lady out, driving without a
+man-servant behind me," quoth the M.F.H. "What we should have done
+without your timely assistance, sir, I really cannot say; in another
+minute she would have kicked the trap into a thousand bits. You have
+saved my niece's life, Mr. Pryme."
+
+"Indeed, I did very little," said Herbert, modestly, glancing at Beatrice
+who was trembling and rather pale; but, perhaps, that was only from her
+recent fright. She had not spoken to him, only she had given him one
+bewildered glance, and then had looked hastily away.
+
+"You have saved her life," repeated Mr. Esterworth, with decision. "I
+hope you do not mean to contradict my words, sir? You have saved
+Beatrice's life, sir, and it's the most providential thing in this world
+for you, as Clochette very nearly kicked her to pieces under your nose.
+I shall tell Mr. and Mrs. Miller that they are indebted to you for their
+daughter's life. Young people, I am going to lead this brute of a mare
+home, and, if you like to walk on together to Lutterton in front of me,
+why you may."
+
+That was how Herbert Pryme came to be once more re-instated in the good
+graces of his lady love's father and mother.
+
+Mr. Esterworth contrived to give them so terrifying an account of
+the danger in which Beatrice had been placed, and so graphic and
+highly-coloured a description of Herbert Pryme's pluck and sagacity in
+rushing to her rescue, that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had no other course left
+than to shake hands gratefully with the man to whom, as uncle Tom said,
+they literally owed her life.
+
+"I could not have saved her without him," said uncle Tom, drawing
+slightly upon his imagination; "in another minute she must have been
+kicked to pieces, or dashed violently to the earth among the broken
+fragments of the cart, and"--with a happy after-thought--"the steam
+plough would have crushed its way over her mangled body."
+
+Mrs. Miller shuddered.
+
+"Oh, Tom, I never can trust her to you again!"
+
+"No, my dear; but I think you must trust her to Mr. Pryme; that young man
+deserves to be rewarded."
+
+"But, my dear Tom, there are things against his character. I assure you,
+Andrew himself saw----"
+
+"Pooh! pooh!" interrupted Mr. Esterworth. "Young men who sow their wild
+oats early are all the better husbands for it afterwards. I will give him
+a talking to if you like, but you and your husband must let Pussy have
+her own way; it is the least you can do after his conduct; and don't
+worry about his being poor, Caroline; I have nothing better to do with my
+money, and I shall take care that Pussy is none the worse off for my
+death. She is worth all the rest of your children put together--an
+Esterworth, every inch of her!"
+
+That, it is to be imagined, was the clenching argument in Mrs. Miller's
+mind. Uncle Tom's money was not to be despised, and, by reason of his
+money, uncle Tom's wishes were bound to carry some weight with them.
+
+Mr. Pryme, who had been staying for a few days at Kynaston, where,
+however, the cordial welcome given to him by its master was, in a great
+measure, neutralised by the coldness and incivility of its mistress,
+removed himself and his portmanteau, by uncle Tom's invitation, to
+Lutterton, and his engagement to Miss Miller became a recognised fact.
+
+"All the same, it is a very bad match for her," said Mrs. Miller, in
+confidence, to her husband.
+
+"And I should very much like to know who that sunshade belonged to,"
+added the M.P. for Meadowshire, severely.
+
+"I think, my dear, we shall have to overlook that part of the business,
+for, as Tom will leave them his money, why----"
+
+"Yes, yes, I quite understand; we must hope the young man has had a good
+lesson. Let bygones be bygones, certainly," and Mr. Miller took a pinch
+of snuff reflectively, and wondered what Tom Esterworth would "cut up
+for."
+
+"But I am _determined_," said Mrs. Miller, ere she closed the discussion,
+"I am determined that I will do better for Geraldine."
+
+After all, the mother had a second string to her bow, so the edict went
+forth that Beatrice was to be allowed to be happy in her own way, and the
+shadow of that fatal sunshade was no longer to be suffered to blacken the
+moral horizon of her father's soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+BY THE VICARAGE GATE.
+
+ Before our lives divide for ever,
+ While time is with us and hands are free,
+ (Time swift to fasten, and swift to sever
+ Hand from hand....)
+ I will say no word that a man might say
+ Whose whole life's love goes down in a day;
+ For this could never have been. And never
+ (Though the gods and the years relent) shall be.
+
+ Swinburne.
+
+
+The peacocks had it all to themselves on the terrace walk at Kynaston.
+They strutted up and down, craning and bridling their bright-hued necks
+with a proud consciousness of absolute proprietorship in the place, and
+their long tails trailed across the gravel behind them with the soft
+rustle of a woman's garments. Now and then their sad, shrill cries echoed
+weirdly through the deserted gardens.
+
+There was no one to see them--the gardeners had all gone home--and no one
+was moving from the house. Only one small boy, with a rough head and a
+red face, stood below the stone balustrade, half-hidden among the
+hollyhocks and the roses, looking wistfully up at the windows of the
+house.
+
+"What am I to do with it?" said Tommy Daintree, half-aloud to himself,
+and looked sorely perplexed and bewildered.
+
+Tommy had a commission to fulfil, a commission from Vera. He carried a
+little note in his hands, and he had promised Vera faithfully that he
+would wait near the house till he saw Captain Kynaston come in from his
+day's shooting, and give him the note into his own hands.
+
+"You quite understand, Tommy; no one else."
+
+"Yes, auntie, I quite understand."
+
+And Tommy had been waiting there an hour, but still there was no sign of
+Captain Kynaston's return; he was getting very tired and very hungry by
+this time, for he had had no tea. He had heard the dressing-bell ring
+long ago in the house--it must be close upon their dinner hour. Tommy
+could not guess that, by an unaccustomed chance, the master of the house
+had gone in by the back-door to-day, and that he had been in some time.
+
+Presently some one pushed aside the long muslin curtains, and came
+stepping out of the long French window on to the terrace. It was Helen.
+
+She was dressed for dinner; she wore a pale blue dress, cut open at the
+neck, a string of pearls and a jewelled locket hung at her throat; she
+turned round, half laughing, to some one who was following her.
+
+"You will see all the county magnates at Shadonake to-morrow. You will
+have quite enough of them, I promise you; they are neither lively nor
+entertaining."
+
+A young man, also in evening dress, had followed her out on to the
+terrace; it was Denis Wilde; he had arrived from town by the afternoon
+train. Why he should have thrown over several very good invitations to
+country houses in Norfolk and Suffolk, where there were large and
+cheerful parties gathered together, and partridge shooting to make a man
+dream of, in order to come down to the poor sport of Kynaston and the
+insipid society of a newly married couple, with whom he was not on very
+intimate terms, is a problem which Mr. Wilde alone could have
+satisfactorily solved. Being here, he was naturally disposed to make
+himself extremely agreeable to his hostess.
+
+"You can't think how anxious I am to inspect the _elite_ of Meadowshire!"
+he said, laughing. "My life is an incomplete thing without a sight of
+it."
+
+"You will witness the last token of mental aberration in a
+decently-brought up young woman in the person of Beatrice Miller. You
+know her. Well, she has actually engaged herself to a barrister whom
+nobody knows anything about, and who--_bien entendu_--has no briefs--they
+never have any. He was staying here for a couple of days; a slow, heavy
+young man, who quoted Blackstone. Maurice took a fancy to him abroad;
+however, he was clever enough to save Beatrice's life by stopping a
+run-away horse. Some people say the accident was the invention of the
+lovers' own imaginations; however, the parents believed in it, and it
+turned the scales in his favour; but he has taken himself off, I am
+thankful to say, and is staying at Lutterton with her uncle. Beatrice
+might have married well, but girls are such fools. Hallo, Topsy, what are
+you barking at?"
+
+Mrs. Kynaston's pug had come tearing out of the house with a whole chorus
+of noisy yappings. The peacocks, deeply wounded in their tenderest
+feelings, instantly took wing, and went sailing away majestically over
+the crimson and gold parterre of flowers below.
+
+"What can possess her to bark at the peacocks?" said Helen. "Be quiet,
+Topsy."
+
+But Topsy refused to be tranquillized.
+
+"She is barking at something below the terrace; perhaps there is a cat
+there," said Denis.
+
+"If so, it would be Dutch courage, indeed," answered Helen, laughing.
+They went to the edge of the stone parapet and looked over; there stood
+Tommy Daintree below them, among the hollyhocks.
+
+"Why, little boy, who are you, and what do you want? Why, are you not Mr.
+Daintree's little boy?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then what are you waiting for?"
+
+"I want to give a note to Captain Kynaston," said Tommy, crimson with
+confusion. "Is he ever coming in?"
+
+"He is in now; give me the note."
+
+"I was to give it to himself, to nobody else."
+
+"Who told you?"
+
+"Aunt Vera."
+
+"Oh!" There was a whole volume of meaning in the simple exclamation.
+Mrs. Kynaston held out her hand. "You can give it to me, I am Captain
+Kynaston's wife, you know. Give it to me, Tommy. Your name is Tommy,
+isn't it? Yes, I thought so. Mr. Wilde, will you be so kind as to fetch
+Tommy a peach off the dinner-table? Give the note to me, my dear, and you
+can tell your aunt that it shall be given to Captain Kynaston directly."
+
+When Denis returned from his mission to the dining-room he only found
+Tommy waiting for his peach upon the terrace steps. Mrs. Kynaston had
+gone back into the house.
+
+Tommy went off devouring his prey with, it must be confessed, rather a
+guilty conscience over it. Somehow or other, he felt that he had failed
+in the trust his aunt had placed in him; but then, Mrs. Kynaston had been
+very kind and very peremptory; she had almost taken the letter out of his
+hand, and she had smiled and looked quite like a fairy princess out of
+one of Minnie's story-books in her pretty blue silk dress and shining
+locket--and then, peaches were so very nice!
+
+What happened to Denis Wilde after the small boy's departure was this. He
+sauntered back to the drawing-room windows and looked in; no one was
+there. He then wandered further down the terrace till he came opposite
+the window of the boudoir--Mrs. Kynaston's own boudoir--which Sir John's
+loving hands had once lined with blue and silver for his Vera. Here he
+caught sight of Mrs. Kynaston's fair head and slender figure. Her back
+was turned to him; he was on the point of calling out to her, when
+suddenly the words upon his lips were arrested by something which he saw
+her doing. Instead of speaking, he simply stood still and stared at her.
+
+Mrs. Kynaston, unconscious of observation, held the note which Tommy had
+just given her over the steam of a small jug of hot water, which she had
+hastily ordered her maid to bring to her. In less than a minute the
+envelope unfastened of itself. Helen then deliberately took out the note
+and read it.
+
+What she read was this:--
+
+ "Dear Captain Kynaston,--I have something that I have promised to give
+ to you when you are alone. Would you mind coming round to the vicarage
+ after dinner to-night, at nine o'clock? You will find me at the
+ gate.--Sincerely yours,
+
+ "Vera Nevill."
+
+Then Helen lit a candle, and fastened the letter up again with
+sealing-wax.
+
+And Denis Wilde crept away from the window on tip-toe with a sense of
+shocked horror upon him such as he never remembered having experienced in
+his life before.
+
+All at once his pretty, pleasant hostess, with whom he had been glad
+enough to banter, and with whom even he had been ready to enter upon a
+mild and innocent flirtation, became horrible and hateful to him; and
+there came into his mind, like an inspiration, the knowledge of her
+enmity to Vera; for it was Vera's note that she had opened and read. Then
+his instincts were straightway all awake with the acuteness of a danger,
+to something--he knew not what--that threatened the woman he loved.
+
+"Thank God, I am here," he said to himself. "That woman is her foe, and
+she will be dangerous to her. I would not have come to her house had I
+known it; but now I am here, I will stay, for it is certain that she will
+need a friend."
+
+At dinner-time the note lay by Maurice's side on the table. Whilst the
+soup was being helped he took it up and opened it. He little knew how
+narrowly both his wife and his guest watched him as he read it.
+
+But his face was inscrutable. Only he talked a little more, and seemed,
+perhaps, in better spirits than usual; but that is what a stranger could
+not have noticed, although it is possible that Helen may have done so.
+
+"By the vicarage gate," she had said, and it was there that he found her.
+Behind her lay the dark and silent garden, beyond it the house, with its
+wide-open drawing-room windows, and the stream of yellow light from the
+lamp within, lying in a golden streak across the lawn. She leant over the
+gate; an archway of greenery, dark in the night's dim light, was above
+her head, and clusters of pale, creamy roses hung down about her on every
+side.
+
+It was that sort of owl's light that has no distinctness in it, and yet
+is far removed from darkness. Vera's perfect figure, clad in some white,
+clinging garment that fell about her in thick, heavy folds, stood out
+with a statue-like clearness against the dark shrubs behind her. She
+seemed like some shadowy queen of the night. Out of the dimness, the
+clear oval of her perfect face shone pale as the waning moon far away
+behind the church tower, whilst the dusky veil of her dark hair lost
+itself vaguely in the shadows, and melted away into the background.
+A poet might have hymned her thus, but no painter could have painted her.
+
+And it was thus that he found her. For the first time for many weary
+weeks and months he was alone with her; for the first time he could speak
+to her freely and from his heart. He knew not what it was that had made
+her send for him, or why it was that he had come. He did not remember her
+note, or that she had said that she had something for him. All he knew
+was, that she had sent for him, and that he was with her.
+
+There was the gate between them, but her white soft hands were clasped
+loosely together over the top of it. He took them feverishly between his
+own.
+
+"I am late--you have waited for me, dear? Oh, Vera, how glad I am to be
+with you!"
+
+There was a dangerous tenderness in his voice that frightened her. She
+tried to draw away her hands.
+
+"I had something for you, or I should not have sent--please, Captain
+Kynaston--Maurice--please let my hands go."
+
+He was alone under the star-flecked heavens with the woman he loved,
+there was all the witchery of the pale moonlight about her, all the
+sweet perfumes of the summer night to intensify the fascination of her
+presence. There was a nameless glamour in the luminous dimness--a subtle
+seduction to the senses in the silence and the solitude; a bird chirruped
+once among the tangled roses overhead, and a soft, sighing breeze
+fluttered for one instant amid its long, trailing branches. And then,
+God knows how it came to pass, or what madness possessed the man;
+but suddenly there was no longer any faith, or honour, or truth for
+him--nothing on the face of the whole earth but Vera.
+
+He caught her passionately in his arms, and showered upon her lips the
+maddest, wildest kisses that man ever gave to woman.
+
+For one instant she lay still upon his heart; all the fury of her misery
+was at rest--all the storm of her sorrow was at peace--for one instant of
+time she tasted of life's sublimest joy ere the waters of blackness and
+despair closed in once more over her soul. For one instant only--then she
+remembered, and withdrew herself shudderingly from his grasp.
+
+"For God's sake, have pity upon me, Maurice!" she wailed. It was the cry
+of a broken heart that appealed to his manhood and his honour more surely
+and more directly than a torrent of reproach or a storm of indignation.
+
+"Forgive me," he murmured, humbly; "I am a brute to you. I had forgotten
+myself. I ought to have spared you, sweet. See, I have let you go; I will
+not touch you again; but it was hard to see you alone, to be near you,
+and yet to remember how we are parted. Vera, I have ruined your life; it
+is wonderful that you do not hate me."
+
+"A true woman never hates the man who has been hard on her," she
+answered, smiling sadly.
+
+"If it is any comfort to you to know it, I too am wretched; now it is too
+late: I know that my life is spoilt also."
+
+"No; why should that comfort me?" she said, wearily. She leant half back
+against the gate--if he could have seen her well in the uncertain light,
+he would have been shocked at the worn and haggard face of his beautiful
+Vera.
+
+Presently she spoke again.
+
+"I am sorry that I asked you to come--it was not wise, was it, Maurice?
+How long must you stop at Kynaston? Can you not go away? We are neither
+of us strong enough to bear this--I, I cannot go--but you, _must_ you be
+always here?"
+
+"Before God," he answered, earnestly, "I swear to you that I will go away
+if it is in my power to go."
+
+"Thank you." Then, with an effort, she roused herself to speak to him:
+"But that is not what I wanted to say; let me tell you why I sent for
+you. I made a promise, a wretched, stupid thing, to a tiresome little man
+I met in London--a Monsieur D'Arblet, a Frenchman; do you know him?"
+
+"D'Arblet! I never heard the name in my life that I know of."
+
+"Really, that seems odd, for I have a little parcel from him to you, and,
+strangely enough, he made me promise on my word of honour to give it to
+you when no one was near. I did not know how to keep my promise, for,
+though we may sometimes meet in public, we are not often likely to meet
+alone. I have it here; let me give it to you and have done with the
+thing; it has been on my mind."
+
+She drew a small packet from her pocket, and was about to give it to him,
+when suddenly his ear caught the sound of an approaching footstep; he
+looked nervously round, then he put forth his hand quickly and stopped
+her.
+
+"Hush, give me nothing now!" he said, in a low, hurried voice. "To-morrow
+we shall meet at Shadonake; if you will go near the Bath some time
+during the day after lunch is over, I will join you there, and you can
+give it to me; it can be of no possible importance; go in now quickly;
+good-night. It is my wife."
+
+She turned and fled swiftly back to the house through the darkness, and
+Maurice was left face to face with Helen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+DENIS WILDE'S LOVE.
+
+ A mighty pain to love it is,
+ And 'tis a pain that love to miss;
+ But, of all pains, the greatest pain
+ Is to love, but love in vain.
+
+ Cowley.
+
+
+He had not been mistaken. It was Helen who had crept out after him in the
+darkness, and whose slight figure, in her pale blue dress, stood close by
+him in an angle of the road.
+
+How long she had stood there and what she had heard he did not know. He
+expected a torrent of abuse and a storm of reproaches from her, but she
+refrained from either. She passed her arm within his, and walked beside
+him for several minutes in silence. Maurice, who felt rather guilty, was
+weak enough to say, hesitatingly,
+
+"The night was so fine, I strolled out to smoke----"
+
+"_Qui s'excuse s'accuse_," quoted Helen; "only you are not smoking,
+Maurice!"
+
+"My cigar has gone out; I--I met Miss Nevill at the gate of the
+vicarage."
+
+"So I saw," rather significantly.
+
+"I stopped to have a little talk to her. There is no harm, I suppose, in
+that!" he added, irritably.
+
+Helen laughed shortly and harshly.
+
+"Harm! oh dear, no; whoever said there was? By the way, is not this freak
+of yours of going out into the roads to smoke, as you say, alone, rather
+a slight on your guest? Here is Mr. Wilde; how very amusing! we all seem
+to be drawn out towards the vicarage to-night."
+
+Denis Wilde, in fact, had followed in the wake of his hostess, and they
+met him now by the lodge gates.
+
+"How very strange!" called out Helen to him, in her scornful, bantering
+voice; "how strange that we should all have gone out for solitary
+rambles, and all meet in the same place; and there was Miss Nevill out
+in the vicarage garden, also on a solitary ramble."
+
+"Is Miss Nevill there? I think I will go on and call upon her," said
+Denis.
+
+"You too, Mr. Wilde!" cried Helen. "Have you fallen a victim to the
+beauty? We heard enough of her in town; she turned all the men's heads;
+even married men are not safe from her snares, and yet it is singular
+that none of her admirers care to marry her; there are some women whom
+all men make love to, but whom none care to make wives of!"
+
+And Maurice was a coward, and spoke no word in her defence; he did not
+dare; but young Denis Wilde drew himself up proudly.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston," he said, sternly, "I must ask you not to speak
+slightingly of Miss Nevill."
+
+"Good gracious, why not? I suppose we are all free to use our tongues and
+our eyes in this world! Why should you become the woman's champion?"
+
+"Because," answered Denis, gravely, "I hope to make her my wife."
+
+Maurice was man enough to hold out his hand to him in the darkness.
+
+"I am glad of it," he said, rather hoarsely; "make her happy, Denis, if
+you can."
+
+"Thanks. I shall go on to see her now."
+
+Helen murmured an unintelligible apology, and Denis Wilde passed onwards
+towards the vicarage.
+
+He had taken her good name into his keeping, he had shielded her from
+that other woman's slandering tongue; but he had done so in his despair.
+He had spoken no lie in saying that he hoped to make her his wife; but it
+was no doubt a fact that Helen and her husband would now believe him to
+be engaged to her. Would Vera be induced to verify his words, and to
+place herself and her life beneath the shelter of his love, or would she
+only be angry with him for venturing to presume upon his hopes? Denis
+could not tell.
+
+Ten minutes later he stood alone with her in the vicarage dining-room;
+he had sent in his card with a pencilled line upon it to ask for a few
+minutes' conversation with her.
+
+Vera had desired that her visitor might be shown into the dining-room.
+Old Mrs. Daintree had been amazed and scandalized, and even Marion had
+opened her eyes at so unusual a proceeding; but the vicar was out by a
+sick bedside in the village, and no one else ever controlled Vera's
+actions.
+
+Nevertheless, she herself looked somewhat surprised at so late a visit
+from him. And then, somehow or other, Denis made it plain to her how it
+was he had come, and what he had said of her. Her name, he told her, had
+been lightly spoken of; to have defended it without authority would have
+been to do her more harm than good; to take it under his lawful
+protection had been instinctively suggested to him by his longing to
+shield her. Would she forgive him?
+
+"It was Mrs. Kynaston who spoke evil things of me," said Vera, wearily.
+She was very tired, she hardly understood, she scarcely cared about what
+he was saying to her; it mattered very little what was said to her. There
+was that other scene under the shadow of the roses of the gateway so
+vividly before her; the memory of Maurice's passionate kisses upon her
+lips, the sound of his beloved voice in her ears. What did anything else
+signify?
+
+And meanwhile Denis Wilde was pouring out his whole soul to her.
+
+"My darling, give me the right to defend you now and always," he pleaded;
+"do not refuse me the happiness of protecting your dear name from such
+women. I know you don't love me, dear, not as I love you, but I will not
+mind that; I will ask you for nothing that you will not give me freely;
+only try me--I think I could make you happy, love. At any rate, you shall
+have anything that tenderness and devotion can give you to bring peace
+into your life. Vera, darling, answer me."
+
+"Oh, I am very tired," was all she said, moaningly and wearily, passing
+her hand across her aching brow like a worn-out child.
+
+It was life or death to him. To her it was such a little matter! What
+were all his words and his prayers beside that heartache that was driving
+her into her grave! He could do her no good. Why could he not leave her
+in peace?
+
+And yet, at length, something of the fervour and the passion of his love
+struck upon her soul and arrested her attention. There is something so
+touching and so pitiful in that first boy-love that asks for nothing in
+return, craves for no other reward than to be suffered to exist; that
+amongst all the selfish and half-hearted passions of older and wiser men,
+it must needs elicit some response of gratitude at least, if not of
+answering love, in the heart of the woman who is the object of such rare
+devotion.
+
+It dawned at length upon Vera, as she listened to his fervent pleading,
+and as she saw the tears that rose in poor Denis's earnest eyes, and
+the traces of deep emotion on his smooth, boyish face, that here was,
+perchance, the one utterly pure and noble love that had ever been laid
+at her feet.
+
+There arose a sentiment of pity in her heart, and a vague wonder as to
+his grief. Did he suffer, she asked herself, as she herself suffered?
+
+"Vera, Vera, I only ask you to be my wife. I do not ask you for your
+heart; only give me your dear self. Only let me be always with you to
+brighten your life and to take care of you."
+
+How was she to resist such absolute unselfishness?
+
+"Oh, Denis, how good you are to me!" burst from her lips. "How can I take
+you at your word? Do you not know that my heart is gone from me? I have
+no love to give you."
+
+"Yes, yes, darling," he said, quickly, pressing her hand to his lips. "Do
+not pain yourself by speaking of it. I have guessed it. I have always
+seemed to know it. But it is hopeless, is it not? And I--I would so
+gladly take you away and comfort you if I could."
+
+And so, in the end, she half yielded to him. What else was she to do? She
+gave him a sort of promise.
+
+"If I can, it shall be as you wish," she said; "but give me till
+to-morrow night. I will think of it all day, and if you will come here
+again to-morrow evening, I will answer you. Give me one more day--only
+one," she repeated, with a dull reiteration, out of her utter weariness.
+
+"One day will soon be gone," he said, joyfully, as he bade her good
+night.
+
+Alas, how little he knew what that day was to bring forth!
+
+That night the heavens were overcast with heavy clouds, and torrents of
+rain poured down upon the face of the earth, and peal after peal of
+thunder boomed through the heavy heated air. Helen could not sleep; she
+rose, feverish and unrested from her husband's side, and paced wildly and
+miserably about the room. Then she went to the window and drew back the
+curtain, and looked out upon the storm-driven world. The clouds racked
+wildly across the sky; the trees bent and swayed before the howling wind;
+the rain beat in floods upon the ground; yet greater and fiercer still
+was the tempest that raged in Helen Kynaston's heart. Hatred, jealousy,
+and malice strove and struggled within her, and something direr still--a
+terror that she could not quench nor stifle; for late that night her
+husband had said to her suddenly, without a word of warning or
+preparation--
+
+"Helen, do you know a Frenchman called D'Arblet?"
+
+Helen had been at her dressing-table--her back was turned to him--he did
+not see the livid pallor which blanched her cheeks at his question.
+
+A little pause, during which she busied herself among the trifles upon
+the table.
+
+"No, I never heard the name in my life," she said, at length.
+
+"That is odd--because neither have I--and yet the man has sent me a
+parcel." It was of so little importance to him, that it did not occur
+to him that there could possibly be any occasion for secresy concerning
+Vera's commission. What could an utter stranger have to send to him that
+could possibly concern him in any way?
+
+It did not strike him how strained and forced was the voice in which his
+wife presently asked him a question.
+
+"And the parcel! You have opened it?"
+
+"No, not yet," began Maurice, stifling a yawn; and he would have gone
+on to explain to her that it was not yet actually in his possession,
+although, probably, he would not have told her that it was Vera who was
+to give it to him; only at that minute the maid came into the room, and
+he changed the subject.
+
+But Helen had guessed that it was Vera who was the bearer of that parcel.
+How it had come to pass she could not tell, but too surely she divined
+that Vera had in her possession those fatal letters that she had once
+written to the French vicomte; the letters that would blast her for ever
+in her husband's estimation, and turn his luke-warmness and his coldness
+into actual hatred and repulsion.
+
+And was it likely that Vera, with such a weapon in her hands, would spare
+her? What woman, with so signal a revenge in her power, would forego the
+delight of wreaking it upon the woman who had taken from her the man she
+loved? Helen knew that in Vera's place she would show no mercy to her
+rival.
+
+It was all clear as daylight to her now; the appointment at the vicarage
+gate, the something which she had said in her note she had for him; the
+whole mystery of the secret meeting between them--it was Vera's revenge.
+Vera, whom Maurice loved, and whom she, Helen, hated with such a deadly
+hatred!
+
+And then, in the silence of the night, whilst her husband slept, and
+whilst the thunder and the wind howled about her home, Helen crept forth
+from her room, and sought for that fatal packet of letters which her
+husband had told her he had "not yet" opened.
+
+Oh, if she could only find them and destroy them before he ever saw them
+again! Long and patiently she looked for them, but her search was in
+vain. She ransacked his study and his dressing-room; she opened every
+drawer, and fumbled in every pocket, but she found nothing.
+
+She was frightened, too, to be about the house like a thief in the night.
+Every gust of wind that creaked among the open doors made her start,
+every flash of lightning that lighted up the faces of the old family
+portraits, looking down upon her with their fixed eyes, made her turn
+pale and shiver, lest she should see them move, or hear them speak.
+
+Only her jealousy and her hatred burnt fiercely above her terror; she
+would not give in, she told herself, until she found it.
+
+Denis Wilde, who was restless too, had heard her soft footsteps along the
+passage outside his door; and, with a vague uneasiness as to who could be
+about at such an hour, he came creeping out of his room, and peeped in at
+the library door.
+
+He saw her sitting upon the floor, a lighted candle by her side, an open
+drawer, out of her husband's writing-table, upon her lap, turning over
+papers, and bills, and note-books with eager, trembling hands. And he saw
+in her white, set face, and wild, scared eyes, that which made him draw
+back swiftly and shudderingly from the sight of her.
+
+"Good God!" he murmured to himself, as he sought his room again, "the
+woman has murder in her face!"
+
+And at last she had to give it up; the letters were not to be found. The
+storm without settled itself to rest, the thunder died away in the far
+distance over the hills, and Helen, worn out with fatigue and emotion,
+sought a troubled slumber upon the sofa in her dressing-room.
+
+"She cannot have given it to him," was the conclusion she came to at
+last. "Well, she will do so to-morrow, and I--I will not let her out of
+my sight, not for one instant, all the day!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+A GARDEN PARTY.
+
+ I have done for ever with all these things:
+ The songs are ended, the deeds are done;
+ There shall none of them gladden me now, not one.
+ There is nothing good for me under the sun
+ But to perish--as these things perished.
+
+ A. L. Gordon.
+
+
+Mr. Guy Miller is a young gentleman who has not played an important part
+in these pages; nevertheless, but for him, sundry events which took place
+at Shadonake at this time would not have had to be recorded.
+
+It so happened that Guy Miller's twenty-first birthday was in the third
+week of September, and that it was determined by his parents to celebrate
+the day in an appropriate and fitting manner. Guy was a youth of no
+particular looks, and no particular manners; he had been at Oxford,
+but his father had lately taken him away from it, with a view to his
+travelling, and seeing something of the world before he settled down
+as a country gentleman. He had had no opportunity, therefore, of
+distinguishing himself at college; but as he was not overburdened with
+brains, and had, moreover, never been known to study with interest any
+profounder literature than "Handley Cross" and "Mr. Sponge's Sporting
+Tour," it is possible that, even had he been left undisturbed to pursue
+his studies at the university, he would never have developed into a
+bright or shining ornament at that seat of learning.
+
+As it was, Guy came home to the paternal mansion an ignorant but amiable
+and inoffensive young man, with a small, fluffy moustache, and no
+particular bent in life beyond smoking short pipes, and loafing about the
+premises with his hands in his trousers pockets.
+
+He was a tolerable shot, and a plucky, though not a graceful horseman. He
+hated dancing because he trod on his partner's toes, and shunned ladies'
+society because he had to make himself agreeable to them. Nevertheless,
+having been fairly "licked into shape" by a course successively of Eton
+and of Oxford, he was able to behave like a gentleman in his mother's
+house when it was necessary for him to do so, and he quite appreciated
+the fact of his being an important personage in the Miller family.
+
+It was to celebrate the coming of age of this interesting young gentleman
+that Mr. and Mrs. Miller had settled to give a monster entertainment to
+several hundreds of their fellow-creatures.
+
+The proceedings were to include a variety of instructive and amusing
+pastimes, and were to last pretty nearly all day. There was to be a
+country flower-show in a big tent on the lawn; that was pure business,
+and concerned the farmers as much as the gentry. There were also to be
+athletic sports in a field for the active young men, lawn-tennis for the
+active young women, an amateur polo match got up by the energy and pluck
+of Miss Beatrice and her uncle Tom; a "cold collation" in a second tent
+to be going on all the afternoon; the whole to be finished up with a
+dance in the large drawing room, for a select few, after sunset.
+
+The programme, in all conscience, was varied enough; and the day broke
+hopefully, after the wild storm of the previous night, bright and cool
+and sunny, with every prospect of being perfectly fine.
+
+Beatrice, happy in the possession of her lover, was full of life and
+energy; she threw herself into all the preparations of the _fete_ with
+her whole heart. Herbert, who came over from Lutterton at an early hour,
+followed her about like a dog, obeying her orders implicitly, but
+impeding her proceedings considerably by a constant under-current of
+love-making, by which he strove to vary and enliven the operation of
+sticking standard flags into the garden borders, and nailing up wreaths
+of paper roses inside the tent.
+
+Mrs. Miller, having consented to the engagement, like a sensible woman,
+was resolved to make the best of it, and was, if not cordial, at least
+pleasantly civil to her future son-in-law. She had given over Beatrice
+as a bad job; she had resolved to find suitable matches for Guy and for
+Geraldine.
+
+By one o'clock the company was actually beginning to arrive, the small
+fry of the neighbourhood being, of course, the first to appear. By-and-by
+came the rank and fashion of Meadowshire, and by three o'clock the
+gardens were crowded.
+
+It was a brilliant scene; there was the gaily-dressed crowd going in and
+out of the tents, groups of elderly people sitting talking under the
+trees, lawn-tennis players at one end of the garden, the militia band
+playing Strauss's waltzes at the other, the scarlet and white flags
+floating bravely over everybody in the breeze, and a hum of many voices
+and a sound of merry laughter in every direction.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Miller, and Guy, the hero of the day, moved about amongst
+the guests from group to group. Guy, it must be owned, looking
+considerably bored. Beatrice, with her lover in attendance, looking
+flushed and rosy with the many congratulations which the news of her
+engagement called forth on every side; and the younger boys, home from
+school for the occasion, getting in everybody's way, and directing their
+main attention to the ices in the refreshment-tent. Such an afternoon
+party, it was agreed, had not been held in Meadowshire within the memory
+of man; but then, dear Mrs. Miller had such energy and such a real talent
+for organization; and if the company _was_ a little mixed, why, of
+course, she must recollect Mr. Miller's position, and how important it
+was for him, with the prospect of a general election coming on, to make
+himself thoroughly popular with all classes.
+
+No one in all the gay crowd was more admired or more noticed than "the
+bride," as she was still called, young Mrs. Kynaston. Helen had surpassed
+herself in the elaboration of her toilette. The country dames and
+damsels, in their somewhat dowdy home-made gowns, could scarcely remember
+their manners, so eager were they to stare at the marvels of that
+wondrous garment of sheeny satin, and soft, creamy gauze, sprinkled over
+with absolute works of art in the shape of wreaths of many-hued
+embroidered birds and flowers, with which the whole dress was cunningly
+and dexterously adorned. It was a masterpiece of the great Worth; rich
+without being gaudy, intricate without losing its general effect of
+colour, and, above all, utterly and absolutely inimitable by the hands
+of any meaner artist.
+
+Mrs. Kynaston looked well; no one had ever seen her look better; there
+was an unusual colour in her cheeks, an unusual glitter in her blue eyes,
+that always seemed to be roving restlessly about her as though in search
+of something even all the time she was saying her polite commonplaces in
+answer to the pleasant and pretty speeches that she received on all sides
+from men and women alike.
+
+But through it all she never let Vera Nevill out of her sight; where Vera
+moved, she moved also. When she walked across the lawn, Mrs. Kynaston
+made some excuse to go in the same direction; when she entered either of
+the tents, Helen also found it necessary to go into them. But the crowd
+was too great for any one to remark this; no one saw it save Denis Wilde,
+whose eyes were sharpened by his love.
+
+Once Helen saw that Maurice and Vera were speaking to each other. She
+could not get near enough to hear what they said, but she saw him bend
+down and speak to her earnestly, and there was a sad, wistful look in
+Vera's upturned eyes as she answered him. Helen's heart beat with a wild,
+mad jealousy as she watched them; and yet it was but a few words that had
+passed between them.
+
+"Vera, young Wilde says you are going to marry him; is it true?"
+
+"He wants me to do so, but I don't think I can."
+
+"Why not? It would be happier for you, child; forget the past and begin
+afresh. He is a good boy, and by-and-by he will be well off."
+
+"You, too--you advise me to do this?" she answered with unwonted
+bitterness. "Oh, how wise and calculating one ought to be to live happily
+in this miserable world!"
+
+He looked pained.
+
+"I cannot do you any good," he said, rather brokenly. "God knows I would
+if I could. I can only be a curse to you. Give me at least the credit of
+unselfishly wishing you to be less unhappy than you are."
+
+And then the crowd, moving onwards, parted them from each other.
+
+"Do not forget to meet me at the Bath," she called out to him as he went.
+
+"Oh, to be sure! I had forgotten. I will be there just before the dancing
+begins."
+
+And then Denis Wilde took his place by her side.
+
+If Mrs. Kynaston surpassed herself in looks and animation that day, Vera,
+on the contrary, had never looked less well.
+
+Her eyes were heavy with sleepless nights and many tears; her movements
+were slower and more languid than of wont, and her face was pale and
+thin.
+
+Meadowshire generally, that had ceased to trouble itself much about her
+when she had thrown over the richest baronet in the county, considered
+itself, nevertheless, to be somewhat aggrieved by the falling off in her
+appearance, and passed its appropriate and ill-natured comments upon the
+fact.
+
+"How ill she looks," said one woman to another.
+
+"Positively old. I suppose she thought she could whistle poor Sir John
+back again whenever she chose; now he is out of the country she would
+give her eyes for him!"
+
+"I daresay; and looks as if she had cried them out; but he must be glad
+to have escaped her! Well, it serves her right for behaving so badly. I'm
+sure I don't pity her."
+
+"Nor I, indeed."
+
+And the two amiable women passed onwards to discuss some other ill-fated
+victim.
+
+But to the two men who loved her Vera that day was as beautiful as ever;
+for love sees no flaw in the face that reigns supreme in the soul. And
+Vera sat still in her corner of the tent where she had taken refuge, and
+leant her tired, aching head against a gaudy pink-and-white striped
+pillar. It was the tent where the flower-show was going on. From her
+sheltered nook there was not much that was lovely to be seen, not a
+vestige of a rose or a carnation to refresh her tired eyes, only a
+counter covered with samples of potatoes and monster cauliflowers;
+and there was a slab of white wood with pats of yellow butter, done up in
+moss and ferns, which had been sent from the principal dairy-farms of the
+county, and before which there was a constant succession of elderly and
+interested housewives tasting and comparing notes. There seemed some
+difficulty in deciding to whom the butter prize was to be awarded, and at
+last a committee of ladies was formed; they all tasted, solemnly, of each
+sample all round, and then they each gave their verdict differently, so
+that it had all to be done over again amidst a good deal of laughter and
+merriment.
+
+Vera was vaguely amused by this scene that went on just in front of her.
+When the knotty point was settled, the committee moved on to decide upon
+something else, and she was left again to the uninterrupted contemplation
+of the Flukes and the York Regents.
+
+Denis Wilde had sat by her for some time, but at last she had begged him
+to leave her. Her head ached, she said; if he would not mind going, and
+he went.
+
+Presently, Beatrice, beaming with happiness, found her out in her corner.
+
+"Oh, Vera!" she said, coming up to her, all radiant with smiles, "you are
+the only one of my friends who has not yet wished me joy."
+
+"That is not because I have not thought of you, Beatrice, dear," she
+answered, heartily grasping her friend's outstretched hands. "I was so
+very glad to hear that everything has come right for you at last. How did
+it all happen?"
+
+"I will come over to the vicarage to-morrow, and tell you the whole
+story. Oh! do you remember meeting Herbert and me, that foggy morning,
+outside Tripton station?"
+
+Would Vera ever forget it?
+
+"I little thought then how happily everything was to end for us. I used
+to think we should have to elope! Poor Herbert, he was always frightened
+out of his life when I said that. But we have had a very narrow escape
+of being blighted beings to the end of our lives. If it hadn't been for
+uncle Tom and that dear darling mare, Clochette, whom I should like
+to keep in a gold and jewelled stall to the end of her ever-blessed
+days!----Ah, well! I've no time to tell you now--I will come over to
+Sutton to-morrow, and I may bring him, may I not?"
+
+"Him," of course, meaning Mr. Herbert Pryme. Vera requested that he might
+be brought by all means.
+
+"Well, I must run away now--there are at least a hundred of these stupid
+people to whom I must go and make myself agreeable. By the way, Vera, how
+dull you look, up in this corner by yourself. Why do you sit here all
+alone?"
+
+"My head aches; I am glad to be quiet."
+
+"But you mean to dance by-and-by, I hope?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I daresay. Go back to your guests, Beatrice; I am getting on
+very well."
+
+Beatrice went off smiling and waving her hand. Vera could watch her
+outside in the sunshine, moving about from group to group, shaking hands
+with first one and then another, laughing at some playful sally, or
+smiling demurely over some graver words of kindness. She was always
+popular, was Beatrice, with her bright talk and her plain clever face,
+and there was not a man or woman in all that crowd who did not wish her
+happiness.
+
+And so the day wore away, and the polo match--very badly played--was
+over, and the votaries of lawn-tennis were worn out with running up and
+down, and the flowers and the fruits in the show-tent began to look
+limp and dusty. The farmers and those people of small importance who had
+only been invited "from two to five," began now to take their departure,
+and their carriage wheels were to be heard driving away in rapid
+succession from the front door. Then the hundred or so of the "best
+county people," who were remaining later for the dancing, began to think
+of leaving the lawns before the dew fell. There was a general move
+towards the house, and even the band "limbered up," and began to transfer
+itself from the garden into the hall, where its labours were to begin
+afresh.
+
+Then it was that Vera crept forth out of her sheltered corner, and,
+unseen and unnoticed save by one watchful pair of eyes, wended her way
+through the shrubbery walks in the direction of the Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+SHADONAKE BATH.
+
+ A jolly place--in times of old,
+ But something ails it now:
+ The spot is cursed!
+
+ Wordsworth.
+
+
+Calm and still, like the magic mirror of the legend, Shadonake Bath lay
+amongst its everlasting shadows.
+
+The great belt of fir-trees beyond it, the sheltering evergreens on
+the nearer side, the tiers of grey, moss-grown steps that encompassed
+it about, all found their image again upon its smooth and untroubled
+surface. There was a golden light from the setting sun to the west,
+and the pale mist of a shadowy crescent moon had risen in the east.
+
+It was all quiet here--faint echoes of distant voices and far-away
+laughter came up in little gusts from the house; but there was no trace
+of the festivities down by the desolate water, nothing but the dark
+fir-trees above it, and the great white heads of the water-lilies that
+lay like jewels upon its silent bosom.
+
+Vera sat down upon the steps, and rested her chin in her hands, and
+waited. The house and the gardens behind her were shut out by the thick
+screen of laurels and rhododendrons. Before her, on the other side, were
+the fir-trees, with their red, bronzed trunks, and the soft, dark brown
+carpet that lay at their feet; there was not even a squirrel stirring
+among their branches, nor a bird that fluttered beneath their shadows.
+
+Vera waited. She was not impatient nor anxious. She had nothing to say
+to Maurice when he came--she did not mean to keep him, not even for five
+minutes, by her side; she did not want to run any further risks with
+him--it was better not--better that she should never again be alone with
+him. She only meant just to give him that wretched little brown paper
+parcel that weighed upon her conscience with the sense of an unfulfilled
+vow, and then to go back with him to the house at once. They could have
+nothing more to say to each other.
+
+Strangely enough, as she sat there musing all her life came back in
+review before her. The old days at Rome, with the favourite sister who
+was dead and gone; her own gay, careless life, with its worldly aims and
+desires; her first arrival at Sutton, her determination to make herself
+Sir John Kynaston's wife, and then her fatal love for his brother; it all
+came back to her again. All kinds of little details that she had long
+forgotten came flooding in upon her memory. She remembered how she had
+first seen Maurice standing at the foot of the staircase, with the light
+of the lamp upon his handsome head; and then, again, how one morning she
+and he had stood together in this very place by the Bath, and how she had
+told him, shuddering, that it would be dreadful to be drowned there, and
+she had cried out in a nameless terror that she wished she had not seen
+it for the first time with him by her side; and then Helen had come down
+from the house and joined them, and they had all three gone away
+together. She smiled a little to herself over that foolish, reasonless
+terror. The quiet pool of water did not look dreadful to her now--only
+cool, and still, and infinitely restful.
+
+By-and-by other thoughts came into her mind. She recalled her interview
+with old Lady Kynaston at Walpole Lodge, when she had so nearly promised
+her to give back her hand to her eldest son, when she would have done so
+had it not been for that sight of Maurice's face in the adjoining room.
+She wondered what Lady Kynaston had thought of her sudden change of mind;
+what she had been able to make of it; whether she had ever guessed at
+what had been the truth. It seemed only yesterday that the old lady had
+told her to be wise and brave, and to begin her life over again, and to
+make the best of the good things of this world that were still left to
+her.
+
+"There is a pain that goes right through the heart," Maurice's mother had
+said to her; "I who speak to you have felt it. I thought I should die of
+it, but you see I did not."
+
+Alas! did not Vera know that pain all too well; that heartache that
+banishes peace by day and sleep by night, and that will not wear itself
+out?
+
+And yet other women had borne it, and had lived and been even happy in
+other ways; but she could not be happy. Was it because her heart was
+deeper, or because her sense of pain was greater than that of others?
+
+Vera could not tell. She only wished, and longed, and even prayed that
+she might have the strength to become Denis Wilde's wife; that she might
+taste once more of peace, if not of joy; and yet all her longings and all
+her prayers only made her realize the more how utterly the thing was
+beyond her power.
+
+To Maurice, and Maurice alone, belonged her life and her soul, and Vera
+felt that it would be easier for her to be true to the sad, dim memory
+of his love than to give her heart and her allegiance to any other upon
+earth.
+
+So she sat and mused, and pondered, and the amber light in the east faded
+away into palest saffron, and the solemn shadows deepened and lengthened
+upon the still bosom of the water.
+
+Suddenly there came a sharp footstep and the rustle of a woman's silken
+skirts across the stone flags behind her. She looked up quickly; Helen
+stood beside her. Helen, in all the sheen of her gay Paris garments,
+with the evening light upon her uncovered head, and the glow of a
+passion, fiercer than madness, in her glittering eyes. Some prescience
+of evil--she knew not of what--made Vera spring to her feet.
+
+Helen spoke to her shortly and defiantly.
+
+"Miss Nevill, you are waiting here for my husband, are you not?"
+
+A faint flush rose in Vera's face.
+
+"Yes," she answered, very quietly. "I am waiting to speak a few words to
+him."
+
+"You have something to give him, have you not? Some letters that are
+mine, and which you have probably read."
+
+Helen said the words quickly and feverishly; her voice shook and
+trembled. Vera looked surprised and even indignant.
+
+"I don't understand you, Mrs. Kynaston," she began, coldly.
+
+"Oh, yes, you understand me perfectly. Give me my letters, Miss Nevill;
+you have no doubt read them all," and she laughed harshly and sneeringly.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, you are labouring under some delusion," said Vera,
+quietly; "I have no letters of yours, and if I had," with a ring of utter
+contempt, "I should not be likely to have opened them."
+
+For it did not occur to her that Helen was speaking of Monsieur
+D'Arblet's parcel; that did not in the least convey the idea of letters
+to her mind; nor had it ever entered into her head to speculate about
+what that unhappy little packet could possibly contain; she had never
+even thought about it.
+
+"I have no letters of yours," she repeated.
+
+"You are saying what is false," cried Helen, angrily. "How can you dare
+to deny it? You know you have got them, you are here to give them to
+Maurice, knowing that they will ruin me. You _shall_ not give them to
+him. I have come to take them from you--I _will_ have them."
+
+"I do not even know what you are speaking about," answered Vera. "Why
+should I want to ruin you, if, indeed, such a thing is to be done?"
+
+"Because you hate me as much as I hate you."
+
+"Hate is an ugly word," said Vera, rather scornfully. "I have no reason
+to hate you, and I do not know why you should hate me."
+
+"Don't imagine you can put me off with empty words," cried Helen, wildly.
+She made a step forward; her white hands clenched themselves together
+with a reasonless fury; she was as white as the crescent moon that rose
+beyond the trees.
+
+"Give me my letters--the letters you are waiting here to give to my
+husband!" she cried.
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, do not be so angry," said Vera, becoming almost
+bewildered by her violence; "you are really mistaken--pray calm yourself.
+I have no letters: what I was going to give your husband was only a
+little parcel from a man who is abroad--he is a foreigner. I do not think
+it is of the slightest importance to anybody. I have not opened it, I
+have no idea what it contains, and your husband himself said it was
+nothing--only I have promised to give it him alone; it was a whim of the
+little Frenchman who entrusted me with it, and whom, I must honestly tell
+you, I believe to have been half-mad. Only, unfortunately, I have
+promised to deliver it in this manner."
+
+Mrs. Kynaston was looking at her fixedly; her anger seemed to have died
+away.
+
+"Yes," she said, "it was Monsieur D'Arblet who gave them to you."
+
+"That was his name, D'Arblet. I did not like the man; but he bothered me
+until I foolishly undertook his commission. I am sorry now that I did so,
+as it seems to vex you so much; but I do not think there are letters in
+the parcel, and I certainly have not opened it."
+
+Helen was silent again for a minute, looking at her intently.
+
+"I don't believe you," she said; "they are my letters, sure enough, and
+you have read them. What woman would not do so in your place? and you
+know that they will ruin me with my husband."
+
+"It is you yourself that tell me so!" cried Vera, impatiently, beginning
+to lose her temper. "I do not even know what you are talking about!"
+
+"Miss Nevill!" cried Helen, suddenly changing her tone; "give that parcel
+to me, I entreat you."
+
+"I am very sorry, Mrs. Kynaston; I cannot possibly do so."
+
+"Oh yes, you can--you will," said Helen, imploringly. "What can it matter
+to you now? It is I who am his wife; you cannot get any good out of a
+mere empty revenge. Why should you spoil my chance of winning his heart?
+I know well enough that he loves you, but----"
+
+"Mrs. Kynaston, pray, pray recollect yourself; do not say such words to
+me!" cried Vera, deeply distressed.
+
+"Why should I not say them! You and I know well enough that it is true.
+I hate you, I am jealous of you, for I know that my husband loves you;
+and yet, if you will only give me that parcel, I will forgive you--I
+will try to live at peace with you--I will even pray and strive for your
+happiness! Let me have a chance of making him love me!"
+
+"For God's sake, Mrs. Kynaston, do not say these things to me!" cried
+Vera. She was crimson with pain and shame, and shocked beyond measure
+that his wife should be so lost to all decency and self-respect as to
+speak so openly of her husband's love for herself.
+
+"I will not and cannot listen to you!"
+
+"But you will not be so cruel as to ruin me?" pleaded Helen; "only give
+me that parcel, and I shall be safe! You say you have not opened it;
+well, I can hardly believe it, because in your place I should have read
+every word; yet, if you will give them to me, I will forgive you."
+
+"You do not understand what you are saying!" cried Vera, impatiently.
+"How can I give you what is not mine to give? I have no right to dispose
+of this parcel"--she held it in her hand--"and I have given my word that
+I will give it to your husband alone. How could I be so false as to do
+anything else with it? You are asking impossibilities, Mrs. Kynaston."
+
+"You will not give it to me?" There was a sudden change in Helen's
+voice--she pleaded no longer.
+
+"No, certainly not."
+
+"And that is your last word?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+There was a silence. Helen looked away over the water towards the
+fir-trees. She was pale, but very quiet; all her angry agitation seemed
+to have died away. Vera stood a little beneath her on the lowest step,
+close down to the water; she held the little parcel that was the object
+of the dispute in her hands, and was looking at it with an expression of
+deep annoyance; she was wishing heartily that she had never seen either
+it or the wretched little Frenchman who had insisted upon confiding it to
+her care.
+
+Neither of them spoke; for an instant neither of them even moved. There
+was a striking contrast between them: Helen, slight and fragile in her
+bird-of-paradise garments, with jewels about her neck, and golden chains
+at her wrist; her pretty piquant face, almost childish in the contour of
+the small, delicate features. Vera, in her plain, tight-fitting dress,
+whose only beauty lay in the perfect simplicity with which it followed
+the lines of her glorious figure; her pure, lovely face, laden with its
+burden of deep sadness, a little turned away from the other woman who had
+taken everything from her, and left her life so desolate. And there was
+the silent pool at their feet, and the darkening belt of fir-trees
+beyond, and the pale moon ever brightening in the shadowy heavens. It was
+a picture such as a painter might have dreamt of.
+
+Not a sound--only once the faint cry of some wild animal in the far-off
+woods, and the flutter of a night-moth on the wing. Helen's face was
+turned eastwards towards the fast-fading evening glow.
+
+What is it that sends the curse of Cain into the human heart?
+
+Did some foul and evil thing, wandering homeless around that fatal spot,
+enter then and there, unbidden, into her sin-stained soul? Or had the
+hellish spirit been always there within her, only biding its time to
+burst forth in all its naked and hideous horror?
+
+God only knows.
+
+"Vera, gather me a water-lily! See how lovely they are. I am going back
+to dance; I want a water-lily."
+
+Vera looked up startled. The sudden change of manner and the familiar
+mention of her name struck her as strange. Helen was leaning towards her,
+all flushed and eager, pointing with her glistening, jewelled fingers
+over the water.
+
+"Don't you see how white they are, and how they gleam in the moonlight
+like silver? Would not one of them look lovely in my hair?"
+
+"I do not think I can reach them," said Vera, slowly. She was puzzled and
+half-frightened by the quick, feverish words and manner.
+
+"Yes, yes, your arms are long--much longer than mine; you can reach them
+very well. See, I will hold the sleeve of your dress like this; it is
+very strong. I can hold you quite safely. Kneel down and reach out for
+it, Vera. Do, please, I want it so much. There is one so close there,
+just beyond your hand. Stoop over a little further; don't be afraid;
+I have got you tightly."
+
+And Vera knelt and stretched out over the dark face of the waters.
+
+Then, all at once, there was a cry--a wild struggle--a splash of the
+dark, seething waves--and Helen stood up again in her bright raiment
+alone on the margin of the pool; whilst ever-widening circles stretched
+hurriedly away and away, as though terror-stricken, from the baleful
+spot where Vera Nevill had sunk below the ill-fated waters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Someone came madly rushing out of the bushes behind her. Helen screamed
+aloud.
+
+"It was an accident! She slipped forward--her footing gave way!" gasped
+the unhappy woman in her terror. "Oh, Maurice, for pity's sake, believe
+me; it was an accident!" She sunk upon her knees, with wildly
+outstretched arms, and trembling, and uplifted hands.
+
+"Stand aside," he said, hoarsely, pushing her roughly from him, so that
+she almost fell to the earth, and he plunged deep into the still
+quivering waters.
+
+It was the water-lilies that brought her to her death. The long clinging
+stems amongst which she sank held her fair body in their cold, clammy
+embraces, so that she never rose again. It was long before they found
+her.
+
+And, oh! who shall ever describe that dreadful scene by the margin of
+Shadonake Bath, whilst the terrified crowd that had gathered there
+quickly waited for her whom all knew to be hopelessly gone from them for
+ever!
+
+The sobbing, frightened women; the white, stricken faces of the men; the
+agony of those who had loved her; the distress and dismay of those who
+had only admired her; and there was one trembling, shuddering wretch, in
+her satin and her jewels, standing white and haggard apart, with knees
+that shook together, and teeth that clattered, and tearless sobs that
+shook her from head to foot, staring with a half-maddened stare upon the
+fatal waters.
+
+Then, when all was at an end and the worst was known, when the poor
+dripping body had been reverently covered over and borne away by loving
+arms amid a torrent of sobs and wailing tears towards the house, then
+some one came near her and spoke to her--some one off whom the water came
+pouring in streams, and whose face was white and wild as her own.
+
+"Get you away out of my sight," said the man whom she had loved so
+fruitlessly to her.
+
+"Have pity! have pity!" was the cry of despair that burst from her
+quivering lips. "Was it not all an accident?"
+
+"Yes, let it be so to the world, because you bear my name, and I will not
+have it dragged through the mire--to all others it is an accident--but
+never to me, for _I saw you let her go_! There is the stain of murder
+upon your hands. I will never call you wife, nor look upon your face
+again; get yourself away out of my sight!"
+
+With a low sobbing cry she turned and fled away from him, and away from
+the place, out among the shadows of the fir-trees. Once again some one
+stopped her in her terror-stricken flight.
+
+It was Denis Wilde, who came striding towards her under the trees, and
+caught her roughly by the wrist.
+
+"It is _you_ who have killed her!" he said, savagely.
+
+"What do you mean?" she murmured, faintly.
+
+"I saw it in your face last night when you were wandering about the house
+during the thunderstorm; you meant her death then. I saw it in your eyes.
+My God! why did I not watch over her better, and save her from such a
+devil as you?"
+
+"No, no, it is not true; it was an accident. Oh, spare me, spare me!"
+with a piteousness of terror, was all she could say.
+
+"Yes; I will spare you, poor wretch, for your husband's sake--because she
+loved him--and his burden, God help him! is heavy enough as it is. Go!"
+flinging her arm rudely from him. "Go, whilst you have got time, lest the
+thirst for your blood be too strong for me."
+
+And this time no one saw her go. Like a hunted animal, she fled away
+among the trees, her gleaming many-hued dress trailing all wet and
+drabbled on the sodden earth behind her, and the darkness of the
+gathering night closed in around her, and covered her in mercy with
+its pitiful mantle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+AT PEACE.
+
+ Open, dark grave, and take her:
+ Though we have loved her so,
+ Yet we must now forsake her:
+ Love will no more awake her:
+ Oh bitter woe!
+ Open thine arms and take her
+ To rest below!
+
+ A. Procter.
+
+
+So Vera was at peace at last. The troubled life was over; the vexed
+question of her fate was settled for her. There was to be no more
+struggling of right against wrong, of expediency against truth, for her
+for evermore. She had all--nay, more than all she wanted now.
+
+"It was what she desired herself," said the vicar, brokenly, as he knelt
+by the side of her who had been so dear and precious to him. "Only a
+Sunday or two ago she said to me 'If I could die, I should be at peace.'"
+
+And Maurice, with hidden face at the foot of the bed, could not answer
+him for tears.
+
+It was there, by that white still presence, that lay so calm and so
+lovely amongst the showers of heavy-scented waxen flowers, wherewith
+loving hands had decked her for her last long sleep; it was there that
+Eustace learnt at last the secret of her life, and the fatal love that
+had so wrecked her happiness. It was all clear to him now. Her struggles,
+her temptations, her pitiful moments of weakness and misery, her
+courageous strife against the hopelessness of her fate--all was made
+plain now: he understood her at last.
+
+In Maurice Kynaston's passion of despairing grief he read the story of
+her sad life's trouble.
+
+Truly, Maurice had enough to bear; for he alone, and one other, who spoke
+no word of it to him, knew the terrible secret of her death; to all else
+it was "an accident;" to him and to Denis Wilde alone it was "murder." To
+him, too, the motive of the foul, cowardly deed had been revealed; for,
+tightly clasped in that poor dead hand, true to the last to the trust
+that had been given her, was the fatal packet of letters that had been
+the cause of her death. They were all blotted and blurred, and sodden
+with the water, but there were whole sentences in the inner folds that
+were sufficient for him to recognize his wife's handwriting, and to see
+what was the drift and the meaning of them.
+
+Whom they were written to, when they had been penned, he neither knew nor
+cared to discover; it was enough for him that they had been written by
+her, and that they were altogether shameful and sinful. With a deep and
+sickened disgust, he set fire to the whole packet, and scattered the
+blackened and smouldering ashes into the empty grate. They had cost a
+human life, those reckless, sinful letters; but for them, Vera would not
+have died.
+
+The terrible tragedy came to an end at last. They buried her beneath the
+coloured mosaic floor of the new chancel, which Sir John had built at her
+desire; and Marion smothered herself and her children in crape, and
+people shook their heads and sighed when they spoke of her; and Shadonake
+was shut up, and the Millers all went to London; and then the world went
+its way, and after a time it forgot her; and Vera Nevill's place knew her
+no more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After Christmas there was a wedding in Eaton Square; a wedding small and
+not at all gay. Indeed, Geraldine Miller considered her sister next door
+to a lunatic, and she told herself it would be hardly worth while to be
+married at all if there was to be no more fuss made over her marriage
+than over Beatrice's. For there were no bridesmaids and no wedding
+guests, only all the Millers, from the eldest down to the youngest, uncle
+Tom, and an ancient Miss Esterworth, unearthed from the other end of
+England for the occasion; and there were also a Mr. and Mrs. Pryme,
+a grave and aged couple--uncle and aunt to the bridegroom.
+
+There was, however, one remarkable feature at this particular wedding:
+when the family party came down into the dining-room to take their places
+for the conventional breakfast upon the plate of the bride's father were
+to be seen some very curious things.
+
+These were a faded white lace parasol with pink bows; a pair of soiled
+grey _peau de suede_ gloves, and a little black wisp of a spotted net
+veil.
+
+"Bless my soul!" said the member for Meadowshire, putting up his
+eye-glasses; "what on earth is all this?"
+
+"I think you have seen them before, papa," says the bride, demurely,
+whilst uncle Tom bursts into a loud and hearty guffaw of laughter.
+
+"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, turning rather red, and looking
+bewilderedly from his daughter to his wife: "I don't really understand.
+Caroline, my dear, do you know the meaning of these--these--most
+extraordinary objects?"
+
+Mrs. Miller draws near and examines the little heap of faded finery
+critically. "Why, Beatrice!" she exclaims, in astonishment, "it is your
+last summer's sunshade, and a pair of your old gloves: how on earth did
+they come here on your papa's plate?"
+
+"I put them there; I thought papa would like to see them again," cries
+Beatrice, laughing; "he met them in Herbert's rooms in the Temple one day
+last summer."
+
+"_Beatrice!_" falters her father, staring in amazement at her.
+
+"Yes, papa, dear, don't be too dreadfully shocked at me; it was I, your
+very naughty daughter, who had gone on the sly to see Herbert in the
+Temple, and I ran into the next room to hide myself when I heard you come
+in, and left those stupid tell-tale things on the table! I don't think,
+now I am Herbert's wife, that it matters very much how much I confess of
+my improprieties, does it?"
+
+"Good gracious me!" says Mr. Miller, solemnly, and then turns round and
+shakes hands with his son-in-law. "And I might have retained you for that
+libel case after all, instead of getting in a young fool who lost it for
+me!" was all he said. And then the sunshade and the gloves were swept
+away, and they all sat down and ate a very good breakfast, and drank to
+the bride and bridegroom's health none the less heartily for that curious
+little explanatory scene at the beginning of the feast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maurice Kynaston has joined his brother in Australia, where, report says,
+they are doing very well, and rapidly making a large fortune; although no
+one thinks that either brother will ever leave the country of his
+adoption and return to England.
+
+Old Lady Kynaston lives on alone at Walpole Lodge; she is getting very
+aged, and is a dull, solitary old woman now, with an ever-present sadness
+at her heart.
+
+Before he left England Maurice told her the story of his love for Vera,
+and the whole truth about her death. The old lady knows that Vera and her
+fatal beauty has wrecked the lives of both her sons. There will be no
+tender filial hands to close her dying eyes, no troops of merry
+grandchildren to cheer and brighten her closing years. They will live
+away from her, and she will die alone. She knows it--and she is very,
+very sad.
+
+In South Kensington there lives a gay, world-loving woman who keeps open
+house, and entertains perpetually. She has horses and carriages, and a
+box at the opera, and is always to be seen faultlessly dressed and the
+gayest of the gay at every race meeting, and at every scene of pleasure.
+
+People admire her and flatter her, and speak lightly of her too,
+sometimes, for it is generally known that Mrs. Kynaston is "separated"
+from her husband; and though a separation is a perfectly respectable
+thing, and has no possible connection with a divorce, yet there are ugly
+whispers in this case as to what is the cause of the dissension between
+the husband in Australia and the wife in London; whispers that often
+do not fall very far short of the truth. And, gay as she is, and
+light-hearted as she seems to be, there are times when pretty Mrs.
+Kynaston is more to be pitied than any wretched beggar who toils along
+the streets, for always there is the terror of detection at her heart,
+and the fear that her dreadful secret, known as it is to at least two
+persons on earth, may ooze out--be guessed by others.
+
+There are things Mrs. Kynaston can never do: to read of some dreadful
+murder such as occasionally fills all the papers for days with its
+sickening details makes her shut herself in her own room till the
+horrible tragedy is over and forgotten; to hear of such things spoken
+of in society causes her to faint away with terror. To walk by a pond,
+or even to speak of being rowed upon a lake or river, fills her with
+such horror of soul that none of her friends ever care to suggest a
+water-party of any kind to her.
+
+"She saw that poor Miss Nevill drowned," say her compassionate
+acquaintances; "it has upset her nerves, poor dear; she cannot bear the
+sight of water." And there are a few who think, and who are not ashamed
+to whisper their thoughts with bated breath, that she saw Miss Nevill's
+sad death too near and too well to be utterly spotless in the matter.
+
+That she allowed her to perish without attempting to save her, because
+she was jealous of her, is the generally received impression; but there
+is no one who has quite realized that she was actually guilty of her
+death.
+
+Did they think so, they could not eat her dinners with decency. And they
+do eat her dinners, which are uncommonly good ones; and they flock to her
+house, and they sit in her carriage and her opera-box, and they take all
+they can get from her, although at their hearts they do not care to be
+intimate with her. But then money covers a multitude of sins. And a great
+many crimes may be glossed over if we are only rich enough and popular
+enough, and sufficiently the fashion.
+
+As to Denis Wilde, he was young, and in time he got over it and married
+an amiable young lady who bore him three children and loved him
+devotedly, so that after a while he forgot his first love.
+
+Shadonake Bath has been drained. Mr. Miller has at last been allowed to
+have his own way about it. It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good,
+and there could be found no voice to plead for its preservation after
+that terrible tragedy of which it was the scene.
+
+So the old steps have all been cleared away, and brick walls line the
+straight deep sides, whereon grow the finest peaches and nectarines in
+the county, whilst a parterre of British Queens and Hautboys cover the
+spot where Vera died with their rich red fruit and their luxuriant
+foliage.
+
+And at Sutton things go on much the same as of old. Old Mrs. Daintree is
+dead, and no one sorrowed much for her loss, whilst the domestic harmony
+is decidedly enhanced by her absence. Tommy and Minnie are growing big
+and lanky, and the subject of schools and education is beginning to
+occupy the minds of Marion and her husband.
+
+But the vicar has grown grey and old; his back is more bent and his face
+more careworn than it used to be. He has never been quite the same since
+Vera's death.
+
+There is a white marble monument in the middle of the chancel, raised by
+the loving hands of two brothers far away in Australia. It is by the best
+sculptor of the day, and on it lies a pale white figure, with a pure
+delicate profile, and hands always meekly crossed upon the bosom.
+
+Every Sunday, as Eustace Daintree passes from his place at the
+reading-desk up to the altar to read the Communion Service, there falls
+upon it a streak of sunshine from the painted window above, which he
+himself and his wife had put up to her memory, lighting up the pale
+marble image with a chequered glory of gold and crimson. And the vicar's
+eye as he passes alights for a moment with a never-dying sadness upon the
+simple words carved at the foot of her tomb--
+
+ Vera Nevill, aged 23.
+
+ AT PEACE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. CAMERON'S NOVELS.
+
+Jack's Secret.
+
+A Sister's Sin.
+
+A Lost Wife.
+
+The Cost of a Lie.
+
+This Wicked World.
+
+A Devout Lover.
+
+A Life's Mistake.
+
+Worth Winning.
+
+Vera Neville.
+
+Pure Gold.
+
+In a Grass Country.
+
+
+ "Mrs. Cameron's numerous efforts in the line of fiction have
+ won for her a wide circle of admirers. Her experience in novel
+ writing, as well as her skill in inventing and delineating characters,
+ enables her to put before the reading public stories that
+ are full of interest and pure in tone."--_Harrisburg Telegraph_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera Nevill, by Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
+
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